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.
For families who want a calm, structured start to school life, Hampton Infant School and Nursery stands out for consistency. The current Ofsted judgement is Outstanding across all areas, including early years provision, and the school sits within the Hampton Primary Partnership federation alongside Hampton Junior School.
A practical detail that matters for working parents is that wraparound care is delivered via partner providers rather than an in-house club, with children collected from classrooms.
For nursery entry, the school publishes clear timelines for September 2026, including a closing date and an offer date, which is unusually helpful compared with many local nurseries that keep dates informal.
This is an infant school that leans into routine and shared language. Pupils are introduced early to simple behavioural expectations and school-wide rules that are designed to be memorable for very young children, and that matters because consistency is often the difference between children merely settling and genuinely flourishing in Reception and Year 1.
Leadership is structured across the partnership. Helen Lockey is listed as Executive Headteacher for the federation, with Anna Gale named as Head of School. That model often suits federations, it keeps strategic decisions consistent while allowing day-to-day leadership to stay close to the infant phase.
A notable practical point is that the nursery was replaced and reopened in October 2022, and the admissions policy frames it as intentionally designed for the youngest children and integrated into the wider school day.
For infant schools, statutory results are not the headline in the way they are at key stage 2. In the current results for this school, key stage 2 performance and ranking fields are not published for this phase, so this review prioritises inspection evidence, curriculum approach, and day-to-day delivery rather than league-table style summaries.
The strongest external signal is the most recent inspection outcome. The most recent Ofsted inspection, dated 7 November 2023, judged the school Outstanding overall and Outstanding in every graded area, including quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
What this means in practice for parents is a high likelihood of predictable routines, clear safeguarding systems, and an early years environment that is being run with the same seriousness as the rest of the school, rather than treated as a softer add-on.
The infant curriculum is presented as a carefully staged pathway rather than a loose collection of topics. That matters because children at this age benefit from repetition and revisiting concepts in slightly different forms, especially in early reading, phonics, and early number.
Specialist input is visible in the staffing structure across the partnership, including a named specialist music teacher and a specialist French teacher. In an infant setting, this can lift quality by ensuring core enrichment is not dependent on individual class teacher confidence in specialist subjects.
The nursery offer is also described in sessions rather than a single one-size model, with part-time (15 hours) and full-time (30 hours) places referenced, and two sessions per day (morning and afternoon). For families using funded hours, that clarity helps planning.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The school is part of a linked infant and junior arrangement through the Hampton Primary Partnership federation, and the junior phase is Hampton Junior School. Families should still expect to engage with the local authority process when moving up, rather than assuming an automatic administrative rollover.
For most children, the key transition question is less about academic selection and more about readiness for the larger junior setting, particularly independence, stamina for a longer curriculum day, and confidence with reading and writing. The benefit of a federation model is that curriculum and pastoral expectations can be aligned across the two schools.
This is a state community school, so there are no tuition fees. Admission arrangements sit with the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, and applications for Reception are made through the local authority route rather than directly to the school.
The school publishes specific dates and an application route for Nursery entry in September 2026. The application closing date is Friday 6 March 2026, and places are offered on or before Friday 1 May 2026. The nursery is described as having 36 places, split across morning, afternoon, and full-day options.
A useful practical step is to use FindMySchool’s map tools to sanity-check travel time and proximity before committing to a house move based on expectations of entry.
95.0%
1st preference success rate
115 of 121 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
120
Offers
120
Applications
245
For very young pupils, the school’s approach blends clear routines with explicit support structures. A notable feature of the day-to-day setup is how wraparound care is organised: breakfast and after-school care is provided via partner organisations, with children collected from classrooms and registered before leaving site. For families, this can work well if you want flexibility and choice, but it does mean you need to engage with a separate provider’s booking and policies.
The published school-day timings also suggest a structured start and end to the day, including soft start windows for Reception, Year 1 and Year 2, which can reduce morning anxiety for some children.
Clubs at Hampton Infant School and Nursery are clearly positioned as an extension of the week rather than a token offering, with provision specifically described for Year 1 and Year 2, and run by external providers.
The detail that will matter to parents is the variety of club types rather than sheer quantity. Recent published timetables include clubs such as Little Meadow Explorers (outdoor exploring and crafts), sewing, chess, and Technokids (coding, STEM and AI), alongside sport options such as football and gymnastics.
Facilities are also described in concrete terms, including a well-resourced library, a Creativity room used for music and clubs, and outdoor spaces that include multiple playgrounds and an environmental garden. In infant education, outdoor design is not cosmetic, it directly affects behaviour, attention, and how well children manage transitions between activities.
The school publishes detailed timings. Gates open at 8.40am, the Reception and Year 1 to Year 2 soft start runs from 8.40am to 8.55am, and collection for Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 is at 3.00pm. Nursery session times are also set out, including a morning session 8.30am to 11.30am and an afternoon session listed as 12.30am to 3.30pm.
Wraparound care is available via partner providers offering breakfast and after-school clubs, with children collected from classrooms.
For transport planning, Hampton is well served by local rail and bus links, but families should treat parking and drop-off as potentially tight in residential streets around the school at peak times, and plan for walking or public transport where possible.
Competition for places: Demand indicators show oversubscription on the primary entry route in the latest published results. Families should approach admissions with a realistic plan B.
Wraparound is via external providers: This can increase flexibility, but it also means separate booking, policies, and potentially variable availability by day.
Nursery places are limited: The nursery is published as 36 places across morning, afternoon, and full day patterns, so early planning matters for September 2026 entry.
Federation model: Leadership spans the partnership; some families like the coherence across infant and junior phases, others prefer a fully stand-alone infant school governance model.
Hampton Infant School and Nursery suits families who value structure, clear routines, and a strong early years foundation, with the added benefit of an Outstanding Ofsted profile across all areas. It is particularly well matched to children who settle best with predictable expectations and consistent behaviour language. Entry remains the limiting factor, so families should treat admissions as competitive and plan accordingly.
The most recent Ofsted inspection judged the school Outstanding overall, with Outstanding grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
Reception applications are made through the local authority primary admissions process rather than directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, Richmond’s published timeline shows applications opening on 1 September 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026.
For Nursery entry in September 2026, the published closing date is Friday 6 March 2026 and places are offered on or before Friday 1 May 2026.
Wraparound care is provided via partner providers offering before- and after-school clubs, with children collected from classrooms.
Published club information includes options such as chess, sewing, outdoor exploration activities, and coding and STEM clubs, with provision typically focused on Year 1 and Year 2 and delivered by external providers.
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