Education Otherwise Than At School (EOTAS) is education arranged by a local authority for a child or young person when attending school is inappropriate for their needs.
This can include one-to-one tuition, therapy, mentoring, or community-based education delivered at home or elsewhere.
EOTAS is not homeschooling — it is a statutory form of provision that must meet the outcomes set in the child’s Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP).
EOTAS is only agreed when:
Typical reasons include:
Learn when EOTAS may be appropriate
Understand the circumstances where home or community provision replaces school.
EOTAS is covered under Section 61 of the Children and Families Act 2014.
It allows the local authority to arrange education “otherwise than at a school” if it is satisfied that this is in the child’s best interests.
Authorities also have a duty under Section 19 of the Education Act 1996 to provide suitable education for children who cannot attend school for reasons such as illness or exclusion.
EOTAS provision must be:
Read statutory guidance on EOTAS
Learn about legal responsibilities and EHCP requirements.
Parents or young people can request EOTAS:
The request should include:
If the local authority agrees, Section I of the EHCP will be left blank (no school named) and Section F will list the EOTAS provision in detail.
Find out how to request EOTAS
See step-by-step guidance on making a formal application.
EOTAS is fully funded by the local authority as part of the EHCP.
The authority may:
Provision often includes:
Safeguarding, DBS checks and progress reporting are required for all professionals involved.
EOTAS arrangements must be reviewed at least annually through the EHCP process.
The local authority should ensure that:
Read about monitoring and review for EOTAS
Learn how provision is checked and updated.