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.
Honeywell Infant School sits in the busy, family-heavy pocket of Battersea often described locally as “between the Commons”, and its admissions data shows just how many families are trying to secure a place. In the latest published admissions results, the school received 414 applications for 89 offers via the Reception entry route, a demand level that makes planning ahead essential.
What sets the setting apart is the combination of scale and structure. Reception runs as three classes of 30 pupils (90 places per year), large enough for broad friendship groups, but still small enough that routines can be consistent across the year group. The wider Honeywell Schools Federation context also matters, because many families are thinking beyond Reception and Key Stage 1, with Year 2 leading directly into the linked junior school on the same site.
A final, distinctive detail is the physical setting. The school buildings are part of a Grade II listed former board school dating from 1891, designed by T J Bailey for the School Board for London, a tangible reminder that this is a long-established education site rather than a modern infill primary.
The tone here is purposeful but young. With pupils aged 3 to 7, the day revolves around routines, language development, early reading, and learning how to manage emotions and friendships, with staff structures that reflect that. The published staff list names Fiona Arnold as Head Teacher, supported by a deputy headteacher and an assistant head, with dedicated nursery teams alongside Reception and Key Stage 1 teaching staff. That visible structure can be reassuring for families who want clear lines of responsibility in the early years.
The setting’s “infant” identity is important. This is not a full primary, and it is not trying to be. That typically means fewer whole-school levers around formal outcomes, and more emphasis on early foundations, phonics, number sense, communication, and behaviour norms. For some families, that is exactly the right fit, especially if they prefer an environment designed around early childhood rather than a single institution stretched across Reception to Year 6.
The school’s physical environment is unusually characterful for a London state infant. The listed building description highlights yellow stock brick, red brick and stone detailing, Dutch gables, and a bell turret, and while that heritage status does not automatically translate into classroom experience, it does point to a setting with strong architectural identity. In practical terms, listed status can also shape how quickly space can be adapted, which is worth bearing in mind when thinking about accessibility, refurbishment, and playground layouts.
For an infant school, parents often want “results”, but the reality is that the national measures most families recognise (Key Stage 2 SATs) do not apply here because the school finishes at the end of Year 2. That shifts the right question from headline attainment data to readiness indicators: early reading and phonics habits, writing stamina, number fluency, and whether children develop the self-regulation and confidence they need for Key Stage 2.
The most recent Ofsted inspection outcome (10 January 2023) judged the school to be Good overall, with Good ratings across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. That pattern matters in an infant setting because it suggests consistency rather than one standout area compensating for weaker foundations.
Because no Key Stage 2 performance metrics apply, it is sensible to evaluate Honeywell through what it explicitly controls: early years curriculum coherence, systematic early reading, and the extent to which routines and expectations are consistent from Nursery through Year 2. Families comparing local options should treat the “infant school” structure as the central variable, and use FindMySchool’s local comparison tools to line up practical differences such as entry pressure, wraparound logistics, and transition pathways.
In a 3 to 7 setting, strong teaching is less about subject breadth and more about sequencing and repetition. The curriculum pages indicate coverage across the typical primary subjects (including English, mathematics, science, computing, art and design, design and technology, geography, history, music, physical education, and PSHE), but the day-to-day learning experience for most pupils is likely to be anchored in early language and literacy.
For Reception and Year 1, the strongest schools make early reading feel inevitable rather than stressful. That normally shows up as consistent phonics routines, adults using shared language for sounds and spelling, and frequent practice that is short and upbeat rather than long and draining. In Year 2, the pivot is towards applying those skills: longer sentences, clearer handwriting habits, more extended talk in lessons, and increasingly independent task completion.
The most useful lens for parents is alignment. Ask how the Nursery, Reception, and Key Stage 1 teams align on expectations for talk, listening, and behaviour, because pupils do not experience “policies” as documents, they experience them as repeated adult responses. In the best infant settings, children can predict what will happen next, and that predictability supports both learning and wellbeing.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For many Honeywell families, the key transition question is Year 3 rather than Year 7. The linked junior school is on the same site, and the published admissions information notes that children transferring from Honeywell Infant School will have a place allocated in Year 3, but families still need to make an application through their home borough. That “place allocated but application required” nuance matters, because it affects paperwork and deadlines even when progression is expected.
This structure can suit families who like the idea of a smaller setting for early years and Key Stage 1, followed by a separate junior phase once children are older and more independent. It can also reduce the pressure some pupils feel in all-through primaries where “being the youngest” lasts only one year. The flip side is that families are, in effect, committing to a two-stage journey on one site, and should pay attention to how the transition is handled in practice.
Beyond Year 6, pupils will move on to secondary schools through Wandsworth’s coordinated admissions process (or another borough if the family relocates). At infant stage, what matters is less the specific destination list and more whether pupils leave Year 2 as confident readers and writers who can cope with increased independence.
Admission to Reception is via the local authority coordinated route, using the borough in which you live. For September 2026 entry, the Honeywell Infant School admissions policy sets the Reception admission number at 90 and states that the common application form deadline is 15 January 2026. This deadline is a fixed point for families planning a September start, and missing it can materially reduce the chance of an offer.
The school is clearly oversubscribed in the latest published data. Reception entry shows 414 applications for 89 offers, and 4.65 applications per place, which is a high level of demand for a 3-form entry infant. In practical terms, that means families should assume that distance, priority categories, and the fine detail of the published oversubscription criteria will matter.
Nursery operates on a different route. The nursery admissions page sets a specific deadline for September 2026 nursery applications, Friday 6 February 2026, and indicates that families apply directly via the nursery application form. That creates two timelines: a school-managed nursery process, and a borough-managed Reception process. Families with a nursery-aged child should treat those as separate tasks with separate dates.
One final point: oversubscription affects more than offers. It often affects tour availability, responsiveness, and the speed at which waiting lists move. Parents should plan to gather evidence early, confirm which authority controls their application, and keep copies of key submissions and acknowledgements.
67.8%
1st preference success rate
82 of 121 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
89
Offers
89
Applications
414
For pupils aged 3 to 7, pastoral care is largely embedded in routines, adult language, and how consistently staff respond to conflict, tears, and anxiety. The school’s safeguarding information identifies named safeguarding roles, and while families should always ask practical questions during a tour, the existence of clearly defined safeguarding leads and deputies is part of what parents should expect from a well-run infant setting.
Wellbeing at this age is also strongly shaped by communication with home. Look for clear processes around handover, collecting medication information, and what happens when a child is struggling emotionally or behaviourally. For children in Nursery and Reception, the “key person” idea matters, even if the school does not use that exact phrase, because one trusted adult can make the difference between a child settling quickly and a child taking months to feel secure.
For pupils with additional needs, the school federation publishes SEND contact points, including named staff for the infant phase. Families should look for clarity on how support is assessed, how external services are involved, and how transitions are planned, especially for pupils moving from Nursery into Reception, and from Year 2 into Year 3.
Extracurricular life at an infant school needs to be age-appropriate, and Honeywell’s clubs information reflects that. Rather than a long list of competitive teams, the published examples include clubs such as Arty Party, yoga, gymnastics, and French, with clubs varying by term and typically running after school from 3:30pm to 4:00pm or 4:30pm. That kind of offer is often most valuable for two reasons: it broadens children’s experience without demanding adult-level commitment, and it allows children to practise independence and social skills in a lower-stakes context than the classroom.
The school also highlights environmental activity work across the federation, including a food waste scheme supported by “Eco Warriors”. For younger pupils, these projects can be more impactful than they sound, because they make abstract values concrete. Children learn that routines apply beyond their own classroom, and that their actions have visible consequences, which is a powerful early civic lesson.
Because club schedules change termly, parents should treat the published examples as indicative rather than guaranteed, and ask how places are allocated when popular clubs fill quickly.
The federation’s published opening times state that pupils should be in class by 9:00am, with afternoon session times listed as 1:00pm for Nursery and Reception classes and for Years 1 and 2. This is useful for understanding punctuality expectations and how the day is structured, particularly for families juggling nursery drop-off with work commitments.
Wraparound care details are signposted via the school’s channels, but specific session times, booking rules, and costs can change, and families should confirm the current arrangements directly before relying on them for childcare planning. The same applies to termly club offerings, which vary across the year.
For travel, the school sits close to the green spaces of Clapham Common and Wandsworth Common, and most families will be thinking for walking routes, buggy logistics, and congestion at peak drop-off times. A practical tip is to test the route at the exact time you would normally travel, because the “easy walk” can feel different once pavements are crowded with other school runs.
Entry pressure is real. The Reception entry route shows 414 applications for 89 offers in the latest published results. For families outside priority categories, proximity and criteria detail can make the difference, so do not treat admission as a formality.
Two-phase structure. This is an infant school ending at Year 2, with progression to the junior school expected, but still requiring a formal application. Families who prefer a single primary from Reception to Year 6 may want to compare the feel of an all-through alternative.
Nursery and Reception are separate processes. Nursery applications run directly through the school with their own deadline, while Reception is coordinated by your home borough with a different deadline. Mixing the two up is an avoidable risk.
Heritage site constraints. A Grade II listed building brings character, but it can also shape how quickly spaces can be adapted. Families with accessibility needs should ask specifically about access routes and any limitations.
Honeywell Infant School looks like a structured, high-demand early years setting with Good inspection outcomes and a clear place in the local Battersea ecosystem. It will suit families who want a busy, well-established infant school with a defined Nursery to Year 2 focus, and who are comfortable planning admissions carefully in a competitive market. Securing entry is where the difficulty lies; the day-to-day offer is designed for early childhood rather than headline exam measures.
The most recent Ofsted inspection outcome (10 January 2023) rated the school Good overall, with Good judgements across key areas including quality of education and early years. In an infant setting, that points to consistent routines and teaching quality rather than a single standout feature.
Reception entry is coordinated by the local authority for the borough you live in, and oversubscription criteria can make proximity important. Because criteria and demand can change year to year, families should read the current admissions arrangements and check how their home address is treated under the published rules.
The latest published admissions results shows 414 applications for 89 offers for the Reception entry route. This indicates a competitive intake, so deadlines and criteria matter.
Nursery applications are made directly to the school using the nursery application process, with a published closing date for September 2026 applications of Friday 6 February 2026. Nursery entry is separate from the local authority Reception application.
Many families progress to the linked junior school on the same site for Year 3. Children transferring from the infant school are expected to have a place allocated, but parents still need to make the required application through their home borough.
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