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Hanford is a small, girls-only independent prep in rural Dorset, with day and boarding from age 7 to 13. Its identity is shaped by a country-house setting and a deliberately outdoors-first rhythm, with school life built around sport, riding, creative arts, and unhurried routines. The most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection (02 to 04 December 2025) confirms the school meets the Standards across education, wellbeing, leadership, and safeguarding.
A notable practical feature is the day structure for younger pupils: families can choose between a shorter “Core” day and a longer “Plus” day in Years 3 to 5, designed to mirror the boarding timetable more closely.
Hanford’s atmosphere is rooted in a rare combination: strong boundaries around kindness and manners, paired with genuine permission to roam, explore, and get muddy. The school history materials explicitly describe choices that prioritise freedom and simplicity, including the long-running “no uniform” approach and “lots of ponies”.
The physical backdrop matters here. The main building is a Grade II* listed site recorded by Historic England, which reinforces the sense that this is not a purpose-built prep trying to imitate a country house, it is the real thing.
Leadership has also recently turned a page. Governance documents on the Charity Commission for England and Wales register describe the appointment of Mrs Hilary Phillips as the next Head after the previous leadership team’s departure at the end of August 2023. The current Head is also confirmed on the school’s own staff listing.
Because pupils leave at 13, the best indicators of academic strength are not public exam tables but curriculum quality, learning habits, and senior school outcomes. The December 2025 inspection report describes pupils making good progress, supported by teachers’ strong subject knowledge and lessons planned around different starting points, including support for pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities and pupils with English as an additional language.
The same report is also helpful on what “achievement” looks like in practice at Hanford: a curriculum that intentionally blends traditional subjects with structured activities that build competence and confidence, including orchestra, bushcraft, pony care, and a range of sports.
Teaching at Hanford is designed to feel broad without feeling hurried. The 2025 inspection report sets out several concrete curriculum features parents tend to care about:
French and riding are included for all year groups.
Latin and art appreciation begin from Year 6.
In Years 7 and 8, science is taught as three separate subjects, a useful marker for families who want stronger subject foundations before senior school.
“Activities” lessons can include unusually specific options for a prep, such as disc jockeying, folk singing, and journalism, alongside more conventional sport.
Hanford is also quite intentional about skills for life beyond prep. Inspectors reference the “Hanford Hundred” initiative, a defined list of skills pupils are expected to master before senior school, including debating, first aid knowledge, sign language, and touch typing.
Hanford’s senior school pipeline is clearly articulated. The school states that, over the past 10 years, leavers have been awarded places at their first choice senior school, and it also runs a senior schools fair for families each spring.
A significant number move on to Sherborne Girls, but the published destination list is intentionally broad, spanning leading co-educational and girls’ boarding and day schools, including: Blundell's School, Bryanston School, Canford School, Clayesmore School, Dauntsey's School, Downe House School, Godolphin School, Heathfield School, King's Bruton, Marlborough College, St Edward's School, Oxford, St Mary's School, Ascot, St Mary's School, Calne, St Swithun's School, Stonar School, Tudor Hall School, Westonbirt School, Warminster School, and Wycombe Abbey.
Scholarships and awards are also part of the destination story. The school reports over 100 scholarships and awards since 2015 across academic, art, drama, sport, and music.
Admissions are designed to be accessible, with flexible entry points across the year. The school says its main intake is September, but applications are welcomed throughout the year and pupils may start during the academic year if there is availability.
For families who prefer to see the school in action, two upcoming open mornings are listed: 28 February 2026 and 16 May 2026. The admissions guidance also suggests starting the process at least a year before the intended start date, while noting flexibility if a family’s timeline is shorter.
Given how rural the setting is, it is worth using FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check real door-to-door travel time for your own routine, especially if you are considering day places with later collections.
Pastoral systems at Hanford are not an add-on, they are built into the day structure. The daily routine page describes mornings beginning with matrons, breakfast, and regular chapel, with grace said before meals. That routine is more than tradition; it gives younger boarders predictable touchpoints and clear transitions through the day.
The 2025 inspection report reinforces the same picture from a safeguarding and wellbeing angle: leaders prioritise wellbeing, routines are well structured, and boarders are supported by matrons and nurses through induction and ongoing care. Behaviour expectations are also described as consistent, with pupils encouraged to reflect when things go wrong and to practise courtesy and good manners as a default.
Hanford’s co-curricular life is unusually specific, which is often the sign of a school that is clear about its priorities. The inspection report explicitly names orchestra, bushcraft, pony care, and sport as integrated parts of what pupils do, rather than optional extras tacked on to the edges of the week.
There is also a strong “make and do” thread. Inspectors describe “handwork” where pupils create practical items such as clothes, napkin rings, and purses, often using upcycled materials or natural resources from the grounds. That matters because it develops patience, precision, and pride in craft, qualities that transfer directly into senior school study habits.
If you want a single, very Hanford example, look at the tree-climbing culture. The school publishes the names pupils give to specific branches of a large cedar tree, from “Junior Bog Roll” up to “Catapult”, and notes that climbing is supervised and older girls teach the route. It is playful, but it also signals how confidence-building is deliberately engineered into daily life.
Fees for 2025 to 2026 are published per term, with figures shown inclusive of VAT in brackets. Day fees vary by year and by the “Core” versus “Plus/Senior Day” model in Years 3 to 5. Boarding fees are shown for each year group.
Day (Hanford Plus/Senior Day) per term, inclusive of VAT:
Year 3: £6,765
Year 4: £7,390
Year 5: £8,000
Years 6 to 8: £8,070
Boarding per term, inclusive of VAT:
Year 3: £8,070
Year 4: £9,310
Year 5: £10,425
Years 6 to 8: £10,520
One-off costs published for boarding and day pupils include a £120 registration fee and a £1,000 deposit.
On affordability support, the school’s admissions policy states that a limited number of means-tested bursaries may be available. Scholarships and awards are also part of the picture, with the school reporting over 100 scholarships and awards since 2015 across multiple disciplines.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
For day families, timings depend on the model chosen. For Years 3 to 5, Hanford Core runs as a shorter day with drop-off between 8.15am and 8.25am and collection after lessons finish at 4.40pm. Hanford Plus extends the day for the same year groups, with optional early arrival from 7.45am and collection after supper up to 7.00pm Monday to Friday; Saturday morning school and activities are included.
For day girls in Years 6 to 8, the published expectation is collection at 6.30pm Monday to Friday, with Saturday school finishing at 1.00pm and later collection if selected for fixtures.
Boarding rhythm is structured around exeats and half term. The published term dates for 2026 include multiple weekend breaks and note a coach departure time for certain exeats, which is useful for families planning transport and handovers.
Boarding from age 7 is a real step. The structures are strong, with matrons, nurses, and a clear induction process, but this suits confident, adaptable children more than those who need a slow transition to independence.
Careers education is still developing. The latest inspection highlights limited arrangements for careers guidance and recommends improving it so pupils can consider future education and careers more effectively.
Day places can mean late collections. For older day girls, collection at 6.30pm on weekdays is the published expectation, and the “Plus” model can run to 7.00pm for younger pupils. This is a great fit for some working families, but it can be logistically heavy.
Costs go beyond tuition. Fees are clearly set out, but extras such as activities and learning support can carry additional charges and VAT, so it is worth asking for a full likely-cost picture for your child’s interests.
Hanford suits families who want a girls’ prep that protects time for childhood while still keeping expectations high around learning, manners, and contribution to others. It is at its best for outdoorsy, curious pupils who gain confidence through doing, making, performing, and being trusted with real independence. The key decision is fit: boarding from 7 to 13, and the long day rhythm for day pupils, are brilliant for the right child and a poor match for others.
The most recent independent inspection (December 2025) confirms the school meets the Standards across education, wellbeing, leadership, and safeguarding. For a prep that finishes at 13, the strongest indicators are the quality of curriculum, the breadth of activities, and senior school destinations, all of which are clearly articulated.
For 2025 to 2026, termly fees (including VAT) range from £6,765 to £8,070 for day pupils on the Plus/Senior Day model, and from £8,070 to £10,520 for boarding, depending on year group. A £120 registration fee and a £1,000 deposit are also published.
The school positions itself as accessible rather than exam-driven at entry, focusing on whether the environment is right for the child and family. The admissions team also indicates flexibility on start points across the year, subject to availability.
The published destination list includes Sherborne Girls and a wide range of leading senior schools, both single-sex and co-educational. The school also runs a senior schools fair to help families compare options and understand differing entry requirements.
Two open mornings are listed: 28 February 2026 and 16 May 2026. If those dates do not work, the admissions guidance indicates families can still begin the process through direct contact and arrange a visit.
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