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(England) 80% increase in SPED students since 2019 due to ASD, ADHD; 'catastrophic' budget upset

Nov 26, 2025, BBC News: Schools could face 'catastrophic' squeeze from special needs costs in Budget shakeup

 

Schools could face a 4.9 per cent drop in funding following a Government pledge to absorb special needs overspend, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has warned.


Today's Budget revealed from 2028-29, councils will no longer have to run deficits to pay for children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND).


Laura Trott, shadow education secretary, said it would ‘push already struggling schools further into the red’.


The move comes in response to many councils facing financial collapse due to overspend on SEND.


The number of pupils entitled to council-funded care has soared by 80 per cent since 2019, driven by a rise in diagnoses of autism and ADHD.


The OBR said this crisis is likely to come to a head in 2028-29, when councils will be obliged to acknowledge their deficits in their budgets.


Previously, they have been able to disregard the deficits due to ‘statutory override’.


In today’s Budget document, the Government said it would set out plans at a later date to ‘support local authorities with historic and accruing deficits’.


However, the OBR noted: ‘The statutory override is due to end in 2028-29 by when these deficits could have reached a total of £14 billion [$18.5B], and a large number of local authorities would as a result not meet their balanced budget requirement.


‘The Government has not set out how this would be addressed and so it represents a significant fiscal risk.’


Earlier this month, the County Councils Network revealed 59 local authorities face 'total collapse' when their deficits are formally added to their books.


The Government plans to reform the SEND system, with proposals due to be released in the New Year.


It is understood ministers want to provide more school-level support so that only high-needs cases get EHCPs.


A Local Government Association spokesman said: ‘While it is positive the Government has committed to absorbing the costs of SEND spending from 2028/29 – and we look forward to clarity on how this will be funded – this does not address existing deficits, which are pushing many councils to the financial brink.'


They urged the Government to ‘write off these deficits’ as part of an upcoming Local Government Finance Settlement. . . .


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