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.
A small, faith-led primary in Garston that puts values up front, not as a poster, but as the language pupils are expected to live by. The most recent Ofsted inspection (February 2023) confirmed the school remains Good, and describes a culture where pupils enjoy coming in, feel safe, and behave well because expectations are clear.
This is a one-form entry setting with nursery provision from age 3, plus an enhanced resource provision called Eden for children with more complex learning needs and communication and interaction difficulties. That combination matters for families who want continuity from early years through to Year 6, but also need an inclusive approach that does not rely on one-size-fits-all teaching.
Academically, the school’s 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes sit below England’s overall picture on FindMySchool measures, although combined reading, writing and maths remains above the England average. The more immediate story for parents is that day-to-day teaching is structured, reading is treated as a priority, and catch-up support is used when pupils slip behind.
The school’s own mission statement is direct and memorable: “we care, we share, we love, we learn”, framed as walking in the footsteps of Jesus. That wording is not decorative. It sets expectations about respect, community life, worship, and how pupils are expected to treat each other.
In the February 2023 inspection narrative, pupils are described as kind and considerate, and staff and pupils describe the school as one big family. Unkind behaviour, including bullying, is dealt with quickly and well, which is usually the difference between a school that feels calm and one that feels unpredictable.
Catholic life is embedded rather than bolted on. The mission statement commits to collective worship and liturgical celebrations, and the school explicitly asks families to respect the Catholic ethos while stating that families of other faiths, or none, can still apply and be considered. In practice, this tends to suit families who value a clear moral framework, consistent language about forgiveness and reconciliation, and a community rhythm that includes prayer and worship.
A notable feature here is Eden, the school’s enhanced resource provision. Eden is organised into two classes, Cedar and Oak, with small class sizes and a strong focus on communication, independence and wellbeing. Strategies named include Now/Next boards, objects of reference, Intensive Interaction, Attention Autism (Bucket Therapy), and sensory-based learning, with curriculum work linked to the Equals framework and progress celebrated through the Engagement Model. This is significant for families seeking mainstream belonging alongside specialist support, and it can also shape the wider school culture towards clearer routines and more thoughtful inclusion.
FindMySchool’s primary ranking places the school at 10,882nd in England and 131st in Liverpool for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). That sits below England average overall, in line with the lower-performing 40% of schools in England on this measure.
Looking at the underlying Key Stage 2 picture for 2024, 70% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 14.33% reached greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared to the England average of 8%. Reading and maths scaled scores were both 104. Grammar, punctuation and spelling was 102. These are the sorts of figures that suggest a cohort with a reasonable core, with a smaller but real group pushing into higher attainment.
The subject breakdown shows some strengths worth noting for parents. Mathematics expected standard was 71%, and science expected standard was 86%. Reading expected standard was 64%, while writing greater depth was 7%. In a small primary, results can swing year to year with cohort size, so the more stable question is whether teaching is consistent and whether gaps are spotted early.
The latest Ofsted inspection supports that more stable picture, describing an ambitious curriculum, effective delivery in most subjects, and reading as a clear priority, including consistent phonics in early years and key stage 1, and daily reading times for older pupils.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
70%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Teaching is described, in formal reviews, as structured around clear expectations for behaviour and achievement, including for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities. The implication for families is simple: classrooms that do not lose time to low-level disruption generally learn more, and pupils who need extra scaffolding tend to get it sooner.
Reading is a headline priority. Staff training and resourcing in phonics is highlighted, alongside a deliberate approach to matching early reading books to the sounds pupils know, and providing extra help for those not keeping up. For parents, that usually translates into a school that takes early reading seriously, rather than hoping it will click eventually.
The curriculum ambition is also explicit. Leaders have identified essential knowledge in most subjects, and teachers deliver effectively in those areas, enabling pupils to achieve well. The main improvement point is important to understand: in a few subjects, there is too much content and less clarity about what must be prioritised, which can mean key concepts are not taught securely. Families considering this school should ask how leaders are tightening curriculum sequencing in those subjects, and how that is being monitored across year groups.
One distinctive thread is the Maths Quality Mark messaging, which aims to change the idea that some people are simply “rubbish at maths” and instead pushes practical numeracy, including weekly recipe-based activities that link maths to real-life contexts such as cooking and shopping. This is a specific, tangible example of how a school tries to shift attitudes, not just improve test scores.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Liverpool primary, most pupils will move on to local secondary schools according to Liverpool’s coordinated admissions arrangements and each secondary’s oversubscription criteria. For Catholic families, the natural next step is often a Catholic secondary within reach, but outcomes depend on where you live, sibling links, and how oversubscribed local secondaries are in that particular year.
The most useful question to ask the school is how transition is handled in Year 6, especially for pupils who need more support with change, and how the school builds independent study habits, organisation, and reading stamina ahead of secondary. A practical indicator is how often pupils are expected to read at home, and what happens when reading routines are not in place.
For families comparing several Liverpool primaries, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you weigh Key Stage 2 outcomes alongside other schools you are considering, using the same measures across the board.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Liverpool City Council, with the Reception closing date for September 2026 entry shown as 15 January 2026 (late applications follow after that point).
Holy Trinity is a voluntary aided Catholic school. The governing body is the admissions authority, with the local authority coordinating the process. For the 2025 to 2026 admissions year, the published admission number is 30 places.
If you want your application considered under the school’s faith criteria, you also need to complete the school’s supplementary form. The oversubscription priorities include, in order: looked-after and previously looked-after children; baptised Catholic children with a sibling already at the school; baptised Catholic children resident in the parish of St Wilfrid (including the areas formerly referred to as Holy Trinity and St Francis of Assisi); other baptised Catholic children; then sibling links more generally, followed by other Christian denominations and other faiths, and finally other children. Where a tie-break is needed within a category, distance from home to school is used.
The school is oversubscribed on the most recent available application data, with 35 applications for 29 offers, which is about 1.21 applications per place. That is not extreme by big-city standards, but it is enough to mean families should take the criteria seriously, particularly if relying on faith priority or proximity.
Parents should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check how their home location sits against likely distance pressures in the area, and to sanity-check routes and travel time. Even when distance is not the headline criterion, it often becomes the tie-break when categories fill up.
90.3%
1st preference success rate
28 of 31 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
29
Offers
29
Applications
35
Safeguarding is described as effective, and the culture is framed as proactive. Pupils say they can go to trusted adults if worried, and leaders are described as knowing families well and working with external agencies when support is needed.
Personal development is treated as more than assemblies. Pupils are taught about risks in the community and how to keep themselves safe, with examples in the inspection narrative including learning about county lines and knife crime in an age-appropriate way. The significance here is not the topic list, it is the willingness to address real local risks rather than pretending primary pupils do not encounter them.
Within Eden, wellbeing and relationships are a stated priority, alongside close working with families and external professionals. For pupils in Cedar and Oak, this often means routines that reduce anxiety, communication strategies that are used consistently, and a classroom environment designed to keep learning accessible.
Extracurricular life appears to be variable year to year. The school’s clubs page currently states there are no school clubs at present, but the February 2023 inspection report lists examples of clubs and experiences pupils took part in, including choir, sports, cheerleading, and representing the school in Young Voices. For parents, the practical takeaway is to ask what is running this term and what tends to run across the year.
There are also two school-specific enrichment threads worth noting because they are more than generic “after-school activities”. First, Artsmark Silver from Arts Council England, which indicates a structured focus on arts and cultural education and links to external cultural partners. Secondly, the Maths Quality Mark approach, which uses practical activities such as weekly recipes to connect numeracy to everyday life. These two strands suggest that creativity and applied numeracy are treated as deliberate whole-school priorities, not optional extras.
For pupils in Eden, enrichment often looks different. Attention Autism sessions, sensory-based learning, structured play, and social communication work can be central to progress. That is not “less than” mainstream enrichment, it is the form of enrichment that helps children build attention, interaction, and independence.
The published day structure is clear. Breakfast Club runs 8.00am to 8.40am; gates open at 8.30am and doors at 8.45am. Nursery sessions are 8.30am to 11.30am (morning) and 12.30pm to 3.30pm (afternoon). Reception and key stage 1 run 8.50am to 3.10pm; key stage 2 finishes at 3.15pm.
For travel planning, families typically focus on safe walking routes and the reality of parking and congestion at drop-off. If you are comparing several local schools, it is worth doing a timed run at drop-off and pick-up to see what daily life will feel like, particularly with younger siblings or nursery sessions.
Wraparound care beyond Breakfast Club is not clearly set out on the school’s published “school day” page. Parents who need after-school provision should check what is currently available and whether it is run on-site, via an external provider, or through local schemes.
A competitive Reception intake. The school is oversubscribed on the latest application figures (35 applications for 29 offers). Families should read the oversubscription criteria carefully and make sure supplementary paperwork is completed if applying under faith priority.
Catholic ethos is central. The school explicitly frames its role as participating in the mission of the Catholic Church, while welcoming applications from families of other faiths and none. This suits many families; others may prefer a school where worship and liturgical life are less prominent.
Curriculum refinement is still a live improvement area. The latest inspection notes that in a few subjects, content is not sufficiently prioritised, which can lead to gaps in key concepts. Ask how leaders have tightened curriculum sequencing since 2023.
Clubs may vary. The published clubs page currently says there are no clubs at present, while the inspection report references a range of clubs and events. If wraparound enrichment matters to your family, clarify what is running now and what tends to recur annually.
Holy Trinity Catholic Primary School, Liverpool is best understood as a values-driven community primary with a clear Catholic identity, a published commitment to inclusion, and an ambitious curriculum that is strongest where essential knowledge is well prioritised. It will suit families who want faith and community life to be part of daily schooling, and who value a structured approach to reading and behaviour. Securing entry is the practical hurdle, so families should focus early on admissions criteria, supplementary forms, and the realities of distance as a tie-break when categories fill up.
The school remains Good at its most recent inspection (February 2023), with safeguarding described as effective and pupils described as safe, happy, and enjoying school. Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 show 70% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%.
As a voluntary aided school, places are allocated by oversubscription criteria, and where a tie-break is needed, distance from home to school is used. The practical effect is that living closer can matter, especially when categories are full, but priority also depends on factors such as looked-after status, sibling links, and faith criteria.
Applications are made through Liverpool City Council for September 2026 entry, with the Reception closing date shown as 15 January 2026. If you want your application considered under the school’s Catholic criteria, you also need to complete the school’s supplementary form.
Nursery provision is available from age 3, but Reception places are allocated through the formal admissions process and are not automatically guaranteed. Families should apply through Liverpool’s coordinated admissions process and complete any supplementary paperwork needed for faith priority.
Breakfast Club runs 8.00am to 8.40am, with gates opening at 8.30am and doors at 8.45am. Reception and key stage 1 run 8.50am to 3.10pm, and key stage 2 finishes at 3.15pm. Nursery session times are published separately.
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