Improve Support for Children with SEND and Address School Costs
Labour · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Labour’s policy “Improve Support for Children with SEND and Address School Costs” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Cost of living — Helps
minor · moderate confidence
Free breakfast clubs and limits on branded school uniform items should save lower-income families a modest but real amount each year; the main caveat is that the breakfast club savings are lower than the government claims, and take-up may be limited.
The evidence
- Labour will fund free breakfast clubs in every primary school and limit branded uniform and PE kit items to reduce family costs. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “To ease the cost of living, Labour will fund free breakfast clubs in every primary school and limit the number of branded uniform and PE kit items schools can require.”
- The average cost of school uniforms is £422 for secondary school pupils and £287 for primary school pupils. — moneywellness.com (media) — “the average cost of school uniforms was £422 for secondary school pupils and £287 for primary school pupils”
- Currently 24% of primary and 70% of secondary schools require five or more branded items. — theguardian.com (media) — “24% of primary and 70% of secondary schools require five or more branded items, with some parents reporting demands for 10 or more”
- A survey in April 2025 showed one in five schools had increased the number of branded items required over the past year. — gov.uk (media) — “A survey in April 2025 showed that one in five schools had actually increased the number of branded items required over the past year”
- The proposed laws will limit branded items to three, excluding ties. — theguardian.com (media) — “The proposed laws will limit the number of branded items schools can require to three, excluding ties”
- The government estimates the uniform cap could save families more than £50 per child and wipe over £70 million off uniform costs nationally. — gov.uk (media) — “government analysis revealed new laws will wipe over £70 million off the cost of uniform for families across the country”
- The government projects free breakfast clubs could save parents up to £450 a year. — theguardian.com (media) — “The government projects that free breakfast clubs could save parents up to £450 a year”
- Current take-up rates for existing breakfast clubs are relatively low, typically ranging from 20% to 35%. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “Current take-up rates for existing breakfast clubs are relatively low, typically ranging from 20% to 35%”
- The IFS warns that universally expanding breakfast clubs could create 'mission creep' for schools if not accompanied by guaranteed core funding increases. — schoolfoodmatters.org (media) — “expanding free breakfast clubs universally could lead to "mission creep" for schools, adding to the burdens of staff and leaders who are already facing pressures related to pay, workload, and recruitment”
- The Schoolwear Association argues that reducing branded items could paradoxically increase costs by forcing families to replace lower-quality uniforms more frequently. — theguardian.com (media) — “reducing the emphasis on "higher-quality branded items" might force families to replace uniforms more frequently”
- Despite existing statutory guidance from 2021 urging schools to minimise branded items, nearly half of parents reported no change in school uniform policies. — moneywellness.com (media) — “Despite statutory guidance from 2021 urging schools to minimize branded items, nearly half of parents surveyed by the Children's Society reported no change in school uniform policies”
Biggest unknown: Whether breakfast club take-up reaches enough families — currently 20–35% of pupils use existing clubs — to deliver savings at population scale, and whether the uniform cap genuinely reduces costs rather than displacing them to more frequent replacements.
Our reading: Two mechanisms directly affect O2: free breakfast clubs and a uniform branded-item cap. On breakfast clubs, the government's £450-per-family saving claim is challenged by the IFS, which calculates the committed £315 million equates to roughly £70 per pupil. Even a food-only model funds all primary pupils at ~£55 per pupil annually, so a real but modest saving is plausible for families who actually use the clubs. However, existing take-up of 20–35% limits population-scale impact; families who most need the relief must actively participate. On uniform costs, the cap at three branded items is a concrete statutory instrument, not just guidance — this distinguishes it from the 2021 guidance which left nearly half of parents seeing no change. The government estimates £70 million in aggregate savings and more than £50 per child; these are modest but credible at the lower bound. The Schoolwear Association's counter-claim that cheaper items require more frequent replacement is possible but unsubstantiated by cited evidence. The direction is a genuine 'improves' because both measures are committed instruments with funding or legislative backing (not merely aspirational), and the uniform cap addresses a demonstrated gap where existing soft guidance failed. Magnitude is minor: the per-family savings in both cases are real but small relative to overall household budgets, and breakfast club benefits depend heavily on take-up. The evidence leans toward modest improvement for lower-income families, particularly on uniforms where statutory enforcement is stronger.
Education & opportunity — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy aims to improve inclusion for children with special needs, provide free breakfast clubs in every primary school, and cut school uniform costs — all of which could help poorer children access better education. The main caveat is whether the funding is enough to make the SEND reforms work in practice.
The evidence
- Labour will improve inclusivity and expertise in mainstream schools for SEND pupils while ensuring special schools cater to complex needs. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “improving inclusivity and expertise in mainstream schools while ensuring special schools cater to complex needs”
- All schools will be required to cooperate with local authorities on admissions, SEND inclusion, and place planning. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “require all schools to cooperate with local authorities on admissions, SEND inclusion, and place planning”
- Labour will fund free breakfast clubs in every primary school. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Labour will fund free breakfast clubs in every primary school”
- Labour will limit the number of branded uniform and PE kit items schools can require. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “limit the number of branded uniform and PE kit items schools can require”
- The number of children with SEND in mainstream education fell by almost a quarter between 2012 and 2019, while attendance at specialist schools rose by nearly a third. — theguardian.com (media) — “the number of children with SEND in mainstream education significantly decreased, falling by almost a quarter between 2012 and 2019, while attendance at specialist schools rose by nearly a third”
- Some schools are already resisting local authority efforts to place SEND children, with some academies limiting admissions to avoid in-year applications. — schoolsweek.co.uk (media) — “some schools are resisting local authority efforts to place children with SEND in their classes, with some academies allegedly limiting admissions to avoid in-year applications”
- Current take-up rates for existing breakfast clubs are low, typically 20–35%. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “Current take-up rates for existing breakfast clubs are relatively low, typically ranging from 20% to 35%”
- The average cost of school uniforms is £422 for secondary pupils and £287 for primary pupils. — moneywellness.com (media) — “the average cost of school uniforms was £422 for secondary school pupils and £287 for primary school pupils”
- One in five schools increased the number of branded items required over the past year, despite existing guidance. — gov.uk (media) — “one in five schools had actually increased the number of branded items required over the past year”
- The government plans to invest £3 billion for up to 60,000 additional special-needs places including inclusion bases in mainstream schools. — theguardian.com (media) — “The government plans to invest £3 billion to create up to 60,000 additional special-needs places, including "inclusion bases" within mainstream schools”
- Critics argue the £1.6 billion Inclusive Mainstream Fund would amount to only thousands of pounds per school setting per year — insufficient to transform provision. — wsws.org (media) — “the proposed £1.6 billion Inclusive Mainstream Fund, spread over three years, would amount to only "thousands of pounds per setting per year" and sometimes just a few hours of teacher time per week”
- Government projections suggest approximately one in eight children currently receiving high-level SEND support will transition to weaker plans between 2030 and 2035. — wsws.org (media) — “approximately one in eight children currently receiving high-level support will transition to weaker plans between 2030 and 2035”
- Critics argue the proposed shift from EHCPs to Individual Support Plans means most SEND children will lose legally enforceable support. — wsws.org (media) — “Critics argue that ISPs lack the legal enforceability and guaranteed provision of EHCPs, raising fears of rationing support based on cost-cutting”
- Labour has committed £315 million to breakfast clubs by 2028-29; the IFS estimates this could fund a food-only model for all primary pupils or a fuller model for about 60%. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “this amount could fund all primary school pupils if a "food-only" model is adopted (costing around £55 per pupil annually) or approximately 60% of pupils if a "traditional breakfast club with some childcare element" is i…”
- The IFS found less evidence that breakfast clubs alone will significantly boost overall school attendance. — schoolfoodmatters.org (media) — “the IFS has found "less evidence" to suggest that breakfast clubs alone will significantly boost overall school attendance”
- The proposed uniform law will limit branded items to three per school, excluding ties, and is estimated to save families more than £50 per child. — theguardian.com (media) — “The proposed laws will limit the number of branded items schools can require to three, excluding ties”
Biggest unknown: Whether the £1.6 billion Inclusive Mainstream Fund and shift from EHCPs to weaker Individual Support Plans will genuinely improve outcomes for SEND children, or reduce their legally enforceable support.
Our reading: This policy bundles three distinct interventions: SEND reform, free breakfast clubs, and uniform cost limits. Each has a plausible positive effect on O7's criteria, but each also carries significant implementation uncertainty. On SEND: the mainstream inclusion drive addresses a real and worsening problem — SEND pupils in mainstream fell sharply over the past decade while specialist rolls rose, partly because mainstream schools lacked expertise and sometimes gamed admissions. Requiring school cooperation with local authorities and investing £3 billion in new specialist places are meaningful structural steps. However, the proposed replacement of EHCPs with ISPs is a serious downside risk: critics with cited evidence argue ISPs lack legal enforceability, and government's own projections show one in eight high-needs children moving to weaker plans. The Alliance for Inclusive Education also noted very little early progress. The balance of cited evidence suggests genuine ambition with a real risk of weakening legal protections for the most vulnerable pupils — a mixed but net-uncertain picture for SEND children specifically. On breakfast clubs: the evidence supports modest educational gains (better concentration, reduced absence) from breakfast programmes, and the IFS endorses cost-effectiveness. The £315 million commitment is substantial though the IFS flags it may not stretch to a full childcare-model rollout for all pupils, and take-up historically runs at only 20–35%. The attendance boost claim is also questioned. Net effect is modestly positive for learning-readiness, especially for poorer pupils. On uniform costs: capping branded items at three is a direct, concrete financial relief for families — the Children's Society data shows uniforms cost £287–£422, and the measure is estimated to save over £50 per child. One in five schools was increasing branded items even under existing guidance, so statutory limits are a meaningful step up. The Schoolwear Association's counter-claim (that quality items last longer) is an advocacy-sector view without independent corroboration in the evidence. Overall, the policy improves O7 on balance — it targets real barriers (cost, SEND inclusion, mainstream expertise) with funded commitments. The SEND legal-protection concern is the most serious caveat and prevents a 'major' rating.