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.
Few schools can genuinely claim that daily cathedral music is part of the timetable. Here, it is the spine of the school’s identity, alongside a mainstream independent prep education for boys and girls aged 3 to 13.
Founded in 1179 (the earliest written reference), the school sits within Exeter’s Cathedral Close and around Palace Gate, with specialist areas clustered by the Cathedral Green. As of early 2026, families also need to factor in a major structural change: the school has stated it will remain open in its current form until the end of the summer term in July 2026, with Years 3 to 8 scheduled to close after that point.
Leadership is stable. James Featherstone is listed as Headteacher on the government’s school register, and the cathedral’s annual report records him being welcomed as headmaster in January 2016.
This is a small-school experience, by design. The capacity is 300, but recent published figures suggest a significantly smaller roll, which tends to shape a more personal day-to-day rhythm and quicker relationship-building across age groups.
The setting does a lot of heavy lifting. The school describes Nursery and Pre-Prep operating within the Cathedral Close, with the Prep based on Palace Gate and additional specialist spaces around the Cathedral Green. The practical implication is that movement between buildings is part of normal operations, and formal risk management is explicit, including for pupils walking between sites in city streets.
The most distinctive cultural thread is music, especially for choristers. The chorister pathway is presented as a specific commitment for children who love singing, combining professional-standard training and frequent participation in cathedral services with a full curriculum. The school also describes an intentionally inclusive musical culture where non-choristers are expected to take part, and it publishes a long list of ensembles and bands that sit alongside the cathedral choir route.
Faith identity is present but not narrow. The school’s religious character is Church of England, and its own admissions FAQs describe welcoming children of all faiths and none, while still foregrounding collective quiet and reflection as part of the culture. For families who want a school with a clear spiritual dimension, but without an expectation of a uniform faith background, that positioning will appeal.
One current reality is that this review cannot ignore transition uncertainty. The school’s January 2026 statement about the planned closure of Years 3 to 8 changes how families should read every promise about “through to Year 8”, because it directly affects continuity, friendship groups, and the chorister pipeline.
The school publishes its Year 8 examination outcomes over time. For the most recent published cycle, it reports 59% of grades at A* to A, 85% at A* to B, and 95% at A* to C.
There is also a clear “next step” narrative. The school emphasises first-choice senior school outcomes and a long record of scholarships and exhibitions, and it provides named destinations plus individual scholarship types (for example, music, art, academic, sport, organ, choral awards) for a recent leavers’ cohort. A key implication for families is that senior school transition support is not treated as an add-on in Year 8, it is positioned as a multi-year programme with a runway.
The other important lens is how the curriculum is made to fit the reality of chorister schedules. The most recent inspection report explicitly describes staff adapting the curriculum for individual needs and to accommodate musical commitments, while still enabling good progress. That matters because a choir school can drift into a two-track experience if it is not carefully managed. The evidence here suggests the school is consciously engineering the timetable so that music is not the enemy of breadth.
The school presents teaching as personal and purposeful rather than high-volume. In practice, that shows up in a few concrete ways.
First, curriculum planning is described (in formal external reporting) as having clear progression expectations across subjects, with a highly individualised approach for the youngest children and a more analytical, senior-prep emphasis for the oldest pupils. The implication is that families should expect different “feel” across phases: more play-based, choice-led learning in early years; more structured knowledge-building and exam technique as pupils approach Year 8.
Second, feedback and teacher support are highlighted as mechanisms that build pupils’ self-knowledge and confidence. For parents, this is the difference between a school that simply has good outcomes and a school that can articulate how it gets pupils there. The description suggests deliberate attention to coaching pupils academically, not just setting tasks.
Third, the school’s published pathway work implies a fairly strategic approach to senior school readiness. It references Common Entrance preparation, a Senior Enrichment Programme, and an “ECS Futures” programme as part of preparation for life beyond Year 8. Even without granular detail on lesson structures, that combination signals a prep that sees itself as an on-ramp to competitive senior schools, including scholarship routes.
Nursery provision begins at age 3, and early years is treated as a distinct setting rather than a bolt-on. The nursery page references documenting learning through the Tapestry Learning Journal, which points to a structured record of progress and next steps, rather than a purely informal approach.
The school day also has a practical advantage for working families, with early care available from 07h30 and after-school care running to 18h30. The implication is straightforward: this is designed to be workable for parents with full-time jobs, not only for families who can do a mid-afternoon pick-up.
For a prep school, destinations are the headline. Here, the school publishes a named list of senior school destinations for its Year 8 leavers, including Blundell’s School, Bryanston School, Canford School, Exeter School, The King’s School, Canterbury, Lancing College, The Leys, Cambridge, The Maynard School, Wells Cathedral School, and Wellington School. This breadth is typical of a prep that serves both local day-school routes and a boarding-school market for families willing to travel.
It also publishes scholarship and exhibition outcomes for the same cohort, naming award types that range across academic, art, music, sport, organ and choral awards. For parents, the implication is that the school is comfortable preparing children for multiple definitions of success, from specialist music places to design technology, sport and all-rounder scholarships.
On longer time horizons, the school states that since 2016, 75% of Year 8 pupils have earned a scholarship or exhibition each year, and it separately reports that in 2020 and 2021, 84% secured a scholarship at their first-choice senior school. Even allowing for the fact that scholarship definitions vary by senior school, the consistency is meaningful, it suggests that senior school preparation is systematic and embedded.
A final destination-related feature is the guaranteed-places initiative launched for Year 6 pupils, described as a collaboration with four regional senior schools, with published commentary from Exeter School and Wellington School leadership confirming their involvement. The practical implication is reduced uncertainty earlier in the process for families who already know the senior school route they want, although families should read this alongside the announced changes to Years 3 to 8 from September 2026.
Admissions are handled directly by the school rather than the local authority route used by state primaries. The published process is clear and conventional for an independent prep: a family tour, a child taster day, registration, a reference from the current school where appropriate, then an offer and acceptance. The message is that fit matters, both academically and pastorally, not simply a first-come-first-served approach.
Open events are structured around “Discovery Week”, with the school publishing a four-day format in November, segmented by year group. Where dates on independent school sites can sometimes lag a year, the safer assumption is that this is a repeating pattern rather than a one-off. For parents, the actionable point is the timing: expect open sessions to cluster in November and plan early contact if you are looking at a September start.
For choristers, the admissions picture has extra layers. The school publishes separate chorister pathways, including “Be a Chorister for a Day” events for children in Years 2 to 5 who love singing, plus voice trials for would-be choristers. The implication is that families interested in choristership should not treat this as a normal school place plus an optional choir, it is a structured pathway with its own selection points.
One operational note that matters: the school states boarding is no longer offered from September 2024. So, despite many choir schools historically having a boarding tradition, families should assume day-only arrangements.
Parents discussing competitiveness should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check daily logistics and typical commuting time. That matters here because the school draws from across and beyond Exeter, and the day-to-day practicalities can be the deciding factor for younger children.
The school places pastoral systems front and centre, but the more useful question for parents is what that means in practice.
A clear feature is the emotional literacy programme. The inspection report describes an effective personal, social, health and economic education programme helping pupils recognise and manage emotions, with relationships and sex education content presented as suitable and respectful. For families with children who can be anxious or sensitive, that kind of explicit curriculum approach often matters as much as academic stretch.
Safeguarding processes appear well embedded, including regular staff training, clear reporting pathways, and strong oversight. One practical governance detail stood out: an attendance policy lagging behind updated statutory guidance was corrected during inspection. The implication is that compliance work is actively monitored and updated, not left to drift.
For families considering additional support needs, the school publishes that it offers learning support and describes curriculum modification for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities where appropriate.
This is where Exeter Cathedral School is most itself. The school claims 30+ clubs offered each term and 194 weekly instrumental lessons. Even allowing for marketing framing, the headline speaks to a timetable that expects co-curricular participation, not just optional after-school add-ons.
Music is the most distinctive pillar, because it operates at multiple levels. Choristers have a dedicated pathway with cathedral commitments, while non-choristers still have access to structured ensembles. The school publishes an unusually specific list, including three school choirs by age (Years 3 and 4; Years 5 and 6; Years 7 and 8), Orchestra I and II, Flutopia, Bash Street Kids, Rhythm Stix, Arco Ensemble, Big Band, Jazz Band, School of Rock, and The Red Hot Chili Preppers.
The implication is breadth plus identity. Children can find a musical “home” even if they are not aiming for choristership, and the naming of groups signals a culture that makes music social, not purely formal.
Sport is not confined to on-site pitches. The school states it trains and plays at external venues including the University of Exeter Sports Hub, plus cricket, athletics and tennis facilities around the city. Major team sports listed include hockey, cross-country, rugby, netball, cricket and athletics. For parents, the practical point is transport: sports involve minibuses and movement across Exeter, so after-school schedules can be more complex than a single-site prep.
The wider clubs picture starts early. School posts reference Pre-Prep clubs such as Story Club, Card Club, Art and Craft Club, and a Construction Club that uses Lego and design challenges. There is also a Chill Out Club described as structured relaxation with calm activities.
The implication is that the co-curricular programme is used as a tool for personal development, not just entertainment. Some children will thrive on the creative pace; others will prefer a lighter schedule, and parents should be ready to help children choose well rather than do everything.
Fees are published for 2025 to 2026 on a per-term basis, with VAT amounts shown within the published figures. Reception is £4,148.40 per term; Years 1 and 2 are £4,245.60 per term; Years 3 and 4 are £6,220.80 per term; Year 5 is £6,440.40 per term; Years 6 to 8 are £6,952.80 per term.
There are also one-off admissions charges listed as a £90 registration fee (non-refundable) and a £250 confirmation deposit. Nursery fee details are provided separately on the school’s site, and parents should use that official page for the current schedule.
Financial support is a genuine part of the structure. The admissions FAQs state that means-tested bursaries are available, and choristers receive a 25% discount on tuition fees from the Dean and Chapter. Scholarships also exist internally for Years 7 and 8 (assessed in January before entry into Year 7), alongside the school’s wider focus on scholarship preparation for senior schools.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school publishes wraparound hours clearly: Early Club runs from 07h30 and after-school care is available until 18h30. Term dates for 2026 are published, with a note that clubs and after-school care do not run on the final day of term.
Transport options include a shuttle bus with pick-ups at Darts Farm and Aldi on Topsham Road, with published morning timings. For rail travel, families often use Exeter Central, which is described by Exeter Cathedral as the closest mainline station to the Cathedral precinct.
Parking is limited in the Cathedral Close area, but the nursery page points families to nearby car parks and notes that the admissions team can advise on visitor spaces when arranging a visit.
Planned closure of Years 3 to 8 from September 2026. The school has stated it will remain open in its current form until July 2026, with Years 3 to 8 then closing. This affects continuity and should be treated as the first admissions question for any family considering entry beyond Year 2.
Choristership is a timetable commitment, not just a club. Families drawn to the cathedral music pathway should be realistic about rehearsals, services, and how that shapes evenings and weekends, especially as children move into the older prep years.
Multi-site movement is part of daily life. The location is special, but it also means walking between buildings and using minibuses for sport. That suits confident children; more anxious children may need extra support with routines.
Boarding is no longer offered. If you want a choir school with boarding, this is not that model from September 2024 onward.
Exeter Cathedral School is best understood as a music-centred prep with unusually direct access to cathedral life, paired with a destinations-focused senior prep track and strong scholarship outcomes. It suits families who want a small, highly personal setting, children who enjoy structured co-curricular life, and, for some, a serious singing pathway.
The decision hinge in 2026 is structural: with Years 3 to 8 scheduled to close after July 2026, families must separate the historic identity from the near-term reality and confirm what provision will look like for their child’s year group.
The published evidence points to a high-expectation prep with strong Year 8 outcomes and an unusually well-developed music culture. The school reports long-running scholarship and exhibition success for leavers, and its most recent inspection reports that standards are met across education quality and safeguarding.
For 2025 to 2026, published termly fees range from £4,148.40 in Reception to £6,952.80 in Years 6 to 8, with VAT shown within the stated figures. Nursery fees are published separately on the school’s own site, and are best checked directly there for the current schedule.
Admissions are direct, usually starting with an individual tour and a child taster day, followed by registration and an offer process. The school markets open events in November (Discovery Week) and also arranges bespoke tours throughout the year.
Choristership is a specialist route for children who love singing, with coached training and cathedral service commitments alongside the normal curriculum. The school runs chorister open days and voice trials for children in Years 2 to 5.
The school publishes named destinations for Year 8 leavers, spanning local day and national boarding senior schools. It also lists scholarship and exhibition awards by destination school and award type for recent cohorts, signalling that transition preparation is a core part of the senior prep offer.
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