Georgia · special-needs funding & services

Special-needs ESA / school-choice funding in Georgia: what you get and what you can spend it on

How Georgia's education savings account / school-choice program works for students with disabilities: award amounts and eligible expenses like therapy, tutoring, and curriculum.

A growing number of states fund Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) or special-needs scholarships. For students with disabilities the awards are often much larger than general-education ones, and (this is what families miss) the money can frequently be spent on far more than private tuition: therapies (speech, OT, ABA), tutoring, curriculum, technology, even some evaluations.

Two things to check: (1) your child's eligibility (a diagnosis, IEP, or 504 often qualifies), and (2) your state's approved-expense list; that's where the real value is hiding.

A federal tax-credit scholarship program (ECCA) is also scheduled to begin in 2027 in participating states, which may add another funding layer.

Georgia ESA / scholarship

Connect with other Georgia parents

Rules and waitlists in Georgia change constantly. The fastest way to know what's working right now is to ask parents who just did it. Join the free community.

Join the community

More for Georgia families

Get our benefits starter checklist (free)

Plain-language help for parents new to all this, plus an occasional genuinely useful note. No spam.

No spam. Unsubscribe with one reply. We never sell your info.

General information, not legal/financial advice. Program names, amounts, and eligibility change and vary, so always confirm with the official source linked above.

Free parent communityJoin now