A compact, all-through early years and primary setting for ages 2 to 11, Unique Academy is designed for families who want a faith-rooted education alongside the national curriculum, in a small-school context. Its premises in Heston place it within easy reach for families across Hounslow and neighbouring boroughs, but the feel is intentionally intimate, with a published capacity of 90 pupils.
Quality assurance is clear: the most recent Ofsted inspection (15 to 17 July 2025) judged the school Good overall, and also confirmed that the independent school standards are met.
If you are deciding whether it is the right fit, the headline questions are practical as much as philosophical. This is a school with an explicit Islamic ethos and daily routines shaped around it, paired with a structured approach to learning, reading, and behaviour. It also operates on a payment model that is lower than many London independent primaries, but still requires careful budgeting once you add meals, trips, and any wraparound needs.
The school positions its identity around “nourishing the fitrah of each unique child”, with a strong emphasis on spiritual development and values-led behaviour. In practice, that comes through in the language used across school communications and policies, and in the way pupils are expected to behave with adults and with each other.
The current headteacher is Ustadha Hawwa Mbombo, who is also described by the school as a co-founder and chair of trustees. For parents, that “founder-led” model often means coherence: the ethos, expectations, and daily routines tend to be consistent, because strategic decisions and day-to-day leadership sit very close together.
A useful, evidence-based snapshot of day-to-day culture appears in the latest published inspection report. It describes pupils as happy, polite, and respectful, following instructions well in lessons and when moving around the premises, and feeling safe. It also notes pupils’ involvement in roles such as school councillors and eco warriors, which signals an effort to blend faith identity with civic participation and British values education.
Outdoor time is treated as a feature rather than an add-on. The school explains that pupils use Avenue Park opposite the premises for break, lunch, outdoor learning, Forest school activities, and physical education, subject to weather. That is a practical plus for a small premises, because it expands the “space to move” available to pupils, and it gives staff a natural setting for play-based language development in the early years and structured outdoor tasks for older pupils.
The latest report indicates that pupils achieve well and that the curriculum is broad and balanced, with a clear focus on sequencing knowledge and skills over time. For parents, that matters because small independent primaries can vary widely in how systematically they teach reading, writing, and mathematics. In this case, the evidence points to a planned curriculum rather than an ad-hoc approach.
Reading is described as a priority, with daily phonics for younger pupils and staff using reading training to support fluency. The practical implication is that families who care about strong foundations in decoding and early literacy should find the emphasis reassuring, especially for children who need consistent routines and repeated practice.
One caveat is also clearly stated: while teachers’ subject knowledge is described as secure and checks for understanding are generally effective, the report notes that teaching strategies are not always as effective as they could be, including occasions when errors are not routinely addressed or modelling is not explicit enough. In a small school, that kind of “inconsistency at classroom level” can have an outsized effect on parents’ perceptions, so it is worth exploring how leaders have responded since July 2025.
Unique Academy presents itself as combining national curriculum subjects with an Islamic studies strand, and it frames this as an integrated model rather than two parallel tracks. The inspection evidence supports the idea of coherence in curriculum planning, describing lessons as well sequenced and focused on key knowledge and skills.
In early years, the report highlights communication and language as a focus in Nursery and Reception, with routines and expectations well embedded to help children feel prepared for the next stage. That is the kind of detail parents should pay attention to, because it usually correlates with smoother transitions into more formal learning, especially in smaller settings where cohorts include mixed starting points.
A practical detail many parents overlook is assessment and feedback style. While the school’s own documents cover teaching oversight and lesson observation, the most parent-relevant takeaway is that staff are expected to check what pupils know and address misconceptions, even if this is not always fully consistent in practice. If your child needs very explicit modelling, or benefits from frequent corrective feedback, it is sensible to ask how the school ensures this happens across classes.
What can be said confidently is that pupils are educated within Hounslow’s broader secondary landscape, which includes a mix of comprehensives and a small number of selective options within reach for families willing to travel. Parents considering selective routes will need to plan independently for that pathway, as there is no published statement here indicating a structured 11-plus preparation programme.
For families staying local, the best next step is to ask the school what secondaries pupils have most commonly moved on to in the last two years, and whether any formal transition support is provided (for example, interview preparation, secondary-ready study habits, or liaison with receiving schools). If the school can provide a recent, anonymised list, it can be more informative than general claims.
Unique Academy operates an all-year-round admissions policy, which is different from the typical local authority coordinated cycle many parents are used to. The published process is structured in three stages:
Document requirements listed for the interview include proof of identification for the child, proof of address for parents, and the child’s previous school report. If your child is transferring mid-year, it is worth asking how the school assesses curriculum fit and whether any short-term catch-up support is offered.
Once a place is offered, the school states that an administration fee and the first term’s fees, or the first month’s fees under a monthly plan, are required to secure the place.
A practical tip for parents using FindMySchool tools: if you are weighing several small independents across West London, use Saved Schools to track fees basis, start times, and what is included, then compare like with like before you visit.
The inspection evidence points to calm movement around the school, respectful interactions, and pupils feeling safe. For most families, that baseline matters as much as academics, particularly in smaller schools where the social mix is limited and day-to-day relationships carry more weight.
The school’s wider safeguarding and community guidance pages emphasise online safety and choosing safe extracurricular environments, and it also signposts safeguarding resources. For parents, the practical question is staffing and accessibility: in a small school, knowing who the safeguarding leads are and how concerns are handled day-to-day is often more reassuring than policy language alone.
In a small setting, enrichment tends to rely on specific, recurring initiatives rather than an enormous clubs list, so the details matter.
One recurring example is Lego Club, referenced in school communications as a timetabled activity, and the school also promotes pupil leadership roles such as a student committee (Student shura). The implication is that enrichment is not purely “sports-first”, and there is room for structured creativity and pupil voice, which can suit children who enjoy building, making, and organising.
Trips and visitors are used to broaden horizons, with the school listing museum visits and themed events across the year, including a British Museum trip and a Natural History Museum trip in the examples published. In a faith-led setting, this kind of outward-facing programme also matters because it helps children connect their learning to wider London life and public institutions.
Outdoor learning is a further pillar: the school explicitly links daily outdoor education to both play and curriculum learning, using a local park for Forest school activities and physical education when conditions allow. The practical implication is that children who regulate best through movement, or who thrive with hands-on tasks, may benefit from that structure.
Fees data coming soon.
The published school day runs Monday to Friday, 8:40am to 3:30pm. Term dates are published online, including faith-linked closures such as Eid holiday dates within the academic calendar.
For travel, the school highlights local outdoor use of Avenue Park opposite the site, which is also a useful clue about the immediate area and drop-off routines. Families driving should also look for the school’s published guidance on transport and car parking before committing, as small premises can mean tight logistics at peak times.
Unique Academy is an independent fee-paying school. For 2025 to 2026, the school publishes annual tuition totals (with options for monthly instalments or termly payment):
Reception (after 15 hours funding is applied): £3,960 per year
Years 1 to 6: £4,235 per year
The school also states a one-off, non-refundable administration fee of £150 per child to confirm acceptance.
Beyond tuition, families should budget for extras that are explicitly listed:
Trips: £90 per year (invoiced separately)
School meals: £2.85 per day
Nursery and early years fee detail is best taken from the school’s current fee documents on its website, rather than relying on summaries, because early years funding interactions and session patterns can change.
The school’s published fee policy does not set out a bursary or scholarship programme in the material reviewed here. If you need financial support, ask directly whether any means-tested help exists, how it is allocated, and whether it is funded through the associated charity activities.
Small-school experience. With a published capacity of 90, friendship groups and peer mix are naturally narrower than in larger primaries. This suits some children very well, but others prefer a bigger social pool.
Teaching consistency. The latest inspection notes strong subject knowledge and a well sequenced curriculum, but also flags occasions where modelling and error correction are not as effective as they could be. Ask what has changed since July 2025.
Extra costs. Meals and trips are charged separately from tuition, which can materially change the real monthly cost for families.
Unique Academy is best understood as a focused, faith-led small independent primary where values, routines, and a structured curriculum are central to daily life. The most recent inspection judgement (Good, July 2025) and the evidence on reading and early years language development support a picture of a school that takes teaching and behaviour seriously.
Who it suits: families seeking an Islamic ethos alongside a broad primary curriculum, who value a smaller setting and can commit to the fee model and practical logistics. The main decision points are whether your child will thrive in a small cohort, and whether your childcare needs fit a 3:30pm finish.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (15 to 17 July 2025) judged Unique Academy Good overall, and confirmed it meets the independent school standards. Reports also describe positive behaviour, pupils feeling safe, and a curriculum that is broad and balanced.
For 2025 to 2026, published annual tuition totals are £3,960 for Reception (after 15 hours funding is applied) and £4,235 for Years 1 to 6. There is also a £150 administration fee on acceptance, with meals and trips charged separately.
The school describes an all-year-round admissions policy, with an application stage, an interview stage where both parents attend with the child, and then an offer and enrolment paperwork. Once offered, securing a place requires an administration fee and the first term’s fees, or first month’s fees under a monthly plan.
Yes, the school takes children from age 2 and describes early years provision within the setting. For current nursery session options and fee detail, use the school’s published admissions and fee documents, because early years funding and session patterns can change year to year.
Published hours are Monday to Friday, 8:40am to 3:30pm. Term dates and closures are published in the school’s calendar.
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