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.
Eversfield’s identity is shaped by two things that do not always coexist easily in the prep sector, a broad intake and a very deliberate focus on outcomes at 11+. The school was founded in 1931 and sits close to the centre of Solihull, with a five-acre site and a facilities list that reads more like a much larger junior school, including an indoor pool within a dedicated Sports and Performing Arts Centre.
Leadership is stable and visible, with Headmaster Mr Robert Yates presented prominently in the school’s own materials. The most recent inspection evidence points to a well-designed curriculum, good pupil behaviour, and an organised pastoral system, with one consistent improvement point, marking and feedback needs to translate more reliably into pupil action.
For parents, the practical headline is simple. Fees sit in the mainstream independent band for the Midlands, and the school publishes a clear 2025 to 2026 schedule, plus explicit bursary information for families who need support.
A lot of prep schools talk about values; fewer make them operational. Here, the most concrete clue is that behaviour and relationships are described in formal evidence as calm and respectful, with bullying characterised as rare and managed quickly when it does occur. In day-to-day terms, that usually means routines are predictable, boundaries are clear, and pupils have a shared language for what “good conduct” looks like.
The school’s Christian character is visible in its published aims, which emphasise moral standards, mutual care, respect, and integrity. In practice, that tends to suit families who want a values-led framework without necessarily seeking a narrowly faith-defined intake. Nothing in the key documents suggests the community is restricted by faith background; the emphasis is on principles and conduct.
A second defining feature is responsibility at a young age. The house system divides pupils and staff into Angles and Saxons, with points awarded for hard work, manners and living the code of conduct. Leadership roles also start early, and pupils are given formal jobs, council responsibilities, and plenty of structured opportunities to speak in public and represent the school.
Pastoral support is framed as systematic rather than informal. The inspection evidence describes an “effective pastoral system”, mental health first-aid trained staff, and specific mechanisms for pupils to raise worries. It also flags a wellbeing initiative that creates protected space midweek for informal check-ins. For many children, especially those who are confident but still young, that kind of visible scaffolding can be the difference between “coping” and genuinely settling.
As an independent preparatory school, Eversfield is not part of the state KS2 results pipeline in the way parents might expect when comparing local primaries, and the usual published KS2 metrics are not available here. What you can measure, and what the school chooses to foreground, is readiness for senior school entry at 11+.
The school’s own published admissions guide reports that its 11+ cohort in 2025 received 73 offers, including 14 scholarships and 3 academic exhibitions, with offers coming from 15 selective grammar and senior independent schools, plus 5 grammar school place offers referenced within that same outcomes section. The home page also claims that 100% of children were offered places in 2025 to leading independent and grammar schools in the region, which is a strong indicator of both guidance and preparation, provided parents understand that “offered places” can include multiple offers per child in selective processes.
Two other outcome signals matter for day-to-day learning. First, the curriculum is described in inspection evidence as rich and varied, with cross-curricular links that push pupils to apply learning, not just rehearse it. Second, teaching is characterised as well planned and typically effective, with good subject knowledge and a range of methods and resources. That combination is usually what produces confident learners who can handle unfamiliar tasks in entrance assessments, particularly where reasoning and problem-solving are required.
If you are comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and the Comparison Tool are still useful, even when exam metrics are not directly comparable, because they help you map alternatives by phase, travel time, and admissions complexity before you invest in multiple visits.
The best evidence for teaching quality here is not a single statistic, it is the coherence of curriculum design and the way the school describes progression.
Curriculum oversight is portrayed as careful and ongoing, with assessment used to shape what is taught so that pupils build knowledge and understanding over time. For parents, that typically shows up as clear sequencing in English and mathematics, an expectation of strong written work, and a tendency to revisit core concepts until they are secure. The inspection detail also highlights systematic development of writing from an early age, plus structured task work in mathematics and science.
Eversfield places explicit weight on communication. That is not just rhetoric, it is supported by references to pupils becoming articulate and confident communicators, and by the school’s extensive involvement in LAMDA acting and communication examinations. LAMDA is particularly useful for children who need a reason to practise speaking skills in a structured way; it rewards clarity, vocabulary, and confidence, and those habits spill into interview settings and classroom discussion.
For older pupils, stretching the top end is formalised via the Scholars Programme from Form 3 to Form 6, positioned as deeper learning rather than acceleration for its own sake, and explicitly not linked to fee reduction. This is the kind of mechanism that helps academically strong children avoid coasting in a non-selective environment, while still keeping the tone inclusive.
One honest constraint appears in the inspection recommendations. Feedback does not always convert into consistent pupil improvement across subjects. That is a normal growth point in many schools; what matters is whether leaders close that gap so pupils regularly revisit and consolidate.
For a prep school, this section matters as much as any “results” narrative, because the destination is the main exit point.
The school frames senior school progression as guided, not passive. Pupils are described as being individually supported through selecting the right senior school, with external examination preparation embedded in the Upper School years. The 2025 outcomes summary, with 73 offers and a defined scholarship count, suggests that guidance is active and that the school is comfortable engaging with selective processes.
If your child is likely to aim for grammar school entry, the key question is not “does the school do 11+”, it is how it balances 11+ preparation with a broad curriculum so pupils remain curious rather than narrowly coached. The inspection examples of cross-curricular projects, including music and digital work (soundtrack work for silent film) and design and technology projects presented to an external engineer, suggest that the school’s academic identity is not limited to practice papers.
If your child is more likely to move on to a non-selective senior school, the same preparation can still be helpful. Good writing, confident speaking, and strong organisational habits are transferable, and they often translate into an easier Year 7 transition.
Admissions are direct and flexible. The school states it accepts applications for immediate mid-term admission and for September 2026 and beyond, subject to availability. Entry into the early years is structured around developmental readiness rather than academics. Kindergarten entry can begin from the term of a child’s third birthday (with the practical requirement of toilet independence), and Nursery and Reception follow the usual September progression points.
From Reception upwards, new pupils typically attend a taster day or session, designed to assess informally whether the curriculum will be accessible and enjoyable, with learning support needs discussed where appropriate. For parents, this is a helpful approach in a non-selective setting. It protects the child from a mismatch and also allows the school to be realistic about how it will support learning differences.
Open events appear to follow a predictable pattern across the year, and the school’s calendar and admissions pages show a scheduled open morning on Saturday 31 January 2026. If you are looking at bursary support, there is an explicit deadline for bursary applications for September 2026 admission, Friday 12 December 2025.
Because prep admissions are not governed by a local authority algorithm, the best practical tool is still a shortlist discipline. Use FindMySchool Saved Schools to keep notes on each visit, then cross-check commute time, wraparound hours, and senior school strategy before you commit.
The pastoral model is presented as proactive and structured. Mental health first-aid trained staff, accessible routes for pupils to report worries, and a personal, social, health and economic programme that is described as age appropriate all point to a school that treats wellbeing as part of the operating system, not a bolt-on.
Safeguarding evidence is also strong, with leaders described as running effective systems and staff responding promptly when concerns are raised. Online safety, including filtering and monitoring, is referenced directly in the inspection content. This matters because modern pastoral care is as much about digital life as it is about friendship issues.
Support for additional needs is addressed explicitly. The inspection report notes that pupils with SEND are identified and supported so they can make progress from starting points, and that pupils with English as an additional language are supported effectively, including in the early years. For families, that suggests the school expects a range of learner profiles and has processes in place rather than relying on ad hoc help.
Eversfield’s extracurricular offer is unusually well evidenced. The school states there are 45+ co-curricular clubs and activities each week, and the calendar gives a concrete flavour of what that looks like in practice, including Orchestra Club, art clubs, music concerts, photography club, and a busy fixtures schedule across rugby, netball, and swimming.
LAMDA is a defining strand. The school regularly reports large cohorts sitting LAMDA acting and communication examinations, and its LAMDA teaching is led by a member of staff described as an examiner for the awarding body. The practical implication is that speaking and performance are normalised early. For some children, that is the quickest route to confidence; for others, it is a structured way to get comfortable with formal presentation, which feeds directly into interview and scholarship environments.
Facilities make a difference to habit formation, especially in a day school. The Sports and Performing Arts Centre was completed for the start of the 2015 academic year at a stated cost of £2 million, and it includes an indoor pool that enables year-round swimming, plus a hall that doubles as a performance venue with a stage, lighting rig, sound system, and retractable seating for more than 200 people.
Swimming is not treated as an occasional enrichment. The school’s fee schedule states that school fees include swimming lessons in the school pool, and the calendar shows regular gala fixtures. For children, that consistency can be transformational, it turns a sport into a skill rather than a termly experience.
Citizenship is also tangible. The Charitable Support and Citizenship page states that a pupil-elected school council chooses a charity each year and the school regularly donates between £10,000 and £15,000 annually through fundraising. That is not only about money, it is about giving pupils practical experience of organising, persuading, and following through.
The published 2025 to 2026 schedule sets out termly fees clearly. Reception and Forms 1 to 2 are £4,811 per term; Form 3 is £5,395 per term; Forms 4 to 6 are £5,543 per term. Lunch is listed at £296 per term and books at £8 per term, alongside a confirmation of entry fee of £400 that is described as refundable upon completion of schooling. Registration fees are published as £80 for Kindergarten or Nursery entry and £96 for Reception and Years 1 to 6.
Financial support is addressed more directly than many schools manage. The fees and assisted places information describes means-tested bursaries ranging from 10% up to 100% reduction in fees, available for pupils entering Form 1 and above. It also provides a specific bursary application deadline for September 2026 admission, Friday 12 December 2025.
Beyond tuition, the schedule also sets out supervised care charges before and after school, which is useful for working families, and it is explicit that additional charges can arise for outings, residential trips, workshops, instrument hire and some clubs.
Nursery and Kindergarten fee details are published by the school, but families should consult the official schedule directly for early years options and session patterns.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day structure is documented in policy. The school day begins at 8:40am, with the gate closing at 8:45am for security and registration completed by 8:50am. A separate welcome document states that the Upper School day finishes at 3:50pm.
Wraparound care is clearly described for early years, with before-school care from 8:00am to 8:30am and after-school provision from 3:30pm to 5:30pm. Parents looking for later cover will need to check the current extended day supervision options and club timings as they vary by age and term.
For travel, the location near Solihull town centre is a real advantage for families commuting by road or public transport, but the drop-off experience still depends on your specific route and parking strategy. It is worth test-driving the journey at peak time before committing.
Marking and feedback consistency. The most recent inspection evidence identifies uneven impact of marking and feedback across subjects. For children who benefit from very explicit next steps, ask how staff ensure pupils act on feedback routinely.
A purposeful 11+ culture. Senior school outcomes are a central part of the school’s story, with a clear focus on selective entry at 11+. This can suit ambitious families; children who feel pressured by exam narratives may need careful support and expectation-setting.
Costs beyond tuition. Lunch, books, trips, workshops, and optional extras can add up, and wraparound supervision is priced separately in the published schedule. Build a full-year budget, not just the headline fee.
Bursary deadlines are early. If you need financial assistance, the September 2026 bursary deadline falls in mid-December 2025, so you need to plan visits and paperwork well ahead of time.
Eversfield is best understood as a traditional, values-led prep that combines a non-selective intake with a highly structured pathway to selective senior school entry. The facilities, particularly the pool and the dual-use sport and performance hall, support a busy, practical co-curricular life, while the published 11+ outcomes indicate deliberate academic preparation rather than vague aspiration.
Who it suits: families seeking a mainstream independent prep in Solihull with clear routines, strong pastoral systems, and a serious approach to senior school transition at 11+. The deciding factor is fit with your child’s temperament, some will thrive on the purposeful culture; others may prefer a less exam-defined narrative.
The most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection, dated February 2025, reported that all inspected Standards were met, including safeguarding. It also describes a well-designed curriculum, strong pastoral systems, and good pupil behaviour.
For 2025 to 2026, the published termly fees are £4,811 per term for Reception and Forms 1 to 2, £5,395 per term for Form 3, and £5,543 per term for Forms 4 to 6. Lunch is listed separately at £296 per term and books at £8 per term.
Yes. The school publishes that means-tested bursaries can range from 10% up to 100% fee reduction for pupils entering Form 1 and above. For September 2026 admission, a specific bursary application deadline is published as Friday 12 December 2025.
The school publishes an open morning on Saturday 31 January 2026, with tours running during the morning. Dates can change, so it is sensible to verify closer to the time.
Policy documents state the school day begins at 8:40am, with registration completed shortly after. Upper School finish time is stated as 3:50pm. Wraparound care is described for early years, with before-school care from 8:00am to 8:30am and after-school care from 3:30pm to 5:30pm.
The school states that there are 45+ co-curricular clubs and activities each week, and its calendar shows regular music, sport, and club activity, including Orchestra Club, swimming fixtures, and performing arts events. LAMDA provision is also prominent, supporting confident speaking and performance.
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