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Moving Districts with a Child Who Has an IEP

Your child’s IDEA rights travel with them. Here is what comparable services means, how records transfer, and what to do when the new district pushes back — whether you’re moving across town or across state lines.

Comparable Services In-State Moves Out-of-State Moves Records Transfer New Evaluations Red Flags
About This Guide: This guide covers federal rights under IDEA that apply in all 50 states. Where state laws add additional requirements or use different terminology, those sections are clearly labeled. This is educational advocacy information, not legal advice.

Your Child’s IEP Rights Move With Them

When a family moves to a new school district, a child with an active IEP carries federal protections under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). The receiving district cannot simply ignore the existing IEP or require weeks of assessment before any services begin. IDEA requires that comparable services be provided from the moment of enrollment while a new IEP is developed or the prior one is formally adopted.

The key distinction IDEA draws is between in-state and out-of-state moves, because eligibility categories and IEP formats can vary by state. However, in both cases the child must receive services — the question is which services and for how long. Parents who understand these rights before enrollment day are significantly better positioned to advocate effectively.

⚖️ Core Federal Right (All States): 34 CFR §300.323(e) and (f) require that a child with a disability who transfers to a new school district during the same academic year receive comparable services to those in the prior IEP until the new district adopts the prior IEP or develops, adopts, and implements a new one. This applies whether the move is in-state or out-of-state.
Same State

Moving Within the Same State

Federal IDEA Right — 34 CFR §300.323(e)
When a child transfers within the same state, the new district must provide comparable services as described in the child’s current IEP, in consultation with the parents, until the new district either formally adopts the prior IEP or develops and implements a new one.

An in-state transfer is the more straightforward scenario because eligibility categories, IEP formats, and procedural safeguards are governed by the same state laws. The receiving district should be able to read and implement the prior IEP relatively quickly.

What the New District Must Do

  • Provide comparable services immediately upon enrollment — not after an evaluation period
  • Contact the previous district to obtain records, including the current IEP and any evaluations
  • Schedule an IEP Team meeting to review, update, or formally adopt the prior IEP
  • Consult with parents about placement and services before finalizing any changes
Tip: Bring a copy of your child’s most recent IEP, any recent evaluation reports, and prior-year progress reports to enrollment. Do not wait for the district to request records — providing them proactively on day one removes any excuse for delay in services.
State-added timelines vary: Some states set specific deadlines for convening an IEP meeting after an in-state transfer — commonly 30 days. The federal law does not set a specific deadline for the meeting itself, only that comparable services begin immediately. Parents may wish to ask the receiving district what its specific timeline is, and request a meeting date in writing at enrollment.
Different State

Moving to a Different State

Federal IDEA Right — 34 CFR §300.323(f)
When a child transfers from another state, the new district must also provide comparable services until it either develops a new IEP or conducts its own evaluation and determines eligibility under the new state’s standards.

An out-of-state transfer is more complex because the new state may have different eligibility categories, disability definitions, IEP formats, or service delivery models. The receiving district is not required to adopt the prior IEP verbatim, but it must provide comparable services in the interim — it may not simply stop services while conducting its own evaluation.

Key Differences in Out-of-State Transfers

What Generally Transfers

  • The right to comparable services immediately upon enrollment
  • The right to have prior records (including the IEP) considered by the new team
  • The right to an IEP meeting before significant changes are made to services
  • All federal IDEA procedural safeguards

What May Need Re-Evaluation

  • Eligibility category — some states use different disability definitions
  • Some states require their own evaluation before formally re-determining eligibility
  • Service delivery models — what constitutes a “resource room” vs. inclusion varies
  • Related service hours — state standards for OT, PT, speech frequency vary
The new state cannot terminate services pending evaluation. Even if the new district wants to conduct its own evaluation, it must continue comparable services during that process. A district that says “we can’t start services until we assess your child” may be misstating its obligation — parents may wish to reference 34 CFR §300.323(f) in writing and request a response.
Key Concept

What “Comparable Services” Actually Means

“Comparable services” does not mean identical services — it means services that are substantially similar to what was in the prior IEP in terms of type, frequency, and intensity. The new district has flexibility in how services are delivered, but not in whether they are delivered.

✅ Likely Meets “Comparable”

  • Prior IEP had 3×/week speech; new district provides 3×/week speech in a similar setting
  • Prior IEP had resource room support; new district provides equivalent small-group pull-out instruction
  • Accommodations (extended time, preferential seating) implemented immediately
  • Specialized instruction frequency maintained at same or equivalent hours

❌ Likely Does NOT Meet “Comparable”

  • Prior IEP had 5 hrs/week specialized reading; new district offers only in-class support
  • Prior IEP included OT; new district says “we don’t have an OT yet”
  • Prior IEP required a 1:1 aide; new district places child in general ed without any support
  • All services withheld pending evaluation or new IEP development
Document the comparison. At enrollment, ask the new district to document in writing exactly which services from the prior IEP they are providing, at what frequency, in what setting, and starting what date. If there are gaps between the prior IEP and what is being offered, those gaps should be discussed at the IEP meeting — and documented.
Documentation

Records Transfer: What to Bring and What to Request

Educational records follow the child, but families should not assume the transfer will happen quickly or completely. FERPA (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) requires the prior district to forward records upon request from the new district or the parent, but timing can vary. Bring your own copies.

Documents to Gather Before You Move

  • Current IEP (full document) — including all goals, services, accommodations, placement, and meeting notes
  • Most recent evaluation report(s) — psychological, educational, speech-language, OT, PT, and any other assessments
  • Most recent eligibility determination — the document showing the disability category and eligibility decision
  • Prior IEPs — at least 2–3 years of history shows the trajectory of services
  • Progress monitoring data and report cards — current-year goal data and academic grades
  • Behavioral intervention plan (BIP) if one exists — must transfer and be implemented immediately
  • Any due process or complaint documents — the new district should be aware of prior formal disputes
  • Procedural safeguards notices you have received
Make a complete records request in writing before moving. Send a written request to the special education office (not just the school) asking for all special education records including evaluations, IEPs, progress reports, and meeting notes. Keep the confirmation of your request. Some districts are slow to release records after a student has departed — requesting before the move gives you time to follow up.
Re-Evaluation

Can the New District Require a New Evaluation?

This is one of the most common points of confusion for families. The short answer is: the new district may conduct its own evaluation, but it may not withhold services while doing so, and it must obtain your consent before evaluating.

In-State Transfer

  • The new district generally cannot require a new evaluation simply because of the transfer
  • Prior evaluations from the same state are typically accepted
  • A re-evaluation may be proposed if the prior evaluation is old (more than 3 years) or the IEP team believes updated data is needed
  • Parent consent is always required before any evaluation

Out-of-State Transfer

  • The new state may require its own eligibility determination, which may involve new evaluation
  • Some states have different eligibility standards — a child eligible in one state is not automatically eligible in another
  • Even during an evaluation process, comparable services must continue
  • Parent consent is always required before any evaluation
If eligibility is at risk: If the new state has stricter eligibility criteria and the district suggests your child may not qualify, do not agree to anything without carefully reviewing the new state’s standards. Families may wish to consult a qualified special education advocate or attorney in the new state before agreeing to re-evaluation or accepting an eligibility determination. Services must continue in the interim.
Independent Educational Evaluations (IEEs): If the new district conducts an evaluation and you disagree with the results, you retain the right to request an IEE at public expense. This right exists in every state under IDEA.
Quick Reference

In-State vs. Out-of-State Transfer: Key Differences

IssueIn-State TransferOut-of-State Transfer
Comparable servicesRequired immediately upon enrollmentRequired immediately upon enrollment
Prior IEPNew district must adopt or develop new IEP; prior IEP governs services in the interimPrior IEP governs comparable services in the interim; new state may develop a new IEP
EligibilityGenerally transfers; same state standards applyMay need new determination; standards vary by state
New evaluationNot required solely because of transfer; may be proposed if data is outdatedNew state may require; must be consented to; services continue during process
IEP Team meetingShould be held promptly to review/adopt IEP; some states set specific timelinesShould be held promptly; new team develops new IEP consistent with new state requirements
Records transferPrior district must forward records upon request (FERPA); bring your own copiesPrior district must forward records; bring your own copies; some formats may differ
BIP/behavioral supportsMust be implemented immediately if one existsMust be implemented in comparable form immediately if one exists
Dispute resolutionFile with new state’s SEA; due process availableFile with new state’s SEA; prior state no longer has jurisdiction
Warning Signs

Red Flags When Enrolling in a New District

🚩 "We need to evaluate before we can start services"

Services must begin upon enrollment — not after evaluation. This statement, while common, misstates the district’s obligation under 34 CFR §300.323. Ask what comparable services will begin on day one, and ask for it in writing.

🚩 "We don’t honor out-of-state IEPs"

Federal law requires comparable services regardless of where the prior IEP originated. While a new state may eventually develop its own IEP, it may not simply ignore the prior one during the transition. Families may wish to cite 34 CFR §300.323(f) in writing.

🚩 "Your IEP meeting can’t be scheduled for 3 months"

While IDEA does not set a specific deadline for the IEP meeting after transfer, the law’s purpose is a timely review. Delays of many months while providing only “comparable” services can leave significant gaps. Parents may wish to request an IEP meeting date in writing and document the request.

🚩 Services offered are significantly less than the prior IEP with no explanation

If the new district offers noticeably fewer hours, smaller levels of support, or eliminates services from the prior IEP without IEP team discussion, that may not meet the “comparable services” standard. Ask for a written comparison of the prior IEP services and what is being provided.

🚩 Behavioral supports not implemented

A Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP) must transfer with the child and be implemented immediately in comparable form. If the new district says it will “look at” the BIP or “develop its own,” ensure behavioral supports are actually in place in the meantime — particularly for students whose behavior is connected to their disability.

🚩 "You’ll need to start the IEP process over from scratch"

The new district does not start from zero. It must receive and review prior records, provide comparable services, and build on the existing evaluation and IEP foundation. “Starting over” without considering the prior IEP may not satisfy IDEA’s requirements — and leaves the child without services during the gap.

What To Do

Action Steps for Families

  1. Before the move: Submit a written records request to the current district’s special education office — requesting all IEPs, evaluations, progress data, BIPs, and meeting notes. Do not wait for the new district to request them.
  2. Prepare your own packet: Assemble copies of the current IEP, most recent evaluation report, progress reports, and any BIP. Bring physical copies to enrollment day. Do not assume the new district will have them.
  3. At enrollment: Notify the school in writing that your child has an active IEP and request information about how comparable services will begin. Ask for the name of the special education coordinator or case manager who will be responsible.
  4. Confirm services in writing within the first week: Send a brief email or letter summarizing what services were in the prior IEP and asking the district to confirm which are currently being provided, in what form, and starting what date.
  5. Request an IEP meeting date: In writing, request a specific date for an IEP Team meeting to review, update, or adopt the IEP. For out-of-state moves, research the new state’s eligibility standards before the meeting.
  6. If out of state: Contact the new state’s Parent Training and Information (PTI) center — every state has one, funded by the federal government, providing free advocacy information to families. They can explain state-specific procedures.
  7. Document everything: Keep copies of all written communications, record requests, and service confirmations. If services are not starting or are significantly reduced, document the gap with specific dates.
State PTI Centers: Every state has a federally-funded Parent Training and Information (PTI) center that provides free information and support to families of children with disabilities. If you are navigating a transfer — especially out of state — contacting the PTI center in your new state is one of the most valuable steps you can take. They know the state’s specific procedures, timelines, and common issues. Search “Parent Training and Information center [new state]” to find yours.
📋 About This Guide: This resource provides educational information about federal special education rights under IDEA as they apply to district transfers. State laws and specific district procedures vary. This is not legal advice. Families with questions about their specific situation may wish to consult a qualified special education attorney or PTI center in their state.

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Educational advocacy and informational support only. Not legal advice. Families may wish to consult a qualified special education attorney regarding legal interpretation.

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