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.
Last reviewed: January 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
In 1630, Francis Rawlinson of South Kelsey left money to establish a school at Caistor, and nearly 400 years later, that endowed institution stands as one of the finest selective schools in England. Just inside the gates down Church Street, you'll notice something immediately: children engaged, teachers purposeful, the rhythm of a community that has learned to value both academic rigour and genuine care. In the current FindMySchool data, Caistor Grammar School ranks 335th out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic outcomes and 501st out of 2,549 for A-level academic outcomes. Recent results tell a consistent story of excellence: 56.9% of GCSE entries reached grades 7 or above, while the 2025 A-level dataset records 60% of grades at A* to B. The school was named Sunday Times Parent Power State Secondary School of the Year for the East Midlands in 2025, an honour reflecting three decades of sustained achievement. With 669 students aged 11 to 18, Caistor remains selective yet welcoming, academic yet human.
The school occupies a distinctive site in the heart of Market Rasen's market town, just off the main square via a narrow lane running down to the parish church. The physical layout is steep and somewhat cramped, lending the campus an intimate, village-like character. Multiple buildings, each with history and named significance, mark the evolution of the school: Casterby House, once a private residence and boarding house, now serves as the sixth form centre and overlooks the churchyard. The Newbolt Centre honours the English poet Henry Newbolt, a former student whose work left its imprint on the school's identity. The Olympic Torch Building, constructed in 2013, celebrates five students who carried the torch for the London 2012 Olympics, as well as Jordan Duckitt, one of the seven young athletes selected to light the cauldron. Lindsey House, remodelled from a purpose-built boarding house into contemporary teaching and dining space, was officially opened in 2001 by Lord Puttnam of Queensgate and upgraded in 2011 with renovated music facilities. The Manning Building, added in 1984, and newer technology blocks from 1993-1994 sit alongside the traditional teaching block from the 1930s.
Headteacher Shona Buck, who took up the position in September 2022, brings fresh energy to an institution with deep roots. Buck became the school's 28th head. Staff turnover is notably low, indicating stability and long-term commitment to the school's mission. The atmosphere students describe is one of mutual support and genuine academic engagement. Parents consistently praise the pastoral care, and the community is often described as close-knit: friendships form quickly, people tend to know one another across year groups, and pupils look out for each other. The overwhelming message from families is that Caistor stands head and shoulders above other Lincolnshire grammar schools, hence the clamour for places.
In the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, 56.9% of GCSE entries achieved grades 9-7. An Attainment 8 score of 69.8 is very high, and Progress 8 is 0.68, indicating pupils make well-above-average progress from their starting points. The English Baccalaureate (EBacc) is a genuine focus, with 78.7% of pupils achieving grades 5 or above across the full suite of subjects and 94.7% entered for EBacc. The school ranks 1st among all schools in Market Rasen for GCSE outcomes, which is unsurprising given its selective entry. With 89.4% achieving grades 5+ in both English and mathematics, and very high entry into the full English Baccalaureate, students here achieve not just high grades but breadth of attainment.
The 2025 A-level dataset records 292 exam entries and a strong grade profile. At the higher end, 60% of grades reached A*-B. With 10% of entries at A* and 30% at A, the school continues to place many sixth formers among high achievers. The school's A-level academic ranking sits at 501st out of 2,549 schools in England (FindMySchool ranking), placing it around the top fifth nationally.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
63.7%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
56.9%
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The school's curriculum is traditional and rigorous, with modern languages compulsory to GCSE level. Students study ten GCSEs including English Language, English Literature, Mathematics, a modern language (French, German, or Latin), Triple Science, and a humanities subject. Two optional subjects are selected from Art, Computer Science, Design & Technology, additional languages, History, Music, PE, and Religious Education. Key Stage 4 students also receive Personal Development, PSHCE, and Careers guidance alongside PE. Some gain Level 2 Further Mathematics.
At A-level, breadth is carefully curated. Most students study three A-levels, though some pursue four. Specialist subjects such as A-level Psychology (introduced in 2019) and the newly added A-Level Sociology and BTEC Engineering (September 2025) expand student choice. The Extended Project Qualification became available in 2017, allowing academically ambitious students to pursue independent research alongside their main subjects.
Teaching quality, repeatedly observed by inspectors, reflects expert subject knowledge. Teachers establish very good relations with students and maintain high expectations without oppressiveness. Lessons are well-planned, with varied tasks designed to engage and challenge. The curriculum integrates knowledge across subjects, ensuring that historical reasoning skills developed in History lessons are reinforced in English and Geography, for example. Students develop the habits of resilience, independent thinking, and critical reasoning that prepare them for success in competitive university courses.
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 sixth form specifically, the current A-level dataset records 292 exam entries, with 60% of grades at A* to B and 40% at A* to A. Published destinations can vary by cohort, so families should check the school's latest leaver destinations information when weighing university, apprenticeship, employment, and further education pathways.
Oxbridge can be an aspiration for academically ambitious students, but families should check the school's latest destinations information for current applications, offers, and acceptances. Beyond Oxbridge, the wider university pipeline should be judged alongside the school's current sixth-form results: the 2025 A-level dataset records 60% of grades at A* to B from 292 entries.
Total Offers
4
Offer Success Rate: 22.2%
Cambridge
4
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
Caistor is a selective grammar school with competitive entry at 11+. Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated through Lincolnshire's secondary transfer route for the 2027-2028 academic year. Families should check Lincolnshire and the school for the current application window, test arrangements, allocation criteria, and offer timetable before relying on dates or places from earlier entry rounds.
Families should use the current Lincolnshire secondary-transfer timetable and Caistor's admissions information for the intended year of entry. Check the current opening date, closing date, testing timetable, oversubscription criteria and offer-day guidance directly before applying, as earlier open-evening and 11+ dates should not be treated as current.
For sixth form entry, internal Year 11 progression and external admissions should be checked against Caistor's current sixth-form admissions information for the intended year of entry. External places, subject requirements and open-evening dates can change, so families should confirm the current timetable directly with the school rather than relying on earlier published dates.
Applications
189
Total received
Places Offered
96
Subscription Rate
2.0x
Applications per place
Extra-curricular life at Caistor is substantial, with the school running over 50 weekly clubs spanning academic, creative, and physical pursuits. The House system facilitates inter-year mixing, with each House engaging in music, sporting, and drama competitions. This structure ensures that extracurricular participation reaches across the entire ability range, not merely the most exceptional.
The annual school musical is the flagship theatrical event. In 2025, the production of Grease sold out three nights before a single note was played. The production showcases ensemble talent across cast, choir, orchestra, and tech team, with the school credited for maintaining professional standards across all areas. Previous productions including Crazy for You have been similarly celebrated. All students are welcome to audition regardless of musical background, and the school newsletter, Caistor Focus, published twice yearly since 2019 and edited by English department staff, celebrates these cultural moments for the wider community. The school also produces student-directed pieces and participates in drama festivals beyond the school gates.
Music occupies a central place in school life. Two major concerts per year, Christmas and end-of-year performances, invite soloist and ensemble participation. The School Choir and School Orchestra are core ensembles, and students are actively encouraged to perform. Individual instrumental lessons are delivered by Lincolnshire Music Service teachers and school staff specialists, with lessons taking place on a rotating timetable during the school day. Students are expected to provide their own instruments, though the school advises on hire. Small ensembles, including string quartets and other configurations, form throughout the year depending on student interest and ability.
The music facilities themselves have been substantially upgraded. In 2010, Caistor secured government funding for Building Schools for the Future to extend Lindsey House with renovated music facilities. These were completed by Christmas 2010 and officially opened on 24 May 2011. The dedication to musical development reflects the school's specialist music status within its broader curriculum offer.
The school holds specialist sports college status, a designation that has driven improvements in curriculum breadth, competitive opportunity, and standards. Playing fields, located a 10-minute run from the main school site, host regular lessons and fixtures. Football, netball, hockey, rugby, and cricket are core sports. Due to the school's size (relatively small intake per year), teams typically have just one representation per year group; students seeking elite competition understand this structure. Nevertheless, fixtures against local and regional schools are regular, and representative honours for county and regional selections are common among the student body.
Physical education is compulsory to GCSE level, and sports remain available as optional subjects. The school's sports college designation has facilitated access to better equipment and opportunities for specialist coaching, benefiting all pupils regardless of elite status.
Caistor is an accredited Duke of Edinburgh Centre. Over 100 students per year participate across Gold, Silver, and Bronze levels. The scheme develops resilience, empathy, and social responsibility, qualities the school prioritises in its broader mission. Students gain practical experience in navigation, expedition planning, and personal challenge beyond the classroom.
The school runs over 50 weekly clubs. While the full list is not publicly itemised in detail, known offerings include debating and public speaking (aligning with the school's humanities specialist status), coding and computing clubs, science societies including the Med Soc (medical society) and Eng Soc (engineering society), Young Enterprise, and subject mentoring schemes. Sixth formers can launch new clubs if existing options don't match their interests, fostering entrepreneurship and self-direction.
Sixth form students access Casterby House, their own dedicated base with teaching rooms, study space, and social areas. The Coffee Club, operating throughout the day in the Lower Lindsey Dining Room, provides additional study and socialisation space. Leadership development is central to sixth form life. Students take roles as House Officials, Sixth Form Council members, Prefects, and Performing Arts and Sport Leadership award holders. A Young Enterprise scheme and wellbeing mentor roles offer further pathways. The school's volunteer scheme runs on Wednesday afternoons, with recent placements including Caistor Rock Foundation, Caistor Heritage Centre, and local nursing homes for students considering healthcare careers.
Enrichment programmes provide Performing Arts Leadership Award, Sport Leadership Award, private study, work experience placements, volunteering, the Extended Project Qualification, and Duke of Edinburgh Gold level. All of this infrastructure reflects the school's recognition that sixth form is both an academic and personal transition, where students develop independence and leadership alongside subject mastery.
The Ofsted inspection of May 2022 rated the school Good across all categories: overall effectiveness, quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and sixth-form provision. Inspectors noted that pupils enjoy lessons and show independence in learning; sixth formers benefit from personalised support and high expectations. The school fosters an environment where pupils take pride in their education. Behaviour management is consistent and effective, contributing to a calm atmosphere conducive to learning.
Pastoral care is consistently highlighted as a school strength. The close-knit community, around 680 pupils in an intimate setting, means staff know students individually. A dedicated SENCO leads support for pupils with additional needs. The school holds the Inclusion Quality Mark, reflecting commitment to accessible education for all learners. Individual tutors and dedicated staff oversee each student's wellbeing and progress.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
School hours run from approximately 8:50am to 3:20pm. The school day comprises nine periods across five days, with breaks at mid-morning and mid-afternoon and a one-hour-and-five-minute lunch break that allows students to pursue extracurricular interests at the split site. No boarding facilities are available; all students are day pupils.
Attendance rates are notably high at 97%, exceeding the England average and reflecting genuine student engagement. Phone rules are strict: devices are expected to stay out of sight and silent during the school day, a stance presented as protecting learning time and supported by parents and staff.
Transport information is available through the school website. The school occupies a compact site on Church Street, Caistor, Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, LN7 6QJ. Most students travel from surrounding areas including Grimsby, Brigg, and Market Rasen, using a combination of school transport (arranged by LA), parents, and public routes.
Competitive entry: Admission is not guaranteed despite strong performance. Families preparing children for selective entry should check the current Lincolnshire secondary-transfer timetable and Caistor admissions criteria, then plan structured familiarisation from Year 4 or early Year 5.
Exam pressure: As a selective grammar school, the culture emphasises academic achievement. This suitsambitious, resilient learners who thrive on challenge. Families seeking a less academically pressured environment should consider non-selective alternatives.
Catchment constraints: The 6.5-mile straight-line catchment from the school gates means students living outside this radius depend entirely on test performance for allocation. Families should verify their distance before relying on entry.
Limited external sixth form intake: Only 6 external places exist for sixth form entry. Students completing Year 11 at Caistor transition automatically if they meet minimum requirements; external applicants face extremely limited opportunity.
Single-sex streaming at A-level: While girls join the sixth form as day students, creating a mixed-gender sixth form, the selective intake and strong performance mean many students find themselves among peers of notably similar academic ability, which suits some and intimidates others.
Caistor Grammar School stands as one of England's finest selective schools, combining rigorous academics with genuine pastoral care and enrichment. Founded in 1630, it has evolved into a modern institution that takes its heritage seriously whilst preparing students for contemporary futures. Results consistently exceed national benchmarks; behaviour and attitudes are exemplary; and the sense of community among staff, students, and families is palpable. The school delivers exactly what it promises: an enviable academic education within a caring community where lively minds are challenged and talents developed. Best suited to academically ambitious families within or able to test into the catchment who value a balanced, well-rounded education alongside top-tier results. The primary challenge is securing a place; those who succeed will find themselves in a genuinely outstanding school.
Yes. Ofsted rated the school Good across all categories in May 2022. In current FindMySchool rankings, GCSE academic results rank 335th out of 3,895 schools in England; A-level academic results rank 501st out of 2,549. In the 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset, 56.9% of GCSE entries reached grades 9-7, and the 2025 A-level dataset records 60% of grades at A*-B.
Very competitive, because Caistor is a selective grammar school and Year 7 entry is handled through Lincolnshire's secondary transfer route. Families should use the current Lincolnshire and school admissions timetable for the 2027-2028 entry cycle, checking test arrangements, oversubscription criteria, and offer information directly before applying.
The school features the Olympic Torch Building (2013) honouring London 2012 torch-carriers; the Newbolt Centre, a modern multipurpose hall named after poet Henry Newbolt (a former student); Lindsey House with renovated music facilities opened in 2011; Casterby House, the sixth form centre; and the Manning Building (1984) housing technology facilities. Playing fields are off-site, about a 10‑minute run from the main campus.
The school produces a professional-standard annual musical (recent: Grease, sold out; Crazy for You); two major concerts yearly featuring School Choir and Orchestra; individual instrumental lessons delivered in school time; and small ensemble opportunities. All students welcome to audition for drama productions regardless of background.
The school offers a broad A-level curriculum including traditional academic subjects, sciences, humanities, languages, and modern additions including A-Level Psychology (since 2019) and newly A-Level Sociology and BTEC Engineering (September 2025). The Extended Project Qualification is available for independent research. Most students study three A-levels; some pursue four.
Families should check the school's latest destinations information for current university, apprenticeship, employment, and Oxbridge outcomes, because those figures can move by cohort. The current sixth-form academic indicators are strong: the 2025 A-level dataset records 292 exam entries, 60% of grades at A*-B, and a FindMySchool A-level academic ranking of 501st out of 2,549 schools in England.
Applications are coordinated through Lincolnshire's secondary transfer route. For 2027-2028 Year 7 entry, families should use the current Lincolnshire and school admissions timetable, including the latest registration, testing, deadline, and offer information. Full admissions policy details are available on the school website.
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