VAT on private school fees ISC has played a prominent role in the ongoing debate over the addition of VAT to private school fees, a government policy enacted in 2025. The Council supported legal challenges against the policy, citing concerns about affordability and the impact on families with children who have SEND and other special requirements. The
High Court dismissed these challenges, ruling that the VAT policy was established through parliamentary legislation.
Fee-fixing investigation In 2005, the
Office of Fair Trading found that a group of prominent private schools had engaged in
anti-competitive fee information sharing, coordinated by the ISC, and imposed collective fines. The outcome was the establishment of a charitable trust to benefit affected pupils and greater scrutiny of fee-setting practices in the sector.
Judicial review of the Charity Commission, 2011 In 2011, the ISC challenged the
Charity Commission in relation to the latter's statutory guidance on public benefit. The Upper Tribunal heard the judicial review, which was combined with an Attorney General's reference, over five days in May 2011 and reserved judgment until October 2011. The lengthy ruling upheld ISC's main ground of complaint, which was that the guidance did not reflect the true state of charity law on public benefit and charities which charge fees. A subsequent hearing and ruling in December 2011 ordered that the Commission withdraw large parts of its guidance or face a quashing order. The disputed guidance was withdrawn shortly before Christmas 2011, and replacement guidance was put out to consultation in 2012. ==References==