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A prep where the setting is not just a backdrop but part of the timetable. Hall Grove sits in a large parkland estate on the Surrey, Berkshire border, with facilities that go well beyond the usual prep checklist, including on-site equestrian provision and outdoor learning spaces referenced by the school in its own history materials.
Leadership is clearly defined. Neil Tomlin OBE has been Headmaster since 01 September 2021, following a handover from the founding family’s long-running day-to-day stewardship, which continues through the Principal role.
This is an independent school, with weekly and flexible boarding (rather than full boarding) and nursery provision from age 3. Families considering Hall Grove are typically weighing three things: a broad, outdoors-capable prep education, a structured transition into senior school entry points, and day-to-day logistics for commutes into the Bagshot, Sunningdale, Ascot corridor.
Hall Grove’s public-facing language is unusually direct about expectations. The school presents its guiding motto as Fais ce que dois... advienne que pourra (Do your duty, come what may), which sets a tone that mixes courtesy with personal responsibility rather than a purely therapeutic, child-led framing.
The site’s backstory matters here because it explains why the grounds are such a core feature. The Graham family bought the house in 1956 and established the school soon after, with the school also highlighting 1957 as its founding marker. The estate narrative is not just heritage, it links directly to today’s use of the grounds, including references to woodland classrooms, a mountain bike track, a walled garden used for horticulture, and a small school farm with a resident flock of sheep.
Boarding is positioned as a complement to day schooling rather than a separate world. The school describes weekly boarding as a Monday to Thursday pattern and outlines flexible options, including trial nights and occasional boarding, which tends to suit families with variable work travel or longer commutes on some days of the week.
As an independent prep, Hall Grove does not sit neatly inside the state primary data parents often compare first. The most useful academic indicators here are the school’s published destination outcomes for Year 8 leavers and the quality judgements in its independent inspection reports. (FindMySchool rankings and KS2 performance metrics are not published for this setting in the available results, so comparison is necessarily more qualitative.)
The May 2023 ISI educational quality inspection judged both pupils’ academic and other achievements, and their personal development, as excellent.
That inspection also points to a specific academic profile: strong mathematics, early development of oracy, and confident use of information and communication technology across the curriculum, with a clear recommendation to build further on writing in the senior years and strengthen pupil voice mechanisms.
The curriculum messaging emphasises breadth, with visible specialist staffing in areas that many preps cover more lightly. Sport is stated to be taught by specialist teachers from Reception through to Year 8. Performing arts also appears formalised, with weekly timetabled dance lessons described as available from Pre-School through to Year 8, rather than being confined to clubs alone.
A helpful way to think about the learning model is in three layers:
Core classroom teaching, with the inspection framing suggesting confident progress tracking and strong subject outcomes in key skills.
Specialist timetabled provision in sport and dance, plus structured opportunities in drama and public speaking.
“Place-based” learning, where the estate’s outdoor assets allow regular outdoor and practical activity without the school needing to rely entirely on off-site trips to deliver those experiences.
For a prep, published destination patterns and scholarship outcomes are particularly valuable. Hall Grove publishes leavers’ destinations and scholarship awards for Year 8 across recent years and states that, on average, over 30% of Year 8 leavers are awarded a scholarship.
The 2025 leavers list on the school site includes multiple awards to schools such as Lord Wandsworth College and St George’s, Weybridge, along with destinations including Cranleigh School and Bishop’s College, with scholarship types spanning academic, music, sport, art, and all-rounder style awards.
This pattern usually implies two things for families:
The school is used to supporting structured applications and assessments for competitive senior school entry points.
The strongest “outcome signal” is likely to be fit, preparation, and confidence in interviews and assessments, not just raw exam drilling, particularly given the emphasis on oracy and personal development in the inspection profile.
Hall Grove sets out a staged admissions pathway: an initial visit (open morning or individual appointment), registration with a registration fee, year-group-appropriate assessment, and then a place offer followed by an acceptance deposit.
The detail varies by entry point:
For Year 3 entry, the school describes group assessment days in the Spring term over two consecutive days with English and maths assessment plus observation of peer interaction, with offers made before the end of the Spring term.
For other pre-prep and prep years, prospective pupils are described as spending two days in school with maths and English assessment and class observation; older applicants may have an informal interview.
For the Senior School pathway (introduced from Year 9), the published process includes online assessment across verbal, non-verbal, quantitative, and spatial reasoning, a written task that cannot be prepared for, and an interview.
Open events are clearly signposted. The school publishes a next Open Morning date of Friday 13 March 2026, with registration required.
Pastoral detail is mostly expressed through structure rather than slogans. Boarding is small-scale and presented as an optional rhythm within the week, which typically supports independence without requiring full-time boarding readiness at age 7 or 8.
The June 2025 ISI material change inspection states that the school meets the Standards, which is an important compliance baseline, especially for families looking closely at safeguarding and leadership oversight.
This is where Hall Grove most clearly differentiates itself, because several co-curricular strands are embedded into the site itself.
Pony Grove is described by the school as a certified Pony Club centre, with lessons held in a 40m by 20m all-weather arena and additional facilities including a cross-country jumping field. For pupils already riding, this can be a practical “after school” pathway without leaving the estate, which changes the feasibility of regular riding during term time.
The school’s own history materials reference outdoor woodland classrooms, a mountain bike track, a walled garden used for horticulture, and a small farm with sheep. This is not generic “outdoor learning” branding, it is a specific on-site menu that can suit pupils who regulate well through activity and practical tasks alongside classroom learning.
Drama is supported through weekly lessons plus Drama Clubs for Years 3 to 8, public speaking clinics for Years 3 to 8, and LAMDA speech and drama opportunities. Dance is described as timetabled weekly for pupils from Pre-School to Year 8.
The boarding page states that, in a typical week, over 50 activities clubs are available, and historic school communications list examples such as bushcraft, Lego design, magic club, and shooting among club options referenced at the time. (As always, club menus vary termly.)
For 2025 to 2026, the school publishes termly day fees (inclusive of VAT) as follows: Reception £5,600 per term; Years 1 and 2 £5,775 per term; Years 3 and 4 £6,910 per term; Years 5 to 9 £7,500 per term.
Nursery and pre-school fee details are published by the school, but early years pricing should be checked on the school’s own fee page.
Boarding is priced as weekly or flexible options, with published examples including £60 per night, and multi-night per week packages per term, alongside pre-paid occasional boarding bundles. A termly boarding fee is listed as price on application.
On financial support, the school publishes a strong scholarship signal at 13 plus exit. It states that over 30% of Year 8 leavers are awarded a scholarship on average, and provides destination-by-destination scholarship information.
A sibling discount is also published, applied termly to the eldest child when multiple siblings attend concurrently.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
School day timings are published by phase. Early Years have form time and registration from 08:15, with collection at 15:00 or 15:10; timings later in the school extend to collections after 17:00 for seniors.
Wraparound has both operational and cost detail published. Breakfast club is listed at £7.50 per booking, and supper club (including after school activities) at £20 per booking, with additional after-school care options costed separately.
For transport, the school publishes its own transport charges, including termly and half-term options, plus ad hoc journey pricing.
For families relying on road and rail, the contact information notes access via the A30, close proximity to the M3 (Junction 3), and rail access via Sunningdale station as the nearest referenced stop.
Senior school transition is changing. Hall Grove launched a Senior School beginning with Year 9 in September 2025, with Year 10 planned for 2026 and Year 11 for 2027; families should be clear on whether they want a traditional 13 plus move, or continuity into the newer senior phase.
Boarding is optional and small-scale. Weekly and flexible boarding can be a major advantage for some families, but it is not a full-boarding culture; those seeking seven-day boarding immersion may prefer a different model.
Writing development is an explicit improvement area. The 2023 inspection recommendation to develop writing further in the senior years is a useful prompt for parents to ask how this is being addressed in current practice.
Costs beyond tuition are real. Even where many essentials are included, individual music lessons, learning support, some clubs, and certain trips are listed as additional charges; families should map likely extras against their child’s interests.
Hall Grove suits families who want a traditional prep structure with unusually strong “on-site breadth” in riding, outdoor learning assets, and specialist-led sport and performing arts. It also suits parents who value flexible boarding as a practical tool rather than a lifestyle choice.
Who it suits: pupils who thrive with plenty of structured activity, enjoy practical and outdoor learning alongside academics, and families who want a prep that demonstrably supports senior school applications and scholarships.
The latest educational quality inspection (May 2023) judged both academic and other achievements, and personal development, as excellent. The school also publishes detailed Year 8 leaver destinations and scholarship outcomes, which provide a clear picture of how pupils progress at 13 plus.
For 2025 to 2026, termly day fees (inclusive of VAT) are published as £5,600 for Reception, £5,775 for Years 1 and 2, £6,910 for Years 3 and 4, and £7,500 for Years 5 to 9. Boarding has published per-night and multi-night options, with a termly boarding fee listed as price on application.
It is primarily a day school with weekly and flexible boarding options. The published model includes regular weekly boarding (typically Monday to Thursday) and flexible patterns such as occasional and trial nights.
The school outlines a visit, registration, and assessment pathway. For Year 3 entry it describes Spring term group assessment days over two consecutive days; for other years it describes a two-day in-school experience with English and maths assessment and class observation, with interviews for older applicants.
The school publishes its next Open Morning as Friday 13 March 2026, with booking required.
Get in touch with the school directly
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