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A prep that has deliberately modernised in recent years, without losing its “small school” feel. Willington’s move to co-education is still relatively recent (now extending through the younger years), and the current leadership era began in 2018, which matters because much of the school’s present shape, including the early years expansion, dates from that period.
The academic offer is broader than many parents expect from a compact prep. Alongside core English and mathematics, the curriculum includes subjects such as Latin and textiles, plus a school-designed outdoor learning programme that is treated as curriculum rather than a bolt-on.
The March 2023 Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) inspection judged pupils’ academic and other achievements and their personal development as excellent, and confirmed the school met the required standards, including safeguarding-related compliance.
Willington’s identity is built around individual attention and manners of conduct, with a values vocabulary that leans on kindness, respect, honesty and humility. It is not framed as relentless competition; instead, it reads as a school that wants children to become capable and articulate, while staying grounded in how they treat other people.
Leadership stability is another part of the current atmosphere. Mr Keith Brown has been Headmaster since September 2018, and the school’s shift into its present form, including becoming co-educational and opening the nursery, sits within that timeframe.
A useful clue to culture is the roles pupils are given. Willington uses responsibility positions such as anti-bullying ambassadors, digital leaders and prefects, which signals an expectation that pupils will practise leadership early, not just talk about it. That tends to suit children who like being trusted with jobs, and it also helps quieter pupils find a defined way to contribute.
This review cannot use standardised performance rankings or key stage data for Willington because for this school does not include those figures. What families can use instead is destination evidence and scholarship outcomes at the point pupils leave for senior schools.
Willington publishes detailed leaver outcomes and scholarship information. For the 2024/25 Year 6 cohort (21 pupils), the school reports 63 senior school offers and 17 scholarships or awards.
The offers list also shows the local senior-school mix parents often want to see, including a combination of London independents and strong day schools. In 2024/25, destinations with multiple offers included St John’s (12), Whitgift (7), Ewell Castle (9), Reed’s (5), and Kingston Grammar School (4), among others.
Implication for families: if your priority is confident progression into well-regarded senior schools, Willington’s published destination pattern is the clearest “results proxy” available,
The curriculum is intentionally broad for ages 3 to 11, and it is structured in sections that reflect how children actually learn across this span. The ISI report describes separate phases for Early Years (nursery and Reception), pre-prep (Years 1 and 2) and prep (Years 3 to 6).
A distinctive feature is the inclusion of specialist and non-core areas that are still treated seriously, including Latin and textiles, plus an outdoor learning programme described as part of the planned curriculum rather than enrichment.
Parents comparing preps often ask whether children can articulate their thinking. ISI notes that pupils are strong communicators, and gives concrete examples of pupils speaking freely in class discussion and using vocabulary and structure effectively in writing tasks. The practical implication is that the teaching style appears to create pupils who are comfortable expressing ideas, which matters if you are looking for a prep that prepares children well for interview-led senior school admissions.
One realistic “development point” is also helpful. ISI advised the school to ensure pupils apply their ICT skills more widely across the curriculum. For families, that reads less like a weakness and more like a steering point: digital competence exists, the next step is consistent application in more subjects.
For an independent prep, this section is the heart of decision-making. Willington’s published leaver outcomes are unusually specific, listing offer volumes and scholarship types, year by year.
Recent destination patterns indicate strong traction with a range of senior schools, including both selective London day schools and larger Surrey options. The 2024/25 list includes, among others, King’s College (2 offers), Emanuel (1), Whitgift (7), and multiple music and all-rounder awards across several destinations.
If you have a musically inclined child, the scholarship mix is worth noting: the published 2024/25 list contains music awards at several receiving schools, alongside academic and sport awards. That breadth often suggests the prep’s pipeline is not narrowly “academic only”.
Willington’s main entry points are nursery (3+) and Reception (4+), with occasional places beyond that and a smaller intake into Year 3 (7+) when space allows.
Reception is the key “decision point” for many families. The school states that children joining in the nursery are guaranteed entry to Reception, and that it typically offers around 15 Reception places each year for external entrants. Offers are made around 18 months before entry following a Reception Discovery Morning, which the school describes as taking place in March.
For open events, Willington states that Open Mornings are held annually on a Saturday in November. A recent example is the full Open Morning scheduled for Saturday 8 November 2025. The safest planning assumption is that open events typically recur in November each year, with exact dates confirmed by the school.
Families tracking competitive London admissions often benefit from precision. If you are aiming for Reception 2026 entry, the school’s registration information explicitly flags that families should contact admissions prior to registering for that entry point.
Pastoral provision at this age range is mostly about consistent relationships, clear routines, and early identification of needs. The ISI report states that the school has identified pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities (including dyslexia and dyspraxia) and provides specialist support where needed, with early identification supported by data use.
On culture and relationships, ISI describes a community in which pupils build positive relationships and engage comfortably with peers from different backgrounds, supported by a strong ethos of acceptance and mutual respect. For parents, this is the practical reassurance: the school is not simply “polite”, it is structured in a way that pushes children to consider others, and it gives them a language for that.
Willington’s co-curricular offer is designed to start early and run frequently through the week. The school explains that clubs are available from nursery onwards, with free enrichment until 3.55pm on Tuesdays and Thursdays for nursery to Year 2, and a broader clubs menu across the week for prep pupils.
Named examples matter more than generic “lots of clubs”. The school has promoted a programme that includes activities such as street dance, Scalextric, fencing, performing arts and film studies.
A distinctive physical feature is The Lego Room, described by the school as a dedicated, hands-on learning space with LEGO-lined walls, varied worktops, and a glass-ceiling mezzanine overlooking the school hall. The implication is not simply “fun”; it is a deliberate investment in design, engineering thinking, teamwork and iterative problem-solving, which can suit children who learn best by making and testing.
Sport is framed around broad participation and regular fixtures. The school lists seasonal sports including football and netball in autumn, rugby or tag rugby plus hockey in spring, and cricket plus athletics in summer, with pupils also using school-based facilities such as a climbing wall for physical education activities.
For 2025/26, published fees (inclusive of VAT) are £6,720 per term for Reception to Year 2 (annual £20,160) and £7,552 per term for Years 3 to 6 (annual £22,656). Fees include lunches and mid-morning snacks.
A 10% sibling discount is available where a child has an elder sibling in the school.
On financial support, Willington states that bursaries are means-tested and considered case by case, with a published bursaries policy setting out the principles and confidentiality expectations. Scholarships and other non means-tested awards are described as limited to a maximum of 10% of fees, and some pupils may receive both scholarship and bursary support.
Fees data coming soon.
School hours vary by age. The school day starts at 8.30am for nursery and Reception and at 8.20am for Years 1 to 6. Finish times are 3.30pm for nursery to Year 2, and 4.05pm for Years 3 to 6, with free enrichment until 3.55pm on Tuesdays and Thursdays for nursery to Year 2.
Wraparound care is available from 7.30am to 6.00pm, and the school also publishes structured before and after school provision via its provider arrangements.
For transport, the school runs a morning minibus service from Raynes Park, arriving by 8.00am, available to pupils in Years 1 to 6.
Reception places for external entrants are limited. Willington states it typically offers around 15 Reception places each year for children joining at 4+, with offers made around 18 months in advance after a Discovery Morning. This can suit families who plan early; it may frustrate those who prefer a short lead time.
Co-education is still a “recent era” story. The school has become co-educational since the previous inspection cycle, and the younger years already include girls. Families who want a long-established co-ed tradition may want to probe how this feels day to day.
ICT breadth is a stated development priority. ISI’s recommendation about applying ICT skills more widely suggests the basics are strong, but consistent cross-curricular use is still being embedded.
Fees include VAT for the main school years. That can matter for budgeting, especially when comparing with settings where fee presentation differs; check what is included and what is optional for your child’s year group.
Willington suits families who want a warm, values-led prep with a genuinely broad curriculum and a clearly evidenced senior-school pipeline, without the feel of a single-track exam culture. It is likely to work best for children who enjoy speaking up, taking on small responsibilities, and learning through both traditional classroom subjects and practical, hands-on projects. The main challenge is timing your admissions journey early enough, especially for Reception entry.
Willington’s most recent ISI inspection (March 2023) judged pupils’ academic and other achievements and their personal development as excellent, and confirmed the school met the required standards. For families, the clearest extra indicator is the published senior-school destinations and scholarship outcomes at the end of Year 6.
For 2025/26, fees (inclusive of VAT) are £6,720 per term for Reception to Year 2 and £7,552 per term for Years 3 to 6, with lunches and mid-morning snacks included. Means-tested bursaries are available, and scholarships are described as capped at 10% of fees.
Willington states that Reception places for children not already in the nursery are typically offered around 18 months before entry following a Reception Discovery Morning, which the school says takes place in March. Planning ahead is important if you are targeting a specific September start.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound availability from 7.30am to 6.00pm, and also describes structured before and after school provision that must be booked in advance.
Willington publishes destination outcomes and scholarships annually. For 2024/25, the school reports 63 senior school offers and 17 scholarships or awards for a cohort of 21 pupils, with offers spanning a range of London and Surrey senior schools.
Get in touch with the school directly
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