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.
Set just off Regent’s Park in Camden, North Bridge House Preparatory is a co-educational independent day school for pupils aged 4 to 13. The setting matters here: the school makes explicit use of its Royal Park neighbourhood for sport, outdoor learning and events, and it also highlights an ongoing collaboration with ZSL London Zoo for behind-the-scenes visits linked to zoology and conservation.
Parents should also understand the school’s current trajectory. The website describes a transition to Alleyn’s Regent’s Park as an “exciting next chapter”, and prospective families are being invited to open events framed around that change.
The June 2023 ISI inspection judged both pupils’ academic and other achievements, and their personal development, as excellent.
This is a school that trades heavily on two kinds of “space”. One is geographic: Regent’s Park is presented as a functional extension of the timetable, used for fixtures and outdoor play rather than a backdrop. The second is architectural: the building is described as a former convent, with features such as an ornate chapel ceiling and stained-glass windows, now paired with specialist rooms and newer Early Years accommodation.
For younger pupils, the school distinguishes The Nest as a dedicated Early Years and Key Stage 1 area. It is described as a “brand-new” space that opens onto a rooftop garden, designed to help children transition into school life. That detail is practical for parents weighing the jump from nursery to Reception, because it signals separation from the bustle of older year groups while still being inside a single school community.
The inspection evidence gives the best window into day-to-day tone without relying on marketing language. It presents pupils as highly engaged learners and confident communicators, with strong relationships between pupils and staff supporting classroom discussion and respectful listening.
For an independent prep, it is more useful to focus on learning quality, curriculum breadth, and senior-school destinations than on a single published results table. Here, there are three credible indicators.
First, the inspection headline is unambiguous about attainment and attitudes to learning. It describes pupils’ knowledge and skills as excellent across subjects, with pupils eager to engage and articulate in reading, writing and speaking.
Second, the report provides concrete examples of stretch across the age range. It references Year 1 pupils applying French vocabulary in speaking, Year 6 Mandarin pupils developing Chinese character writing, and older pupils tackling sophisticated analytical writing, including an essay question on Viking history. That kind of evidence matters because it points to a culture where pupils are expected to explain, justify and apply knowledge, not just recall it.
Third, destinations, scholarships and senior-school readiness are positioned as a key output. The headteacher’s welcome highlights frequent senior school destinations including Channing, City of London, Highgate, Merchant Taylors’, Mill Hill, North London Collegiate, South Hampstead, St Paul’s, UCS and Westminster. While this is not a ranked league table, it is a helpful proxy for the kind of academic profile and interview readiness the school aims to develop by Year 8.
The most distinctive academic feature, based on the inspection evidence, is a specialist-teaching model that shows up in both languages and technology.
Languages appear as a visible pillar. The inspection references breadth “reflecting the school’s commitment to exposing pupils to a range of languages”, with examples spanning French and Mandarin across different year groups. For families seeking early, serious language learning without needing a separate Saturday-school structure, that is a meaningful differentiator.
Technology is framed as both a tool and a subject. The school states that pupils in Year 3 and above receive a 1:1 school device as part of the fee structure. The inspection describes pupils using devices for research, presentations and subject-specific work, including spreadsheets and coding, plus practical creative outputs such as designing a chess piece and a puzzle cube game using 3D printing software. The implication for parents is that “digital” here is not treated as an occasional add-on; it is integrated into humanities, sciences and creative subjects in a way that builds confidence before pupils reach senior school.
Because this is a through-prep to age 13, the most important transition is Year 8 to senior school entry. The school positions that pathway as a core part of its value proposition, naming a wide spread of London independents as frequent destinations.
Families should treat that list as a signpost, not a guarantee. Senior school admissions in London are competitive and depend on a pupil’s profile, assessments, references and interview performance. The useful question to ask on a tour is how the school structures preparation by age: when practice interviews start, how references are handled, and how it supports pupils targeting different types of senior school, including highly selective academic schools versus more all-round options.
One practical, specific indicator of this preparation is in the arts: the school describes supporting pupils in Years 6 and 8 with scholarship applications, and it also references a morning portfolio club from Year 5 for pupils targeting art scholarships.
Admissions are managed directly by the school via an enquiry, visit and application process, with age-appropriate assessment steps.
The most helpful published dates on the admissions page relate to the previous cycle, but they provide a strong guide to the typical rhythm. For September entry, the application deadline is shown as mid-November in the autumn term of the year before entry. For 7+ entry, the school states assessments were held in November, with offers issued in January and an acceptance deadline in February.
For Early Years and Key Stage 1, the school describes a play-based Discovery Morning and indicates that offers are normally sent within two weeks of that session.
Open events are an important part of the process. The school advertises an Open Morning in late September, which suggests that autumn remains the key decision window for September starts.
Parents using FindMySchool tools should treat this as a “timing-sensitive” school: start by using Saved Schools to track open events and deadlines, and use the comparison tools to keep alternative preps and likely senior-school routes in view as your child’s strengths become clearer.
Inspection evidence points to strong personal development, with pupils described as resilient, respectful of diversity and confident. For parents, the practical implication is that the school’s pastoral programme is not only about behaviour management; it is aiming to build social maturity and independence well before senior school applications and the pressures that can come with them.
A balanced view also means noting the inspection recommendations. Two areas were flagged for improvement: developing pupils’ leadership and initiative in everyday learning, and further supporting pupils’ ability to develop strong healthy relationships. Those are not unusual themes for a busy prep, but they are worth exploring in conversation, especially for families with children who need explicit coaching in peer dynamics or confidence to take the lead.
Creative arts look like a genuine strength, with unusually concrete examples of both breadth and ambition. The arts programme is described as spanning abstract expressionism, textiles, sculpture and 3D printing, and the school runs an annual “Big Exhibition” displaying work by every student.
For pupils with particular flair, there is a clear scholarship lens. The school describes regular support for senior-school scholarship applications, and it highlights a morning portfolio club from Year 5 as a structured runway towards that goal.
After-school arts clubs are also named rather than described generically, with examples including Calligraphy, Anime, Street Art and Model-Making. That specificity is useful because it signals the school is likely to refresh its co-curricular menu based on staff expertise and pupil interest, not just run the same staples each term.
Facilities also support breadth. The school lists specialist spaces including an Innovation Suite, library, drama studio, gymnasium, two science laboratories, two music rooms plus soundproof music pods for one-to-one tuition, practice and recording, and a chapel used for productions.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, published termly tuition fees (inclusive of VAT, with lunch included) are: Reception £9,537; Years 1 to 2 £9,954; Years 3 to 6 £10,389; Years 7 to 8 £10,442. The school also states that pupils in Year 3 and above receive a 1:1 school device included within the fee structure.
It is also important to factor in admissions costs. The admissions page lists an application fee of £180.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school is in Camden, adjacent to Regent’s Park, and it explicitly uses the park as an extension of school life for sport and outdoor activities.
A school in transition. The website frames the current period as a move towards Alleyn’s Regent’s Park. Families should ask what is changing in curriculum, branding and senior-school pathways, and what stays stable for pupils already on roll.
Admissions timing is easy to miss. The published pattern suggests key steps happen in the autumn term for September entry, with 7+ assessments in November and decisions landing from January. If you are starting late, ask about in-year vacancies and waiting list expectations.
Pastoral development is strong, but leadership is a stated next step. The inspection praises pupils’ personal development while also recommending further work on leadership, initiative and healthy relationships. That combination may suit many children well, but it is worth probing how the school teaches and practises those skills day to day.
Fees include some meaningful extras, but budget for the full picture. Lunch, VAT and a Year 3+ device are included, and there is an admissions application fee. Ask for a clear outline of additional costs such as clubs, trips, peripatetic music tuition and uniforms.
North Bridge House Preparatory suits families who want a central London prep with tangible specialist facilities, strong creative arts, and a clear focus on preparing pupils for competitive senior schools. It is particularly well matched to children who enjoy languages, technology-enabled learning and visible opportunities in the arts. The main judgement call is confidence in the school’s “next chapter”, and whether the transition described aligns with your priorities for senior school destinations and school culture.
The most recent ISI inspection (June 2023) judged pupils’ academic and other achievements as excellent, and their personal development as excellent. Families should still visit, because “fit” at prep level depends on how a child responds to expectations, classroom pace and co-curricular breadth.
For 2025 to 2026, termly fees are published by year group: Reception £9,537; Years 1 to 2 £9,954; Years 3 to 6 £10,389; Years 7 to 8 £10,442. The school states these fees include VAT and lunch, and that Year 3 and above receive a 1:1 school device included within the fee structure.
The admissions page shows the previous September-entry deadline falling in mid-November of the year before entry, and it sets out a wider pattern of assessments and offers running through late autumn and early spring. For the current cycle, families should confirm the exact dates with the school, since annual timings can shift.
For Reception to Year 2, applicants are invited to a play-based Discovery Morning and offers are typically sent within two weeks. For Year 3 to Year 8, the school describes a short online assessment in Maths and English followed by a meeting with a member of the Senior Leadership team.
In the arts, the school highlights an annual Big Exhibition and a menu of creative clubs including Calligraphy, Anime, Street Art and Model-Making. Facilities listed on the site include an Innovation Suite, drama studio, music rooms with soundproof pods, and two science laboratories, which supports a broad co-curricular programme across creative and academic areas.
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