June 2026

James Dixey
Founder and Managing Director

Is Your SEN School Ready to Sell? Five Things Buyers Will Scrutinise
James Dixey — Founder and Managing Director · 8 min read · James Dixey Limited
If you run a specialist educational needs school, the buyer universe for your business is more active and better-capitalised than at any point in the last decade. The right preparation in the eighteen months before a sale process consistently adds more to the price than any single negotiation choice during the process itself.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
• Good SEN schools — particularly residential ones with strong commissioning relationships and freehold property — trade in the 6–10x EBITDA range. The upper end is reached for purpose-built or strong-condition residential settings with diversified LA commissioner books, current dual Ofsted/CQC Good or Outstanding ratings, and a credible management succession beyond the founder/RM.
• Buyers scrutinise five things: the Ofsted / CQC regulatory picture, the local authority commissioner spread, staff qualifications and retention, the property and capacity for growth, and the tribunal and complaints history.
• Local authority concentration matters. A school where 60% of placements come from a single LA is exposed. Buyers will price that risk in, and the preparation work to broaden the commissioner book is one of the most valuable items an owner can address in the eighteen months before a sale.
• Staff turnover below 20% is notable in a sector where workforce churn is structurally high. Anything above 30% will attract questions — not necessarily as a deal-breaker, but as a signal that requires explanation alongside a credible plan to address it.
Thinking about selling your SEN school?
Talk to us. The first conversation is confidential and we'll tell you honestly where your business sits today and what twelve to eighteen months of preparation could add to the outcome.
Buyers for specialist educational needs schools are more active and better-capitalised than at any point in the last decade. The buyer universe includes purpose-formed PE-backed children's services platforms, established trade groups expanding their specialist provision, and overseas buyers — increasingly American REITs and family offices — entering UK specialist education and care.
Good SEN schools — particularly residential ones with strong commissioning relationships and freehold property — trade in the 6–10x EBITDA range. The upper end of that range is reached for purpose-built or strong-condition residential settings with diversified local authority commissioner books, current dual Ofsted/CQC Good or Outstanding ratings, and a credible management succession beyond the founder and Registered Manager. The lower end applies where any of those conditions is missing. A sector-typical, well-run SEN school in good condition will sit comfortably in the middle of that range; the preparation work in the eighteen months before a sale is what moves a business towards the upper end.
Here are the five things sophisticated buyers will scrutinise in due diligence. They are also the five areas where eighteen months of preparation makes the biggest difference.
1. Ofsted and CQC: the dual regulatory picture
Most SEN schools are inspected by Ofsted under the social care common inspection framework if they are residential, and by the Care Quality Commission if they provide regulated personal care. The dual-regulator picture is one of the most important things buyers test, because either regulator can act on the school's registration in ways that materially affect the deal.
The questions buyers ask are predictable. When was the last Ofsted inspection? What was the outcome? Are there any actions or recommendations still open? Has there been a change of Registered Manager since the last inspection (and if so, when does the regulator next propose to re-inspect on that basis)? On the CQC side: any recent enforcement action, conditions, or warning notices? Any current notifications outstanding?
A clean inspection file is genuinely a competitive advantage. A patchy file is workable but priced. The preparation work is to know exactly what is in the file before a buyer's diligence team asks for it, and to have a credible response to every item — including the items the seller themselves would prefer not to discuss.
2. Local authority funding and the referral pipeline
Buyers think about specialist education revenue in terms of commissioner spread and contract terms. A school where 60% of its placements come from a single local authority is exposed — to the LA's commissioning decisions, to the LA's budget pressure, and to any single procurement event that could move the placements elsewhere.
A school where 60% of its placements come from a single local authority is exposed. Buyers will price that risk in — and the preparation work to broaden the commissioner book is one of the most valuable items an owner can address in the eighteen months before a sale.
The threshold buyers tend to apply is that no single LA should account for more than 20–25% of revenue. Schools with a spread of eight to fifteen commissioning authorities, with no single one above 20%, sit at the strong end of the diligence conversation. Schools concentrated on one or two LAs need to either tell the story of why the concentration is structurally durable (geographic catchment, specialism that no other school in the area provides, long-standing framework relationships) or work to broaden the commissioner mix in the months before going to market.
Beyond commissioner concentration, buyers will also scrutinise the contract structure. Are placements on spot contracts, framework agreements, or block contracts? What is the average length of placement? What is the historic exit rate (placements ending early)? How are fee uplifts negotiated? Each of these has a price implication.
3. Staff qualifications, retention and safeguarding
Specialist education is a workforce-intensive sector with structurally high staff turnover. The diligence picture here is about three things: the qualifications and competency of the staff base, the retention rate over the recent past, and the safeguarding record.
On qualifications, buyers want to see the breakdown of teaching, therapy, support and care staff by qualification level, with the relevant DSL (Designated Safeguarding Lead) and SENDCo qualifications named individuals. On retention, the question is staff turnover. A turnover rate consistently below 20% is notable in a sector where workforce churn is structurally high. Anything above 30% will attract questions — not necessarily as a deal-breaker, but as a signal that requires explanation alongside a credible plan to address it.
On safeguarding, buyers will review the full safeguarding file — every recorded incident, every Section 47 enquiry, every LADO referral, every closed and open action. Section 47 of the Children Act 1989 enquiries are formal child-protection investigations triggered when a local authority has reasonable cause to suspect a child is suffering, or likely to suffer, significant harm. The presence of historic Section 47 enquiries is not in itself a problem; the pattern of them, the way the school responded, and the regulator's view of the response is what matters.
4. Property: suitability and capacity for growth
Property is one of the largest single items on the SEN diligence list, both because it is usually the largest asset on the balance sheet and because it determines the school's growth potential.
Buyers test three things on property. First, the legal position — freehold, leasehold, with a charge over it, sitting in a separate property company. Second, the operational suitability — is the building fit for purpose as a specialist setting (purpose-built or converted, single-storey or multi-storey, accessible bedrooms, therapy and teaching space, outdoor and sensory space)? Third, the capacity for growth — is there scope to expand the bed count or day-place count without new planning permission? Many buyers' underwriting case is built on capacity expansion under their ownership, so the planning position genuinely matters to the price.
As with ELT, the OpCo/PropCo split is often the right structuring choice. A purpose-built specialist setting can be more valuable to a healthcare REIT than to an operational buyer; selling the freehold on a long lease to the OpCo, and selling the OpCo separately to a children's services platform, can produce a meaningfully better total outcome than a single sale of the combined entity.
5. Tribunal and complaints history
The final area buyers scrutinise is the tribunal and formal complaints history. SENDIST — the Special Educational Needs and Disability Tribunal, formally the First-tier Tribunal (Special Educational Needs and Disability) — hears appeals against local authority decisions on EHCPs and on discrimination claims. A school that has been a party to multiple recent SENDIST cases, or has been the subject of multiple complaints to the Information Commissioner or the regulator, is a buyer concern.
The framing here matters. The presence of complaints is not automatically a problem. Some level of complaints, particularly in a sector dealing with vulnerable young people and anxious parents, is structurally inevitable. The pattern of complaints, the quality of the school's response, and the outcome of any formal proceeding is what buyers actually price. A school that has been formally upheld in three SENDIST cases as the rightful provider is a different proposition to a school that has had three placements ended early by tribunal direction.
The preparation work is to be able to walk a buyer through every formal proceeding, every complaint and every notification on file, with the response and the outcome documented. The work to put this right is mostly mechanical — pull the records, document them, prepare the diligence response — and it materially de-risks the diligence phase.
If you can answer the questions in all five of these areas
Most SEN owners find that one or two areas need attention before they are truly ready. The framing we would offer is this: the work in each of these five areas in the eighteen months before a sale is what determines whether the outcome lands in the bottom half or the top half of the 6–10x EBITDA range. For a school with £1m of EBITDA, that is the difference between a £6m outcome and a £10m outcome — a £4m equity-value swing that genuinely is determined by preparation, not by negotiation.
It is also why we have so many conversations with SEN owners that start two years before the sale. The owners who get the strongest outcomes are the ones who started the work early, did the unglamorous file-tidying, broadened the commissioner book, addressed the staff retention pattern, and walked into the process with all five of these areas in a defensible position. The owners who come to us six months before they want to exit can still run a good process — but the work to clear the upper end of the range is largely no longer available to us.
Related: How international buyers — including REITs and overseas education groups — are reshaping the UK independent and prep school M&A market. (/insights/international-buyers-uk-independent-prep-school)
Considering a SEN school sale in the next two years?
The eighteen-month conversation is the one that consistently produces the strongest outcomes. Start it now. The first call is always confidential.
SOURCES
[1] Regulatory framework: Ofsted Social Care Common Inspection Framework; CQC adult and children's services registration and inspection guidance.
[2] Section 47 of the Children Act 1989: formal child-protection enquiry procedure.
[3] SENDIST: First-tier Tribunal (Special Educational Needs and Disability), HM Courts & Tribunals Service.
[4] Local authority commissioning patterns: dialogue with active commissioners in the West Yorkshire, Greater London and Greater Manchester catchments, 2024–2026, anonymised.
GLOSSARY
CQC (Care Quality Commission): The regulator for care and healthcare services in England.
DSL (Designated Safeguarding Lead): The named staff member responsible for child protection in a school.
Due diligence: The detailed checks a buyer makes before completing a purchase.
EBITDA: Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation — a standard measure of underlying profit.
EHCP (Education, Health and Care Plan): A legal document setting out a child's special educational needs and required support.
ELT (English Language Teaching): The industry of teaching English to non-native speakers, often through language schools.
Equity-value swing: The difference in the owner's sale proceeds caused by a particular factor.
Exit rate: The proportion of placements that end earlier than expected.
Family office: A private firm that manages the investments and wealth of a wealthy family.
Fee uplift: An agreed increase in the fee a commissioner pays for a placement.
Healthcare REIT: A property-investment company specialising in healthcare buildings.
LADO (Local Authority Designated Officer): The official who handles allegations against adults who work with children.
Local authority (LA): A council responsible for local public services, including funding placements.
Multiple / EBITDA multiple: A number multiplied by profit (EBITDA) to estimate a business's value.
Ofsted (Office for Standards in Education): The regulator for schools and children's services.
OpCo/PropCo: Splitting a business into a trading company and a separate property-owning company.
PE-backed: Owned or financed by a private equity fund.
REIT (Real Estate Investment Trust): A listed company that owns property and pays most of its income to shareholders.
Registered Manager (RM): The legally responsible manager a regulator requires a care service to have.
Section 47 enquiry: A formal child-protection investigation under the Children Act 1989 when serious harm is suspected.
SEN (Special Educational Needs): Education for children who need extra or specialist support to learn.
SENDCo (Special Educational Needs Coordinator): The teacher responsible for SEN provision in a school.
SENDIST (Special Educational Needs and Disability Tribunal): The tribunal that hears appeals about SEN decisions and disability discrimination.
Underwriting case: The financial reasoning a buyer or lender uses to justify a deal.
James Dixey Limited — Specialist M&A for regulated, owner-managed businesses in Care, Education, Fire & Security and Other Regulated Services.