Attendance warnings, fines and prosecution in Wales: what parents need to know

 

Attendance warnings, fines and prosecution in Wales: what parents need to know

(especially if your child has Additional Learning Needs)

Important disclaimer
Learn Without Limits CIC is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.
This article is for general information and guidance only, based on Welsh and UK legislation, statutory guidance, and publicly reported cases.
It should not be relied upon as a substitute for independent legal advice.
Parents facing enforcement action, fines, or prosecution may wish to seek specialist legal or advocacy support.


1. The legal duty to secure education in Wales

The starting point in law is section 7 of the Education Act 1996, which applies in Wales.

The Act states:

“The parent of every child of compulsory school age shall cause him to receive efficient full-time education suitable
(a) to his age, ability and aptitude, and
(b) to any special educational needs he may have,
either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.”
(Education Act 1996, section 7)

Two points matter legally and are often misunderstood:

  1. The duty is to secure suitable education, not attendance at any cost.

  2. Regular school attendance is one lawful way of meeting the duty, but it is not the only way.

However, this is still a parental duty, and failure to meet it can carry serious legal consequences if the statutory tests are met.


2. What attendance letters mean in practice

Most attendance letters sent by schools or local authorities are administrative.

They are usually issued to:

  • notify parents of attendance concerns

  • request engagement or meetings

  • warn that enforcement action may follow

At this stage:

  • no criminal offence has been proven

  • no fine has yet been issued

  • no prosecution has started

That said, attendance letters are important.
Failure to respond or engage can later be relied upon by a local authority as evidence that a parent did not take reasonable steps.


3. Fixed Penalty Notices (attendance fines) in Wales

The legal basis

Attendance fines in Wales are governed by the Education (Penalty Notices) (Wales) Regulations 2013.

These regulations allow a local authority to issue a Fixed Penalty Notice for unauthorised absence.

Key legal facts parents should understand:

  • Penalty notices are discretionary, not automatic.

  • They are intended as an alternative to prosecution, not a replacement for the law.

  • Paying a penalty notice usually prevents prosecution for the same period of absence.

  • Failure to pay may lead the authority to consider prosecution for the underlying attendance offence, not for non-payment itself.

A penalty notice is not a criminal conviction.


4. Welsh Government guidance on enforcement

Welsh Government guidance makes clear that enforcement should not be the default response.

The Attendance Framework for Wales states that legal intervention should be:

“used sparingly, consistently, and only where other approaches have failed.”
(Welsh Government, Attendance Framework for Wales)

The guidance also stresses the importance of understanding why a child is not attending school, rather than relying solely on attendance percentages.

Although guidance is not law, local authorities are expected to have regard to it when making decisions.


5. When fines may be inappropriate

Welsh Government guidance and established practice indicate that penalty notices are often inappropriate where absence relates to:

It is important to be clear that guidance does not create immunity from enforcement.
These factors do not automatically prevent fines or prosecution, but they are highly relevant to whether enforcement is reasonable and proportionate.


6. Additional Learning Needs and attendance

Under the Additional Learning Needs and Education Tribunal (Wales) Act 2018 and the ALN Code for Wales, children with ALN are entitled to additional learning provision that meets their needs.

The ALN Code states:

“A child has additional learning needs if they have a learning difficulty or disability which calls for additional learning provision.”
(ALN Code for Wales)

If required provision is not in place, or the placement cannot meet the child’s needs, non-attendance may reflect system failure rather than wilful parental neglect.

This does not remove parental responsibility, but it is directly relevant to how attendance enforcement should be approached.


7. When schools say a child is “unsafe”

If a school states that a child is:

  • unsafe when dysregulated

  • unable to cope in the school environment

  • a risk to themselves or others

this raises serious questions about:

  • suitability of the placement

  • safeguarding responsibilities

  • reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010

A local authority may still pursue attendance action, but parents are entitled to challenge the fairness and logic of enforcement where the school itself says it cannot safely educate the child.


8. When non-attendance becomes a criminal offence

The offence

Prosecution for non-attendance occurs under section 444 of the Education Act 1996.

A court must be satisfied that:

  1. the child failed to attend school regularly, and

  2. the parent failed to secure attendance without reasonable justification.

Section 444(1A) applies where a parent knows their child is failing to attend regularly and fails to act.

Welsh prosecutions under this section do take place.
Parents have been prosecuted in magistrates’ courts following sustained periods of unauthorised absence.


Reasonable justification

Section 444 provides a defence where there is reasonable justification.

Evidence of:

may be relied upon, but the burden is on the parent to evidence this.
This is why early engagement, written responses, and record keeping are so important.


9. What parents should do to protect themselves legally

  1. Do not ignore letters or visits.
    Lack of engagement can increase risk.

  2. Respond in writing, explaining:

    • why your child is absent

    • what needs are unmet

    • what provision is missing or unsuitable

  3. Keep evidence, including emails, medical letters, school statements, and IDP paperwork.

  4. Reframe the issue as provision, not refusal to attend.

  5. Seek advice early if enforcement escalates.


10. Common misconceptions corrected

“Attendance fines are automatic.”
They are discretionary.

“A fine means a criminal record.”
Only a court conviction does.

“ALN prevents prosecution.”
ALN is legally relevant but does not create immunity.

“Nothing happens if letters are ignored.”
Ignoring contact can significantly increase legal risk.


11. Key legislation and guidance parents can quote

  • Education Act 1996, sections 7 and 444

  • Education (Penalty Notices) (Wales) Regulations 2013

  • Additional Learning Needs and Education Tribunal (Wales) Act 2018

  • ALN Code for Wales

  • Welsh Government Attendance Framework


Related guidance: acting early to reduce escalation

If you are at an early stage, or have not yet received a fine or prosecution notice, you may also find this earlier guidance helpful:

Attendance guidance for families in Wales: understanding your options and acting early
https://learnwithoutlimitscic.blogspot.com/2026/01/attendance-guidance-for-families-in.html

That article focuses on:

  • early engagement with schools and local authorities

  • practical steps to reduce escalation

  • documenting unmet need and support requests

  • keeping attendance concerns from becoming enforcement matters

It is designed to sit alongside this article, not replace it.


Final note

Attendance enforcement in Wales is real, serious, and legally grounded.
It is also required to be fair, proportionate, and informed by a child’s needs.

Parents are not powerless, but accuracy, engagement, and evidence matter.

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