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.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England primary serving families around Ringley and the Fold Road area, with a published capacity of 210 pupils. The school leans into a close knit feel, partly because it is small, and partly because it runs a clear structure for pupil responsibility, including a system of 15 “tribes” that children belong to.
Academically, the headline is the combined Key Stage 2 figure. In 2024, 73.7% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. That sits alongside relatively high “higher standard” attainment (20%), which is well above the England benchmark (8%).
The latest inspection judgement is Good, following an Ofsted inspection on 30 January 2024. Admissions are competitive in the Reception entry route, with 60 applications for 30 offers in the most recent published admissions data. (Distances data is not available for this school in the input.)
A small school can feel either intensely personal or slightly limiting. Here, the school’s own framing puts the emphasis on relationships and a “caring” approach, while also stating high academic expectations. That blend matters for parents weighing whether a faith primary is mainly about worship and values, or whether it also has a clear academic spine.
The school has a long local footprint. Its own history notes a school on Fold Road since 1640, and the current school building dating to 1872. For families who care about continuity and community identity, that sort of longevity often correlates with stable traditions such as seasonal church links, recurring events, and a strong alumni parent network.
Leadership is clearly signposted on the school website. The headteacher is Mr J Moorhouse, who is also listed as the Designated Safeguarding Lead. In a smaller primary, this kind of dual role tends to translate into direct visibility of senior leadership in day-to-day routines, and often faster decision-making when pastoral issues arise.
As a Church of England school, collective worship is part of the normal rhythm, and the school publishes relevant policies around this. For families of other faiths, or those who are non-religious, it is worth understanding the practicalities: voluntary aided faith primaries can integrate worship and faith language more explicitly into the school week, even when the intake is mixed.
The school’s Key Stage 2 outcomes suggest a mixed picture that is more positive than the overall ranking band might imply.
In 2024, 73.7% met the expected standard, compared with the England average of 62%. That is the statistic many parents will care about most because it captures the combined end-of-primary readiness indicator.
At the higher standard, 20% achieved the higher standard measure, compared with the England average of 8%. In practical terms, that suggests there is a cohort each year leaving with stronger depth across core areas.
The results reports average scaled scores of 103 in reading, 103 in maths, and 104 in grammar, punctuation and spelling. Expected standard rates are 77% in reading, 67% in maths, and 70% in GPS. Science expected standard is shown as 80%, slightly below the England average of 82%.
Ranked 10,598th in England and 211th in Manchester for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). The ranking percentile band indicates below England average overall (within the bottom 40%), so parents should interpret this as “solid in parts, less consistent in others”, rather than uniformly weak or uniformly strong.
A sensible way to use these numbers as a parent is to compare the combined expected standard and the higher standard to local alternatives, then use a visit to test whether the curriculum and support match your child’s needs. If you are shortlisting locally, the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools can help you line up the KS2 measures side-by-side without over-weighting any single metric.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
73.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The published curriculum pages show an intent to build confidence and independence, including in areas such as computing, where the emphasis is on tackling challenges and building a sense of achievement. That kind of language often reflects a school trying to avoid a narrow SATs-only mindset.
PE is positioned as more than just timetabled lessons. The school notes specialist coaching opportunities, and names sports including dance, football, rugby and cricket in that context. When this is done well, it can matter academically too, because structured physical activity can support attention, self-regulation, and confidence in the classroom.
Religious education is clearly embedded, with planning aligned to the Manchester Diocesan syllabus, and the school describes a teaching approach that uses creative strategies such as art, drama, music, and design and technology to support understanding. For families choosing a Church of England school specifically for ethos, this is relevant because it signals that RE is treated as a curriculum subject with deliberate pedagogy, not simply an add-on.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary, the next step is secondary transfer at Year 7, coordinated through the local authority and influenced heavily by home address and the local secondary landscape. Bolton is the named local authority for this school.
What matters in practice is that families should treat Year 5 and early Year 6 as the time to research likely secondary options, especially if transport or specific pastoral needs influence your choice. A useful approach is to look at your realistic travel radius, then compare the local secondaries for outcomes and pastoral fit, rather than assuming the nearest will always be the best match.
Because the school is faith-based, parents should also check whether any linked faith secondary routes are relevant to their family, and how those admissions criteria work. Not every family will want that continuity, but those who do often value the consistency of values language and community links.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Bolton Council, with the key dates set out clearly by the local authority. Applications for September 2026 entry open from 01 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026 at 11:59pm. National offer day for primary places is 16 April (and for 2026 the Bolton coordinated scheme specifies 16 April 2026).
As a voluntary aided Church of England school, there is also faith-related admissions documentation and criteria signposted on the school’s website, including references to church supplementary forms. Parents should pay close attention to any supplementary information requirements if applying under faith criteria, because missing paperwork can affect how an application is ranked within oversubscription rules.
Demand, based on the for the Reception entry route, suggests competition for places. There are 60 applications for 30 offers, which is 2 applications per place, and the route is marked oversubscribed.
If you are deciding whether a move is worth it for admissions advantage, treat all distance thinking as provisional, because this school’s furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is not available provided, and distance cut-offs can shift year to year depending on where applicants live.
90.0%
1st preference success rate
27 of 30 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
60
A useful signal for parents is clarity of safeguarding leadership. The headteacher is explicitly listed as the Designated Safeguarding Lead on the staff page. In a small primary, that can be reassuring because accountability is clear, and escalation routes are usually straightforward.
Faith primaries often use values language as part of behaviour expectations. Here, the school’s public messaging emphasises social and interpersonal development alongside academic expectations, suggesting a pastoral model built around community norms rather than heavy sanction systems. The right question for prospective families is whether your child responds well to that approach: some children thrive when expectations are framed through shared values, while others need very explicit routines and step-by-step behaviour scaffolding.
The school publishes a detailed list of extracurricular opportunities and wraparound provision.
football, athletics, cross country, multi-skills, and gymnastics are explicitly listed, with dance also included. This is a helpful level of specificity for a small primary, because it indicates the offer is not just “sports club” as a generic label.
art and crafts are named, and the school also references Art Club. For children who are not sport-led, this can make a material difference to confidence and friendships.
the school notes that Year 4 children learn guitar, with continuation into Years 5 and 6 for a small fee, plus violin opportunities for Years 5 and 6, and a Key Stage 2 choir. That is a concrete pathway, not just enrichment language, and it gives parents a sense of progression across the junior years.
The implication is that children with an emerging interest, whether in sport or music, can try something early and then stick with it long enough to build competence. That consistency is often what turns “I tried it once” into a genuine skill by the end of Year 6.
Wraparound care is clearly established. Breakfast Club runs from 7:45am, and the school asks that children do not arrive after 8:35am so that the school day can start promptly at 8:45am. An after-school care club operates on site and closes at 6:00pm. Published pricing indicates £6 per breakfast session and £9 for after-school care, with both prices stated as effective from 01 September 2026.
For travel planning, the practical factor is that this is a local community primary, so most families will prioritise walkability and short car journeys. When you visit, it is worth checking drop-off flow and parking realities in the immediate streets, because small primaries can feel most pressured at the start and end of day, regardless of the quality of the education.
Ranking band versus KS2 headline. The school’s 2024 combined KS2 outcome is above the England average, but the overall ranking band sits below England average. This can indicate variability between cohorts or subjects. Parents should look beyond a single headline by asking how the school supports children who need to catch up, and how it stretches high attainers.
Faith-based admissions detail. As a voluntary aided Church of England school, the admissions process can include supplementary requirements when applying under church criteria. Families who do not want a faith-shaped admissions route should read the criteria carefully before assuming it works like a community school application.
Competition for Reception places. The figures indicate oversubscription for the Reception route, with 2 applications per place. Families should treat admission as uncertain unless their circumstances align strongly with the oversubscription criteria.
Wraparound costs. Breakfast and after-school care are available and convenient, but they are not free. Regular use becomes a meaningful monthly cost for some families.
St Saviour CofE Primary School, Ringley suits families who want a small Church of England primary where faith and values are part of daily life, and who also care about achieving a strong KS2 combined outcome by the end of Year 6. The academic picture, as shown in the latest available results, looks better on the combined measure than the overall ranking band suggests, so this is one where it is sensible to dig into consistency and support during a visit. Entry is the limiting factor for many families, so shortlisters should treat admissions criteria and deadlines as the practical priority.
The latest graded inspection outcome is Good (inspection date 30 January 2024). In the 2024 KS2 data used here, 73.7% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%, with 20% achieving the higher standard compared with 8% in England.
Admissions are coordinated through Bolton Council, and places are allocated using the published oversubscription criteria.
Bolton’s primary application window for September 2026 entry runs from 01 September 2025 to 15 January 2026 (11:59pm). Offer day for primary places is 16 April 2026.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs from 7:45am, and after-school care runs until 6:00pm. Pricing is published by the school, with £6 per breakfast session and £9 for after-school care, stated as effective from 01 September 2026.
The school lists clubs and activities including football, athletics, cross country, gymnastics, dance, and art and crafts, plus a Key Stage 2 choir. It also describes a music pathway including guitar in Year 4 and violin opportunities in Years 5 and 6.
Get in touch with the school directly
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