ServicesNew Jersey

Extended School Year (ESY): Summer Services Your Child May Be Entitled To

How this applies in New Jersey

10 min readMarch 1, 2026

By Adam Matossian · Founder of IEP Says. Father, advocate, and builder — helping parents understand and navigate their child's IEP.

Quick Answer

In New Jersey, extended School Year (ESY) is special education provided beyond the regular school year — free, individualized, and based on your child's IEP goals. Schools must offer ESY when the IEP team determines the student needs it to avoid significant skill regression over breaks. It is not the same as summer school and cannot be denied based on disability category or budget.

Read the complete federal guide: Extended School Year (ESY): Summer Services Your Child May Be Entitled To

Summer is supposed to be a break. But for many children with disabilities, a long break from services can mean losing months of progress. Skills that took the entire school year to build can evaporate over summer — and it can take weeks or months to get back to where they were.

Extended School Year (ESY) services exist to prevent that. And if your child qualifies, they are free, individualized, and your child's legal right.

What Is Extended School Year (ESY)?

ESY is special education and related services (services like speech therapy, OT, counseling, and transportation that help your child benefit from special education) provided beyond the regular school year to students with disabilities who need them to receive a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE). Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), every school district must make ESY services available when the IEP team determines they are necessary (34 CFR 300.106).

ESY is not:

  • Summer school. Summer school is a general education program, often for credit recovery. ESY is a special education service tied to IEP goals.
  • Daycare or babysitting. ESY must provide specially designed instruction (instruction specifically adapted for your child's disability) aimed at maintaining or preventing loss of specific skills.
  • A reward for good behavior. ESY eligibility is based on need, not merit.
  • Optional for the district. If the IEP team determines a student needs ESY, the district must provide it at no cost.

Who Qualifies for ESY?

ESY eligibility is determined by the IEP team — not by an administrator, not by a formula, and not by disability category alone. The team must consider the individual student's data and determine whether services beyond the regular school year are necessary for FAPE.

Under federal law, districts cannot limit ESY to certain disability categories (34 CFR 300.106(a)(2)). They cannot say "only students with intellectual disabilities qualify" or "only students in self-contained classrooms get ESY." The decision must be individualized.

The IEP team should consider:

  • Regression-recoupment data — the most commonly used criterion (see next section).
  • Nature and severity of the disability — more severe disabilities may make ESY more likely.
  • Emerging or breakthrough skills — is the student close to mastering a critical skill that could be lost?
  • Interfering behaviors — will a long break cause behavioral regression that disrupts the next school year?
  • Rate of progress — is the student already struggling to keep up, making any regression harder to absorb?
  • Critical life skills — are self-care, communication, or safety skills at risk?
  • Special circumstances — any factor unique to this child that makes ESY necessary.

The Regression-Recoupment Standard

The most widely used criterion for ESY eligibility is regression-recoupment. It asks two questions:

  1. Regression: Does the student lose significant skills during extended breaks from school?
  2. Recoupment: After the break, how long does it take the student to regain those skills?

If a student regresses significantly during breaks and takes an unreasonably long time to recoup — typically defined as more than 8 weeks after instruction resumes — that is strong evidence for ESY eligibility.

How to build the regression-recoupment case:

  • Collect data before breaks. Ask the school to assess your child's performance on IEP goals right before winter break, spring break, and summer.
  • Collect data after breaks. Ask the school to assess the same skills immediately when school resumes. The difference is your regression data.
  • Track recoupment time. How many weeks of instruction does it take for your child to return to their pre-break level? Document this.
  • Keep your own records. Note what you observe at home during breaks — skill loss, behavioral changes, loss of routines.

Beyond Regression: Other Paths to ESY

Not every child's need for ESY fits neatly into the regression-recoupment model. Here are other situations where ESY may be necessary:

Emerging or breakthrough skills

Your child is on the verge of mastering a critical skill — perhaps they are finally starting to communicate using an AAC device, or they have just begun reading independently. A summer break could derail this breakthrough. The IEP team should consider whether the momentum of learning would be lost without continuous services.

Interfering behaviors

If your child has a behavior intervention plan (BIP), a long break from the structure and supports that manage those behaviors can cause significant regression. The student may return to school with behaviors that take weeks to stabilize, cutting into instructional time.

Critical life skills

For students working on self-care, safety, communication, or daily living skills — especially those in transition planning — these skills require consistent practice. A summer without practice can mean starting over in the fall.

Severity of disability

Students with more significant disabilities may need ESY simply because any interruption in services has a disproportionate impact. A student who is learning at a very slow rate cannot afford to lose ground.

What ESY Should Look Like

ESY must be individualized. It is not a one-size-fits-all summer program. The IEP team determines:

  • Which goals will be addressed — not necessarily all IEP goals, but the ones at risk of regression or most critical to maintain.
  • Which services will be provided — specialized instruction, speech therapy, OT, behavioral support, etc.
  • How much service — frequency and duration. ESY does not have to replicate the full school-year schedule, but it must be sufficient to prevent regression on the identified goals.
  • Where services will be provided — the same placement as the school year, or a different location if appropriate.
  • Transportation — if your child receives transportation as part of their IEP, it should be included in ESY.

ESY services must be provided at no cost to the family. The district cannot charge you for ESY programming, transportation, or materials. If the district cannot provide ESY services directly, it must arrange for them through another provider — still at no cost to you.

How to Request ESY

ESY should be discussed at the annual IEP meeting, but you do not have to wait for that. Here is how to approach it:

Before the IEP meeting

  1. Collect your data. Regression-recoupment records from previous breaks, your home observations, progress reports showing stalled or slow growth, and any outside evaluations that support the need.
  2. Send a written request. Before the meeting, send an email to the case manager: "I would like the IEP team to consider Extended School Year services for [child's name] at the upcoming annual review. I have data showing regression during previous breaks and will bring it to the meeting."
  3. Review the IEP goals. Identify which goals are most at risk — academic skills, communication, behavior, daily living — and be prepared to explain why.

At the IEP meeting

  1. Present your data. Share regression data, home observations, and any outside evaluations. Frame it around the goals: "This goal shows 6 weeks of regression after winter break and 10 weeks to recoup. Over summer, I expect the regression to be even greater."
  2. Reference the standard. Remind the team that ESY is required when necessary for FAPE and that multiple factors must be considered — not just regression-recoupment.
  3. Be specific about what you want. "I am requesting ESY services including [specific services] for [specific goals], for [duration]. Here is the data that supports this request."
  4. Request Prior Written Notice if the school denies or limits ESY. The PWN must explain the basis for the decision and the data that was considered.

What to Do If ESY Is Denied

A denial of ESY is not the end of the road. Here are your options:

  1. Request Prior Written Notice (PWN). The school must explain in writing why ESY was denied and what data they considered. If the PWN is vague or does not address your data, that is a procedural concern.
  2. Ask for the school's data. What evidence does the school have that your child will not regress or that recoupment will be reasonable? If they have no data, they have no basis for the denial.
  3. Provide additional data. Get outside evaluations, collect more regression data over shorter breaks, or document home observations that support your case.
  4. Request another IEP meeting. You can request a meeting at any time to revisit the ESY decision, especially if you have new data.
  5. File for mediation or due process. If the school refuses to consider your data or applies a blanket policy, you can pursue dispute resolution. ESY denials are a common subject of due process hearings, and hearing officers regularly overturn denials that are not supported by individualized data.
School's ReasonWhy It's Not Valid
"We don't offer ESY for that disability category." Federal law prohibits limiting ESY by disability category (34 CFR 300.106(a)(2)).
"We don't have the budget for ESY." Budget is not a valid reason to deny FAPE. The district must provide ESY if needed.
"We only offer ESY as a 4-week half-day program." ESY must be individualized. A one-size-fits-all program does not meet the IDEA standard.
"There's no regression data." Regression-recoupment is not the only criterion. The team must consider all relevant factors.
"Your child is doing well — they don't need ESY." The question is not current performance but whether skills will regress without services.

Your ESY Checklist

Throughout the school year

  • Track your child's performance before and after every break — winter, spring, extended weekends.
  • Ask the school to assess IEP goal performance immediately before and after breaks.
  • Document skill loss, behavioral changes, and routine disruptions you observe at home.
  • Keep progress reports and note which goals show slow or stalled growth.

Before the annual IEP meeting

  • Send a written request for ESY to be discussed at the meeting.
  • Organize your regression-recoupment data by goal.
  • Identify which goals are most at risk of regression and prepare your case.
  • Research your state's specific ESY criteria (see state notes below).

At the IEP meeting

  • Present your data and reference specific goals.
  • Ask the school for their data on regression and recoupment.
  • If ESY is approved, ensure the IEP documents specific goals, services, frequency, and duration.
  • If ESY is denied, request Prior Written Notice and ask for the data supporting the denial.

If ESY is denied

  • Review the PWN for specificity and data references.
  • Consider providing additional data or requesting an independent evaluation.
  • Request another IEP meeting if you have new evidence.
  • Consider mediation or due process if the school is applying blanket policies or ignoring your data.

Sources

New Jersey — State-Specific Guidance

New Jersey follows the federal IDEA framework

The guidance in this article is accurate for New Jersey parents. Below is how New Jersey implements the relevant federal requirements.

Verified Mar 2026

Related Services in New Jersey

In New Jersey, related services are developmental, corrective, and other supportive services required to assist a student with a disability to benefit from special education. Under N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.3 and 34 CFR 300.34, related services include speech-language pathology, audiology, psychological services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, counseling services (including rehabilitation counseling), social work services, school health and nursing services, parent counseling and training, transportation, recreation, assistive technology services, orientation and mobility services, and interpreting services. The IEP must specify the type, frequency, duration, location, and projected start date of each service (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(8)). A distinctively NJ feature is the mandate to consider integrated therapy services — delivering OT, PT, speech, and other related services within the student's natural educational setting rather than through a pull-out model — when the IEP team determines it is educationally appropriate (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(5)). The Child Study Team (CST) — comprising a school psychologist, learning disabilities teacher-consultant (LDTC), and school social worker (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.3) — evaluates students and recommends related services. A speech-language specialist evaluation may serve as the complete multi-disciplinary evaluation when accompanied by a classroom teacher impact statement (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(g)(3)), streamlining referrals for communication impairment. Under N.J.S.A. 18A:46, all related services must be provided at no cost to parents as part of FAPE. Districts may contract with outside agencies, educational services commissions, or jointure commissions if they cannot provide services directly (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.1). Assistive technology devices and services must be provided if required by the IEP and may extend to home use when necessary for FAPE (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(c)(10); 34 CFR 300.105).

Key Requirements

  • The IEP must specify each related service with its type, frequency, duration, location, and projected start date (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(8); 34 CFR 300.320(a)(7)).
  • Integrated therapy — delivering OT, PT, speech, and related services within the student's educational setting — must be considered when appropriate; this is a distinctive NJ requirement (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(5)).
  • The CST (school psychologist, LDTC, school social worker) evaluates and recommends services; a speech-language evaluation may serve as the full multi-disciplinary evaluation with a teacher impact statement (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.3; N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(g)(3)).
  • All related services are part of FAPE and must be provided at no cost; districts may contract with external agencies to fulfill this obligation (N.J.S.A. 18A:46; N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.1).
  • Assistive technology devices and services must be provided when required by the IEP and may be used at home when necessary for FAPE (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(c)(10); 34 CFR 300.105).
  • Related service progress must be monitored and reported to parents at least as frequently as report cards, consistent with the goals reporting requirement (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(16)).

Timelines

  • Related services must begin on the projected start date documented in the IEP and be in effect at the beginning of each school year (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(e)(8); 34 CFR 300.323(a)).
  • Related services must be reviewed at least annually as part of the IEP review (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(i)).
  • For transfer students, the receiving district must provide comparable services immediately and develop a new IEP within 30 days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.1(g)).

Timelines & Deadlines in New Jersey

New Jersey has a comprehensive set of timelines governing every stage of the special education process. The critical timelines are codified primarily in N.J.A.C. 6A:14 and include: Identification Meeting within 20 calendar days of referral, excluding school holidays but not summer vacation (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.3); initial evaluation, eligibility determination, and IEP development/implementation within 90 calendar days of parental consent (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(e)); evaluation reports to parents at least 10 calendar days before the eligibility meeting (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.5(a)); IEP meeting within 30 calendar days of eligibility determination (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(a)); prior written notice at least 15 calendar days before implementation (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.3(h)); annual IEP review (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(i)); triennial reevaluation within 3 years (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.8); reevaluation completion within 60 calendar days of consent (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.8); IEE challenge by district within 20 calendar days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.5(c)(1)); mediation conference within 15 calendar days of request, completed within 30 days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.6(d)); due process resolution meeting within 15 days of filing (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.7(h)); hearing decision within 45 calendar days after resolution period (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.7(j)); state complaint decision within 60 calendar days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-9.2(c)); and transfer student IEP within 30 days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.1(g)).

Key Requirements

  • NJ uses a 90-calendar-day comprehensive timeline from consent through IEP implementation — more expansive than the federal 60-day evaluation timeline (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(e)).
  • All timelines are in calendar days unless specifically noted as school days (e.g., disciplinary timelines).
  • The 90-day timeline does not apply if the parent repeatedly fails or refuses to produce the child for evaluation (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(e)(1)).
  • Dispute resolution timelines are specific: 15 days for mediation scheduling, 30 days for mediation completion, 15 days for resolution meetings, 45 days for hearing decisions (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.6, 2.7).
  • Transfer students must receive comparable services immediately and a new IEP within 30 days (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.1(g)).

Timelines

  • 20 calendar days (excluding school holidays, but not summer vacation): Identification Meeting after referral (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.3).
  • 90 calendar days: evaluation through IEP implementation from parental consent (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(e)).
  • 10 calendar days: evaluation reports to parents before eligibility meeting (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.5(a)).
  • 30 calendar days: IEP meeting after eligibility determination (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.7(a)).
  • 15 calendar days: prior written notice before implementation (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.3(h)).
  • 3 years: triennial reevaluation (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.8).
  • 60 calendar days: reevaluation completion from consent (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.8).
  • 20 calendar days: district must file due process to challenge IEE request (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.5(c)(1)).
  • 15/30 calendar days: mediation scheduling/completion (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.6(d)).
  • 15 calendar days: resolution meeting after due process filing (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.7(h)).
  • 45 calendar days: hearing decision after resolution period (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-2.7(j)).
  • 60 calendar days: state complaint decision (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-9.2(c)).
  • 30 days: new IEP for transfer students (N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.1(g)).
  • 2 business days: written statement of discussion items before annual IEP meeting (P.L. 2025, c.107).

Is your child getting what they’re owed?

Upload your child’s IEP and we’ll break down every service, check the hours, and flag anything that looks short.

Analyze My Child's IEP

This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific questions about your child's IEP, consult a qualified special education attorney or advocate.