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How to Get a 504 Plan for Your ADHD Teen: Step-by-Step
By Jacob Dennis
Request an evaluation in writing. Gather documentation. Show up to the 504 meeting with a list of accommodations you want. The whole process takes 2 to 4 weeks. Schools must respond. This guide shows you exactly how.
I was the ADHD kid who made my parents' lives hell. Missing assignments. Nightly battles. Teachers giving up. I figured out how to survive by building systems. Now I build those systems for families with ADHD teens in grades 6 through 12. The 504 gets your teen access. The systems get homework done.
What Qualifies Your ADHD Teen for a 504 Plan
Parents of ADHD teens in grades 6 through 12: You can get a 504 plan in 2 to 4 weeks. This guide gives you the exact letter, the checklist, and the meeting script to make it happen.
But schools have rules. Before you request, you need to know the criteria.
A 504 plan falls under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. It protects students with disabilities from discrimination. ADHD counts as a disability when it limits a major life activity. Learning counts. Concentrating counts. Reading counts.
Three things qualify your teen:
- Documented disability: ADHD diagnosis from a doctor, psychologist, or school evaluation
- Substantial limitation: The ADHD must significantly affect learning, concentration, or another major life activity
- Need for accommodations: The standard classroom creates barriers your teen cannot overcome alone
ADHD almost always qualifies. The question is not if your teen is eligible. The question is how well you document the impact. Strong documentation means fast approval. Weak documentation means delays and denials.
Not sure if a 504 is the right fit? Read our guide: IEP vs 504 Plan: Which One Does Your ADHD Teen Need.
Is a Medical Diagnosis Required?
No. A medical diagnosis is not required.
The school can run its own evaluation at no cost to you.
But a diagnosis from a doctor or psychologist speeds things up. It strengthens your case. Schools take medical documentation seriously. If you have a diagnosis, use it. If you don't, the school must still evaluate your request.
The law requires schools to evaluate students who may have a disability. They cannot refuse just because you lack a medical diagnosis.
Step 1: Request an Evaluation in Writing
Don't call. Don't send a casual email. Write a formal letter. Send it to your school's 504 coordinator. This creates a paper trail. It starts the legal clock.
Schools must respond to written requests. The moment they get your letter, they have a legal obligation to evaluate. Verbal requests disappear. Written requests create accountability.
Find your school's 504 coordinator. This person is usually in the main office or counseling department. If you can't find them, send the letter to the principal. They must forward it to the right person.
Sample 504 Evaluation Request Letter
Copy this letter. Fill in your details. Send it today.
Dear [Principal or 504 Coordinator Name],
I am writing to request an evaluation for a Section 504 plan for my child, [Teen's Full Name], who is in [Grade] at [School Name].
[Teen's First Name] has been diagnosed with ADHD by [Doctor or Psychologist Name] on [Diagnosis Date]. This condition affects their ability to [concentrate in class / complete assignments on time / stay organized / other specific impacts].
I am requesting this evaluation under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
Please contact me at [Your Phone Number] or [Your Email] to schedule the evaluation process.
Thank you,
[Your Full Name]
[Your Address]
[Your Phone Number]
[Your Email Address]
Send the letter two ways. Email it to the 504 coordinator AND send it via certified mail. Keep copies of everything. Print the email. Save the tracking number. Documentation protects you if problems arise later.
Step 2: Gather Your Documentation
Stronger documentation means smoother process. Weak documentation leads to delays. Strong documentation leads to approvals. Gather everything that proves ADHD affects your teen's learning.
Schools look for patterns. One bad grade means nothing. A pattern of missing assignments means everything. Your job is to show the pattern.
- ADHD diagnosis letter from doctor or psychologist
- Recent report cards showing pattern of struggles
- Standardized test scores (if available)
- Teacher emails mentioning concentration or completion issues
- Examples of incomplete or late assignments
- Previous evaluations or testing
- Notes from your own observations at home
- Medical records related to ADHD treatment
What If You Don't Have a Diagnosis?
Request that the school conduct an evaluation. They must do this at no cost to you. The school psychologist can evaluate your teen for ADHD and determine 504 eligibility.
This path takes longer. School evaluations often take 4 to 8 weeks. If speed matters, get a private diagnosis first. Many psychologists can diagnose ADHD within 1 to 2 appointments.
Either path works. Private diagnosis is faster. School evaluation is free. Choose based on your timeline and budget.
Step 3: Attend the 504 Meeting
The school will schedule a meeting with the 504 team. This is where decisions happen. Come prepared. Know what you want. Don't leave without it.
The 504 team usually includes the 504 coordinator, your teen's teachers, the school counselor or psychologist, and you. Your teen can attend if appropriate. Some teens do better when they advocate for themselves.
What to Bring
- All documentation from Step 2 (bring copies for everyone)
- A written list of specific accommodations you want
- Notes on what is NOT working in the current classroom
- Questions about how accommodations will be implemented
- Notebook to take notes during the meeting
The school may propose accommodations. Listen to their suggestions. But don't accept a plan that doesn't address your teen's needs. You have the right to request specific accommodations. You have the right to explain why they matter.
If your 504 plan gets ignored after approval: What to Do When a 504 Plan is Not Being Followed.
504 Accommodations for ADHD
Walk into the 504 meeting with a list. Don't wait for the school to suggest accommodations. Request what your teen needs.
| Accommodation | Why It Helps |
|---|---|
| Extended time (1.5x or 2x) | ADHD affects processing speed. Extra time reduces anxiety and allows for checking work. |
| Preferential seating | Sitting near the teacher reduces distractions and increases engagement. |
| Movement breaks | ADHD brains need physical movement to release energy and refocus. |
| Chunked assignments | Large projects overwhelm ADHD students. Smaller pieces reduce paralysis. |
| Written instructions | Verbal instructions disappear. Written instructions can be reviewed. |
| Assignment notifications | Parents get alerts about missing work before grades suffer. |
| Less homework | Quality over quantity. Ten focused problems beat forty rushed ones. |
| Testing in separate room | Fewer distractions mean better focus during tests. |
Request accommodations based on your teen's specific struggles. Not every ADHD student needs every accommodation. Focus on the barriers that cause the most pain.
For a complete breakdown: What Is a 504 Plan? The Complete Guide for ADHD Parents.
Step 4: Review and Sign the Plan
The school will draft the 504 plan based on your meeting. Don't sign until you read every word. Ask questions. Request changes if something is missing or unclear.
The 504 plan should include specific accommodations, who provides them, and how they will be monitored. Vague language leads to vague results. Push for specifics.
If the plan doesn't include everything discussed at the meeting, speak up. You can request revisions before signing. Once you sign, the plan goes into effect.
Get a copy of the signed plan. Share it with every teacher your teen has. Follow up after two weeks to confirm accommodations are in place. The plan only works if teachers follow it.
504 plans should be reviewed once a year. Mark your calendar. Don't wait for the school to schedule the review. Request it yourself as the anniversary approaches.
A 504 Plan Removes Barriers. OneTracker Closes the Gaps at Home.
Your teen's 504 gives them accommodations at school. But who tracks whether homework actually gets done? OneTracker syncs with Canvas automatically. Every assignment visible on your phone. Alerts before deadlines. Your teen gets a text at homework time. Missing assignments caught before they become zeros. $149/mo. Homework-Running-or-Free guarantee.
Start with OneTrackerWant more hands-on help? The 10-Day Sprint builds custom homework systems for your family with direct support.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The school can run its own evaluation to determine eligibility. But a diagnosis from a doctor or psychologist speeds things up and strengthens your case.
Most 504 plans take 2 to 4 weeks from request to approval. Timeline depends on your school's schedule and how fast you gather documentation. An existing ADHD diagnosis speeds things up.
A child qualifies if they have a physical or mental condition that substantially limits one or more major life activities. Learning, concentrating, reading, thinking, and communicating all count. ADHD almost always qualifies.
Yes. A school can deny if they determine the ADHD doesn't substantially limit a major life activity. But if you have documentation showing academic impact, denials are rare. You can appeal any denial.
A 504 gives accommodations that remove barriers. An IEP gives specialized instruction that changes what or how a child is taught. Most ADHD students get a 504. Students who need modified curriculum get an IEP. Read our full comparison.
No. Most parents successfully navigate the process themselves with a written request and documentation. Lawyers are only needed if the school denies your request and you want to appeal.
Yes. ADHD qualifies as a disability because it affects learning and concentration. Both are major life activities under Section 504.
Jacob Dennis
ADHD Automation Engineer | Founder, Riveta Labs
I was the ADHD teen who lived through homework battles. Missing assignments. Frustrated parents. Nightly fights about schoolwork. Now I build automation systems that eliminate those battles for families like yours. Infrastructure, not motivation. Systems, not willpower.
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