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.
A small, values-led prep in Burgh Heath that leans into creativity, technology and practical problem-solving, without losing sight of core literacy and numeracy. Aberdour educates pupils from age 2 through to Year 6 and positions itself as non-selective, with pupils moving on at 11 to a range of senior schools. The atmosphere described in formal inspection evidence is one of high engagement, strong relationships and pupils who collaborate well, with digital literacy used routinely to support learning and accessibility.
Leadership changed in 2025, with Mr Phillip Makhouli now listed as headteacher on the Department for Education register, following the previous head, Mr Simon Collins, who was in post at the time of the 2023 inspection.
For families weighing independent prep options in the Banstead and Tadworth area, the differentiators here are the school’s explicit emphasis on technology and entrepreneurial thinking, plus a broad co-curricular menu that includes robotics, ballet and martial arts alongside sport and music.
Aberdour is organised in clear stages, Early Years (nursery and Reception), a pre-prep year (Year 1), then a middle school model (Years 2 and 3) followed by Years 4 to 6. That structure matters day-to-day because it allows the school to pitch expectations carefully, with younger pupils building habits for independence that later show up as confident participation and well-developed study skills.
The 2023 inspection evidence points to pupils who are comfortable speaking, debating and reflecting on learning, and who show mature communication for their age. It also highlights a culture of responsibility that begins early, with roles such as “helpers of the day” in Early Years, then playground monitors, buddies and pupil librarians higher up the school.
A strong “whole-school” thread is environmental awareness. The school was advised in 2023 to build an even stronger pupil voice around environmental concerns, and pupils already take on responsibilities such as eco monitoring and “light monitor” roles that translate values into daily habits.
As an independent prep, Aberdour does not sit within the same public primary performance tables used for state schools, and the available results does not publish comparable ranking or key stage outcome metrics for this school.
What can be evidenced is the quality judgement from the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) in 2023, which described pupils’ academic and other achievements as excellent, with particularly rapid progress in Early Years and pre-prep.
A useful practical implication for parents is that the school’s “results story” is best understood through senior school destinations and the strength of preparation for 11+ style assessments, rather than GCSE-style measures which do not apply at this phase.
The most distinctive evidence-based feature is how routinely technology is used to improve learning and access. ISI highlights pupils’ advanced digital literacy and the positive impact of information and communication technology on learning across the school. That is not presented as an add-on; it shows up in day-to-day classroom practice, including pupils using translation applications on tablets to access instructions where helpful.
The curriculum also makes room for practical, high-frequency challenge. Inspectors describe daily science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) challenges, with examples that are age-appropriate and hands-on, such as designing solutions with simple materials and drawing conclusions from experiments (for example, testing waterproof materials). The implication is a learning culture where pupils practise iteration and explanation, not just getting the right answer.
Support for pupils with additional needs is also described in operational terms, with learning plans shared internally so teachers can adapt lessons, and effective additional support for pupils with education, health and care plans.
Aberdour is a leave-at-11 prep. The 2023 inspection confirms that pupils now move on at age 11, following the school’s decision to stop offering Years 7 and 8.
Destination detail is not consistently published but third-party school profile information indicates leavers commonly move to a wide spread of established Surrey and London day schools, with scholarships across academic, sport and creative routes. Examples referenced include schools such as Caterham, City of London Freemen’s, Dunottar, Epsom College, Reigate Grammar, Royal Russell, Trinity and Whitgift. Treat this as indicative rather than exhaustive and confirm the current pattern with the school, as destination mixes can shift by cohort.
For families, the key question is fit: a prep that emphasises digital confidence, practical STEM and creative breadth can suit pupils aiming for senior schools that value interview confidence, portfolio evidence and problem-solving, not only written papers.
Admissions are direct to the school rather than local authority coordinated. Entry is available from nursery onwards, and the school structure also suggests natural joining points at Reception and as pupils move into the older prep years.
Dated open day listings show the school advertising spring-term events, including an Open Morning on 20 March 2026 and Open Afternoons on 27 February 2026 and 8 May 2026. Parents should treat these as a prompt to check current availability and booking requirements, as event details can change.
If you are comparing options, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for sanity-checking daily travel time, especially at peak drop-off and pick-up windows, which can matter as much as raw distance.
The available evidence emphasises wellbeing through culture and routines rather than marketing claims. The 2023 inspection describes pupils as caring and respectful, with strong pupil-teacher relationships and a school culture where pupils collaborate extremely effectively in both formal and informal situations.
There are also practical wellbeing indicators embedded into daily life, including structured responsibilities (buddies, monitors, librarians) and charity activity through a four-house system, with pupils involved in choosing and supporting causes. The implication is a setting where pastoral development is woven into roles, leadership opportunities and shared expectations, not treated as a separate programme.
The co-curricular picture is broad and, importantly, specific in the inspection evidence. Pupils take part in robotics competitions and a range of sports fixtures, including national sports events, alongside opportunities spanning music, ballet and martial arts.
Music appears to be a mainstream pathway rather than a niche option. ISI notes that many pupils learn instruments with individual tuition and achieve graded outcomes (Grade 3 or above) before leaving. The practical implication is that families looking for an early start in instrumental learning, with progress that can support senior school scholarships, should ask how timetabling works and how lessons integrate with the school day.
Facilities are not described in detail in the accessible official website content, but local authority leisure documentation references a sports hall on site (33m x 18m). For parents, that suggests indoor provision that can support year-round physical education and clubs, which matters for younger pupils in winter months.
Aberdour publishes a 2025 to 2026 fees list effective from September 2025. For Reception, the published VAT-inclusive termly fee is £5,830 (with a separate note showing a reduced figure with Early Years Free Entitlement where applicable). Years 1 and 2 are £5,998 per term, Year 3 is £7,149 per term, and Years 4 to 6 are £7,635 per term. The same document lists a non-refundable registration fee of £100 plus VAT (VAT applicable for Reception and above) and an acceptance deposit of £400.
Nursery fees are published by the school, but specific nursery pricing is best checked directly on the school’s current fees page and supporting documents, as early years entitlement and session patterns can affect what families actually pay.
The fees list also indicates a sibling reduction policy for families with three or more children at the school, and notes that fees are reviewed annually.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school is based on Brighton Road in Burgh Heath, positioned for families in the Tadworth, Banstead and wider Surrey commuter belt.
Start and finish times, wraparound care (breakfast and after-school), and transport arrangements are not confirmed in the accessible official materials reviewed here. If these logistics matter for your household, ask for the current timetable and whether wraparound care is available daily or only on certain days.
Senior school focus starts early. Pupils leave at 11, and the school explicitly frames preparation for selective senior schools and scholarships. That can suit ambitious families, but it is worth checking how the school balances challenge with pace for children who develop later.
Technology is a core feature. Strong digital literacy can be a real advantage, particularly for pupils who benefit from accessibility tools, but parents who prefer a more traditional, low-screen approach should ask how devices are used by year group and in what quantities.
Open day information changes. Published open events exist for spring 2026, but families should confirm dates, booking requirements and year-group availability directly, especially for in-year entry.
Aberdour Preparatory School suits families who want an independent prep experience that blends strong classroom practice with practical STEM thinking and confident use of technology, plus a co-curricular offer that includes robotics, music, ballet and martial arts. It is best suited to pupils who enjoy hands-on challenges and who are likely to thrive with responsibility and leadership roles woven into daily life. The deciding factor for many families will be whether the school’s approach to senior school preparation matches their child’s temperament and pace.
Formal inspection evidence from ISI in 2023 judged pupils’ academic and other achievements as excellent, with particularly rapid progress in Early Years and pre-prep. The same report describes strong collaboration, mature communication and high levels of digital literacy that support learning.
From September 2025, published VAT-inclusive termly fees are £5,830 for Reception, £5,998 for Years 1 and 2, £7,149 for Year 3, and £7,635 for Years 4 to 6. The registration fee is £100 plus VAT for Reception and above, and the acceptance deposit is £400.
Listings show spring-term events including an Open Morning on 20 March 2026 and Open Afternoons on 27 February 2026 and 8 May 2026. Families should confirm the latest details and booking requirements directly with the school.
Pupils leave at 11, and the 2023 inspection confirms the school no longer offers Years 7 and 8. A range of senior school destinations is referenced in external school profiles; parents should ask for the most recent destination list and scholarship outcomes by cohort.
The 2023 inspection describes structured support, including learning plans shared internally so teachers can adapt lessons, plus effective additional support for pupils with education, health and care plans and those with English as an additional language.
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