Local SEND context
For families in North West, the practical question is not just how Warrington performs on paper, but what the local data means for a child who needs support now. The figures below help identify where delays, disputes or evidence gaps may create pressure points.
Warrington is responsible for 2,309 active EHC plans, with 487 new plans recorded in the latest 2025 data. For parents, that means EHCP decisions are being made inside a busy local system where clear evidence and a well-structured request can make a material difference.
Warrington issued 58% of new EHCPs within 20 weeks (283 of 487). Even where most plans are on time, a significant minority of families may still need help responding to delay, poor draft wording or missing provision.
Warrington's most recent Area SEND inspection outcome was inconsistent. This provides useful background, but individual EHCP decisions still turn on the child's assessed needs, the available evidence and whether provision is written clearly enough to be enforceable.
Warrington covers families in Appleton, Bewsey and Whitecross, Birchwood, Burtonwood and Winwick, Chapelford and Old Hall, Culcheth, Glazebury and Croft, Fairfield and Howley, Grappenhall, Great Sankey North and Whittle Hall, Great Sankey South, Latchford East, Latchford West, Lymm North and Thelwall, Lymm South, Orford, Penketh and Cuerdley, Poplars and Hulme, Poulton North, Poulton South, Rixton and Woolston, Stockton Heath and Westbrook and other areas within North West.
These figures are drawn from the Department for Education's SEN2 data collection and published inspection information where available.
Active EHC Plans
2,309
New EHC Plans
487
Issued within 20 weeks
58%
283 of 487 new plans
Tribunal Cases
37
Mediation Cases
41
You can request an EHC Needs Assessment directly from Warrington local authority. The strongest requests usually include clear school evidence, professional reports where available, examples of unmet need and a concise explanation of why SEN Support is not enough.
If Warrington refuses to assess or refuses to issue an EHCP after assessment, parents and young people usually have a right of appeal to the SEND Tribunal. You should read the decision letter carefully, note the appeal deadline and request mediation information before deciding how to proceed.
A SEN advocate can help by reviewing evidence, strengthening the EHC needs assessment request, checking draft EHCP wording and preparing the issues for mediation or SEND Tribunal.
In the latest published data, 58% of new EHCPs in Warrington were issued within the 20-week timescale, so families should keep dated records and follow up missed deadlines. If your case is delayed, ask for written updates, keep copies of every submission and consider taking advice before accepting a weak draft plan.