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.
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A Church of England primary in Tupsley, St Paul’s is academically steady rather than headline-grabbing, but the wider offer is where it differentiates itself. The school’s published KS2 picture shows 71% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, ahead of the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure, 23%, is also well above the England average of 8%, suggesting a cohort with a meaningful tail of high attainers.
This is also a school that invests heavily in personal development. The most recent inspection graded personal development as Outstanding, alongside Good judgements for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and early years provision.
For families, the practical question is demand. Reception entry is oversubscribed, with 92 applications for 43 offers in the latest admissions results, which is a little over two applications per place.
St Paul’s frames daily life around a Christian ethos and a clear sense of purpose. The school also sits within a wider trust context, and presents partnership working as part of how it maintains consistency and capacity.
The tone set by leadership matters in primaries, and the head teacher is named publicly on the school website, which helps parents know who is accountable for culture, priorities, and communication.
A key feature of the school’s culture is how it treats personal development as a structured entitlement rather than an optional extra. That shows up both in formal pupil leadership opportunities and in the way enrichment is described as a route to independence and responsibility, not simply “something fun after lessons”.
St Paul’s is a state primary, so the most useful outcome indicators are KS2 measures. In 2024, 71% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 23% reached greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared with the England average of 8%.
Scaled scores add helpful nuance. Reading is 104 and maths is 102, with grammar, punctuation and spelling at 104. Science is also strong, with 89% meeting the expected standard.
In FindMySchool’s proprietary ranking (based on official data), the school is ranked 10,600th in England for primary outcomes and 29th in Hereford locally. This places performance below the England average overall, in line with the bottom 40% of schools in England, even though several headline attainment measures compare positively with national benchmarks. That combination often appears when cohorts are mixed, with some high attainment alongside variability across subjects or groups.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
71%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The best primary teaching is cumulative, it builds knowledge deliberately and checks understanding frequently. The most recent inspection evidence aligns with that model, describing a broad curriculum and well-ordered learning, with clear explanations and routine checks for understanding.
Two curriculum details are worth calling out because they explain the “how”, not just the “what”. First, mathematics is described as giving pupils regular opportunities to practise and improve fluency, then apply that knowledge in reasoning and problem-solving. Second, the school uses planned “progress pauses” and “revisit and revise” activities to help pupils retain learning over time.
The key development area, and one parents should ask about directly, is consistency. The inspection notes some variability in how effectively phonics is implemented. In practice, this is the sort of issue that can show up as uneven early reading confidence across classes unless it is tackled through training, coaching and tight monitoring.
As a Hereford primary, most pupils will move on to local secondary schools, with allocation shaped by Herefordshire admissions arrangements and, for some families, travel patterns and sibling links. If you are shortlisting in this area, it is sensible to map likely secondary routes early, then sanity-check them against your address and the local authority’s published admissions guidance.
For parents comparing primary options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you put KS2 outcomes side by side with nearby schools, which is often more informative than reading headline descriptions in isolation.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Herefordshire. For September 2026 entry, the online application window opened on 15 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Demand data indicates an oversubscribed picture, with 92 applications for 43 offers for the primary entry route provided. That equates to 2.14 applications per place applications per offer, so families should assume competition and plan accordingly.
100%
1st preference success rate
32 of 32 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
43
Offers
43
Applications
92
St Paul’s stands out most clearly in the personal development strand. The inspection evidence points to pupils feeling listened to, learning how to stay safe online and in the wider community, and benefiting from relationships with adults that give them confidence to raise concerns.
The school also uses structured responsibilities to turn “leadership” into something tangible. Examples referenced include pupil council roles and a worship council shaping spaces used by pupils for quiet reflection. These are small design choices, but they matter, they create routine opportunities for pupils to practise responsibility and articulate ideas, not just follow rules.
Safeguarding is a threshold issue for any parent. The report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The extracurricular programme is unusually well-specified, with a published club list that makes it easier for parents to see what is actually running, not just what might run. Across Autumn Term 2025, examples include Football after school for Years 3 to 6, Choir at lunchtime for Years 3 to 6, Coding after school for KS2, Chess Club after school, and a KS2 Stop Motion club delivered by an external provider.
Forest School begins in Reception with weekly sessions, positioned as a way for children to build confidence, become more willing to take appropriate risks, and develop language and self-awareness in an outdoor setting.
Wraparound childcare is available locally through St Paul’s Childcare, supporting children attending St Paul’s and a neighbouring primary. Early Birds operates from 7.50am on weekdays in term time, and the after-school club runs until 5.30pm.
The school day begins with gates opening at 8.35am and registration at 8.50am. Lunchtime runs 12.00pm to 1.00pm, and the day finishes at 3.20pm, with gates opening for parents at 3.10pm.
For wraparound care, provision is not described on the main school “school day” page, but local childcare operates an Early Birds and After School service linked to the school. Parents should confirm availability and booking arrangements directly with the provider, particularly for Reception starters.
Competition for Reception places. The school is oversubscribed in the latest admissions results, with 92 applications for 43 offers. If you are moving or planning ahead, build in alternative options early.
Phonics consistency. Inspection evidence highlights variability in how effectively the phonics programme is implemented. Ask how staff training and monitoring now work, and what this means for pupils who need extra support with early reading.
No published distance indicator. Without a furthest distance at which a place was offered figure here, families should avoid assumptions about how far “usually works” and instead verify admissions criteria and measurement rules for their year group.
Enrichment can feel busy. With clubs, leadership roles and wider experiences, some pupils thrive on the pace, while others need careful balance. It is worth checking how the school supports children who find transitions, timetables, or after-school commitments tiring.
St Paul’s CofE Primary School, Hereford suits families who value a faith-informed ethos, structured personal development, and a clear enrichment offer, alongside attainment that is better than England averages on the key KS2 combined measure. The strongest signal is the school’s emphasis on pupils’ broader development and responsibility. The main challenge is admission competition at Reception, so this is a school to shortlist with a realistic plan B.
It has a strong recent inspection profile, with personal development graded Outstanding and other key areas graded Good in May 2025. KS2 outcomes are also solid, with 71% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, above the England average of 62%.
Reception places are allocated through Herefordshire’s coordinated admissions process using published oversubscription criteria.
Yes. The latest admissions results shows 92 applications for 43 offers for the primary entry route, indicating more applicants than places.
The headline combined measure is 71% at expected standard in reading, writing and maths, above the England average of 62%. At higher standard, 23% reached greater depth across the combined measure, above the England average of 8%. Reading and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores are 104, and maths is 102.
The school publishes a club list, with examples including Football after school, Choir at lunchtime, Coding after school for KS2, Chess Club, and a stop-motion club delivered by an external provider. Forest School also runs weekly from Reception.
Get in touch with the school directly
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