A 504 plan is a written agreement between a student’s family and a public school that lays out accommodations and supports so a student with a disability can learn in the regular classroom on equal footing with peers.

What a 504 plan is

A 504 plan comes from Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act , a federal civil‑rights law that bars discrimination against people with disabilities in programs that get federal funding, including public schools. The plan does not provide special‑education instruction like an IEP; instead, it removes barriers so the student can access the same general‑education curriculum.

Who qualifies

To qualify, a student must have a disability that substantially limits a major life activity , such as learning, concentrating, walking, seeing, hearing, or caring for oneself. Common examples include:

  • ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, or learning differences
  • Chronic health conditions (asthma, diabetes, epilepsy)
  • Mental‑health conditions (anxiety, depression)
  • Temporary needs after a serious illness or injury

What goes in a 504 plan

Each 504 plan is tailored to the individual child, but typical elements include:

  • Accommodations : extra time on tests, preferential seating, use of assistive tech, modified materials, or adjusted schedules.
  • Health‑related supports : regular nurse visits, medication administration, or special equipment.
  • Staff roles : who will provide each accommodation and who oversees the plan.

Schools are not required to use a specific format, but most create a written document parents can review and sign.

How it’s created

Any parent, teacher, nurse, or other school staff can request a 504 evaluation. The school then gathers information (grades, test scores, medical records, teacher input) and, if the student qualifies, a 504 team (principal, teachers, counselor, nurse, etc.) drafts the plan and meets with the family.

504 plan vs. IEP

Feature| 504 plan| IEP (special education)
---|---|---
Legal basis| Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (civil rights) 35| Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) 9
Main purpose| Remove barriers to general‑education access 39| Provide specially designed instruction and related services 9
Instruction| Same curriculum, different “how” (accommodations) 39| May include modified curriculum and goals 9
Services| Accommodations, some therapies (OT, PT, counseling) 57| Can include speech, intensive interventions, and specialized teaching 9

If you tell me whether you’re asking as a parent, teacher, or student, I can walk through a concrete example of what a 504 plan might look like for that role.