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.
An all-girls preparatory school where the day is structured around small-school familiarity and a clear values framework. The school operates across two sites in Wimbledon, with younger pupils based at Wilberforce House and older pupils at Spencer House, a set-up that gives the early years and Key Stage 2 very different rhythms and expectations.
Leadership has been stable in recent years after a period of change. Mrs Sharon Maher took up her post in September 2023, and the most recent inspection reflects a school with strong pastoral habits, confident teaching in core areas, and a clear push to tighten how assessment information is used across subjects.
Parents considering the school are usually weighing two things at once: the appeal of a girls-only prep from Reception through Year 6, and the practicalities of admissions and fee planning for 2025 to 2026 in a VAT-influenced landscape.
The school’s identity is grounded in four stated core values, courage, compassion, curiosity, and creativity, and those are not positioned as decorative slogans. They are described as permeating school life, and they show up in how pupils are expected to speak to each other, take academic risks, and recover from mistakes without drama.
The two-site arrangement does a lot of cultural work. Wilberforce House is the early years and younger-years base; Spencer House is the “grown-up” setting for older pupils. For many children, that mid-prep move can feel like a mini-transition that builds independence before senior school. It also helps with age-appropriate spaces, play, assemblies, and specialist rooms, rather than forcing a single model to fit four-year-olds and eleven-year-olds in the same corridors.
Historically, the school’s Wimbledon roots matter. The school traces its origins to 1893, founded by Sarah Kate Sidford, and the Spencer House premises are linked to early purpose-built development in the early 1900s, designed by Sidford’s brother, Alfred. That heritage tends to appeal to families who want something established but not anonymous.
As an independent prep, there is no requirement to publish Key Stage 2 SATs outcomes in the way state primaries do, so parents should not expect the same DfE tables used for maintained schools. The more useful evidence is the breadth and coherence of curriculum, the consistency of classroom practice, and how well pupils are prepared for the transition to senior schools.
Mathematics is above the national average, and links this to a diverse curriculum and teachers’ strong subject knowledge.
One important nuance is that the inspection also flags a development priority that is practical rather than philosophical: leaders have introduced a framework to evaluate progress and inform planning, but it is not yet consistently effective across subjects. In day-to-day terms, that usually translates into a school that teaches well and has high engagement, while still tightening the feedback loop between assessment and next-step teaching in some areas.
Teaching leans on clarity and strong routines, with teachers described as having comprehensive subject knowledge and creating a positive learning environment that encourages pupils to take risks and develop resilience.
The curriculum is described as comprehensive and diverse, which matters in a prep context because it signals breadth beyond the core. The best prep experiences avoid a narrow “English and maths plus extras” feel. Here, the intent is that English and mathematics are strong, while the wider programme remains active enough to keep curiosity alive and give senior schools a rounded pupil.
If you are comparing schools, a helpful question to ask is how they build progression in foundation subjects across the two sites, and how subject leadership works when pupils move from Wilberforce House to Spencer House. The inspection indicates leaders monitor teaching and learning through regular reviews and pupil voice, which suggests a school that expects consistency, not classroom-by-classroom variation.
For a prep school, “destinations” is the real outcome story, but it only helps if a school publishes numbers or named senior school destinations. The publicly accessible material does not consistently provide destination numbers, and it is sensible to ask the admissions team for the most recent leavers’ destinations list and any scholarship outcomes, presented with counts rather than anecdotes.
What can be said with confidence is that the school is structured as a full Reception to Year 6 pipeline, with early years on-site and a clear upper-prep environment at Spencer House. That supports continuity for families who want one setting from age four through the end of prep, rather than needing to move at seven or eight.
When you evaluate “fit”, focus on your child’s likely senior-school route. If you are targeting specific Wimbledon, South West London, or Surrey senior schools, ask directly how the school supports applications, interviews, and scholarships, and what proportion of the cohort typically moves on to each destination.
The school welcomes registrations from birth, but also notes that there are specific registration-by dates for Reception entry each year. That combination usually means two things in practice: families can show early interest without committing immediately, but there is still a hard administrative deadline for the main entry point.
The admissions process includes a non-refundable registration fee of £120, and typically asks for basic documentation such as proof of identity.
For families planning ahead, open events are a key signal of timing. The school advertises an Open Day on Saturday 3 October 2026, which strongly suggests that autumn remains a typical “visit and decide” window.
Practical tip: if you are comparing multiple Wimbledon-area preps, use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to track open events and document requests, then request destinations lists in the same format from each school so you can compare like-with-like.
Pastoral support is described as a priority, with policies and procedures designed around pupil wellbeing and a suitable range of adults available to support pupils’ needs.
The inspection evidence also points to strong safeguarding practice, including comprehensive staff training and effective links with external agencies, alongside pupils knowing how to stay safe online.
SEND support is also visible in the inspection detail. Pupils with identified SEND are described as making good progress because support is well-targeted and teachers plan with learning needs in mind. In a prep context, where needs can be subtle and easily missed in high-performing cohorts, that attention to planning is often more valuable than headline statements about “inclusion”.
The extracurricular story is strongest when it is specific, and the school provides plenty of named examples across arts, sport, and clubs.
Creative and performing arts include opportunities such as Art Appreciation and Art History Clubs, which is a more mature offer than generic “art club” and tends to suit pupils who enjoy discussion, museums, and ideas as well as making.
Music is clearly a significant pillar. The school has named ensembles including Spencer House Choir, and pupils have performed at venues such as the Royal Albert Hall, which signals an outward-facing approach rather than keeping concerts purely in-house.
Clubs breadth is well illustrated by the school’s own Gazette material, which lists options such as Eco Club, Brainbuster Club, Cooking Club, Jazz Club, Horse and Pony Club, Library Club, Chess Club, Creative Writing Club, Martial Arts Club, Musical Theatre Club, STEM Club, and Yoga Club. For parents, the implication is choice. A child can find “their thing” without it needing to be sport-led.
Sport and facilities include netball provision, with two netball courts and access to green space used for training in sports such as cricket and football, alongside co-curricular options that include activities such as fencing.
For 2025 to 2026, published fee information indicates a day fee per term of £5,820 excluding VAT, and a termly figure of £6,984 including VAT. Lunch is listed separately at £380 per term.
This matters for budgeting because families should treat “excluding VAT” and “including VAT” as two different planning numbers, and confirm exactly which applies to their child’s year group and billing point. The school’s published materials also indicate that scholarships and bursaries are available, so it is worth asking early what types exist and whether means-tested support is offered at entry points beyond Reception.
One-time costs are also part of the picture. The registration fee is listed as £120.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school is in Wimbledon and operates on two sites. Younger pupils are at Wilberforce House and older pupils are at Spencer House.
Assessment consistency is a live improvement area. Teaching and engagement are strong, but the most recent inspection highlights that assessment information is not yet used consistently across subjects to drive progress for all groups.
Two-site logistics. The Wilberforce House and Spencer House model is a strength educationally, but it can add complexity for families juggling siblings, timings, and travel as children move into the older setting.
Community contribution beyond school could be stronger. Pupils support charities and local foodbanks, but opportunities to contribute to the local and wider community beyond the school are described as limited, which may matter to families who prioritise outward-facing service.
Fee planning needs precision. Ensure you are comparing the correct 2025 to 2026 figures, particularly where VAT-inclusive and VAT-exclusive figures appear side-by-side in published information.
The Study Preparatory School offers a clear, values-led education for girls from age four to eleven, with a two-site structure that sensibly separates early years from upper prep. Music, clubs, and creative options look particularly well-developed, and the pastoral picture is confident. It suits families who want a girls-only prep in Wimbledon with breadth beyond the core and a strong sense of school culture, and who are comfortable actively managing admissions timing and precise fee planning.
The evidence points to a school with strong teaching and a positive culture.
Published information for 2025 to 2026 indicates a day fee per term of £5,820 excluding VAT, and £6,984 including VAT, with lunch listed at £380 per term. Families should confirm which applies to their billing and year group.
The school notes that registrations are welcomed from birth, but there are specific register-by dates for Reception each year. In practice, families should register interest early, then follow the published deadline for the relevant entry year.
An Open Day is advertised for Saturday 3 October 2026. Booking expectations can vary, so check the school’s visit information before attending.
The published club list includes options such as Eco Club, Cooking Club, Jazz Club, Chess Club, Creative Writing Club, Musical Theatre Club, STEM Club, and Yoga Club, among others, alongside strong music opportunities including Spencer House Choir.
Get in touch with the school directly
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