Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ASSISTANCE FOR EDUCATION OF ALL CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › § 1412
To get federal special education money, a State must send a plan that promises it will provide and protect special education services. The State must make a free, appropriate public education available to children with disabilities ages 3 through 21 (including children who are suspended or expelled), subject to limited exceptions for children ages 3–5 and 18–21 when state law or practice says otherwise, and for some youth in adult prisons who were not identified or did not have an IEP before incarceration. The State must set a goal and timetable to serve all children with disabilities, find and evaluate all children who need services (including homeless children, wards of the State, and parentally placed private school children), and make an IEP or IFSP for each child. Children must be educated with nondisabled peers to the maximum extent appropriate, and funding rules must not force segregated placements. Parents and children get procedural safeguards, non‑discriminatory testing in the child’s native language when feasible, and confidentiality of records. Children moving from early intervention to preschool must have an IEP or IFSP by their third birthday. For parentally placed private school children the State or local agency must consult with private schools, spend a proportionate share of federal funds on those children, and keep records; parents may sometimes be reimbursed for private school tuition if the public agency did not provide a timely FAPE, with rules about notice (including a 10 business‑day rule) and exceptions. The State education agency must supervise all special education programs, keep qualified staff (special ed teachers certified, trained paraprofessionals, bachelor’s degree for teachers, no emergency waivers), set performance goals and report progress, include students with disabilities in statewide assessments with needed accommodations or alternate assessments, and use federal funds only as allowed (not commingled; federal funds must supplement, not replace, other funds). The Governor must require interagency agreements to define who pays for services and how disputes are resolved. The State must hold public hearings before adopting policies, maintain an advisory panel with parents and people with disabilities, monitor and correct racial or ethnic disproportionality in suspensions/expulsions, adopt the National Instructional Materials Accessibility Standard, prevent overidentifying students by race, and prohibit requiring a prescription for controlled substances as a condition for school or special education evaluation or services. The Secretary must give notice and a hearing before denying a State’s eligibility; certain procedural timelines for federal action and appeals apply (45 days to respond, 60 days to petition a court).
Full Legal Text
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1412
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73