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.
There is a particular kind of prep that works best when it stays intentionally small, keeps routines predictable, and builds confidence through repeated public performance, sport fixtures, and structured enrichment. Solefield School fits that mould, with pupils aged 3 to 13, a one-form entry feel in the early years, and a clear focus on manners, emotional literacy, and getting children ready for selective senior school routes.
The February 2024 Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection reported that the school met all required standards.
Since 2020, Headmistress Helen McClure has overseen a period of visible change, including the opening of the pre-school in 2023 and the move to co-education from January 2024.
Solefield’s tone is set less by scale and more by habit. Children are expected to speak clearly, shake hands, and represent the school, whether that is in a Year 2 performance, a Year 8 captaincy role, or a debating club session where pupils learn how to disagree without being rude. The school’s three values, Value yourself, Value others, Value our world, appear as a practical organising principle rather than a poster slogan, with pupil leadership through School Council and an eco group known as Team G.
The physical setting has genuine local texture. The main building began life as a family house built around 1878, and the school sits close to the site associated with the Battle of Solefield of 1450, a reminder that Sevenoaks history is never far away.
The school also leans into community identity through its house system. Pupils join one of five houses, Holmes, Marlowe, Stanhope, Sackville, and Wolfe, and the references are not arbitrary. They are used to anchor assemblies, charity initiatives, and a sense of belonging that matters in a school where many pupils are preparing for selective 11+ or 13+ routes.
Pastoral work is unusually explicit for a prep. The school holds the Wellbeing Award for Schools, runs structured pastoral contact time daily, and describes a model that includes Talk Time and Play Therapy delivered by trained counsellors, alongside dedicated wellbeing hubs. The presence of two wellbeing dogs, Monty and Charlie, is positioned as part of normal school life rather than a gimmick.
This is a non-selective prep with selective outcomes in view. That combination shapes how learning is described: strong fundamentals early, then progressively more explicit exam preparation, plus a consistent emphasis on thinking skills and confident speaking.
In the pre-prep, pupils are taught core curriculum by form teachers supported by teaching assistants, with specialist teaching for French, art, sport, music, and ICT in specialist rooms. The detail matters because it signals a transition point: children begin to see that different subjects come with different expectations, spaces, and ways of working.
From Year 5 upwards, the school describes residential trips as part of learning, and at the top end it references Common Entrance alongside 11+ preparation. The implication for parents is straightforward: this is not a setting that treats exams as an awkward add-on at the end of Year 6 or Year 8. Preparation is threaded through the experience, while still leaving room for projects, themed enrichment weeks, and visiting speakers that broaden vocabulary and general knowledge.
A distinctive curriculum feature is PPE, Philosophy, Politics and Ethics, running through the curriculum from age 7. That is unusual in the prep sector, and it points to an explicit goal: pupils who can explain their reasoning, not just produce correct answers.
STEM is presented as both timetabled learning and co-curricular identity. Lessons are organised around half-termly, project-based topics where pupils solve a problem and present their solution to peers. At scholarship level, pupils can go deeper through options in the Year 7 and Year 8 pathway, and the school references experiences such as the BETT Show and the Big Bang Fair as part of widening pupils’ sense of where STEM leads.
For families with a child who learns best by building and iterating, this approach can be a strong fit. It turns “maths and science ability” into tangible habits, planning, testing, presenting, and reflecting, which also travel well into senior school interview and scholarship contexts.
Because published national performance tables are not the lens here, the most meaningful outcomes are senior school destinations and the pattern of scholarships and awards.
For Year 6 leavers in 2025, the school lists a spread that includes The Judd School (5) and Sevenoaks School (4), alongside Caterham School, Radnor House, King's School, Canterbury, Lingfield College, Sutton Valence School, and Tunbridge Wells Grammar School for Boys (3).
For Year 8 leavers in the same year, the list includes Tonbridge School (5) and Whitgift School, as well as repeat destinations such as Caterham, Radnor House (3), Sevenoaks School, and Sutton Valence (2).
Scholarship information is also published in the same 2025 summary, with awards listed across academic, art, drama, music, and sport categories at several destination schools.
The practical takeaway: Solefield appears to keep multiple routes open at 11+ and 13+. That suits families who are not yet certain whether a child will thrive best moving earlier at 11+, or benefiting from two more years before stepping into a larger senior school.
Admissions are direct to the school and start with a visit. If families proceed, the school asks for an application form and a registration fee of £120, and it describes confirming places around twelve months before entry, with a refundable deposit of £500 to accept a place.
The key practical point for 2026 entry is that early years demand is tight. The school states that Little Acorns is currently full until September 2028, with a waiting list operating for 2026 to 2027 and 2027 to 2028 in case places become available.
For entry beyond the main points, the school says it can accept applications into Years 1 to 7, and sometimes Year 8, subject to availability and a taster day. Assessments are described as age-appropriate, and the admissions policy references English comprehension and writing tasks, maths work, plus contextual information such as prior reports and, where relevant, 11+ or NFER scores.
Open events are structured and frequent enough to support genuine due diligence. Open mornings are listed once a term on a Saturday, and for 2026 the school publishes open morning dates including 31 January 2026 and 9 May 2026.
If you are shortlisting, the most useful next step is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check commute time from your front door at real drop-off hours, then save Solefield alongside 2 to 3 realistic alternatives so you are not over-committed to a single admissions outcome.
The wellbeing offer is a defining part of the school’s pitch, but it is also described with operational detail. Pastoral time appears daily, with weekly Relationships, Sex and Health Education sessions, and a structure that allows small pastoral groups within each year. The school explicitly talks about teaching children to name emotions, resolve misunderstandings through communication, and build resilience through positive self-talk habits.
Support mechanisms go beyond the usual “tutor system” language. The school describes a wellbeing team, two trained counsellors delivering Talk Time and Play Therapy, and designated wellbeing hubs that pupils can use.
For families with a sensitive child, or one who presents as capable but anxious, the implication is encouraging: the school is not treating wellbeing as an afterthought. Equally, the approach relies on children engaging with reflective routines, which will suit some temperaments more than others.
Co-curricular life is presented as structured choice, not casual add-ons. The school describes over 40 clubs per term, and recent lists reference even higher numbers in some terms.
What matters most is the specificity. Clubs cited by the school include Debating, Kung Fu Karate, Chess, Gardening, Lego, Fencing, Spanish, Archery, Parkour, Judo, and Advanced Chess.
This breadth helps children find an identity beyond “good at school”. For a pupil who is competent across subjects but not yet sure what they enjoy, a club menu spanning performance, languages, strategy games, and physical disciplines can create a stronger sense of agency.
Music is unusually systematic. The school describes a purpose-built music school, a keyboard room, and a curriculum where instruments rotate by year group: recorder in Reception to Year 2, violin in Year 3, melodica in Year 4, ukulele in Year 5, then keyboard lessons in Years 6 to 8. Ensembles include three choirs, two orchestras, plus smaller groups such as string, woodwind, cello, guitar, and brass groups, alongside a rock and technology group focused on performance and recording techniques.
Drama is positioned as confidence training. Lessons cover improvisation, speaking in public, script writing, and collaborative work, with the explicit intention of building self-belief rather than filtering for a narrow “drama kid” profile.
Sport is framed in two tracks, sport for all and sport for performance. Major fixtures sports are listed by season, including football, rugby, and cricket, plus tag rugby and netball for girls in the fixtures programme. Co-curricular sport extends into options such as the Young Athlete Development programme, Judo, Parkour, Table Tennis, and Quidditch.
Outdoor learning is a weekly highlight, delivered in private woodlands and aligned to a forest school style framework described through “SPICES” ingredients. For pupils who learn best when movement and practical tasks are part of the lesson, this can act as an important counterweight to desk-based academic intensity.
For 2025 to 2026, termly fees are published as £5,508 per term for Reception, rising through the school to £7,884 per term for Years 7 and 8. The school notes that fees from Reception to Year 8 include VAT, while the pre-school is treated differently.
The published fee description is unusually clear about what is included. It references lunches, match teas, tea before after-school clubs, many clubs, books and resources, swimming lessons, outdoor learning for pre-prep, some non-residential trips, Talk Time, and in-class support from teaching support staff.
On financial support, the school references bursaries through a bursary and development fund, and scholarship preparation is built into the Year 7 and 8 scholarship pathway and the published list of awards gained at senior schools. For families who may need help with affordability, the realistic move is to ask early, in writing, about means-tested support and how it is assessed.
Nursery and pre-school fees are published separately; for current early years pricing, check the school’s official fees page.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school day is designed around a working-parent timetable. Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am, and the school describes before and after-school care available during term time up to 6.30pm. For pre-prep children, there is also a Wait Class option until 4.00pm.
Wraparound care is priced per session, with a Breakfast Club rate of £6 and several after-school care options depending on finish time.
Travel is straightforward for families using town transport links. The school describes itself as just off the A225 and around a 10-minute walk from the centre of Sevenoaks, and it operates a school bus service with pick-ups including Sevenoaks Station and Tesco Riverhead.
Early years availability. Little Acorns is stated as full until September 2028, with a waiting list for 2026 to 2027 and 2027 to 2028. If nursery entry is central to your plan, you may need a parallel option.
Selective outcomes, non-selective entry. The school describes itself as non-selective while also preparing pupils for 11+ and Common Entrance routes. That mix can be motivating, but some children may find the senior school focus intense by Year 5 and beyond.
Costs beyond tuition. While fees include many clubs and core extras, some specialist clubs and extended care sessions are priced separately. Families should ask for a realistic annual extras range.
Co-education is still new. Girls were welcomed from January 2024. For some families, joining during a period of cultural change is a plus; others prefer a longer-established pattern.
Solefield School suits families who want a small, high-contact prep that takes both learning and emotional development seriously, and that keeps multiple senior school routes open at 11+ and 13+. The combination of explicit wellbeing structures, systematic music, broad clubs, and a published destination pipeline makes it a credible option for academically able pupils who also benefit from close adult attention. The main constraint is admissions timing in the early years; the practical challenge is securing a place when you need it, not deciding whether the school can educate your child well.
For families seeking a small prep with structured pastoral care and strong senior school destinations, it has a compelling profile. The school publishes a wide set of 11+ and 13+ destinations and scholarship outcomes, and its wellbeing systems are described in operational detail rather than marketing language. The most recent independent inspection (February 2024) reported that required standards were met.
For 2025 to 2026, termly fees are published from Reception through Year 8, with a published termly rate of £5,508 for Reception and £7,884 for Years 7 and 8. Nursery and pre-school pricing is published separately on the school’s fees page.
Entry is not described as selective, but availability matters, especially in early years. The school states that Little Acorns is full until September 2028 and is operating waiting lists for 2026 to 2027 and 2027 to 2028. For other year groups, places depend on availability and a taster day with age-appropriate assessment.
The school publishes termly open mornings. Dates listed include Saturday 31 January 2026 and Saturday 9 May 2026, both at 9.30am.
The school publishes destinations by cohort year. In 2025, the Year 6 list includes The Judd School (5) and Sevenoaks School (4), plus a range of independent and selective options; the Year 8 list includes Tonbridge School (5) among others. Cohorts vary year to year, so it is sensible to look at several published years, not just one.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
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.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.