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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There are plenty of London preps that promise individual attention; fewer can genuinely deliver it at every stage from Nursery through to Year 6. With a published capacity of 144, this is a deliberately small school, with one-form entry and a maximum of 18 pupils per class (outside Nursery).
The most distinctive feature is how intentionally it treats “next steps”. Senior school planning is presented as a core part of the job, not a bolt-on in Year 6. The school even publishes a named list of destination schools and, unusually for a prep of this size, shares a full breakdown of where a recent Year 6 cohort moved on to.
For parents weighing fit, three themes matter most. First, the atmosphere is designed to feel safe and settled, with clear routines and wraparound care extending the day for working families. Second, results are presented in a way that makes the small cohort effect obvious, which is honest and helpful. Third, admissions are non-selective, but not casual: there is an interview, and entry at Reception can be oversubscribed, with priority rules set out in writing.
The tone set on the school’s own pages is unapologetically traditional for a small prep: high expectations, good manners, and a strong home-school partnership are emphasised repeatedly. The Head’s welcome is direct about this, linking pupil conduct in class and beyond the classroom to the school’s standards, and framing education as preparation for the future rather than simply meeting short-term milestones.
Leadership, at least as presented publicly right now, is clear. The school website names Gavin Biston as Headteacher. It is worth being aware that older public records and third-party listings have not always kept pace with leadership changes, which is common across the sector; for families, the practical implication is simple: if leadership continuity matters to you, ask directly about the current senior team and how long they have been in post.
Culture is also shaped by the school’s size. In a one-form entry environment, every child is highly visible, in the best sense, as strengths, gaps, friendships and confidence changes are hard to miss. That can be reassuring for families who want quick feedback loops and staff who know their child well. It can also feel intense for pupils who crave anonymity or a broader peer set, particularly as they approach Year 5 and Year 6.
The latest inspection evidence aligns with the “small school, closely-known pupils” positioning. Inspectors describe pupils feeling happy, safe and secure, and highlight leadership creating a community feel where pastoral care sits centrally in decision making.
(Inspection references are used sparingly here; the point is that the external evidence broadly supports the picture the school presents.)
Independent preps sit in an awkward data space: some publish standardised outcomes (often SATs), but they are not always comparable across schools, and cohort sizes can be extremely small. Here, the school does publish Key Stage 2 SATs results and explicitly states the cohort size. That transparency matters, because the smaller the cohort, the larger the year-to-year swings can be.
For 2024, the school reports:
Reading: 90% at the expected standard; 40% at the higher standard
Maths: 100% at the expected standard; 20% at the higher standard
Writing: 90% at the expected standard; 10% at the higher standard
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: 100% at the expected standard; 60% at the higher standard
Combined reading, writing and maths: 80% at the expected standard; 10% at the higher standard
It also notes these figures are based on 10 children sitting.
The implication for parents is twofold:
It is also helpful that the inspection report points to structured quality assurance in teaching and learning, including lesson observations and work scrutiny, and to staff sharing findings to strengthen practice. That kind of internal routine is typically what reduces volatility in small settings.
Curriculum detail is one of the areas where the website gives parents something concrete to work with. In Key Stage 1, pupils are taught across the National Curriculum subjects, and the school specifies that subject specialist teachers take classes for science, French, physical education, dance and drama, and music.
Two practical consequences flow from that structure:
Subject confidence can be built early. Children who respond well to specialist teaching often benefit from clear subject identities and a slightly different teaching style from lesson to lesson.
Breadth is easier to maintain. In many small schools, breadth exists on paper but narrows in practice; having named specialist areas reduces the risk of the curriculum shrinking under staffing pressure.
Computing is framed as a regular, formal element from Reception upwards, supported by access to computers and iPads. The school’s language here is about capability and independence, which tends to suit pupils who like building competence through frequent practice rather than occasional project weeks.
One of the more “prep-like” parts of the offer is languages. The school states that French is taught weekly from Nursery through Year 6, using songs, rhymes, stories and interactive games in the early years, progressing to longer spoken and written work as pupils move through the school.
It is not “exam prep” selection, but it is still a compatibility check.
This is the area where the school provides unusually concrete information for a small prep.
First, it publishes a list of destination schools that includes a mix of selective state options and independents, which signals that the school supports a range of routes rather than steering every pupil towards one “house style” outcome. The named list includes: Aldenham School, Highgate School, Palmers Green High School, Ashmole Academy, Haileybury, Queenswood School, Dame Alice Owen's School, Henrietta Barnett School, St Albans High School for Girls, Enfield County School for Girls, Highlands School, St John's Senior School, Forest School, Latymer School, St Michael's Catholic Grammar School, Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, Mount House School, and Southgate School.
Second, it publishes a cohort breakdown for the Year 6 class that left in July 2025 (16 pupils). The school lists:
Ashmole: 1 place
Dame Alice Owen’s: 2 places
Forest School: 1 place
Highlands: 3 places
Latymer: 1 place
Mount House: 1 place
Queen Elizabeth’s Girls’: 1 place
Queenswood: 1 place, plus a further 3 places also listed for Queenswood
Southgate: 1 place
St Anne’s: 1 place
Because this is a small cohort, the numbers are not a “league table”. What they do show is that the school is actively engaged with both selective tests and independent school processes, and that outcomes span different academic profiles and school types.
The school’s own description of preparation includes verbal reasoning and non-verbal reasoning incorporated into the curriculum, plus practice papers and monitoring strategies to track progress. For parents, the practical question is not whether preparation exists, but how it is balanced. If you want a heavy tutoring culture, you would probe what is done in-school versus expected at home; if you want a lower-pressure route, you would ask how the school supports pupils heading to non-selective schools so that Year 6 does not become defined by tests.
Admissions are positioned as non-selective, but structured. The written admissions policy describes a two-part process: a tour and interview with the Head, plus an “Acquaint (Taster) day”, with September entrants typically completing this in the summer term before entry.
The website also differentiates by age:
Nursery entry is non-selective, with a practical requirement that children are toilet trained, as the setting does not provide nappy changing facilities.
Reception pupils are informally assessed for language, early mathematical concepts, social skills, and interest levels, with an explicit reassurance that the school does not frame this as children “passing” or “failing” at that age.
Oversubscription rules are spelled out for age 4 entry: priority is given to children of staff within the wider group, then siblings of current or former pupils, then other pupils in strict order of registration, with the reminder that admission is not automatic and candidates must meet the criteria. That is a “prep style” rule-set, and it rewards early engagement.
If you are shortlisting multiple local options, FindMySchool.uk tools can help you keep the process orderly. Use Map Search to sanity-check travel time at drop-off and pick-up, and Saved Schools to track which admissions steps you have completed for each school (tour, registration, taster day, deposit).
Pastoral messaging focuses on respect, encouragement and celebrating both academic and wider achievements. The school presents this as a whole-community approach rather than a bolt-on programme, and that tends to work well in small settings where routines and relationships are stable across the week.
There is also a practical layer that matters for parents. Wraparound care is clearly described: breakfast club covers the pre-school window from 7:45am to 8:30am, and after-school care runs from 3:30pm to 6:00pm, with homework supervision in the hall early in the session and a snack later on. This is the kind of operational detail that tells you the school expects working families, and has built routines to support them.
For pupils who need additional support, the admissions policy and learning support messaging emphasise inclusion and the need to understand a child’s requirements early. In practice, for any small school, the important parental questions are: what support is delivered in-house, what is expected externally, and how quickly the school can adapt if needs change mid-year.
Extracurricular provision reads as a blend of in-house clubs and specialist providers. The school states that clubs run before school, at lunchtime, and after school, and rotate termly.
The most concrete named examples include:
LAMDA lessons delivered at lunchtime or after school on Mondays
Chess coaching offered after school on Tuesdays
Judo coaching offered before school on Mondays
A football club and holiday camps delivered through Smart Play
This matters because it tells you something about how the school builds confidence. LAMDA is a very direct route into public speaking, structured performance and interview confidence, which links neatly to secondary transfer interviews. Chess coaching supports concentration, planning and calm competitive habits. Judo is often good for self-control and physical confidence, particularly for younger pupils who need a channel for energy early in the day.
Food provision is also unusually specific: lunches are described as freshly made hot meals with daily bread, salad bar and fruit, and the school frames lunch as included in fees rather than an added extra. For parents, inclusions matter because they change the “real” cost of a school day.
For 2025-26, published fees for Reception to Year 6 are £4,878 per term (inclusive of VAT). The same document breaks this down as £3,863 tuition plus £1,015 for educational materials and related costs, per term.
One-off charges are set out clearly: a £50 registration fee and a £750 acceptance deposit. The school also describes discounts: 5% for annual payment, sibling discounts (10% for the second child, and for three or more siblings a 10% reduction for the second child with 5% for subsequent children), plus an additional 5% discount for families who work for the NHS, with evidence required.
Financial assistance is available in principle. The admissions policy states that bursaries are offered and are means-tested, with families directed to ask for details. Scholarships and bursaries are also referenced in the fees document, with the note that they apply towards tuition fees and educational materials.
Nursery fees are published separately; for up to date early years pricing and funding offsets, refer to the nursery fees information on the school website.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound care extends the day from 7:45am to 6:00pm, which is a meaningful differentiator for families balancing work schedules.
On travel, the nearest rail link for most families will be Grange Park railway station, which is listed on National Rail as a local station serving the area. The school is also listed on Transport for London’s Travel for Life programme as Gold accredited from September 2023 to August 2026, which suggests sustained attention to active travel and safer journeys.
Small cohort volatility. The school’s Key Stage 2 SATs results are published with cohort sizes, for example 10 pupils in 2024. That is transparent, but it also means year-to-year percentages can swing sharply.
Reception entry can come down to timing. Oversubscription is resolved using staff connections, sibling priority, then registration order. Early engagement matters if Reception is your target entry point.
Curriculum consistency is a stated improvement area. The most recent inspection set a clear “next step” around continuity in art, religious education and design technology. If these subjects are important to your child, ask how schemes of work and progression have been strengthened since.
Fees include meaningful add-ons, but you should still budget for extras. Lunch is described as included, and wraparound care is priced separately. Trips and some externally delivered clubs can add cost across a year.
Grange Park Preparatory School suits families who want a genuinely small prep, clear routines, and a senior school transition process that covers both selective and independent routes. The strongest evidence of “fit” is the combination of published SATs outcomes with openly stated cohort sizes, and the unusually detailed destination breakdown for a recent Year 6 class.
Who it suits: pupils who respond well to being known, guided and stretched in a one-form environment, and parents who value structured pastoral support plus long-day wraparound. The main challenge is that Reception places can be limited and priority rules reward early registration rather than last-minute decision making.
The latest inspection evidence supports a positive picture, with all key standards reported as met and safeguarding included within those standards. The school also publishes Key Stage 2 SATs outcomes and states the cohort size, which helps parents interpret results realistically in a small setting.
For 2025-26, Reception to Year 6 fees are £4,878 per term, inclusive of VAT, with a published breakdown between tuition and educational materials. One-off charges include a £50 registration fee and a £750 acceptance deposit, and the school describes available discounts and means-tested bursaries.
Admissions are non-selective but structured. The process includes a tour and interview plus a taster day. Reception entry can be oversubscribed, with priority given first to staff children within the wider group, then siblings, then applicants in registration order. In-year places depend on availability and usually involve a taster morning.
The school publishes a list of destination schools and a cohort breakdown for the Year 6 class that left in July 2025. That cohort moved to a mix of selective state and independent schools, including Latymer, Dame Alice Owen’s, Forest School, Highlands and Queenswood, among others.
Yes. The school describes wraparound provision running from 7:45am to 6:00pm, with breakfast club in the morning and after-school care from 3:30pm, including supervised homework time early in the session.
Get in touch with the school directly
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