MATs have a narrow window to deploy the Inclusive Mainstream Fund strategically. AV1 helps you meet DfE requirements, reduce exclusions, and evidence inclusion at scale, before the December 2026 deadline.


The IMF isn't just new funding, it's a new accountability framework. MATs that act strategically now will be better placed for inspection, compliance, and pupil outcomes.
The DfE requires all mainstream schools and MATs to publish an inclusion strategy by 31 December 2026, demonstrating how they support additional needs, improve attendance and strengthen inclusive practice.
EBSA, medical needs and long-term absence continue to increase demand for alternative provision. Without early intervention and continuity tools, MATs risk pupil needs escalating towards costly and sometimes ineffective specialist pathways.
Simply receiving IMF funding isn't sufficient. Trusts will need to evidence how IMF funding was deployed, what outcomes it produced, and how it advanced the DfE’s inclusion priorities at trust and school level.
For MAT leaders, this is both a financial opportunity and a strategic imperative. The fund comes with clear expectations: earlier intervention, stronger evidence of belonging, reduced exclusions, and a published inclusion strategy before year-end.
The Inclusive Mainstream Fund (IMF) is a new DfE funding stream designed to strengthen inclusive practice across mainstream schools in England. It replaces fragmented SEND budgets with a single, strategic allocation, paid directly to academy trusts from July 2026.

The DfE expects IMF spending to be allocated across seven themes of inclusive practice. AV1 provides direct, evidenceable contribution to all seven.

Trust-wide AV1 deployment, centrally procured, flexibly deployed across schools is a strategic, system-level inclusion investment. It demonstrates that inclusion is an institutional priority, not a school-by-school emergency measure, with outcomes data for trustees, governors and senior leaders.
Telepresence Robots are formally endorsed by the DfE following a major national trial. AV1 enables schools to intervene at the earliest signs of EBSA, dysregulation, medical absence, transition challenges or disengagement. This helps prevent needs from escalating to costly alternative provision, EHC reassessments or specialist placements.
AV1 keeps absent pupils in the live lesson, following the curriculum, and participating in class discussion. No separate adapted content is needed as the pupil experiences the same high-quality teaching as their peers, in real time.
AV1 extends inclusion beyond core lessons, pupils can participate in group lessons, extracurricular activities, and social moments that build independence and prepare them for a return to full school life.
Belonging is not possible if a pupil is invisible to their class. AV1 maintains the pupil's social and emotional presence with evidence showing this significantly improves reintegration outcomes.
AV1 helps pupils stay connected to learning and school life during periods of absence or transition. It enables schools, families, and wider services to maintain consistent communication and coordinated support, helping staff take a more proactive approach to inclusion and reintegration.
AV1 is used within school as well as remotely, giving pupils who struggle with sensory overload, crowded spaces, or overwhelming classroom environments a way to access learning from a quieter space on site.

Schools and MATs using AV1 are improving attendance, supporting return-to-classroom pathways and delivering cost-effective inclusion support.
Forward-thinking MATs are turning IMF into a long-term inclusion strategy across every school, with AV1 helping ensure consistent support for absent pupils.
Pupils with EBSA, SEND, behavioural needs, mental health needs, or medical conditions are at greatest risk of losing their school connection. AV1 helps schools intervene early, on-site or remotely, to keep pupils connected before a pathway to AP becomes the only option.
AV1 was designed to be operated without specialist technical knowledge. Inclusion leads and SENCOs can manage deployments independently and generate the evidence their strategy documentation requires.

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The Inclusive Mainstream Fund is a new DfE funding stream allocating £400 million per year to mainstream schools in England. It replaces fragmented SEND and inclusion budgets with a single strategic allocation paid directly to academy trusts. Its goal is to improve inclusive practice, reduce exclusions, support SEND pupils, and strengthen early intervention across mainstream education.
By 31 December 2026, every mainstream school must publish a standalone inclusion strategy. For Multi-Academy Trusts, this means developing both school-level and trust-level documentation that evidences how IMF funding was deployed, what outcomes it achieved, and how it addresses DfE inclusion priorities, including SEND provision, attendance, reintegration, and belonging.
Yes. IMF funding is designed to support investment in inclusion practice and provision. AV1 directly addresses IMF priorities, including continuity of education, reintegration, early intervention, and reducing escalation to alternative provision. We recommend discussing your specific procurement route with your trust finance and compliance teams, and we can support with funding justification documentation.
For pupils with Emotionally Based School Avoidance (EBSA), AV1 provides a low-pressure way to maintain school connection without the anxiety triggers of physical attendance. Pupils control their presence themselves, joining when ready, participating at their own pace. AV1 gives the young person agency and reduces the psychological distance from school, enabling faster, more achievable reintegration than a cold return.
IMF funding is expected to be paid directly to academy trusts in early July 2026. This means trusts have a narrow window between funding receipt and the December 2026 inclusion strategy deadline. Early procurement decisions — made now — allow for deployment, evidence gathering, and strategy integration before the deadline.
AV1 can typically be operational within days of delivery. No complex IT infrastructure is required — the robot connects via standard Wi-Fi and is managed through a secure web platform. For trust-wide deployments, we provide dedicated onboarding support, training for inclusion leads and SENCOs, and a central management dashboard to monitor all schools from a single interface.
Every AV1 deployment generates structured records including session frequency and duration, subject engagement data, reintegration milestone tracking, and pupil voice documentation. This evidence feeds directly into your inclusion strategy documentation, EHCP review processes, and inspection preparation — providing auditable proof of IMF funding deployment and impact.
AV1 is used across both primary and secondary settings. For younger pupils, the robot interface is designed to be simple and intuitive — children typically adapt quickly. However, the strongest evidence base for EBSA reintegration and long-term absence is in secondary settings. Our team can advise on the most appropriate deployment model for your schools' age range and need profile.
