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.
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For families in and around Bulford, Larkhill, Tidworth and Salisbury, Avondale Preparatory School positions itself as a small, non-selective independent day school for ages 2 to 11, with a working day that stretches well beyond core lessons. The school’s own framing is built around “The Avondale Way” and three headline ideas, confidence, creativity and community, backed by a structure that starts early (before-school care from 7:30am) and runs to 5:30pm for those who need wraparound.
The latest Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) routine inspection took place in March 2025 and reported that the school met the Standards, with safeguarding judged effective.
Avondale’s location and history are unusually intertwined with the military presence on Salisbury Plain. The school was founded in 1923 by Captain Perks of the Worcester Regiment and the Army Education Corps, and later relocated to Bulford in 1957.
Avondale leans into being a “family-run” prep, and that scale matters. A capacity of 180 alongside substantially smaller current roll on public directories points to a setting where pupils are likely to be known quickly and routines can be responsive.
The tone is practical and values-led, rather than glossy. On the curriculum side, there is a stated balance between core academics and a deliberate push for sport and the creative subjects, including drama, art, music and computing. The more interesting detail sits in how the school talks about day-to-day culture: older pupils supporting younger pupils at the start and end of the day, mixed-age outdoor play before registration, and child-led wellbeing ideas such as Calm Club and the Shush Shed, which signal an attempt to give younger children usable tools for self-regulation.
Leadership information varies by source. The school’s own website and independent school membership directories list Mr Craig Wardle as Head, which is the most current, school-controlled position statement available.
In practice, for parents, the key point is that the school presents a clear senior leadership structure on its site, including a Deputy Head who is also SENDCo and Designated Safeguarding Lead, which usually improves speed of decision-making around support, behaviour, and pastoral issues.
As an independent prep (ages 2 to 11), Avondale does not publish national test performance in the same way many state primaries do, and there are no Key Stage 2 performance metrics for this school. The most useful academic evidence therefore comes from the school’s published curriculum intent and external inspection commentary on progress, teaching and challenge.
The March 2025 ISI report describes pupils making good progress and achieving well, supported by teachers with good subject knowledge and lessons that typically engage pupils.
Avondale’s teaching narrative is strongest where it is specific about structure and breadth.
The implication is a school that likes clear routines and measurable steps, which often suits children who respond well to predictable lesson structure.
A detail worth noticing is the emphasis on using maths beyond the maths lesson, such as calculating food miles or water savings in topic work. That kind of applied work tends to suit pupils who learn best when they can see what a concept is for, not only how to execute it.
The school describes specialist teaching in art, music and design and technology, and the inspection report supports that picture, describing pupils producing drawings, clay models and woven objects, and older pupils composing and performing music linked to themes such as World War 2. For children who build confidence through making and performing, this is not just an add-on, it is part of how the week is designed.
For nursery-age children, the school describes two learning spaces and a heavy emphasis on outdoor and physical learning, using grassed areas, a large playing field, an adventure playground, an astroturf court and a hard-court playground with bikes and ride-on toys. External review language also supports well-planned Early Years activities and skilful use of indoor and outdoor resources to encourage curiosity and language development.
Avondale also integrates Early Years into whole-school life where appropriate, for example music and celebration assemblies, which can make transition into Reception feel more natural for children who find change difficult.
For a prep that ends at Year 6, the transition question is less about exam outcomes and more about readiness, confidence, and the administrative and pastoral mechanics of moving on.
Avondale’s stated mission is explicitly tied to preparing children for the next stage of schooling and building confidence and skills for progression.
What is not published (at least in the publicly accessible pages reviewed) is a destination list of senior schools or scholarship outcomes. Families for whom named destinations are essential should ask directly for the most recent leavers’ profile, including which schools are most common, and whether the school supports specific entrance routes such as 11-plus preparation, interview coaching, or scholarship pathways.
Avondale is an independent school, so admissions are not Local Authority coordinated in the way state primaries are. The school’s site emphasises visiting, requesting a prospectus, and engaging directly with the admissions team, with entry spanning Early Years through Year 6 depending on space.
The most concrete admissions-linked financial signals on the public site are a registration fee and an acceptance deposit, plus fee policies about notice periods. Those details usually indicate a conventional independent school admissions flow: enquiry and visit, registration, offer (if space is available), then acceptance with deposit.
Because open mornings and deadlines can change year to year, and because some publicly visible posts about deadlines sit on social platforms rather than on the school’s own admissions pages, the safest approach for 2026 entry is to treat visiting opportunities as regular throughout the year, and confirm the next dates directly with the school.
If you are building a shortlist, this is a good moment to use FindMySchool Saved Schools to track visit dates and questions, and keep a record of what each school says about likely availability by year group.
Pastoral information at Avondale is unusually detailed for a small prep. Two points stand out.
First, the school frames wellbeing as active, not passive. In the ISI report, leadership is described as promoting wellbeing through risk management, stakeholder feedback, and behaviour improvement over time through clear rules and values. Pupils are described as helpful and kind, with structured opportunities to take responsibility.
Second, there is evidence of practical, child-friendly regulation strategies, Calm Club and the Shush Shed are named in the inspection report as pupil-led ideas to help manage emotions. For families with children who can feel overwhelmed in busier settings, that kind of concrete approach can matter more than generic “pastoral care is strong” claims.
This is where Avondale becomes more distinctive, because it publishes a term-by-term clubs calendar rather than relying on broad claims.
From the Autumn 2024 programme alone, named options included Book Club, Cookery Club, Needle Club, Pottery Club, Gardening Club, Construction Club, Spanish Club, Choir, and sport clubs such as football and netball, alongside home learning clubs for both prep and pre-prep.
The implication for parents is straightforward: if your child thrives with structured after-school rhythm, there is a predictable weekly pattern, and several clubs are capacity-limited, which usually keeps groups small.
Sport is framed as inclusive, with fixtures and an inter-house system, and swimming is positioned as a weekly element for Years 1 to 4 across the year.
Trips and residentials are described as starting early and widening from Year 3 onwards, with a mix of adventure and cultural experiences. If your child builds confidence through novelty and managed risk, those experiences can be a meaningful part of “education” rather than an occasional reward.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day begins at 8:00am, with a Before School Care Club from 7:30am, and registration at 8:30am. Nursery and tots finish at 3:00pm for those using funded entitlement hours, and older pupils finish at 3:20pm, with after-school care running later for families who need it.
Avondale states operating hours up to 5:30pm, including for Early Years sessions, which will matter for working families and service families managing variable schedules.
On transport and access, the school’s public materials position it as a Bulford village setting near Salisbury Plain, with the local garrisons explicitly referenced, and it describes itself as being a short drive from Stonehenge.
Avondale publishes 2025 to 2026 school fees on its website.
For pupils in Years 1 to 6, and for Reception children aged 5 and above, the main school fee is £4,200 per term.
Reception fees for younger children can vary depending on free entitlement funding arrangements, which is set out by the school on the same page.
For nursery and tots, the school uses a session and entitlement model; as with all early years settings, families should check the current details directly with the school and confirm how funded hours apply to their child.
Beyond tuition, Avondale lists a set of common extras, including lunches, snacks, swimming (for specific year groups), music tuition, and after-school care charging.
Financial support is presented as fee remission rather than classic means-tested bursaries. The school publishes sibling remission (5% for two children; 20% for three) and also references a 10% remission for service families once early years entitlement funding is exhausted.
For families weighing affordability, this is worth modelling as a household budget, including lunches, wraparound, and any regular tuition such as music.
Leadership information differs by source. The school’s own website presents a clear current headship, but some government and directory listings reflect earlier arrangements. If continuity matters for your decision, ask directly how leadership and governance are structured today.
Clubs can be capacity-limited. Several clubs list maximum numbers and rotation by half term. That can be positive for quality, but it also means not every child will get their first choice every term.
Budget for regular extras. Lunches, after-school care, swimming charges for some year groups, and per-lesson music tuition can materially change total cost over a term.
Avondale Preparatory School suits families who want a small independent setting with long-day practicality, a clear emphasis on character and wellbeing, and visible co-curricular structure that changes termly. It is likely to suit children who gain confidence from being known personally, and who benefit from a blend of creative specialist teaching, outdoor play, and organised routines.
The key decision hinges on fit: how much academic stretch your child needs, and how you value wraparound capacity and the wider Salisbury Plain context. Families who like what they see should treat the visit as essential, and ask directly for leavers’ destinations and how the school differentiates for the most able.
Avondale’s most recent external inspection was a routine ISI inspection in March 2025, which reported that the school met the Standards and that safeguarding was effective. Families should still visit, ask about stretch for higher prior attainers, and check how the school would support their child’s specific needs and temperament.
For 2025 to 2026, the school publishes a main fee of £4,200 per term for Years 1 to 6, and for Reception children aged 5 and above. Early Years arrangements operate on a funded-entitlement and session basis, and parents should confirm current details directly with the school.
Yes. The school states that the day begins at 8:00am, with a before-school care option from 7:30am, and after-school care running beyond the 3:00pm (nursery) and 3:20pm (older pupils) finish times.
Clubs vary termly. A published programme includes options such as Book Club, Cookery Club, Pottery Club, Gardening Club, Construction Club, Spanish Club and Choir, alongside sport clubs such as football and netball. Some clubs are capped, so availability can depend on year group and sign-up.
As an independent prep, entry is managed directly by the school and places can depend on year-group availability. The safest approach is to book a visit as early as possible, and confirm the school’s current timeline for the year group you are targeting, particularly for Reception and Year 3 entry points.
Get in touch with the school directly
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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