Education Law in Cardiff.
Education law solicitors in Cardiff for students, parents and families. Help with university appeals, school exclusions and admissions, and additional learning needs, with knowledge of the Welsh ALN system and the local council.
Specialist education law advice, for Cardiff students and families
If you need an education law solicitor in Cardiff, we help students, parents and families challenge unfair decisions made by schools, colleges, universities and the local council. Cardiff is a university city, so a lot of our work is for students, academic appeals, allegations of academic misconduct, disciplinary and fitness-to-practise cases, and complaints that reach the Office of the Independent Adjudicator. Whatever you’re facing, we’ll explain where you stand and take on as much or as little as you need.
For families with school-age children, we act on exclusions, admission appeals, bullying and disputes with private schools. Admission and exclusion appeals in the city are run through Cardiff Council, and we know how those panels work and how to put your case to them.
Because Cardiff is in Wales, children with additional needs come under the Welsh system, not the English one, an Individual Development Plan (IDP) rather than an EHCP, with appeals to the Education Tribunal for Wales. We work across both the Welsh and English systems, so we can help whether your child is at school in Cardiff or just over the border.
We act for students and families across Cardiff and the wider South Wales area. For a full explanation of how each part of education law works, see our education law page.
Robertsons Solicitors in Cardiff
Find us: 6 Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3RS
Call Cardiff: 029 2023 7777
Tell us your access needs and we’ll do what we can to accommodate you.
Full Cardiff office details & directions →Specialist education law — whatever stage you're at
Find the area most relevant to your situation below.
ALN & Individual Development Plans
Additional Learning Needs in Wales — Individual Development Plans (IDPs), annual reviews and the Education Tribunal for Wales.
Learn more →School Admissions Appeals
Appealing where a child has not been offered a preferred school place.
Learn more →School Exclusions
Challenging fixed-term and permanent exclusions — governor panels and the Independent Review Panel.
Learn more →SEN & EHC Plans (England)
Special Educational Needs in England — EHC needs assessments, EHC Plans and the First-tier Tribunal (SEND).
Learn more →Tribunal Appeals & Judicial Review
Challenging decisions — Education Tribunal appeals (Wales and England) and judicial review of local authority or school decisions.
Learn more →University & Student Disputes
For university students — academic misconduct, academic appeals, fitness to practise proceedings and complaints to the OIA.
Learn more →Free tools for education law
Quick, free and private. Get an instant indication, then talk it through with us.
““Efficient professional staff, prompt reply to queries.””
Mr BrownHow we work in Cardiff
Whether you're a student facing a university decision or a parent up against a school or the local council, the other side usually knows the system far better than you do. So our job is to even things up, to explain your rights, set out the strongest way forward, and move quickly, because education deadlines are often tight. We'll be honest about your prospects from the first conversation.
- Support for students at Cardiff's universities, as well as parents and families
- A clear view of your rights and the strongest route, from the first conversation
- Knowledge of the Welsh ALN system and Cardiff Council's processes
- Quick to act, because academic and appeal deadlines don't wait
Who would be looking after you?
Some of your education law specialists, supported by the wider Robertsons team.
Dannielle Howard
Dannielle works in the Education Law department at Robertsons Solicitors, supporting clients on school exclusions, admissions appeals and special educational needs matters. She helped develop the firm's Education Law team alongside Rhys Palmer and was shortlisted for "Legal Assistant of the Year" at the 2023 Wales Legal Awards.
View profileFfion Davies
Ffion is an Education Law Executive. She supports clients through university and school matters, with a particular interest in SEN and ALN cases, working alongside the department's solicitors to help secure positive outcomes for children, families and students.
View profileRhys Palmer
Rhys is Associate Director in the Education Law team. He specialises in SEND and EHCP appeals, school exclusions and admissions, and disputes involving university students — acting for families and students across England and Wales. A recognised voice on education law, he has been quoted by national media including The Independent and Times Higher Education on student rights and university accountability.
View profileReal stories from real clients
“I cannot recommend Rhys Palmer and the Education Law team highly enough. Rhys represented me in a complex set of EHCP appeals involving EOTAS provision, and the outcomes were excellent.”C Ward EHCP appeals
“Rhys Palmer was amazing and covered every angle of my case. He uncovered the flaws in the university's approach that led to my full exoneration from allegations of academic misconduct using AI.”A S Academic misconduct
“My experience with Robertsons Solicitors was very effective. They were prompt and informative when I asked questions and helped me navigate what was a difficult process with skill and dexterity.”Sam Benson Academic appeal
What makes us different?
A Cardiff firm since 1903
Over a century advising people across the city, and still independent today.
We know the Welsh system
Additional-needs cases in Cardiff run through the ALN process and the Education Tribunal for Wales, and that's where we work.
From school to university
We cover the full range, from a child's additional needs to a student's academic appeal.
What do clients ask us most often?
No — you can bring an appeal yourself, and many parents do. The tribunals are designed to be accessible, and you do not need a lawyer to take part. That said, appeals are won on evidence and on how clearly the case is put. A specialist solicitor can help you gather the right expert reports, prepare a working document setting out the provision in dispute, and present your case at the hearing — which can make a real difference to the outcome, particularly in complex cases. We are honest from the outset about whether an appeal is likely to succeed and where your time and money are best spent.
Find out about Tribunal Appeals & Judicial Review →A request for an IDP can be made by a parent, a child who is considered capable of exercising their own rights, or a young person. Requests should be made in writing to the school if the child is in maintained education, or to the local authority if the child is educated otherwise than at school or is being home educated. The school or local authority must then decide whether the child has ALN and, if so, prepare an IDP. There is no prescribed form for a request — a clear written letter identifying the child and explaining the concerns about their learning is sufficient. If you are unsure whether your child has ALN, requesting an assessment is the first step. Schools also have a duty to identify ALN proactively — you do not always need to make a formal request.
Find out about ALN & Individual Development Plans →When an allegation is made against a teacher or other member of school staff — whether by a pupil, parent, or colleague — the school must follow a specific process governed by statutory guidance. The allegation must be reported to the school's designated safeguarding lead, who must then refer it to the Local Authority Designated Officer (LADO) if it meets the threshold: that the person has behaved in a way that has harmed or may have harmed a child, possibly committed a criminal offence against a child, or behaved in a way that indicates they may pose a risk of harm to children. The LADO coordinates the response, which may involve a strategy discussion, referral to the police, a disciplinary investigation, or a combination. The process is designed to protect children while also ensuring fairness to the accused person.
A barring decision by the DBS places a person on the children's barred list or the adults' barred list, preventing them from working in regulated activity. Before making a barring decision, the DBS must give the person an opportunity to make representations — this is the critical stage at which specialist legal advice makes the most difference. Once a barring decision is made, it can only be reviewed after a minimum period of three years for those under 18 at the time of referral, or ten years for adults. An appeal against a barring decision can be made to the Upper Tribunal, but only on the grounds that the DBS made a legal error — not simply because the person disagrees with the decision. The grounds for appeal are narrow, which is why the representations stage is so important.
A school admissions appeal is a formal hearing before an independent panel that reviews a decision to refuse a child a place at a particular school. Every parent refused a school place has the right to appeal. Appeals can be made when a child is refused a place at a preferred school during the normal admissions round, when a parent applies for a place outside the normal round and is refused, or when an in-year application is turned down. The appeal panel is independent of the school and the local authority — it has the power to overturn the admissions authority's decision and direct that the child be admitted. Appeals are heard annually, with most taking place in May and June following the March offer day for primary and secondary school places.
Find out about School Admissions Appeals →An independent review panel (IRP) is a panel of three or five members — including a lay member, a headteacher, and a governor — that reviews a permanent exclusion decision in England following a governing body decision to uphold the exclusion. A request for an IRP must be made within 15 school days of the governing body's decision. The IRP can uphold the exclusion, recommend that the governing body reconsider, or quash the exclusion and direct reinstatement. The IRP cannot itself reinstate the pupil — it can only direct or recommend. If the IRP finds that the governing body acted unlawfully or irrationally, it can direct reconsideration. Taking legal advice before the IRP hearing — and being represented at it — significantly improves the chances of a successful outcome.
Find out about School Exclusions →Wales operates a distinct education support system for children and young people with learning difficulties or disabilities — the Additional Learning Needs (ALN) system, introduced by the Additional Learning Needs and Education Tribunal (Wales) Act 2018. It replaced the previous Special Educational Needs framework in Wales and is separate from the SEN and EHCP system in England. The Welsh system uses different terminology — ALN rather than SEN, Individual Development Plans (IDPs) rather than EHCPs, and Additional Learning Provision (ALP) rather than special educational provision. The tribunal for Wales is the Education Tribunal for Wales (ETW). If your child is educated in Wales, the Welsh ALN system applies regardless of where you live.
Find out about ALN & Individual Development Plans →In a standard admissions appeal, the panel carries out a two-stage balancing exercise. First, it considers whether the school is genuinely full — whether admitting an additional child would cause prejudice to the efficient education or use of resources at the school. If the school is full, the panel then weighs the prejudice to the school against the case for the individual child being admitted. If the case for the child outweighs the prejudice to the school, the appeal must be allowed. The stronger and more specific your reasons for needing this particular school, the more weight they carry in the balance. Understanding this exercise helps parents focus their appeal on the factors the panel will actually be weighing — not simply asserting that they want the school.
Find out about School Admissions Appeals →Didn't find what you were looking for? Speak to one of our education law specialists directly.
Practical advice you can read at your own pace
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Across South Wales and the South West
Cardiff
6 Park Place, Cardiff, CF10 3RS
029 2023 7777
Visit office pageSwansea
Princess Quarter, 18 Princess Way, Swansea, SA1 3LW
01792 720 721
Visit office pageBarry
6 St Nicholas Road, Barry, CF62 6QW
01446 745 660
Visit office pageBristol
Trym Lodge,1 Henbury Road, Westbury-On-Trym, Bristol, BS9 3HQ
Appointment only0117 325 9545
Visit office pageNewport
8a Pentonville, Newport, NP20 5HB
Appointment only01633 742 741
Visit office pageGet started with our education law team
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