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Autism and ADHD School Rights in UAE: What Accommodations Your Child Is Entitled To

Autism and ADHD School Rights in UAE: What Accommodations Your Child Is Entitled To

A lot of parents arrive at this question after a school has told them one of two things: either that their child with autism or ADHD "doesn't qualify" for accommodations because they don't have a severe enough profile, or that any accommodations the school can provide require additional payment on top of standard tuition. Both of those claims are misleading under UAE law.

Federal Law No. 29 of 2006 defines a Person of Determination broadly — covering individuals with any temporary or permanent deficiency in physical, sensory, mental, communicational, educational, or psychological abilities that limits their functioning relative to peers. ADHD and autism spectrum disorder both fall within this definition. The legal protections flow from the diagnosis, not from its severity.

What Schools Must Provide Within Standard Tuition

Both KHDA (Dubai) and ADEK (Abu Dhabi) are explicit that a range of inclusive services are part of a school's standard operating obligation, funded from general tuition revenue. These cannot be separately charged:

  • Differentiated instruction tailored to the child's learning profile
  • Access to the school's Special Educational Needs Coordinator (SENCO) or Head of Inclusion
  • Curriculum modifications that enable participation in mainstream lessons
  • Basic behavioral support strategies within the classroom
  • Environmental accommodations (seating, sensory considerations, exam conditions)
  • Development and implementation of an Individual Education Plan (IEP) in Dubai or a Documented Learning Plan (DLP) in Abu Dhabi

This baseline applies whether the diagnosis is autism, ADHD, dyslexia, developmental delay, or any other condition meeting the Federal Law 29 definition. The school cannot reserve these supports for "severe" cases only, and it cannot argue that because ADHD doesn't affect academics significantly enough, no accommodation is required.

KHDA's position is particularly clear: a formal medical or psychological diagnosis is not even a legal prerequisite for a child to receive targeted support. Schools must adopt a rights-based approach and respond to observed differences in learning, development, or behavior. A diagnosis strengthens a parent's position, but the obligation to support a child doesn't depend on having one.

Specific Accommodations for Autism

For children with autism spectrum disorder, the graduated support framework typically includes:

Within standard provision: Structured routines communicated in advance, visual schedules, sensory-adjusted environments (lighting, noise), quiet workspaces or exit strategies for sensory overload, clear and explicit instructions, and social-emotional support from trained staff. These should be specified in the IEP with measurable targets, not described vaguely as "support will be provided."

Enhanced provision (potentially charged): If clinical assessment demonstrates the child requires dedicated 1:1 Learning Support Assistant (LSA) support for at least 50% of the school day, this crosses into enhanced provision territory. In Dubai, any fee for an LSA must be backed by a KHDA-registered Individualised Service Agreement (ISA). In Abu Dhabi, fees for an Individual Assistant must be formally justified with clinical assessment reports and cannot exceed 50% of the standard tuition fee.

Health insurance coverage (DHA 2026 mandates): A significant shift that many parents aren't yet aware of — the Dubai Health Authority's 2026 mandates now legally prohibit insurers from issuing blanket rejections for developmental therapies on the basis of an autism diagnosis. Speech therapy, occupational therapy, and behavioral interventions must now be covered under the mandatory standard of care. Insurers can no longer impose unlimited exclusion periods for a previously diagnosed ASD condition. This directly reduces the out-of-pocket cost of many autism-related therapies that parents previously had to fund entirely themselves. Abu Dhabi's Department of Health has separately issued comprehensive ABA Guidelines standardizing evidence-based autism therapy delivery across the emirate.

Specific Accommodations for ADHD

For children with ADHD, the legal framework is the same — the diagnosis falls within Federal Law 29's definition, and the same graduated support structure applies.

Within standard provision: Extended time on assessments, permission to use movement breaks, preferential seating, chunked instructions, access to assistive tools (including, in many cases, digital tools that support focus and organization), and regular check-ins with a trusted adult in the school. These are not optional extras — if a child's ADHD profile means these supports are necessary for them to access the curriculum, the school must provide them within standard tuition.

IEP specificity matters: A common problem for ADHD families is that IEPs are written in vague terms — "additional support will be given" without specifying frequency, duration, who provides it, or how it will be tracked. The KHDA framework requires IEP goals to be measurable and specific. Parents have the right to reject a vague IEP and request SMART goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. An IEP that says "will improve attention and task completion" without a baseline, a target percentage, and a review date is not KHDA-compliant.

Medication and school cooperation: Schools in the UAE cannot refuse to allow a child to take prescribed ADHD medication during school hours, provided the medication is legally prescribed and the school is notified according to its health management protocols. Schools must cooperate with parents and medical providers to support medication management within the school day.

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The Admission Question

Both autism and ADHD are conditions for which schools frequently attempt to restrict admission — citing "lack of resources" or "inability to meet the child's complex needs." Under Federal Law 29 and both KHDA and ADEK policy frameworks, this is illegal when used as a blanket policy.

In Dubai, KHDA's "no rejection" principle means students cannot be denied enrollment in a common learning environment solely based on their diagnosis. In Abu Dhabi, if a school genuinely cannot accommodate a student, it must formally file an "Inability to Accommodate" notification with ADEK within seven days — backed by clinical assessments and environmental audits — and ADEK can override the school's decision.

Schools routinely avoid putting refusals in writing precisely because a written refusal based on autism or ADHD creates a clear paper trail for a regulatory complaint. If a school communicates a refusal verbally, request written confirmation of the decision and the specific stated reason. Schools are far more careful once they know a parent intends to document.

When the School Claims It "Can't Meet Needs"

This phrase — "we don't have the resources to meet your child's needs" — has specific regulatory consequences in Abu Dhabi that schools often don't advertise.

If an Abu Dhabi school believes it cannot accommodate a student, it cannot simply decline the application. It must submit the formal "Inability to Accommodate" notification to ADEK, supported by clinical reports, environmental audits, and documented observations proving either severe safety risk or resource requirements fundamentally beyond mandated reasonable adjustments. ADEK then reviews the evidence and can compel admission.

In Dubai, the equivalent conversation must be grounded in documented evidence. The school's standard provision budget is the starting point — if the school claims the child needs more support than standard provision covers, the school must first demonstrate that standard provision is genuinely exhausted before proposing additional fees or alternative placements.

If you're in a current dispute over an autism or ADHD-related admission refusal, IEP failure, or unlawful fee demand, the UAE Special Ed Parent Rights Compass includes the specific regulatory citations and escalation templates for both KHDA and ADEK processes.

What to Keep on Record

Whatever the current situation with your child's school, maintain:

  • All IEP or DLP documents in their signed versions, with your objections noted if you signed under pressure
  • Every email with the school's inclusion team, SENCO, or head of inclusion
  • Any fee invoices or ISA documents, including unsigned drafts the school has sent
  • Notes from verbal meetings (date, attendees, summary of what was said), sent to the school by email as a written record
  • Clinical reports and assessment documents

This documentation is what a regulatory complaint is built on. KHDA and ADEK take written evidence seriously. Schools know this — which is why the most common tactic is to keep conversations verbal. Putting everything in writing, even just by sending a follow-up email saying "to confirm what we discussed today," systematically shifts the power dynamic.

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