London to get 2,000 more SEND school places

See if your area is included

Author: Liam ArrowsmithPublished 1st Apr 2025

Schools in London are to get funding for 2,000 more places for children with special educational needs.

More than £120 million has been allocated by the Government, with Newham topping the funding table.

Croydon and Ealing Councils will also receive a significant sum.

The funding, which is distributed based on the population size of the local authority and their pupil to capacity ratio, is part of a wider national allocation of £740m.

According to the Government’s explanatory note: “The funding can be used to adapt classrooms to be more accessible for children with SEND, to create specialist facilities within mainstream schools that can deliver more intensive support adapted to suit the pupils’ needs, and to create special school places for pupils with the most complex needs.”

Fewer than one in 10 mainstream schools have SEN units or resourced provision, while the number of children with Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) has rocketed since 2010.

The most recent figures indicate there is a shortfall of around 8,000 places in state special schools, a gap the Government is looking to plug.

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “As part of our Plan for Change, we want every family to have access to a good local school for their child, breaking the link between children’s background and their opportunities in life.

"This investment is a big step towards delivering not only enough school places, but the right school places, supporting all children and particularly those with SEND, and plugging the significant gaps in provision we inherited.

“This investment will give children with SEND the support they need to thrive, marking the start of a turning point for families who have been fighting to improve their children’s outcomes.”

In London the shortfall of secondary school special places in May 2024 was 600, with 21,900 places reported against 22,500 pupils.

Looking ahead, the number of children in London with an EHCP requiring specialist provision is expected to increase from 34,500 in 2024/25 to 41,900 by 2028/29.

In a breakdown of where the London funding is to be allocated, Newham Council is listed as due to receive the most, with £8,106,208. Kensington and Chelsea meanwhile is to receive less than a tenth of that sum, £605,401.

A spokesperson for the West London council said: “We welcome the availability of the funds, which allow us to create new specialist placements for SEND and improve the suitability and accessibility of existing buildings.”

The council added that since 2021/22, it has been allocated £13,780,411 in High Needs Capital Grant Funding, which has been used to create around 300 new specialist places.

A Newham Council spokesperson said: “We are delighted that there is a commitment to increasing much needed funding for specialist places for children with special educational needs in Newham.

"We are in close touch with the Department for Education to work out the detail of how and when the funding will be made available.”

See the full breakdown below:

Local Authority Total High Needs Provision Capital Allocations

Barking and Dagenham £4,230,915

Barnet £3,950,769

Bexley £3,703,855

Brent £6,355,245

Bromley £5,276,857

Camden £1,323,140

City of London N/A

Croydon £5,548,421

Ealing £5,812,461

Enfield £6,181,905

Greenwich £3,948,641

Hackney £3,507,978

Hammersmith and Fulham £1,153,670

Haringey £2,481,631

Harrow £4,223,677

Havering £3,945,057

Hillingdon £4,520,939

Hounslow £5,016,773

Islington £1,666,742

Kensington and Chelsea £605,401

Kingston upon Thames £2,146,504

Lambeth £2,468,212

Lewisham £5,710,313

Merton £3,636,150

Newham £8,106,208

Redbridge £3,688,564

Richmond upon Thames £3,168,044

Southwark £5,028,292

Sutton £2,491,676

Tower Hamlets £3,999,064

Waltham Forest £3,016,012

Wandsworth £2,242,894

Westminster £1,902,311

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