The number of children in EHE increased compared to the previous autumn term
Local authorities reported 126,000 children in elective home education on census day in autumn 2025. This includes children of compulsory school age (opens in new tab) who are resident in the local authority and the local authority are aware of being electively home educated on census date.
EHE increased by an estimated 14,300 in autumn 2025/26, compared to the previous autumn term. However, EHE decreased by 11,200 compared to summer term 2024/25. The number of EHE children has increased each autumn since the start of the data collection and the seasonal decrease from the summer term is as expected as some EHE children obtain their school preference, and the cohort of previous year 11 children cease to be of compulsory school age. (The proportion of local authorities providing data reached 100% for the first time in summer 2024, previous term estimates include adjustments made for non-response.)
The rate of EHE was 1.5% of the population of comparable ages (based on ONS mid-year population estimates (opens in new tab) for children aged 5 to 16 years).
As this is a relatively new data collection, which first became mandatory in autumn 2024, changes over time are likely to be in part due to improvements in data quality. For further information on data quality please see the methodology.
Mental health and philosophy or preference remained the most reported reasons for EHE
The table below provides the primary reason why a pupil was EHE. Of those reasons known or provided, the most reported in autumn 2025 were ‘mental health’ (16%) and ‘philosophical or preferential reasons’ (12%).
Of the primary reasons given, almost 3 in 10 continued to be recorded under ‘unknown to the local authority’ or ‘parent did not provide a reason’.
Two new primary reasons for EHE were introduced from autumn 2025 and appear in the table below, a low proportion of local authorities were able to report against the new reasons in this introductory term.
EHE by characteristic
The proportion of children in EHE varies by characteristics. The figures below relate to autumn 2025 but trends remain similar to previous years.
Sex
52% of EHE children were reported as female and 48% of EHE children were reported as male (less than 1% were unknown). This compares to 49% of the overall school population as female and 51% male as at January 2025.
Year group
The number of EHE children increased as the expected year group increased, from 3% expected to be in year group 1 to 19% expected to be in year group 11. Over a third of EHE children were expected to be in either year groups 10 or 11.
Ethnicity
67% of EHE were of White ethnicity, 6% were of Mixed ethnicity, 4% were of Asian ethnicity, 2% were of Black ethnicity and 2% other ethnicity. The remaining 18% had refused to provide their ethnicity or were unknown. This compares to the overall school population of 68% White ethnicity, 7% Mixed ethnicity, 14% Asian ethnicity, 6% Black ethnicity and 3% other ethnicity, with 2% unclassified.
16% of EHE children had an additional requirement of SEN support, while 7% of EHE children had an education, health and care plan. This compares with 14% and 5% respectively for the overall school population.
Children in need *
1% of EHE children were recorded as a child in need, <0.5% were recorded as having a child protection plan and <0.5% were a looked after child. This compares with 3% children in need, 0.4% having a child protection plan and 0.7% looked after children amongst the overall child population.
*SEN provision and Child in need status was as known to the local authority as at the census day and therefore may exclude children who previously held these additional requirements and those for whom these requirements were not known.
The following characteristic was collected for the first time in autumn 2025 and may be under-reported in this first collection.
English as an additional language
4% of EHE had a first language other than English. This compares to 21% of the school population.
EHE by local authority
The number and rate of elective home education varies across local authorities. Counts will vary depending on the local population, which may change over time; for example inward migration may lead to higher numbers of EHE at the start of a school year as parents await their preferred school place and EHE in the meantime. High or low counts should not be used as a reflection of ‘good’ or ‘bad’ practice.