Most parents think IEP meetings only happen once a year. That's the annual review β and yes, it's required. But you don't have to wait for it. You have the right to call a meeting anytime something changes, something concerns you, or something isn't working.
What the law actually says
"Each public agency must ensure that the parents of each child with a disability are members of any group that makes decisions on the educational placement of their child⦠parents have the right to request a meeting to review the IEP."
34 CFR Β§ 300.501(b) β Individuals with Disabilities Education ActUnder IDEA, an IEP team meeting can be requested by the parent or by any member of the IEP team β including a teacher or the school. The school does not get to decide whether your concern is "worth" a meeting. Your written request is enough to trigger the process.
Most states require the school to hold the meeting within 30 calendar days of a written request. Some states have shorter timelines. When in doubt, ask for the meeting in writing and document the date you sent it.
When should you request a meeting?
You don't need a dramatic reason. If something feels off, a meeting is the right call. Here are common situations where parents request one:
How to request an IEP meeting: step by step
- Put it in writing. Email is best β it creates a timestamp. You can also send a letter. Verbal requests are hard to track and easy for schools to forget.
- Send it to the right person. Address it to the Special Education Director or your child's case manager. CC the principal if you've had trouble getting responses.
- State your reason briefly. You don't need to justify yourself legally, but a one-line reason helps: "I have concerns about [X] that I'd like to discuss with the team."
- Ask for a date within 10 school days. This is a standard expectation. Stating it sets a clear anchor and signals that you know your rights.
- Keep a copy. Screenshot the sent email or note the certified mail tracking number. The date you sent the request matters if there's ever a dispute about timelines.
What to say β a simple request template
Tip: Keep your reason brief and neutral. You'll share the full details at the meeting. The goal of this email is simply to get the meeting on the calendar.
What if the school says no β or ignores you?
The school cannot legally refuse to hold an IEP meeting that a parent has requested. If they push back or go silent, here's what to do:
- Follow up in writing within 5 school days. Forward your original email and add: "I have not received a response to my meeting request dated [date]. Please confirm a meeting date as soon as possible."
- Contact your district's Special Education Director directly. Case managers answer to someone. Escalating one level often gets a quick response.
- File a State Complaint. If the school is not complying with IDEA timelines, your state's Department of Education can open an investigation. This is free to file and typically resolved within 60 days.
- Request mediation. IDEA also guarantees parents access to free mediation with a neutral third party β no lawyer required to initiate.
Date every email, keep every reply, and note any verbal conversations with the date and who said what. If a dispute ever escalates, your paper trail is your most powerful tool.
What to do before the meeting
Once the meeting is confirmed, prepare like any IEP meeting β review the current IEP, write down your specific concerns, and bring any documentation (evaluations, doctor notes, daily logs) that supports what you're seeing at home.
Not sure what questions to ask or what your child's current IEP says? That's exactly what Claudia, IEP Compass's AI assistant, is built for. Upload the IEP, ask Claudia to explain the goals, and walk in knowing what you're there to discuss.