The FMS Inspection Score is FindMySchool's proprietary analysis based on official Ofsted and ISI inspection reports. It converts ratings into a standardised 1–10 scale for fair comparison across all schools in England.
Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.
Some prep schools sell a promise. This one sells a plan. Wilmslow Preparatory School was founded in 1909 and moved to Grove Avenue in 1912, and it has kept the feel of a long established local prep while sharpening its focus on transition at 11.
Leadership is stable. Mr Bradley Lavagna-Slater has been headteacher since September 2020, following the previous head’s tenure from 2014.
The latest Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection took place in November 2024 and reported that the required standards, including safeguarding, are met.
The strongest theme here is familiarity. It is a small, all through prep, so children are known well, and day to day routines can be shaped around individual needs rather than around a big year group machine. That shows up in the way pupils’ progress is tracked and in the attention given to wellbeing and relationships.
There is also a distinctly purposeful senior school narrative. By the time pupils reach the oldest year groups, the language shifts from “doing well” to “being ready”, with preparation aimed at selective independent seniors and local grammar routes. In March 2025, the school reported 17 pupils receiving 34 offers from Manchester Consortium schools, plus five passes for Trafford grammar schools, which gives a concrete sense of how the pipeline can look in a strong year.
Nursery provision adds a second rhythm to the day. The on site The Garden Nursery is independently owned and caters for younger children, with longer opening hours than most prep settings. That helps families who need an earlier start and later finish while still wanting continuity on one site.
As an independent prep, Wilmslow Preparatory School does not publish statutory primary performance measures in the same way as state primaries, and the usual headline tables are not the best lens for judging it. A more useful question is how effectively pupils build core literacy, numeracy, confidence, and examination readiness for selective entry at 11.
External review evidence points to pupils gaining good knowledge and skills across the curriculum, with leaders checking progress carefully and using assessment to identify where teaching needs to sharpen further.
If you are comparing local options, this is where a tool based comparison can help. Families weighing independent preps against nearby state primaries can use FindMySchool’s local comparison tools to keep the decision grounded in what matters most for their child, including school size, wraparound realities, and travel patterns, not just reputation.
The curriculum is broad and deliberately structured, with subject specialist teaching visible even at primary ages. The published curriculum areas span core subjects plus computing, design and technology, modern foreign languages, music, art, physical education, religious education, and speech and drama, supported by pastoral strands including personal, social, health and economic education.
A practical example is writing and computing, which leaders have recently prioritised through new systems, resources, and progress. That is the sort of “small school advantage” families tend to value, targeted change can be rolled out quickly without waiting for a trust wide programme cycle.
Early years teaching is described as a blend of play and guided learning, built around secure routines and regular parent communication. The implication for families is predictable, children can settle into school habits early, and parents should expect frequent feedback rather than end of term surprises.
A key development point is stretch in the older year groups.
For a prep that finishes at 11, destinations matter because they are the clearest public signal of academic preparation and coaching quality around admissions.
In 2025, the school reported that 17 pupils collectively received 34 offers from Manchester Consortium schools, including The Manchester Grammar School, Manchester High School for Girls, Stockport Grammar School, The King's School in Macclesfield, and Withington Girls' School. The same update notes five Trafford grammar passes, including Altrincham Grammar School for Boys, Altrincham Grammar School for Girls, Loreto Grammar School, Urmston Grammar Academy, and St Ambrose College.
That mix tells you two things. First, the academic pathway is credible for selective entry. Second, the school seems comfortable supporting different end points, independent seniors, grammar routes, and the right fit for the child rather than a single destination brand.
The school also references a partnership route with The King’s School in Macclesfield, aligning academically and sharing best practice, with access to King’s sports grounds, swimming pool, and performing arts facilities.
Admissions are direct to the school rather than coordinated through the local authority, with places dependent on availability and, for older children, assessment. The published process emphasises a visit and meeting the headteacher, plus the option of a free taster session of half or a full day. The practical implication is that families can test fit early, and the school can start planning support based on how a child responds in the classroom.
The registration fee is £50. A deposit is then used to secure a place when available, set at £250 or £500 depending on year of entry.
For families thinking ahead to 11+ and selective independent tests, the extracurricular timetable also hints at the school’s internal culture. A “Pre 5 11+ and Reasoning Club” appears on the weekly schedule, which will appeal to families who want structured reasoning practice embedded into school life rather than bolted on externally.
If you are moving into the area, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity check travel time at the hours that matter, morning drop off and late collection can feel very different from an off peak test drive.
The school places wellbeing on the same level as academics, in a way that feels operational rather than slogan based. Leaders identify individual needs, staff know pupils well, and personal development topics such as healthy relationships and lifestyles are taught through the PSHE curriculum.
Safeguarding practice is described as systematic, with trained staff, prompt reporting routes, and secure record keeping. Pupils are expected to know that there are adults who will listen and act, and online safety is taught alongside appropriate filtering and monitoring.
For families with additional needs, it is also worth noting that the school’s approach includes tailoring support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, with the stated outcome that those pupils can achieve alongside peers, including gaining places at selective senior schools.
The extracurricular programme is not left to vague “clubs available” wording. A weekly schedule is published and includes named activities by year group, which makes it easier for parents to picture the week.
A few examples show the breadth and the intent. Chamber Choir for Prep 5 and Prep 6, and Orchestra for Prep 4 to Prep 6, underline a structured music pathway that goes beyond a one off performance. Maths Club for Prep 4 and Reasoning Club for Prep 6 indicate academic extension that is built into the school calendar. Sport is similarly specific, with activities such as fencing for Prep 5 and Prep 6 and lacrosse for Prep 3 and Prep 4, alongside tennis across multiple age groups.
Facilities investment is also documented over time. The 2021 compliance inspection report notes refurbished music facilities, an increased outdoor learning area, and the creation of a sports hall and an all weather pitch since the previous inspection. That combination supports a prep identity where performance, physical confidence, and outdoor learning are treated as everyday practice rather than occasional enrichment.
Fees are published as an annual range of £12,285 to £14,385 per year.
Financial support exists and is clearly framed as means tested. Bursary awards range from 10% to 100% remission of fees, and in hardship cases the school may supplement support to cover extra curricular activities, equipment, and trips.
Scholarships and assisted routes also feature. The school has promoted a Scholarship Awards Programme with awards across academic, performing arts, music, art, and sport, including a stated offer of two assisted scholarships for pupils entering Prep 3 in September 2025.
One additional consideration in the current market is VAT policy impact. The school has communicated steps to cushion parents against fee changes linked to VAT, including a reported discretionary credit applied to fees for the 2025/26 academic year.
Nursery fees are not listed here. For early years pricing, families should refer to the nursery’s official information.
Fees data coming soon.
Wraparound care is clearly described. An early morning group runs from 8.00am, and late class runs from 4.00pm to 6.30pm.
The on site Garden Nursery publishes longer opening times, 7.30am to 6.00pm on weekdays, with late collection to 6.30pm by arrangement, which is helpful for families who need full day cover before children move fully into the prep timetable.
The school publishes term dates well ahead, which is valuable for planning childcare and holidays, but daily start and finish times for the core school day are not presented as a single headline on the main pages, so parents should confirm the precise timetable for their child’s year group directly.
Selective destinations culture. The senior school pipeline includes Manchester Consortium and Trafford grammar routes, and that can bring an exam aware feel to the oldest year groups. This suits many children, but families should consider how their child responds to assessments.
Fees planning. Fees sit within a published annual range, and bursaries can be substantial, but the overall cost picture can still vary once you add uniform and optional extras. Start the conversation early if you are relying on financial support.
Nursery and prep are linked by site, not governance. The Garden Nursery is on site and supports wraparound care, but it is independently owned, so policies and pricing may differ from the prep school’s.
Wilmslow Preparatory School is best understood as a deliberately small prep with an unusually explicit transition mission. Its strengths sit in knowing pupils well, teaching across a wide curriculum with specialist input, and preparing children for selective senior school options without forcing a single destination pathway.
Who it suits: families who value small classes, structured extracurriculars, and clear guidance towards 11+ testing and selective senior admissions, while still wanting wraparound practicality on one site.
For families seeking a small independent prep with a strong 11+ transition record, the evidence is reassuring. The most recent ISI inspection confirms that required standards, including safeguarding, are met, and the school’s own reporting shows consistent success in selective senior school offers.
Fees are published as an annual range of £12,285 to £14,385 per year. Bursaries are means tested and can cover 10% to 100% of fees, with scholarships and assisted awards also promoted for certain entry points.
Admissions are managed directly by the school. The published route is visit first, then registration, with places offered subject to availability and assessment for older entrants. Families can also book a free taster session so a child can experience a normal school day before decisions are made.
Yes. Bursaries are means tested and can be substantial, up to full remission in some cases. The school has also advertised scholarship awards across academic, performing arts, music, art, and sport, including assisted scholarships for pupils entering Prep 3 in a recent intake cycle.
The school reports regular success with Manchester Consortium independent schools and Trafford grammar routes. In a recent year, offers included Manchester Grammar, Manchester High School for Girls, Stockport Grammar, King’s Macclesfield, and Withington Girls’ School, alongside multiple Trafford grammar passes.
Yes. The prep school runs an early morning group from 8.00am and late class until 6.30pm. The on site Garden Nursery is independently owned and publishes longer opening hours, which can help families needing full day childcare before children move into the prep years.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.