Family & Divorce Law

The Law on Taking Children Out of School for Holidays in Term Time

Every child in the UK must get an education.

05 Aug 2024

Team name
Jenny Waite

Jenny Waite

This starts from the school term after their fifth birthday and lasts until the last Friday in June of the school year, in which they reach the age of sixteen. Education is compulsory in the UK and children can only miss school if they are either too ill to attend or have permission in advance from the school.

New statutory guidance has been issued by the Department for Education which will come into effect on 19th August 2024. The aim of the guidance is to help improve school attendance across the education sector.

Authorised absences

A parent or carer can approach the headteacher to ask for permission in advance of removing a child from school. If the headteacher grants the request, this will be considered an authorised absence. For example, a parent may ask that their child be excused from school to attend a wedding or a funeral and it is likely such a request will be granted.

Holidays in term time

Some parents book holidays outside the school holiday window to take advantage of cheaper pricing. They may ask the headteacher for authorisation to remove their child from school to take them on holiday. If the headteacher does not authorise the absence or if the parent simply does not ask for authorisation, the school will record the child as having an unauthorised absence.

Consequences of unauthorised absence

The new national framework requires local councils to consider issuing a fine where there has been five days or more unauthorised absence over a rolling period of ten school weeks. The five days’ unauthorised absence are described as ten sessions.

Fines will be levied on each parent. Up until 18th August 2024 the fine is £60, rising to £120 if the parent does not settle the fine within 28 days. From 19th August 2024, the fine increases to £80 and £160 where the parent does not pay the fine within 28 days. This rate is in line with inflation and is the first increase since 2012. The fines are also based on a per child per parent basis.

The fine will take the form of a penalty notice. A penalty notice can be issued by the headteacher (or a deputy or assistant head), a local authority officer or the police.

Fines per parent will be capped to two fines within any three year period. Once this limit has been reached, other action like a parenting order or prosecution will be considered.

Repeated or persistent unauthorised absences

Should the child have persistent unauthorised absences, the headteacher and local authority have additional remedies available to address the problem.

These include prosecution, parenting orders, education supervision orders and school attendance orders. These types of remedies will involve the local council social work department and are used in cases of persistent unauthorised absences. It is unlikely those taking children out of school during term time to go on holiday will be likely to face these types of orders unless it is a frequent occurrence.

Conclusion

If you do decide to go on holiday during term time, before you book, seek authorisation from the headteacher to remove your child from school. There will be no consequences if you receive authorisation. If your request for authorisation is denied and you go ahead and take your child out of school, you may face a fine if the absence from school lasts more than five days. Five days unauthorised absence is the trigger point. That means if there have been previous unauthorised absences unrelated to holidays, these will count towards the five days.

If you take your child out of school for more than five days during term time, each parent is likely to face a fine. Clearly, where parents have separated and only one parent is taking the child on holiday, the parent who is not going on holiday will not be affected by this.

M&P Commentary

Jenny Waite, a Paralegal in Mullis & Peake’s Family team, said:

“The changes to the statutory guidance in relation to unauthorised absence from school will probably not stop parents from removing their child/ren from school during term time given that holiday companies are able to increase the price significantly during the school holidays. This means that parents still find it much cheaper to take a holiday during term time and simply pay the fine. It is important that parents weigh up the option of their child/ren missing education compared to making memories as a family. It will of course be less of an issue for some families than others as with the increasing costs of living expenses it is now even harder for some families to afford go on holiday. Parents should be made aware of the new rule where if they receive a second fine within a three year period the fine is increased to £160 per child per parent and any further unauthorised absence could then be subject to a parenting order or even prosecution. The new guidance will have parents considering their options more carefully.”

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