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Personal Budgets

A personal budget is a sum of money made available for children and young people who require additional support over and above what is available to most children through universal services.

A personal budget can support the child or young person to meet the outcomes in their Education, Health and Care (EHC) plan.

A Personal Budget for SEN is money identified to pay for support specified in an Education, Health and Care plan (EHC plan) for a child or young person with special educational needs. It can include funds from the local authority for education and social care and from the Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) for health.

There are four ways you can use a personal budget:

  1. Sometimes the local authority, school or college will look after the Personal Budget for you. This is called an Arrangement or a Notional Budget.
  2. Sometimes you can receive money directly to manage all or part of the Personal Budget yourself. This is called a Direct Payment.
  3. Sometimes you can opt to have someone else to manage the Personal Budget for you. This is called a Third-Party Arrangement.
  4. Sometimes you can have a mixture of some or all these arrangements.

Parents of a child with an EHC plan, or a young person with an EHC plan, can request a Personal Budget either during the drafting of an EHC plan or once the plan has been issued and is under review.

You do not need to have an EHC plan to get Personal Budgets for social and health care, but once you have an EHC plan, or one is being prepared, you can request budgets for all three areas of support. You must have an EHC plan to get a Personal Budget for special educational provision.

However, you do not have to have a Personal Budget.

The SEND Code of Practice says:

9.96 Local authorities must provide information on Personal Budgets as part of the Local Offer. This should include a policy on Personal Budgets that sets out a description of the services across education, health and social care that currently lend themselves to the use of Personal Budgets, how that funding will be made available, and clear and simple statements of eligibility criteria and the decision-making processes.

You can see Camden’s policy on Personal Budgets here.

A young person with an EHC plan can ask for their own Personal Budget after the end of the school year in which they become 16.

Sometimes the local authority or the health authority may not agree to a Personal Budget. If the local authority refuses a personal budget for special educational provision, it must tell you why. You cannot appeal to the Special Educational Needs and Disability Tribunal over this refusal.

Personal Budgets can be used only to fund the support set out in an EHC plan. This must be agreed by the local authority for education and care support, and by the health authority for the health provision.

You can find out what can be included in a Personal Budget in the Local Offer. You can also ask SENDIASS for more information about this.

A Personal Budget for educational provision cannot cover payment for a place at the school or college. A Personal Budget can include any top up funding (known as Element 3 funding). It can also include support that is managed by the school or college – but only if the Headteacher or Principal agree.

You can find out more about what can be included in a Personal Budget in Sections 9.110 to 9.118 of the SEND Code of Practice.

A Personal Budget shows you what money there is to make some of the provision specified in an EHC plan, and who provides it. The parent or young person does not actually manage the funds directly.

With a Direct Payment the parent or young person is given the money for some services and manages the funds themselves. The parent or young person is responsible for buying the service and paying for it.

A Personal Budget can include a Direct Payment if it is agreed that this is the best way to manage part of the Personal Budget.

Direct payments can be used for special educational provision in a school or college only if the school or college agree. Local authorities can refuse a direct payment for special educational provision if it would make things worse for other children and young people with an EHC plan, or if it would be an inefficient way to pay for services.

It is also possible to have a Third-Party Arrangement to manage a Direct Payment.

How much you get will depend on what has been set out in the EHC plan. So, it will vary from one person to another.

If the local authority has agreed to make a Direct Payment, it must be enough to pay for the service or services specified in the EHC plan.

Yes – some people have had Personal Budgets for health provision (a Personal Health Budget) and for social care provision (e.g., Fair Access to Short Breaks). They may have managed some or all the provision using a Direct Payment. But this is the first time that Personal Budgets have become available for SEN provision.

SENDIASS can also give you;

  • more information about Personal Budgets, including Direct Payments
  • advice on whether you may be able to get a Personal Budget and how you can apply for it
  • impartial information and advice on local services, organisations, and resources that may be able to help
  • impartial information, advice, and support on what you can do if you are unhappy with the local authority’s decision on your Personal Budget.

Easy read version

https://search3.openobjects.com/mediamanager/camden/cd/files/personal_budgets_factsheet_easy_read.pdf