Private school VAT hike âunfairâ for SEND pupils
Pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) might lose their extra support at private schools once a 20% VAT is introduced.
Some parents of SEND pupils say they already at âbreaking pointâ financially.
Mum-of-three Rebecca, from Somerset, believes the new fees are âunfairâ, she said: âIf they can guarantee my child will turn up at a state school and they will get the help they need, I have no problem. But they canât.â
The government said the VAT rise is needed to improve education for the 93% of pupils outside the private system.
The government spokesperson added that students with an Education, Health and Care Plan (ECHP), which states their needs cannot be met in the state sector, will have their private school fees paid by the local authority and will be able to reclaim the VAT fee.
However, not all SEND pupils have ECHPs, which has resulted in some parents paying the fees with their own money to ensure their childrenâs needs are being met.
The VAT rise will be added to private school fees from January 2025.
The BBC spoke to parents who have SEND children at Westonbirt School in Tetbury, Gloucestershire, and Wellington School, in Somerset.
Rebecca chose Wellington School because of its reputation for being âcaring and diverseâ. All of her children have special educational needs but do not have ECHPs.
She is âfrightenedâ by the additional ÂŁ9,000 a year she has estimated she will have to pay on top of the current ÂŁ60,000.
Without being at the private school, Rebecca fears her youngest child, who has a neurodiverse condition, could be placed in a residential care unit due to losing the âstability and extra attention Wellington School providesâ.
Her son, who has a hearing condition, had previously been bullied in a state school.
She considers herself an âaverage earnerâ, and the family has already been eating into an inheritance received from her husbandâs late parents to pay the fees at their current level.
âThis year our holiday was to Milton Keynes â to visit an audiologist for Ellia and Max. We donât live a luxurious lifestyle.
âOur shoulders are not big enough. I canât get into a [state] school and none of them are able to cater for my childrenâs requirements,â she added.
SEND students make up a third of Westonbirt Schoolâs population and leaders said it has already lost about âthree or four pupilsâ as a direct result of the VAT changes.
âThere are better ways of asking more of us. It would be brilliant to be doing more with bursaries from the local authority, and do that with the government rather than working against it,â said headteacher Natasha Dangerfield.
One mother Henny said she can âjust about weather the stormâ.
âThe added cost pressures are going to limit the number of jobs I can create at my marketing agency, where almost all the profits have been ploughed back into my dyslexic childrenâs education,â she said.
She had been been trying to secure places at various alternative state schools to Westonbirt, but could not get in anywhere.
âBest chance in lifeâ
Recent polling, conducted by Ipsos at the end of August, suggests 55% of Britons support Labourâs plan to impose VAT on private schools, with only 19% opposed.
During the election campaign, Sir Keir Starmer insisted he had ânothing againstâ them, but that his greater priority would be to fund a promised 6,500 new teachers in the state sector.
A government spokesperson said: âWe want to ensure all children have the best chance in life to succeed.
âEnding tax breaks on private schools will help to raise the revenue needed to fund our education priorities for next year, such as recruiting 6,500 new teachers.â
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