A school can be many things at once, and this one genuinely is. Steyning Grammar School combines a broad, non-selective day school (despite the name) with a distinctive state boarding offer and a sizeable sixth form. It also operates across multiple sites, with different campuses serving different year groups, which shapes daily routines for students and families.
Leadership has also shifted recently. The current headteacher is Mr A Timmons, with the appointment recorded from February 2025 on the school’s published governance information.
For parents, the headline is this: results sit around the middle of England at GCSE, while A-level outcomes look weaker against England averages, and the school is working through improvement priorities following its last graded inspection. Boarding, by contrast, is a clear strength, formally recognised in a very recent inspection of the boarding provision.
The school’s identity is strongly tied to its breadth and scale. With multiple campuses and pathways, it has the feel of a single organisation running several schools under one umbrella. Students move through different environments as they progress, and that can suit those who like a sense of fresh start at key transition points. It can also feel logistically demanding for families juggling siblings on different sites, or students balancing clubs, travel, and homework across locations.
Faith sits in the background rather than dominating. As a Church of England school, it describes itself as welcoming students with a faith and no faith, and its Christian vision underpins values and ethos. Collective worship is structured into the week, with assemblies and arrangements varying by key stage and site.
The stated vision is clear and repeated across curriculum information: for every person to be the best they can be. That emphasis tends to translate into a mix of academic expectations and character education, rather than a narrow results-only approach.
At GCSE, Steyning Grammar School is ranked 2,066th in England and 1st in the Steyning area for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This reflects solid performance, in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).
The headline measures add important context. Attainment 8 is 45.1 and Progress 8 is -0.02, which suggests outcomes broadly track prior attainment, rather than significantly exceeding it. EBacc outcomes are a point to understand: 15% achieved grades 5 or above across the EBacc measure, and the average EBacc APS is 4.05, close to the England figure of 4.08. Put simply, the EBacc profile does not read as a major specialism, and families prioritising a strongly EBacc-heavy pathway should look closely at subject uptake, options guidance, and how languages and humanities are positioned across the curriculum.
Sixth form outcomes, based on A-level grades, look more challenging. The school ranks 1,734th in England and 1st in the Steyning area for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), placing it below England average. 37.53% of grades were A* to B, compared with an England average of 47.2%. At the top end, 15.49% of grades were A* or A, compared with an England average of 23.6%. This does not mean the sixth form will not suit the right student, but it does suggest that parents should probe subject-level outcomes, teaching capacity in small A-level sets, and the academic support offer for students aiming for the most competitive courses.
Inspection context matters here. The latest Ofsted school inspection (April 2023) judged the school Requires Improvement.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
37.53%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The timetable structure is unusually clear and consistent across sites. From September 2023, the school runs a two-week timetable (Week A and Week B) with five one-hour lessons per day, with slightly different daily timings depending on campus. That hour-long lesson model tends to support depth within each lesson, especially where practical work, extended writing, or sustained discussion is part of the planned learning.
Digital learning is part of the infrastructure. The school runs a 1:1 device programme for students in Years 7 to 10, structured so families can provide an iPad for learning at school and at home. For some students, this supports organisation, homework submission, and access to resources. For others, it adds an additional practical and financial consideration, particularly if siblings overlap in the programme.
Support for students with additional needs appears well-defined. The school publishes SEN information and identifies a named SENCo, alongside transition support for new Year 7 pupils. There is also evidence of structured support for students with EHCP-related needs through a specialist centre model described in SEND documentation.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Requires Improvement
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
This is a school with a meaningful post-16 and post-18 pipeline, even if headline A-level averages are not its strongest feature. In the most recently reported Oxbridge cycle, 11 applications led to 3 offers and 3 acceptances. That is a small cohort in absolute terms, but it shows that highly academic routes are realistic for a minority of students with the right profile and support.
For broader destinations, the 2023 to 2024 leavers data indicates 49% progressed to university, 7% to apprenticeships, 28% to employment, and 4% to further education. The spread suggests the sixth form supports multiple pathways rather than assuming a single default route.
A practical point for families considering sixth form is entry criteria. The school’s published sixth form admissions policy sets a minimum threshold of five GCSE passes at grade 4 (or equivalent), preferably including English Language and Mathematics, with many subjects requiring specific GCSE grades to continue. Internal Year 11 students have priority, and the school also sets out a minimum number of external places, including day and boarding routes.
Total Offers
3
Offer Success Rate: 27.3%
Cambridge
3
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
Year 7 admissions sit within West Sussex’s coordinated process, with applications for September 2026 opening at 9am on 8 September 2025 and closing on Friday 31 October 2025. Offers are issued on 2 March 2026. Those dates matter because late applications are processed after on-time applications, which can materially affect outcomes when popular schools fill.
Steyning Grammar School is its own admission authority and publishes detailed oversubscription criteria. One distinctive feature is its faith-related route. The 2026 to 2027 admissions policy sets out “foundation places” reflecting the school’s Christian ethos and requires a supplementary information form to be considered under that priority. It also sets out a catchment structure linked to its lower school campuses, with allocations mapped to different sites.
In-year applications (for Year 7 after the normal round, and for Years 8 to 11 where places exist) are made directly to the school using its in-year process.
Boarding is a separate route and a core differentiator. The school states that state boarding entry points are Year 9 and sixth form, and where space permits, Year 10. Families considering boarding should plan ahead, because boarding places are limited by house capacity and are not simply an add-on to a day application.
Year 12 applications are made directly to the school for both internal and external candidates, with a published deadline of 5 January 2026 for September 2026 entry. The policy describes conditional offers being made during the spring term, followed by course discussions and final subject confirmations closer to results and registration.
Parents comparing options should consider using the FindMySchool Map Search to sense-check travel time and campus practicality, particularly because the school’s lower-school geography is a defining feature of the experience.
Applications
409
Total received
Places Offered
312
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral support operates through the structures you would expect in a large secondary and sixth form, with additional layers for students who need them. Published sixth form information points to a wellbeing lead and access to counselling, plus a SEN learning support mentor for students who require extra help.
Boarding adds another tier of pastoral contact. The most recent boarding inspection describes detailed oversight systems, including recorded pastoral interactions and joint oversight with day-school tutors, alongside accessible wellbeing support. That combination often appeals to families who want the consistency of adult supervision across evenings and weekends, and it can be particularly relevant for students far from home or new to the country.
For students with additional needs, the school publishes SEND information that signals a defined approach to identification, support planning, and transition, which is important in a multi-site setting where consistent practice can otherwise vary by campus.
Co-curricular life is presented as part of wider development, with enrichment positioned alongside academic learning rather than as an optional extra for a small minority. At Key Stage 3, the school explicitly lists several structured opportunities including a Key Stage 3 Drama Club, ICT clubs, Literacy and Numeracy Breakfast Clubs, and a Science Club, with the Learning Resource Centre open at break and lunch for reading and borrowing.
For students who need a quieter base during the day, the Learning Resource Centre and library provision can be an important practical benefit, especially in a large school where social spaces can feel busy. For students aiming for competitive sixth form and university routes, structured academic clubs and supervised study spaces can also help build independent study habits earlier.
Boarding expands the co-curricular frame because evenings and weekends are part of the programme. The boarding provision describes weekly clubs and enrichment, plus trips and social events, which tends to suit students who want a full timetable and who gain energy from structured group life outside lessons.
State boarding is the most distinctive feature of Steyning Grammar School. Tuition is state funded, while families pay for accommodation and associated boarding costs. The latest boarding inspection, carried out 2 to 4 December 2025 and published on 20 January 2026, rated the boarding provision outstanding across overall experiences and progress, how well students are helped and protected, and the effectiveness of leaders and managers.
Boarding is organised across two boarding houses, with boarders aged 14 to 18 at the time of inspection. The report describes strong induction for new boarders, clear safeguarding culture, and a blend of academic and pastoral support that connects boarding staff with day-school tutors. For families considering boarding for Year 9 or Year 12 entry, that detail matters because it signals a model built around transition and integration rather than expecting students to simply adapt without support.
Boarding costs are published clearly for 2025 to 2026. Full boarding fees are £6,379 per term for Years 9 to 11, and £6,535 per term for Years 12 to 13. Weekly boarding is priced separately, and the school also publishes deposits and certain extras. Families should read the fee schedule carefully because items like deposits, sundries, and occasional additional accommodation nights can materially change the overall cost.
The school also advertises a Year 9 boarding scholarship route which provides a 10% discount on annual fees for students with outstanding academic, sporting, or musical talent. As with any scholarship, parents should confirm eligibility, assessment, and how awards interact with other reductions, as the financial impact depends on the family’s circumstances and the student’s entry point.
The day-to-day timetable is one of the clearer practical strengths. The main upper school day at Shooting Field runs from 08:50 registration, with the final lesson ending at 15:15, plus a “Twilight” session running until 16:10. Times vary slightly at The Towers and Rock Road campuses.
Transport planning matters because of the school’s geography and size. The school points families to local operator routes, including dedicated public service routes during term time for some areas, and it also highlights that families choosing a school outside the usual catchment may be responsible for transport costs.
Parents should also factor in standard secondary costs such as uniform, trips, and optional tuition. For boarders, published schedules also reference sundries and optional extras such as additional tuition, so a realistic budget should include more than the headline termly boarding fee.
Improvement journey. The most recent graded school inspection (April 2023) judged the school Requires Improvement. Families should read the report alongside any more recent school communications, and probe what has changed since 2023 in curriculum leadership, behaviour systems, and attendance expectations.
Multi-site reality. Campus structure shapes daily life, and it can be a positive for students who like clear phases and fresh starts. It can also add complexity, especially where siblings attend different sites or where after-school commitments require travel planning.
A-level outcomes are weaker against England averages. Sixth form results, as measured by A-level grades, sit below England averages in the most recent dataset. Students aiming for highly competitive courses should ask detailed questions about subject-level results, teaching capacity, and academic coaching, particularly for small-entry subjects.
Boarding is a major commitment, even when state funded. Boarding fees are substantial, and families should plan for deposits, extras, and the student’s readiness for structured residential life from Year 9 or Year 12.
Steyning Grammar School is best understood as a large, multi-campus Church of England secondary with a genuine state boarding offer and a significant sixth form. GCSE outcomes sit around the middle of England, while A-level outcomes are a weaker point and merit careful scrutiny for students with the most demanding academic goals. Boarding is the standout strength, with very recent formal recognition of its quality.
Who it suits: families who value a broad, structured school with multiple pathways, and students who will benefit from the additional pastoral and routine support that boarding can provide. The main challenge is matching the school’s scale, logistics, and improvement context to the individual student’s needs and ambitions.
Steyning Grammar School offers a broad secondary and sixth form experience with a distinctive state boarding option. GCSE outcomes sit around the middle of schools in England in the latest dataset, while boarding quality is a clear strength. Parents should also weigh the school’s improvement priorities following its last graded school inspection in 2023.
No. Despite the name, it is a non-selective state school. Admission is not based on an 11-plus style academic selection test, and places are allocated through published oversubscription criteria.
Applications for September 2026 secondary entry in West Sussex opened on 8 September 2025 and closed on 31 October 2025, with offers issued on 2 March 2026. Families should follow West Sussex’s coordinated admissions process and review the school’s own oversubscription criteria, including any faith-related supplementary form route.
The school states that boarding entry points are Year 9 and sixth form, and where space permits, Year 10. Boarding has its own application steps and should be treated as a separate pathway rather than an automatic add-on to a day place.
The published policy sets a minimum threshold of five GCSE passes at grade 4 (or equivalent), preferably including English Language and Mathematics, and many subjects require higher GCSE grades to continue at Level 3. Internal applicants are prioritised, and external places are offered where capacity allows.
Get in touch with the school directly
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