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.
Hambrough Primary School sits in a busy part of Southall, serving a large community intake in the London Borough of Ealing. It is a state-funded community primary with nursery classes, educating children from age 3 to 11, and operating at substantial scale with a published capacity of 520.
The most recent inspection outcome is Good, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision, following the inspection on 29 November 2022.
Academically, the headline story is stronger than the school’s overall ranking band might suggest. In 2024, 71.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 15.33% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. For many families, that combination signals a school that is pushing attainment while still supporting a broad range of starting points.
Competition for Reception places is real. The latest admissions data shows 163 applications for 60 offers, indicating an oversubscribed school where planning ahead matters.
Scale is part of Hambrough’s identity. With more than 500 pupils recorded on the national register, routines and systems have to work, and the school’s public-facing information leans into structure: safeguarding roles are named; school routines are detailed; and parent guidance is explicit about drop-off, collection and expectations around safety.
There is also a strong emphasis on pupil voice and responsibility. The school describes an anti-bullying charter developed through consultation with school councillors, and highlights roles such as Playleaders, Mini-Mentors and School Councillors in supporting a culture where children can report concerns and feel listened to.
A second pillar is rights and community-minded citizenship. The school presents its Rights Respecting School work as a whole-school approach, linking rights with responsibilities and encouraging pupils to reflect on the consequences of actions. Alongside that, the site signposts community initiatives such as local food support projects, which helps explain the civic tone in its messaging, even though day-to-day practice will vary by class and year group.
Leadership is stable. The headteacher listed on the national register is Mrs Louise Singleton, and the school website directs formal correspondence to her as headteacher. Public governance records also show a long-standing link to the role going back at least to April 2009 (recorded through ex-officio governor status).
Hambrough’s 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes indicate attainment that is above England averages in the combined measure that most families track.
Expected standard (reading, writing, maths combined): 71.33% (England average 62%).
Higher standard (greater depth in reading, writing, maths): 15.33% (England average 8%).
Reading scaled score: 102.
Mathematics scaled score: 104.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 104.
Science expected standard: 82% (in line with the England average of 82%).
These results point to a cohort leaving Year 6 with particular strength in mathematics and technical English skills, while science is broadly in line with national norms.
Rankings tell a more mixed story. Hambrough’s current FindMySchool ranking places it below England average overall, with an England rank of 10,623 and a local rank of 62 within Ealing for primary outcomes. As always with any single-rank lens, it is best used for broad comparison rather than as a proxy for what happens in a particular classroom. Parents comparing local options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools to place these outcomes alongside nearby schools with similar intakes.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
71.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum information available on the school website suggests a broad primary offer, with a clear effort to make subject coverage explicit for parents. Alongside English and mathematics, the school signposts work across the wider curriculum, including computing, design and technology, geography, history, music, physical education, and relationships education.
Two practical indicators of how teaching is organised show up in staffing. First, the school lists specialist or visiting provision in music, Spanish and guitar across the week, which often matters in a large primary where subject expertise can otherwise vary by class teacher. Second, senior and inclusion leadership roles are clearly defined, including an assistant head for inclusion and a named SENDCo function within the staffing list, which usually signals a structured approach to additional needs support in a mainstream setting.
For families, the implication is straightforward. If your child responds well to routine and clear expectations, a large school with established systems can be reassuring. If your child needs a very small setting to feel secure, you will want to look closely at how the school uses adults beyond the class teacher, and how it organises support at transition points such as Nursery to Reception and Year 2 to Year 3.
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 primary school, the main destination question is Year 7 transfer. Hambrough’s admissions guidance for families includes signposting around secondary open days and application processes, indicating that transition is treated as a major stage for parents as well as pupils.
In Ealing, most children transfer to a range of local secondary schools depending on address, admissions criteria and parental preference. Families considering Hambrough should plan early to understand the secondary landscape in Southall and wider Ealing, including travel time, oversubscription patterns and whether any schools you are considering have specialist criteria.
Admissions for Reception to Year 6 are managed through Ealing’s local authority process, rather than direct application to the school. Demand is high: the latest admissions figures show 163 applications for 60 offers, and the school is marked as oversubscribed for primary entry. That does not mean a place is impossible, but it does mean families should treat it as competitive and have realistic alternative preferences.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Ealing’s published primary admissions prospectus states:
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Offer date: 16 April 2026
The school also indicates that families can request a visit before applying, which is worth doing early in the autumn term where possible, as open events and tours tend to cluster before the January deadline.
Hambrough operates a large nursery, described as 100 places with 50 children per session, offering 15 hours of free early education for 3 and 4-year-olds over 38 weeks in term time. Sessions are published as:
Morning: 8.45am to 11.45am
Afternoon: 12.45pm to 3.45pm
The school is explicit that a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place, and families must apply separately through the local authority route for Reception.
98.3%
1st preference success rate
59 of 60 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
163
Safeguarding is prominently signposted. The school publishes named safeguarding leads and governors on its site, and sets out expectations around collection arrangements and safety at hometime, including restrictions on collection by siblings under age 16.
The published materials also show a deliberate anti-bullying posture. Beyond policy, the school describes pupil leadership roles, pupil voice activity and an anti-bullying charter developed with school councillors, which matters because the credibility of anti-bullying work often depends on whether children see it as lived practice rather than adult messaging.
Hambrough’s extracurricular picture is best understood in three layers: clubs, pupil leadership, and wraparound enrichment.
The school states that after-school clubs have been offered free of charge since September 2021, with places still requiring booking. Historical event notices show specific examples such as Choir and Guitar club performances, including participation linked to the Ealing Music Festival. These named examples are useful because they point to provision that goes beyond generic “music club” language.
Pupil roles, including School Council and Playground Leaders, appear consistently across the site navigation and wellbeing content, suggesting that leadership opportunities are embedded rather than occasional.
For many working families, the practical impact of extracurricular provision is as much about childcare as enrichment. Hambrough runs a daily breakfast club from 8.00am to 8.55am, and an after-school club from 3.30pm to 5.30pm during term time, with snack and structured activities described (board games, cooking, sports, arts and crafts, books, competitions, homework).
Hambrough is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual primary extras such as uniform, trips and optional clubs, and should ask the school for a current breakdown where needed.
Wraparound care is a clear strength. The school publishes breakfast club (8.00am to 8.55am) and after-school club (3.30pm to 5.30pm, term time) arrangements. Nursery session times are also published, which helps working families plan logistics well in advance.
Transport-wise, most families will approach this as a walk-and-drop or short local journey school. When shortlist planning depends on travel time, use the FindMySchool map tools to sanity-check door-to-door routines at peak times, rather than relying on off-peak estimates.
Competition for Reception places. With 163 applications for 60 offers in the latest published year, admission is competitive. Families should include realistic alternative preferences and understand how the local authority allocates places.
Nursery is not a guaranteed route into Reception. The school is explicit that nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place, and a separate local authority application is still required.
A big school feels different. Scale can be a positive, offering wider peer groups and more structured systems, but it can also feel busy for children who prefer smaller settings. A visit matters here because fit is often about day-to-day routines, not just results.
Results are strong, but not uniformly top-tier by ranking. KS2 outcomes in 2024 exceed England averages on the combined measure, yet the overall ranking band is below England average. Families should look at the full profile, including support, pastoral systems and the individual child’s needs, rather than treating any single measure as definitive.
Hambrough Primary School is a large, established Southall primary with a clear set of routines, substantial wraparound care, and KS2 outcomes that exceed England averages on the combined reading, writing and mathematics measure. The Good inspection profile across all key areas supports the picture of a well-organised mainstream school.
Who it suits: families who value structure, practical childcare provision, and a school that combines above-average attainment with visible pupil voice and responsibility. The main constraint is getting a place at Reception, so shortlisting should be realistic and plan-led rather than hopeful.
Hambrough was judged Good at its most recent inspection (29 November 2022), with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Its 2024 Key Stage 2 results also exceed England averages for the combined reading, writing and maths measure.
Admissions are coordinated by Ealing local authority, and oversubscription is handled through the published community school criteria. Because distance cut-offs vary year to year and depend on applicant patterns, it is best to check the current criteria and recent allocation data when planning a move or a Reception application.
Hambrough has nursery classes and publishes session times. The school also states clearly that a nursery place does not guarantee admission to Reception; Reception applications are made separately through the local authority route.
Yes. The school publishes a breakfast club running from 8.00am to 8.55am, and an after-school club operating from 3.30pm to 5.30pm during term time.
Ealing’s Starting Primary School 2026 prospectus lists the closing date as 15 January 2026 and the offer date as 16 April 2026.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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