Wales ALN Toolkit vs Hiring an ALN Consultant: Which Do You Actually Need?
If you're choosing between a Wales-specific ALN toolkit and hiring an ALN consultant, here's the short answer: start with the toolkit, and escalate to a consultant only if you're heading for the Education Tribunal for Wales. Most Welsh parents never need a consultant — they need the right template letters, a clear understanding of the ALNET Act 2018, and a way to audit their child's IDP tonight. A consultant becomes essential only when formal Tribunal proceedings are on the table or when the case involves multi-agency complexity beyond what any self-advocacy tool can handle.
The reason this distinction matters is that Wales's ALN system is designed with multiple escalation stages before anyone enters a courtroom. Requesting ALN identification, challenging a vague IDP, demanding that the school quantify provision under Chapter 23 of the ALN Code, escalating missing health provision to the DECLO, requesting local authority reconsideration — none of these require professional representation. They require knowing which section of the ALNET Act to cite, which statutory timeline applies, and how to put your request in writing so it triggers the school's or local authority's legal obligations.
The Core Difference
An ALN toolkit gives you the knowledge and templates to handle the first 90% of ALN disputes yourself. A consultant handles the final 10% — the formal proceedings, complex multi-agency disputes, and Tribunal representation where professional expertise genuinely changes outcomes.
The problem is that most parents hire a consultant at stage one because they don't know what they're legally entitled to do themselves. That's an expensive way to send a letter the school was legally required to respond to anyway.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | ALN Advocacy Toolkit | ALN Consultant |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | One-time purchase () | £110+ per hour (Sunshine Support rates) |
| Speed | Instant download — use tonight | Days or weeks to get initial consultation |
| Best for | IDP audits, meeting preparation, template letters, DECLO escalations | Tribunal representation, complex multi-agency cases, bespoke casework |
| Wales-specific | Written exclusively for ALNET Act 2018 and ALN Code 2021 | Depends on the consultant — many cover England and Wales together |
| Template letters | Ready-to-send, citing exact statutory sections | Custom-drafted (at hourly rates) |
| IDP audit tools | Specified-and-quantified checklist included | Consultant reviews IDP manually (at hourly rates) |
| Meeting preparation | Scripts, checklists, pre-meeting document requests | Pre-meeting briefing (at hourly rates) |
| Ongoing reference | Toolkit you keep permanently | Engagement ends when the case closes |
| Legal representation | No — you advocate for yourself | Some consultants attend meetings; solicitors represent at Tribunal |
| Availability | Immediate, 24/7 | Limited — few consultants specialise exclusively in Welsh ALN law |
When a Toolkit Is All You Need
The vast majority of ALN disputes in Wales are resolved before they reach the Education Tribunal. These are the situations where a toolkit handles everything:
Your child's draft IDP uses vague language. If the IDP promises "regular TA support" instead of "3 hours of 1:1 specialist teaching assistant time per week," it is legally unenforceable under Chapter 23 of the ALN Code. The toolkit's IDP Quality Audit Checklist flags every weasel phrase and gives you the replacement wording that makes the provision legally binding — no consultant required.
The school says your child needs a diagnosis before they'll draft an IDP. Under the ALNET Act, ALN is identified based on need, not diagnosis. A template letter citing Sections 2 and 11 of the Act resolves this in most cases. Parents stuck on multi-year NHS waiting lists should not be told their child cannot receive support.
You want to challenge a school's refusal to identify ALN. Parents have a statutory right to request that the local authority reconsider a school-level decision. The toolkit provides the exact reconsideration request letter, citing Section 28 of the ALNET Act, with the 7-week statutory timeline the LA must follow.
Health provision is missing from the IDP. If speech and language therapy, OT, or other NHS-delivered support should appear in Section 2C of the IDP but doesn't, a template letter to the DECLO triggers the health board's statutory duty under Section 61 of the Act. You don't need a consultant to send this letter.
Your child's old SEN Statement is being converted to an IDP. During the SEN-to-ALN transition, legal professionals documented a roughly 20% drop in children recognised as having additional needs. The toolkit's transition defence section shows you exactly how to ensure existing provision levels are maintained.
You're preparing for an IDP meeting and don't know what to say. Meeting scripts, pre-meeting checklists, and the exact questions to ask about Section 2B provision give you the language that triggers the school's statutory obligations.
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When You Genuinely Need a Consultant
A consultant becomes the right choice in specific, high-stakes situations:
You're filing an appeal with the Education Tribunal for Wales. The ETW is a formal proceeding. While parents can self-represent, professional support significantly improves outcomes for complex cases involving multiple agencies, specialist placements, or disputed clinical provision.
The local authority has refused to maintain the IDP after reconsideration. If your reconsideration request was rejected and you believe the refusal is legally wrong, Tribunal preparation benefits from professional guidance — especially when local authority solicitors will be arguing the other side.
Your child needs a specialist placement that the LA is refusing to fund. Cases involving named placements in independent specialist schools or residential provisions require detailed legal arguments about Section 2D of the IDP that benefit from experienced advocacy.
You're navigating a multi-agency dispute involving the health board, social services, and education. When the DECLO, the school, and the local authority are all pointing fingers at each other over who is responsible for clinical provision, a consultant can coordinate the entire case.
Your child has been unlawfully excluded or placed on a reduced timetable. If the school won't reverse the decision after your written complaints and the local authority is unresponsive, professional intervention may be necessary.
The Cost Reality
An ALN consultant in Wales typically charges £110 per hour or more. An initial consultation runs 1–2 hours. A comprehensive case review might cost £500–£1,000. Full Tribunal preparation and representation can run £3,000–£8,000 depending on complexity.
SNAP Cymru provides free, legally accurate advice and independent parental support — but they are severely capacity-limited. When you have a hostile meeting with the ALNCo scheduled for tomorrow morning, you cannot afford to wait weeks for an advisor to call you back.
A toolkit like the Wales IDP & ALN Blueprint costs a fraction of a single hour of consultant time and equips you to handle every pre-Tribunal stage independently. If you do eventually need a consultant, the paper trail you've built using the toolkit — dated letters citing exact ALNET Act sections, documented meeting outcomes, completed IDP audit checklists — saves your consultant hours of preparation time, directly reducing your bill.
Who This Is For
- Parents who've received a vague IDP and want to challenge it tonight — not in two weeks when a consultant is available
- Parents whose child has been refused ALN identification and need to escalate immediately
- Parents dealing with missing NHS provision in the IDP who need DECLO escalation letters now
- Parents transitioning from SEN Statements to IDPs who need to protect existing support levels
- Parents on tight budgets who cannot afford £110/hour but still need Wales-specific legal tools
- Parents who want to exhaust every self-advocacy option before spending thousands on professional representation
Who This Is NOT For
- Parents already at the Education Tribunal stage who need professional representation
- Parents whose case involves a disputed specialist school placement requiring detailed legal arguments
- Parents dealing with complex multi-agency disputes where a consultant can coordinate health, education, and social care
- Parents who have the budget and preference for someone to handle the entire case end-to-end
The Smart Approach
The most effective strategy is sequential: use the toolkit to handle every stage you can handle yourself, build an airtight evidence trail, and escalate to a consultant only if you reach the Tribunal. Parents who do this arrive at the consultant's office with an organised case file — letters dated and cited, IDP audits completed, statutory timelines documented — instead of a stack of unsigned IDPs and half-remembered meeting notes.
That preparation typically saves £500–£1,000 in consultant time. The toolkit pays for itself before the first meeting.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is an ALN consultant worth it if my child's IDP is just vague?
No. A vague IDP is the most common problem Welsh parents face, and it's the easiest to challenge yourself. The ALN Code requires provision to be specified and quantified — "regular support" must become exact hours, named interventions, and identified personnel. The toolkit's IDP Quality Audit Checklist walks you through this in 20 minutes. A consultant would charge £110+ to tell you the same thing.
Can I use the toolkit if I eventually need a consultant?
Yes — and it makes the consultant more effective. Every letter you send using the toolkit creates a dated, legally cited paper trail. If the dispute escalates to Tribunal, your consultant inherits a complete case file instead of starting from scratch, saving hours of preparation time at their hourly rate.
How do I know when to stop self-advocating and hire a consultant?
The escalation point is clear: if you've sent the reconsideration request to the local authority under Section 28, received a formal refusal, and believe the refusal is legally wrong, it's time to consider Tribunal representation. Everything before that point — IDP audits, challenge letters, DECLO escalations, meeting preparation — is designed for self-advocacy.
Why doesn't the toolkit include Tribunal representation?
Because Tribunal proceedings are formal legal proceedings where professional representation changes outcomes. The toolkit is designed to resolve disputes before they reach that stage. Over 90% of ALN disputes are resolved through written challenges, meetings, and local authority reconsideration — the stages the toolkit covers.
What about SNAP Cymru's free service?
SNAP Cymru provides excellent, legally accurate advice. The limitation is capacity — overwhelmed by demand, wait times can be weeks. The toolkit provides the same statutory citations and template letters for instant access, 24/7. If SNAP Cymru can take your case, use both. They complement each other.
Are English SEND consultants useful for Welsh ALN cases?
Only if they have specific Welsh ALN expertise. Many consultants advertise "UK-wide" education support but default to English SEND law. Using English terminology (EHCP, SENCo, SENDIST) in Welsh correspondence signals to the school that you don't understand the jurisdiction — which undermines your credibility. Always confirm the consultant works exclusively with the ALNET Act 2018 and the ALN Code for Wales 2021.
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