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A small prep in Caterham Valley that trades scale for familiarity, Oakhyrst Grange is built around tight class sizes, a structured school day, and a clear destination story. The age range runs from three to eleven, with Nursery age children in Pre-Reception and pupils progressing through to Year 6, preparing for senior school entrance assessments at 11+.
Two recent inspection moments matter for parents reading today. The school had significant compliance weaknesses identified in late 2023, particularly around safeguarding oversight and recruitment record keeping, then underwent a progress monitoring inspection in December 2024 which confirmed the relevant Standards checked at that visit were met. That arc frames a school that has needed to tighten systems, and has since been required to demonstrate improvement.
For families who want a co-educational prep with strong routines, wraparound care, and a broad spread of clubs (from archery to chamber choir to coding), this will feel like a pragmatic option. Entry is not exam-led, but it is capacity-led, and early years places are managed through a registrations list.
Oakhyrst Grange positions itself as a small school with traditional expectations, with an emphasis on behaviour, courtesy, and a steady work ethic. The language used across its public materials leans towards calm confidence rather than trend-led pedagogy, and the school’s own messaging is clear that it intends pupils to be ready for a wide range of senior schools, including selective routes.
The practical reality of a small prep is that adults and children typically know one another quickly. That can be reassuring for families with a younger child who needs steady transitions, and it can also create a more visible culture around behaviour, where patterns are noticed early. The school’s day structure is highly timetabled, with defined lesson blocks, assemblies, and staggered end times by year group, which tends to suit children who do well with routine.
A distinctive physical detail that does show up in official inspection reporting is the school’s Reading Garden, referenced as a resourced space that supports reading enjoyment. That matters because it is more specific than the generic “we love reading” claim most schools make, and it suggests an intentional reading culture rather than a library that is only used in timetabled slots.
. Parents should therefore judge academic “outcomes” through three practical proxies: how teaching is tracked, how learning needs are identified, and what the senior school pipeline looks like at Year 6.
On assessment and tracking, the school has described structured systems that help teachers understand individual needs, and parents receive regular reporting on progress. This matters most in a small school because it sets the tone for responsiveness, whether your child is stretching ahead or needs targeted support in literacy, maths, or confidence with speaking and writing.
On senior school preparation, the school is explicit that most Year 6 pupils sit entrance examinations across both independent and grammar pathways, with the aim of matching children to the right next school. That is an academically purposeful end point for a prep, and it implies a Year 5 and Year 6 curriculum that will not drift away from English and maths fundamentals.
The curriculum is structured across Early Years Foundation Stage, pre-prep, and prep, with the stated aim of combining scholarship and hard work with broader development. In day-to-day terms, that usually translates into explicit teaching of core skills, regular practice, and a steady climb in expectations as children move into Years 3 to 6.
Entry to the older year groups is not via formal entrance examinations, but it is not “walk-in” either. From Year 2, children are invited to a taster day and complete informal checks in English, maths and reading. The implication is that the school is trying to confirm a child can access the level of the class they would join, while keeping the experience lower pressure than a traditional written entrance test.
For children with particular talents, the school’s published curriculum documentation suggests it has a conscious approach to scholarship preparation, including portfolio development in art across the later prep years. That is a niche but useful signal for families aiming at senior schools where art, music, sport, or all-rounder scholarships are part of the 11+ landscape.
This is a prep where the “next step” is a core part of the narrative. The school publishes a list of senior school destinations that includes a mix of selective independents and strong local state options, including Caterham School, Whitgift School, Trinity School, Royal Russell School, Reigate Grammar, Croydon High School, Woldingham School, Worth School, and several others.
For parents, the practical takeaway is that the school appears comfortable supporting multiple routes at the end of Year 6, rather than assuming one default destination. That can be helpful if you are undecided at age seven or eight about whether you will prioritise a selective independent, a grammar route, or a strong comprehensive. It also suggests the school will be familiar with the different assessment styles children face at 10+ and 11+.
Because this is a primary-phase setting, there is also the simple developmental question: does your child need a gentler transition, or do they thrive on challenge and external assessment? A prep that explicitly prepares for senior school entrance can be an excellent fit for a child who likes goals and structured practice; it can feel intense for a child who would prefer a less exam-referenced primary experience.
Admissions are capacity-led, and the school describes small class sizes, with places allocated on a first come, first served basis in early years and a registration list running several years ahead. If you are looking at Pre-Reception or Reception, the main message is to plan early, even if your child is still two.
For Years 1 to 6, entry depends on availability, with a taster day and informal academic checks from Year 2. This tends to suit families moving into the area or switching from another setting who want a realistic sense of whether the class is the right level and social fit.
Open mornings are published as a repeating pattern across the year, typically in February, May and October. The school also publishes term dates, which is useful for working families aligning childcare and holiday planning.
Parents shortlisting schools at this stage should also use FindMySchool tools in a practical way: keep a shortlist (Saved Schools) and compare wraparound hours and term dates alongside other nearby options, because the “fit” question at prep age is often logistical as much as philosophical.
The school frames wellbeing through belonging, kindness, and adults knowing children well, which is a common small-prep strength when it is backed by consistent routines. Wraparound care is integrated into that picture, with breakfast provision and structured after-school supervision rather than an ad hoc “children wait around” model.
It is also important to treat safeguarding and operational compliance as part of wellbeing, not separate from it. The most recent monitoring visit confirmed that the relevant Standards checked at that inspection were met, following concerns identified in late 2023. For families, the sensible approach is to ask direct questions at a visit about safeguarding leadership, recruitment checks, and how concerns are logged and escalated now, then assess the clarity and confidence of the answers.
The co-curricular list is unusually specific and therefore genuinely helpful. The published club examples include archery, taekwondo, IT coding, construction club, orchestra club, chamber choir, brass ensemble, violin ensemble, guitar ensemble, ballet, modern dance, gymnastics, hockey, netball, cricket, badminton, athletics, and woodland activities, among others.
The implication for children is breadth without needing the scale of a large prep. A child can try performance through choir or orchestra, then switch to practical making through construction club, then spend a term in coding. In small schools, the limiting factor is sometimes whether clubs run if numbers are low, so parents should ask which activities are most consistently available across the year groups their child will be in.
Trips and visits are presented as curriculum-linked, with examples ranging from local outings for younger children to more substantial experiences later on, including a one-night residential listed for Year 3. The educational benefit is less about the trip itself and more about what it does to confidence, independence, and talk-rich learning afterwards.
As an independent school, Oakhyrst Grange charges tuition fees. For 2025/26, the published termly day fees (including VAT where applicable) are listed for Reception through Year 6, with lunch included. The school also publishes one-off charges such as a registration fee and a deposit.
Nursery-age provision (Pre-Reception) is priced separately and also references Early Years grant funding, with eligible families able to access funded hours for three and four year olds. For early years fee detail, use the school’s fees page and confirm the pattern of sessions offered, since flexibility is often as important as the headline figure.
On financial support, publicly available listings indicate no scholarships or bursaries offered by the school itself. This does not prevent pupils later earning senior school scholarships at 11+, but it does mean fee reduction at this stage should not be assumed.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day is tightly structured. Registration is at 8.40am, with staggered finishing times: 3.20pm for Pre-Reception and Reception, 3.25pm for Years 1 and 2, 3.35pm for Years 3 and 4, and 3.45pm for Years 5 and 6.
Wraparound care includes breakfast club from 7.30am, plus after-school care up to 6.00pm. Breakfast club and early arrival have per-session charges, and after-school care pricing varies by session length. These details matter because they are often the real differentiator between schools that look similar on paper.
Lunch is described as freshly cooked on site, and the school highlights mixed-age “family style” meals, with older pupils supporting younger children. That social structure can be a quiet strength for confidence and manners, particularly for younger pupils who benefit from older role models.
Compliance history and questions to ask. Late 2023 findings raised concerns about safeguarding referral timeliness and recruitment record oversight, followed by a monitoring visit confirming the checked Standards were met in December 2024. Families should use a visit to probe how systems now work in practice, especially around logging concerns and safer recruitment.
Early years entry can be list-driven. Pre-Reception and Reception admissions describe a registrations list running years ahead and places allocated first come, first served. If you are considering this route, delaying a decision can be the difference between choice and compromise.
Fees include VAT in the published totals for most year groups. Parents budgeting should use the “total” figures on the fees page and confirm what is included (lunch is stated as included) and what is extra (clubs are described as charged separately).
Small school trade-offs. A close-knit setting can suit many children, but it can also mean fewer peers per year group and less “critical mass” for niche clubs every term. Ask which activities are most consistent for your child’s age range.
Oakhyrst Grange School suits families who want a small, structured prep with clear senior school ambition, strong routines, and a practical wraparound offer. It is likely to appeal most to children who respond well to predictable days, close adult oversight, and a steady build towards 11+ style expectations.
The main decision points are admissions timing in the early years, the real-world affordability of fee totals once VAT and extras are considered, and parental confidence in the school’s tightened compliance systems following the 2023 findings and the subsequent monitoring confirmation.
It can be a strong fit for families seeking a small independent prep with a structured day, broad clubs, and an explicit focus on senior school transition. Recent external inspection history is important context, with later monitoring confirming the relevant Standards checked were met, so families should still ask detailed questions and satisfy themselves during visits.
Fees are published per term for Reception through Year 6, with lunch included, and most year groups shown with VAT included in the total. Early years (Pre-Reception) is priced separately and should be checked on the school’s fees page, particularly because session patterns and funding eligibility can affect the true cost.
The school describes places as first come, first served in early years, with a registrations list running several years ahead. The usual practical advice is to enquire early, then use an open morning or visit to check fit and session patterns.
Yes. Breakfast provision is described as starting at 7.30am, and after-school care runs up to 6.00pm, with session charges published. This is available across the age range, with after-school care structured slightly differently for younger children versus Year 1 and above.
The school publishes a destination list including a range of independent and state options such as Caterham School, Whitgift, Trinity, Royal Russell, Reigate Grammar and others. Families considering specific senior schools should ask what preparation looks like in Years 5 and 6 for those particular entry routes.
Get in touch with the school directly
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