IEP vs 504: Which Does My Child Need? (A Texas Parent's Guide)
- Reese Berry
- Apr 27
- 4 min read

Here's the plain answer. An IEP (Individualized Education Program) is for students who need specialized instruction. The way they're being taught has to change, not just the conditions around them. A 504 plan is for students who can succeed in regular instruction with accommodations like extra time, preferential seating, breaks, a calculator, or modified assignments. In Texas, both come from federal law, both are legally enforceable, and both are free. They aren't the same document, and choosing the wrong one means your child gets the wrong kind of support.
This question is hard for a reason. Schools sometimes default to a 504 because it's faster and cheaper to put in place, even when an IEP is the right call. Other parents are told their child doesn't qualify for an IEP without ever being told what the qualification process actually looks like. The terminology overlaps. The forms look similar. And no one is required to walk you through the difference before you sign.
What an IEP actually is
n IEP is a document under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). It's only available to students who qualify under one of 13 federal disability categories. These include specific learning disability, autism, ADHD (under "other health impairment"), speech or language impairment, and emotional disturbance. To get one, your child has to be evaluated and the ARD committee has to find that the disability adversely affects educational performance AND that your child needs specially designed instruction to make progress.
That second part matters. An IEP isn't just extra help. It means the school will change how your child is taught. Different methods, different materials, different goals than the rest of the class. Progress gets measured against those goals. In Texas, the meeting where this gets decided is called the ARD (Admission, Review, Dismissal) committee, not "IEP meeting." Texas is the only state that uses the ARD acronym. Saying "ARD" tells the school you've done your homework.
What a 504 plan actually is
A 504 plan comes from Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The qualification standard is broader. Any student with a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity can qualify. Major life activities include learning, concentrating, reading, thinking, and communicating. The student doesn't need to be failing. They don't need specially designed instruction. They just need accommodations to access the same curriculum as their peers.
A 504 plan typically lists accommodations like extended time on tests, preferential seating, breaks during long assignments, access to a quiet space, or permission to use a calculator or speech-to-text software. The instruction itself doesn't change. The conditions around it do.
How to tell which one your child needs
he clearest test: can my child make meaningful progress with the regular curriculum if we change the conditions around them?
If yes, a 504 is probably the right fit. Your child can learn what their grade-level peers are learning, but they need the playing field leveled (extra time, fewer distractions, assistive technology).
If no, and your child needs different instruction rather than different conditions, you're looking at an IEP. A child who reads three grade levels behind, who cannot decode multi-syllable words despite being in 5th grade, who needs structured literacy intervention rather than just "more reading help" needs an IEP.
A simple example. A child with ADHD who can do the math but can't focus long enough to finish the test usually needs a 504 (extended time, breaks). A child with dyslexia who cannot read the test at all needs an IEP, with structured literacy instruction tied to the Texas Dyslexia Handbook and HB 1886.

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How to request either one in Texas
For an IEP, request a Full Individual and Initial Evaluation (FIIE) in writing. Send it to the campus principal and the special education department. Once the district receives a written request, Texas law gives them 15 school days to either start the evaluation or give you Prior Written Notice declining. Keep a dated copy of every email.
For a 504, the request goes to the campus 504 coordinator. Every Texas campus has one. The process is shorter. A 504 committee meets, reviews documentation, and decides if your child qualifies. Outside evaluations from a doctor, psychologist, or educational diagnostician carry weight here, especially if the school is reluctant.
In both cases: request in writing, keep dated copies, and don't accept a verbal "we don't think your child qualifies" without a written response. That written response is your record.
Common reasons schools steer parents toward 504
ou should know this part because it happens often. A 504 is faster to write, cheaper to provide, and doesn't require ongoing progress monitoring the way an IEP does. Schools occasionally suggest a 504 to parents whose children would actually qualify for an IEP because the 504 is less work for the district. That's not always bad faith. Sometimes it's a legitimate clinical call. But you should know it's a possibility.
The way to push back without being adversarial: ask the school directly. "Has my child been evaluated for special education services? If so, what was the result? If not, can we start that evaluation?" This is a question, not an accusation. It puts the path forward in the school's hands while making clear you're informed.
What to do next
Make a list, on paper, of what your child specifically struggles with at school. Not labels. Behaviors. ("Cannot finish a 30-minute reading passage without losing focus." "Reads aloud at a 2nd-grade level despite being in 4th grade.")
Pull any outside evaluations, doctor's notes, or progress reports you already have.
Decide which path you're requesting (IEP evaluation or 504 plan) based on the test above.
Send the request in writing this week. Email is fine. Keep the timestamp.
If you want a second set of eyes on your situation before you send it, book a Path Planning Consultation at accommodatedpathways.com/service-page/path-planning.
The most important thing is that you're driving the conversation. Schools have good people in them. They also have a system to run. Your child has one advocate. You.




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