Set on the north eastern edge of Northampton near Moulton, Northampton School is a young 11 to 16 free school that opened in September 2023 and sits within The NSB Trust.
The early story here is about foundations rather than headline exam data. There is no published Ofsted report yet, and performance measures have not yet formed a stable public track record. What families can judge today is the intent and the infrastructure, a traditional academic curriculum at Key Stage 3 with a strong English Baccalaureate steer at Key Stage 4, plus specific emphasis on sport and performing arts, including optional aptitude routes for a small number of places.
Admission demand is already high. For the main Year 7 entry route the school is oversubscribed with 916 applications for 214 offers, which is 4.28 applications per place, and first preference pressure is clear.
A new school has to create its identity quickly, and Northampton School puts clarity first. The leadership message repeatedly returns to shared expectations, a behaviour curriculum that teaches routines explicitly, and a culture where learning is protected from disruption.
The headteacher is Mr Matthew Edwards, who has led the school since it opened and had been involved from the project stage prior to launch. That matters for coherence. In a start up school, families usually feel the difference between a team still assembling its approach and one that has been designed end to end.
A house structure is part of how the school tries to build belonging early. Students are placed into one of four houses, Bason, Harris, Kay, or Walker, which frames competitions and wider participation.
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What is available is the academic positioning the school communicates, a traditional subject menu in Key Stage 3, then a Key Stage 4 pathway where most students follow an English Baccalaureate core, alongside options. For parents, the practical implication is that subject breadth is designed to stay open for longer, particularly for students who may later want A levels or a strong academic route at 16.
The right way to read a new school academically is to focus on input quality and consistency. The school describes a structured programme of staff development, and a curriculum model designed to scale as year groups grow.
Curriculum design is one of the more concrete signals available for a young school. Northampton School sets out a Key Stage 3 programme that includes English, mathematics, science, humanities, Spanish, design technology (including food and nutrition), computer science, music, art, dance, drama, religious education, physical education, and personal development sessions.
The emphasis on personal development is not just a statement of values. The school describes a registration and personal development lesson at the start of the day delivered by form tutors, with assemblies within that structure.
For families, the implication is that the pastoral and culture building work is timetabled, not left to chance. That can be a good fit for students who thrive on routine and clear expectations, especially in a school that is still growing into its full size.
As an 11 to 16 school, Northampton School’s key transition point is the move into post 16 at the end of Year 11. At this stage, families should plan early for sixth form or college routes and check published entry requirements at the providers they are considering.
The headteacher’s own leadership statement explicitly treats university, apprenticeships, and employment as credible and supported pathways, with careers guidance positioned as a planned programme rather than occasional advice. The practical implication is that families looking for a clear careers structure should probe how employer engagement and work related learning will scale as the first full cohorts move through Key Stage 4.
For Year 7 entry, applications are coordinated through West Northamptonshire Council, with a standard secondary admissions window that opens from 10 September 2025 and closes on 31 October 2025 for September 2026 entry, with offers made on 02 March 2026.
Northampton School’s own admissions materials highlight two features parents should notice:
Records 916 applications for 214 offers for the main entry route, so competition is not theoretical.
The school allocates 10% of places via aptitude across sport and performing arts, with 21 places in total, 9 for sport and 4 each for dance, drama, and music. These tests are optional and the school states that not taking them does not harm an application.
For the September 2026 intake, the school’s published timeline places presentation evenings in late September 2025 and morning tours from 29 September to 02 October 2025. The school also sets a clear internal deadline alignment, with its supplementary form deadline matching the council’s closing date of 31 October 2025.
Parents comparing options should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check practical travel distance and realistic commute time from home, then sense check it against your wider shortlist.
61.1%
1st preference success rate
176 of 288 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
214
Offers
214
Applications
916
Pastoral systems are still bedding in for a new school, but Northampton School gives unusually specific signals about how it intends to run daily life. The behaviour approach is described as explicit teaching of routines and expectations, backed by consistent reminders, sanctions, and rewards.
The school also describes tutor groups as the first point of contact, supported by heads of year, and references an Inclusion Centre intended to provide wellbeing support and targeted help for students with additional needs.
Because there is no Ofsted report yet, families should treat open events, published policies, and how clearly staff explain safeguarding and behaviour procedures as particularly important at the decision stage.
This is one of Northampton School’s clearest differentiators so far. The school’s published emphasis is that every student should participate in at least one extracurricular activity, framed through house events, clubs, and competitive opportunities.
Two strands stand out:
Optional aptitude places exist for dance, drama, and music, and the facilities list includes a dance studio and a main hall suitable for performances. The leadership page also points to school productions such as Matilda and Beauty and the Beast, plus a community arts event described as NS Fest.
The sports facilities described on the school site are substantial for a young secondary, including a 3G all weather pitch with floodlights, marked grass pitches, and courts laid out as four tennis courts or three netball courts with floodlighting. The sports hall description is unusually specific, referencing 12 height adjustable training basketball hoops.
For families, the implication is straightforward. Students with a strong interest in sport or performing arts may find more structured routes to participation here than at some established schools, while students who prefer quieter, lower profile activities should still check the breadth of clubs in the current term offer.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Published trust documentation states the school day starts at 8.40am and ends at 3.35pm. Beyond that, wraparound arrangements for older students tend to be activity based rather than formal childcare, so families should check the current club timetable and any supervised study provision.
For travel, the location at Thorpeville in Moulton places the school on the northern side of Northampton, so it suits families whose commute aligns with that direction of travel.
No inspection report yet. Ofsted lists Northampton School as open with no report published so far. For cautious families, this makes first hand questions at open events more important, especially on safeguarding, SEND processes, and behaviour consistency.
A new school’s culture is still settling. The structures are clearly described, but a growing school can feel different year to year as cohorts and staff teams expand.
Admission competition is already serious. With 916 applications and 214 offers the limiting factor for many families will be securing a place rather than what the school intends to deliver.
Aptitude routes suit a narrow group. Only 21 places are allocated through aptitude across sport and performing arts, so most applicants should still treat the core oversubscription criteria as the main pathway.
Northampton School is a high demand, still maturing 11 to 16 free school that has put structure, routine, and participation at the centre of its early identity. The facilities for sport and performing arts are a genuine practical advantage, and admissions arrangements are unusually explicit about optional aptitude routes. It best suits families in the northern Northampton area who want a clear behaviour culture and a school that expects students to get involved. The biggest barrier is admission, not ambition.
It is a young school that opened in September 2023 and does not yet have an Ofsted report published. The clearest indicators at this stage are its published curriculum model, behaviour expectations, and facilities. Demand is high which suggests strong interest from local families.
Applications are made through West Northamptonshire Council for the normal Year 7 process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened from 10 September 2025 and closed on 31 October 2025, with offers made on 02 March 2026.
Yes. The school allocates 10% of places through aptitude across sport and performing arts, which is 21 places in total, with 9 for sport and 4 each for dance, drama, and music. The tests are optional and the school says not taking them does not disadvantage an application.
For the September 2026 intake, the school published presentation evenings in late September 2025 and morning tours from 29 September to 02 October 2025. Open events usually follow a yearly cycle, so families should check the school’s current admissions pages for the next set of dates.
The school describes facilities including a 3G all weather pitch with floodlights, grass pitches, a sports hall, a dance studio, and courts configured as four tennis courts or three netball courts. The leadership page also references nine music practice rooms and a dance and drama studio.
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