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.
A primary in Wood Green that pairs a distinctly traditional building with results that sit among the strongest in England. The academy serves Nursery through Year 6 and operates as a two-form entry school, so pupils typically have broad peer groups without losing the sense that staff can know families well. The building itself matters here, it is Grade II listed Victorian, with original features still part of the day-to-day environment.
The headline for parents, though, is performance. In the most recent published key stage 2 outcomes, 93% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics. That is far above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 51.67% reached greater depth, compared with the England average of 8%. On FindMySchool’s ranking (built from official data), the school is ranked 57th in England and 1st in Haringey for primary outcomes, placing it among the highest-performing in England (top 2%).
Admissions demand is equally clear. For Reception entry, 212 applications were recorded for 60 offers, around 3.53 applications per place, so oversubscription is the norm rather than the exception.
The site sets the tone. A Grade II listed Victorian building brings a sense of permanence, and the school explicitly leans into the idea of belonging. House identity is a good example. Every pupil is assigned to one of four houses named after Londoners, Adepitan, Franklin, Attenborough, and Thompson, with each figure introduced in an age-appropriate way. It is a simple structure, but it gives pupils a shared language for teamwork and recognition, especially around events like sports day.
Leadership structure is also clearly presented. The principal is Melissa Martinez, and the published leadership team includes a vice principal and assistant principals with defined areas of responsibility. Parents who value clarity about who does what usually find this reassuring, particularly in a larger primary where responsibilities are necessarily distributed.
The most recent inspection evidence supports a settled, positive climate. The February 2023 Ofsted inspection confirmed the school continues to be Outstanding. Pupils are described as proud of their school and behaviour is reported as extremely strong, which, in practical terms, tends to show up in calm transitions, orderly classrooms, and lessons that can move at pace without constant interruption.
The performance profile is unusually strong for a large, non-selective primary.
93% met the expected standard. England average: 62%.
51.67% reached the higher standard. England average: 8%.
reading 113, mathematics 112, GPS 112.
The implication is straightforward. A school that can get the vast majority of pupils to expected standards, while also stretching a very large share to higher standard, is doing two things well at once: securing foundations for most pupils and maintaining genuine extension for high attainers.
Rankings are consistent with those outcomes. Ranked 57th in England and 1st in Haringey for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the school sits among the highest-performing in England (top 2%).
For parents comparing options, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to place these figures next to other Haringey primaries, particularly if you are weighing a slightly longer commute against a meaningful difference in attainment.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
93%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum information published by the academy suggests a broad, structured approach rather than a narrow focus on tests. Spanish is part of the curriculum menu, as are specialist subject areas like computing and design and technology, which often get squeezed in crowded timetables.
A useful window into what learning looks like is the way extracurricular links back to curriculum content. The design and technology offer explicitly references practical clubs such as Cooking Club, Gardening Club, Art and D&T Club, and Computing Club, including CAD work. That is a concrete signal that pupils are not only covering content in lesson time, they are also being given optional routes to rehearse and apply skills beyond the core timetable.
Music similarly looks designed to build confidence through performance and collaboration, with emphasis on singing and learning instruments. For many children, that kind of structured music provision is where self-belief can develop fastest, because the feedback loop is immediate, practise leads to progress you can hear.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary, the key question is transition at Year 6. Trinity Primary Academy is in Wood Green, and families typically look at local state secondaries in Haringey and neighbouring boroughs, balancing travel time, admissions criteria, and individual fit.
What the academy can most credibly signal is readiness. With 93% meeting expected standards at the end of primary, most pupils should be well prepared for a broad secondary curriculum, particularly in reading and maths which underpin access across subjects.
For families set on a particular secondary route, it is sensible to map backwards from the secondary admissions rules and transport reality. The FindMySchoolMap Search is especially useful here, because even small changes in walking distance can affect real-life feasibility when you are juggling work, siblings, and wraparound care.
Reception places are coordinated through the local authority process, rather than direct application to the academy. For September 2026 entry, the key local authority dates are clear:
Applications open: 01 September 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
National Offer Day: 16 April 2026
These are the dates that drive planning, even if families visit schools earlier in the autumn term.
Demand indicators suggest strong competition. For Reception entry, 212 applications were recorded for 60 offers, and the route is marked as oversubscribed, around 3.53 applications per place. The practical implication is that families should treat Trinity Primary Academy as a high-demand option and ensure their preference list includes realistic alternatives that work for childcare and travel.
Nursery admissions are described as a direct-to-school process (families are asked to request an application pack). In practice, nursery places do not guarantee a Reception place in most local authority systems, so families considering nursery should still plan for Reception admissions on the standard timeline.
81.4%
1st preference success rate
57 of 70 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
212
The published safeguarding and visitor procedures show a school that treats safeguarding as operational, not just policy. For example, the detail around appointments, visitor expectations, and collection from extended day provision suggests routines are designed to reduce ambiguity. That sort of clarity tends to support calmer end-of-day handovers, especially for younger pupils.
Pastoral structures also appear embedded in leadership. The leadership list includes a designated safeguarding lead role, which matters because it signals capacity for timely triage when concerns arise, whether those concerns are attendance, wellbeing, or family support needs.
The most convincing enrichment is specific and connected to learning.
One pillar here is practical making. Clubs linked to design and technology and computing, including Cooking Club, Gardening Club, Art and D&T Club, and Computing Club, give pupils hands-on ways to practise skills that do not always fit neatly into a standard lesson. The evidence is in the naming and the detail, including CAD exposure, which is not common at primary level. The implication is that children who learn best by doing are likely to find a good outlet, and high attainers can deepen interest early.
A second pillar is performance and wider cultural opportunity. The school’s Glee Club has been invited to sing at Wigmore Hall alongside other Haringey schools. That kind of external performance opportunity tends to raise expectations of rehearsal discipline and teamwork, while also giving children a memorable sense that their work can travel beyond the classroom.
The house system adds a third strand, competition and belonging. Houses named Adepitan, Franklin, Attenborough, and Thompson provide an easy structure for team events and recognition, and the school explicitly links house points to values and leadership. The implication is a coherent framework for celebrating positive behaviour without relying only on sanctions.
The published school day timings are clear by phase. Nursery operates morning, afternoon, and full-time patterns, while Reception to Year 6 follow an 8.45am to 3.15pm day.
Breakfast club and after-school provision are offered, which is important for working families. The academy hosts dedicated information documents for these, but if you are budgeting or need exact session rules for a particular year, check the latest academy guidance because wraparound arrangements can change.
For travel, the academy describes itself as close to the tube station in Wood Green, so it is a realistic option for families who prioritise public transport access.
Oversubscription is real. With 212 applications for 60 offers for Reception entry, competition is high. Families should build a balanced preference list rather than relying on one outcome.
Nursery does not usually equal guaranteed Reception. Nursery admissions are handled directly, while Reception is coordinated through the local authority timeline. Plan for both processes so you are not caught late.
High attainment can bring pace. With more than half of pupils reaching the higher standard at key stage 2, teaching may move quickly in upper years. That suits many children, but some will prefer a slightly gentler rhythm.
A Victorian building has trade-offs. The Grade II listed setting brings character, but listed buildings can also mean constraints around space and layout. Visit to check how that feels for your child day to day.
For families seeking a state primary with no tuition fees and exceptionally strong outcomes, Trinity Primary Academy stands out. The combination of top-tier key stage 2 performance, a settled school culture, and tangible enrichment, from CAD-linked clubs to choir performance opportunities, makes it an appealing shortlist candidate.
It suits pupils who enjoy clear routines, thrive with strong academic expectations, and benefit from structured opportunities beyond lessons. The main hurdle is admission, so parents should approach applications strategically and verify key dates early in the autumn term.
Academic outcomes are very strong, with 93% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics at key stage 2, well above the England average of 62%. The school is also ranked 57th in England and 1st in Haringey for primary outcomes on FindMySchool’s ranking based on official data. The most recent Ofsted inspection (February 2023) reported the school continues to be Outstanding.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority, and places are allocated using the published admissions criteria for the relevant year. Because the school is oversubscribed, families should check how distance is measured and use a distance calculator tool to understand how their home compares with recent allocation patterns.
Breakfast and after-school provision are offered and the academy publishes information documents for families. Because wraparound arrangements and session availability can change, it is best to check the latest academy guidance before relying on a particular pattern for childcare planning.
Applications are made through the local authority coordinated process. Key dates for the September 2026 cycle include applications opening on 01 September 2025, the closing date of 15 January 2026, and offers released on National Offer Day, 16 April 2026.
Nursery admissions are handled directly through the academy, with families asked to request an application pack. Nursery arrangements can be different from Reception admissions, so families who want continuity should plan for the Reception application separately, using the local authority deadlines.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
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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