Al-Falah Primary School is a small independent primary in Lower Clapton, Hackney, serving pupils aged 5 to 11, with capacity listed at 120.
The school’s identity is closely tied to a split-day model, National Curriculum subjects typically taught in the morning, with Islamic curriculum taught in the afternoon.
The most recent full inspection (2 to 4 July 2024) judged the school as Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development both rated Outstanding.
For families weighing independent options in London, the headline is value and focus. The published 2025 to 2026 fee level is comparatively low for the sector, and the offer centres on high expectations, calm behaviour, and a curriculum that aims to be ambitious across subjects.
This is a small school by London standards, and that shapes daily life. The website itself points to small class numbers as a defining feature, which often translates into more individual attention and a tighter sense of belonging, provided a child is comfortable in a close-knit setting.
Behaviour is a major strength. The latest inspection describes high expectations shared consistently by staff, and it is reflected in the school’s judgement profile, with Behaviour and attitudes rated Outstanding.
The school also places visible emphasis on pupil voice and responsibility. In the latest inspection narrative, pupils describe improvements linked to school council input, such as new playground equipment.
Culturally, Al-Falah positions itself as an Islamic primary serving boys and girls, with pupils from a range of ethnic backgrounds, and with the curriculum designed to connect moral development and citizenship to faith-based learning.
What can be said with confidence is that the curriculum intent is framed as ambitious for all pupils, and the inspection evidence indicates that pupils typically achieve well across much of the curriculum, with clear sequencing in many subjects and routine checking for gaps and misconceptions.
Early reading is a clear pillar in the inspection evidence. The report notes investment in a phonics programme delivered across key stage 1, alongside fluency and enthusiasm for reading.
Where the academic picture is more mixed is in curriculum precision and in identification of needs. The inspection notes that in some subjects learning is not consistently broken into small enough components to build deeper knowledge, and that procedures for identifying a small proportion of pupils with specific special educational needs, or social and emotional needs, are not as well developed as they should be.
Teaching at Al-Falah is structured around a broad, balanced curriculum that explicitly aims to combine high academic expectations with Islamic education. The school’s prospectus describes a day split into two parts, giving equal significance to National Curriculum and Islamic Studies, which is important for families who want that integrated approach rather than an add-on model.
The inspection describes staff checking knowledge routinely and adapting plans when gaps appear, which is the practical engine behind “high expectations” when it works well.
A helpful detail for parents is the way subject enrichment shows up in specific curriculum choices. For example, the published curriculum policy describes music that includes recitation and nasheeds, and also names particular instruments, including the derbuka, def and bendir, suggesting a music offer shaped by the school’s ethos rather than a generic template.
In practical terms, families should expect that most pupils will move into Hackney and wider London secondaries via standard secondary admissions, with choices shaped by distance, sibling links, faith considerations where relevant, and each family’s preference order.
A sensible step is to map likely secondary options early. FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for checking realistic travel distances and comparing nearby secondary schools on a like-for-like basis, especially in London where short distance differences can matter.
Admissions are handled directly by the school rather than via Hackney’s co-ordinated primary admissions route.
The admissions policy sets out a priority order that begins with siblings (first within the local area, then outside it), then children living within the local area without siblings, then those living within the London Borough of Hackney, then those outside Hackney. Within each criterion, places are offered on a first-come basis.
Entry patterns differ by year group:
For Year 1 entry, the published criteria apply.
For in-year entry (Years 2 to 6), the school operates a waiting list and states that applicants may be called to sit an entry examination, with timing given as April for September entry and October for January entry.
The policy also states that admissions are taken twice each year, in September and January, which matters for families arriving mid-year.
Safeguarding is a core baseline question for any school, and the latest inspection states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
On day-to-day wellbeing, the inspection evidence points to calm routines, strong relationships between pupils and staff, and a culture where bullying is described as extremely rare and taken seriously.
The main pastoral development point to watch is the school’s systems for identifying and supporting pupils with certain additional needs, particularly around SEND identification and social and emotional needs. For parents of children who need more structured pastoral or learning support, this is an area to explore carefully in conversations with leaders, including what screening, referral, and external specialist pathways look like in practice.
The school uses trips and external experiences as part of the wider curriculum. The latest inspection describes regular visits, including local museums and parks, plus exhibitions and invited visitors that help bring learning to life.
On facilities, the school highlights several concrete spaces that matter at primary age:
A dedicated ICT room with safe internet access, used for weekly ICT lessons and cross-curricular work, including projects such as 3D modelling.
A library with novels across genres as well as reference and poetry books, positioned for both pleasure reading and research.
A soft-matted playground at the rear of the school, used for playtimes and PE, with local parks and libraries within walking distance.
Art and design activity that has included producing work for Hackney Museum, which is a more specific marker than the usual “strong in art” claim.
The school’s curriculum documentation also signals enrichment through cultural and religious life, such as structured Islamic Studies content and an emphasis on Quran reading with tajweed.
Al-Falah Primary School is an independent school, so tuition fees apply.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, the published fee is £3,200 plus VAT, shown as £3,840 including VAT. The fees policy also sets out payment options, either full payment in July 2025 or three instalments of £1,280 due in July 2025, November 2025, and March 2026.
The same document lists a one-off, non-refundable admissions fee of £300 per child in the first year of enrolment, payable on confirmation of a place.
The fees policy also flags typical additional costs, including resources such as Islamic curriculum books and SATs materials, with an indication that these can vary by year group.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The school publishes a calendar for 2025 to 2026, which is useful for term-time planning.
For travel, the setting is residential Lower Clapton. Real-world drop-off feasibility depends heavily on each family’s route and timing, so it is worth doing a timed test run on a weekday.
Academic benchmarking is limited in published data. The available results does not include national test outcomes or FindMySchool rankings for this school, so parents should rely on meetings, work samples, and the curriculum detail to gauge academic fit.
Identification of additional needs needs scrutiny. The latest inspection highlights that systems to identify and support a small proportion of pupils with SEND, and social or emotional needs, are not as well developed as they should be. This matters if your child may need structured interventions.
Admissions timing and in-year entry are specific. The policy describes September and January intake points and indicates entry testing for Years 2 to 6, with typical test timing in April for September entry and October for January entry. Plan ahead if you are considering anything other than Year 1 entry.
Fee structure includes VAT and a registration fee. The published tuition for 2025 to 2026 is £3,200 plus VAT, and there is a £300 admissions fee in the first year, so families should budget for both.
Al-Falah Primary School is a small independent primary that combines the National Curriculum with Islamic Studies through a split-day model, and it is strongest where behaviour, relationships, and personal development are concerned. The 2024 inspection profile supports that picture, with Outstanding judgements in Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development alongside a Good overall rating.
It suits families who want an Islamic ethos within an independent primary structure, value a smaller school setting, and prioritise calm, consistent behaviour standards. The main due diligence task is academic and pastoral detail, specifically how consistently subject knowledge builds in every area, and how additional needs are identified and supported.
The most recent full inspection (2 to 4 July 2024) judged the school as Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development rated Outstanding. The report also describes high expectations and very positive pupil attitudes to learning.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, the published fee is £3,200 plus VAT, shown as £3,840 including VAT. A one-off admissions fee of £300 per child applies in the first year of enrolment.
Applications are made directly to the school. The admissions policy prioritises siblings first, then local proximity, then Hackney residents, then applicants outside Hackney, with places offered on a first-come basis within each criterion.
The admissions policy states that for September admission, the entry test is typically in April, and for January admission, typically in October. These timings are described as the school’s usual pattern.
Facilities highlighted by the school include a dedicated ICT room used for weekly ICT and cross-curricular work, a library with fiction and reference stock, and a soft-matted playground area.
Get in touch with the school directly
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