This is a small independent day school for boys in Stamford Hill, serving primary-aged pupils. The roll is 73 pupils against a registered capacity of 120.
The recent inspection picture is the defining context. The school is currently listed as Inadequate on Ofsted’s inspection portal, with the most recent visit being an additional inspection on 29 January 2025.
A further practical point matters for families considering entry. The most recent inspection record states that the Department for Education placed a restriction on the school from September 2022 which prevented the admission of new pupils, and that there were no children on roll in the early years at the time of the January 2025 inspection.
Wiznitz Cheder School sits within the Stamford Hill community and operates as an Orthodox Jewish day school for boys, as described in official inspection documentation.
Given the recent regulatory focus, day-to-day culture is best understood through what external reviews have prioritised. Recent inspection documentation concentrates on the organisation of the secular curriculum, staff capability in core subjects, and the systems that underpin safeguarding and compliance.
For parents, that has two implications. First, the immediate experience is likely to feel tightly structured around getting fundamentals right, particularly spoken English, reading, and mathematics. Second, the school is operating in a context where policies, record-keeping, and oversight are not background admin, they are core to whether the school can stabilise and move forward.
(This is common for some independent schools, particularly where cohorts are small or where published measures are not available.)
What can be stated with confidence from the most recent inspection record is where improvement work has been concentrated. The January 2025 additional inspection describes a strong recent emphasis on strengthening English and mathematics, including clearer schemes of work and increased attention to pupils’ spoken English.
Teaching and learning is currently best characterised as a “back to foundations” phase, with explicit attention on English and mathematics.
Implication for families: if your child needs rapid confidence-building in spoken English and reading routines, this focus may align well, provided teaching is consistent across classes.
Implication: the intent is clearer than it was previously, but the key question for parents is whether implementation is embedded beyond the core subjects, as the inspection record indicates that consistency across subjects remained a challenge at that point.
Implication: ask how the school checks pupils’ retention and progression in subjects outside English and mathematics, and what training staff receive to build subject knowledge.
As a primary-age school, the most relevant “next step” question is transition to secondary education at Year 7.
The most helpful practical approach is to treat this as a family-led planning task: identify the secondary schools you would realistically consider, then ask Wiznitz Cheder School how it supports transition planning, references, and readiness for the expectations of those destinations, particularly in English and mathematics.
Because the admissions context has been affected by a restriction on admitting new pupils (as recorded at the January 2025 inspection), cohort shape and year-group continuity may be atypical. That can affect peer-group stability and transition planning, so it is worth asking how the current cohort is structured by age and how leavers are supported.
Admissions are the most sensitive operational area for this school at present.
The January 2025 inspection record states that a restriction was put in place from September 2022 preventing the admission of new pupils. In practical terms, families should confirm directly whether that restriction remains in force for 2026 entry cycles, and if not, what conditions now apply.
If admissions are open, expect a direct-to-school process typical of independent primaries, rather than a local authority coordinated route. Because the school’s public website presence is not listed in the most recent inspection record, you may need to request admissions information directly.
A useful tactic is to keep your planning grounded and time-safe: treat Wiznitz as one option within a wider shortlist, and use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to track alternatives while you clarify admissions status here.
Recent inspection documentation places significant weight on staffing suitability checks and recruitment record-keeping, and describes leaders taking appropriate action to complete checks and maintain the single central record in line with requirements.
Beyond compliance, the strongest parent questions to ask are practical and child-centred: who holds safeguarding responsibility, what training staff receive, how concerns are logged and followed up, and how the school supports pupils who are developing English as an additional language in social times as well as lessons.
Publicly available information on clubs and enrichment is limited for this school, so families should not assume a typical published after-school programme.
What is evidenced in formal documentation is the school’s current programme focus: a phonics programme matched to reading books; a structured PSHE education curriculum on respect and equality; and subject planning that includes physical education.
If extracurricular breadth is important to your child, ask for specifics such as:
What supervised activities run at lunchtime or after school, and on which days
Whether enrichment is age-banded (Key Stage 1 versus Key Stage 2)
How the school ensures pupils access sport and wider experiences alongside the current academic improvement drive
This is an independent school, but the latest published inspection record lists annual fees for day pupils as £0.
That does not mean school life is cost-free. Families should still budget for typical extras such as uniform, trips, and any optional activities or learning support, and clarify what is included versus charged separately.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The school is based in Stamford Hill (Hackney), with a small roll relative to its registered capacity.
For travel planning, Stamford Hill is well served by local bus routes and Overground links in the wider area; the simplest approach is to map your door-to-door journey at drop-off and pick-up times and check whether walking routes are realistic for your child.
Current regulatory position. The school is listed as Inadequate, and the most recent inspection record states that not all checked independent school standards were met.
Admissions uncertainty. The January 2025 inspection record states that a restriction preventing new admissions had been in place since September 2022. If you are considering 2026 entry, confirming current admissions status is essential before you plan around this option.
Early years reality versus registration. Although the school is registered down to age three, the January 2025 inspection record states there were no Nursery or Reception-age children on roll at that time.
Breadth beyond English and maths. The improvement drive is heavily concentrated on English and mathematics; the inspection record indicates that consistency across other subjects was not yet secure.
Wiznitz Cheder School is a small independent boys’ primary in Stamford Hill, with the most recent public record showing £0 annual day fees, but also a demanding regulatory context and stated restrictions affecting admissions.
Who it suits: families for whom community context and a tightly focused drive on English and mathematics are priorities, and who are comfortable doing direct due diligence on admissions status, safeguarding systems, and how improvements are being sustained. The limiting factor is not day-to-day intent, it is confirming operational stability and admissions openness for your child’s entry point.
The most recent public inspection listing shows the school as Inadequate, and the additional inspection dated 29 January 2025 states that not all checked independent school standards were met. Families should read the latest inspection documents carefully and ask the school how improvements have been embedded since then.
The latest published inspection record lists annual day fees as £0. Families should still check what additional costs apply for uniform, trips, and any optional extras.
The January 2025 inspection record states that a restriction preventing the admission of new pupils had been in place since September 2022. You should confirm directly with the school whether that restriction still applies for your intended entry year group.
The school is registered for ages 3 to 11, but the January 2025 inspection record states there were no Nursery or Reception-age children on roll at that time due to the restriction on new admissions. Ask the school whether early years places are currently available and, if so, what the reopening timeline is.
The January 2025 inspection record describes a strong emphasis on English and mathematics, including expectations around spoken English and reading books matched to phonics knowledge. It also indicates that improvements were not yet consistently embedded across all other subjects at that time.
Get in touch with the school directly
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