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 Victorian frontage, 22 acres of grounds, and an age range that runs from Nursery through to Year 8 makes Hilden Grange feel like a complete small-school ecosystem rather than a simple pre-prep add-on to a prep. The scale matters, children can grow up without constant transitions, while still moving into specialist teaching and higher expectations as they reach the upper years. The outdoor offering is unusually extensive for a town-edge school, with a heated outdoor swimming pool plus multiple pitches and cricket nets supporting a busy fixtures calendar.
Leadership has also had a recent reset. Mrs Helen Hoffmann became headteacher in September 2025, arriving with prior headship experience in both local and regional junior settings.
As an independent prep, there are no comparable government performance tables in the way many parents expect for state primaries. The best evidence is the school’s own senior-school destination picture, the scholarship record, and the most recent regulatory inspection.
This is a school that talks a lot about belonging and wellbeing, and there is external evidence that the message is not just marketing. Pupils are encouraged to see themselves as part of a wider group, but also as individuals whose needs are noticed. The language used around wellbeing is practical rather than abstract, with peer mentors and access to counselling explicitly referenced in the school’s pastoral outline.
Behaviour expectations are framed as a set of everyday, repeatable habits rather than a long list of rules. The school’s behaviour documentation refers to the “Hilden Grange Way” as a shared code that appears in pupil diaries and is used consistently across the community. That matters in a prep setting, because consistency reduces anxiety, especially for younger pupils who need clear boundaries and predictable adult responses.
The tone of the community is shaped by its structure. With pupils spanning early years to 13, the older children are part of the daily landscape for the younger ones, which makes peer mentoring feel natural rather than bolted on. It also creates a visible “next step” for younger pupils, they can see what Year 7 and Year 8 look like and what kind of maturity is expected.
The school is also explicit about inclusion. Learning support is presented as a normal part of the school’s architecture, not something hidden away. Mrs Rebekah Sievewright is named as Head of Learning Support, and the approach described is one of early identification and early intervention, with support for dyslexia and dyscalculia highlighted, plus oversight for pupils who are bi- or multilingual where support is needed.
What families can use instead is outcome evidence at the transition point to senior school. The school reports that pupils have received 114 scholarships since 2019 across academic, drama, art, music and sport pathways, and it also highlights a strong recent grammar-school success rate at 11+ (reported as between 92% and 100% over the past four years).
A further strength is the specificity of its published scholarship record and leavers’ destinations. The school publishes a scholarship awards list across multiple years, and it also provides a destinations document that records where pupils progressed by year. These are school-published documents rather than third-party summaries, so while they are not directly comparable to national performance tables, they do give a transparent line of sight into the senior-school pipeline.
Implication for parents: if your priority is confident transition at 11+ or 13+, the evidence to focus on is the school’s senior-school outcomes and the breadth of scholarship types, rather than expecting SATs-style reporting.
Parents comparing local options can also use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to line up nearby schools and keep notes using the Comparison Tool, particularly useful when weighing prep-to-senior routes against the state system.
The curriculum model is built around two ideas: breadth, and an earlier move into subject-specialist teaching than many smaller preps manage. Subject specialists from Year 3 are specifically referenced in official documentation and in the most recent inspection report.
In practice, that tends to suit pupils who like clear subject identities and enjoy variety in their week. It also tends to reduce the “one teacher for everything” bottleneck that can appear in smaller settings. The trade-off is that pupils need to adapt earlier to different adult expectations and different classroom styles. Most children do, but a small number can find the switch from a single class teacher to a more secondary-like pattern unsettling at first.
The school also describes setting for Maths and English from Year 3, framed as a way to meet individual needs. The implication is not simply academic pace, it can also be about confidence. For pupils who need more time to secure core concepts, the right group reduces stress. For pupils who are ready to move quickly, it reduces the risk of boredom and low-level distraction.
Science is presented as hands-on and curiosity-led, with a named after-school option, Mad Science Club, that explicitly goes beyond the standard syllabus. That sort of club can matter more than it sounds, because it signals that curiosity is treated as legitimate, not as an inconvenience to be postponed until “after exams”.
For early years, the published emphasis is on calm, well-planned spaces and outdoor learning, backed up by a commitment to regular Forest School sessions. Importantly, Forest School is described as led by a qualified practitioner and delivered as a full-day experience once per term, which is different from the token “muddy Tuesday” model some schools use.
Nursery entry is possible from the term a child turns three, and settling-in sessions are described as available if needed.
Financially, the school is a registered provider for free early education for 3- and 4-year-olds, with the entitlement framed as up to 15 hours per week, across the school’s academic year structure. (For the precise nursery fee schedule outside the funded entitlement, the school directs families to its own fees material.)
For a prep, this section is the closest equivalent to a “results” narrative because it captures what the school is ultimately preparing pupils to do.
A key headline is the published scholarship volume. The school states that since 2019, pupils have secured 114 scholarships across multiple disciplines. In 2025 alone, the school reported 27 scholarships in academic, drama, sport and music.
The destinations material also indicates a pipeline that includes both strong local independents and selective routes. Examples specifically referenced by the school include Radnor House, Sutton Valence School, Sevenoaks School and Tonbridge School, with music and art awards also mentioned, plus a dance award to Kent College Pembury.
For families who want granular evidence, the published leavers’ destinations document lists named senior schools by year, and the scholarship awards list records award types over time. This level of transparency is helpful when you are trying to judge whether a prep can serve multiple trajectories at once, for example, a child aiming for a highly selective 13+ route and a sibling heading for a different senior school with strong arts.
Implication for parents: ask about fit rather than prestige alone. A prep that can regularly place pupils into different senior-school cultures is usually one that is prepared to advise against the wrong “status choice” for an individual child.
Admissions are direct to the school and are presented as flexible, with entry possible at multiple points subject to space. The published process is clear and step-based: initial enquiry, registration via an online account, then a taster session (two hours for Nursery or Reception, a full day for Years 1 to 8).
Assessment is used, but in a measured way. The admissions policy references INCAS assessments for reading, maths and developed ability for relevant year groups, alongside a previous school report and a health and education questionnaire.
There are also a couple of operational points that matter more than parents sometimes realise:
Nursery entry is tied to a longer-term commitment. The admissions policy indicates that to join Nursery, families are expected first to commit to a Reception place, typically well in advance.
Year 3 is a known expansion point, with the school stating it offers additional places at that stage.
Visits follow a regular pattern. The school states it hosts open mornings during the school year on Fridays, and it also lists open mornings as typically once per term. For admissions shortlisting, the FindMySchool Saved Schools feature is useful here, especially if you are comparing multiple preps with different testing and deposit timelines.
Pastoral work is presented as both preventative and responsive. Preventative, in the sense that the school uses a shared behaviour code plus explicit personal development teaching, and responsive, in the sense that there are multiple pathways for a pupil to ask for help.
One layer is peer support. The school describes peer mentors as part of the pastoral model, which in a prep context can be powerful because younger pupils often disclose worries to slightly older children before they feel ready to go to adults.
Another layer is adult support. Counselling is explicitly referenced in both policy and pastoral material, and the overall wellbeing framework includes trained staff and multiple reporting routes.
The most recent ISI inspection (February 2025) stated that the school met all relevant standards, including safeguarding. That matters because it anchors the wellbeing narrative in formal compliance, not just aspiration.
Support for learning differences is not described as a single “unit”, it is described as integrated practice, with a focus on minimising barriers, early intervention, and collaboration with parents.
A prep can claim “lots of clubs” and still be thin on substance. Here, there are enough named, recurring activities to suggest a programme with real structure.
Music is a major pillar. The school publishes an activities schedule that includes specific ensembles such as Handchime Choir, Samba Band, Junior Choir, Senior Recorder Consort, Wind Band, Flute Group, and even year-group ocarinas. This level of detail usually indicates consistent staffing and rehearsal slots, not just ad hoc enrichment.
STEM has visible hooks as well. Alongside curricular science framed as practical and investigative, the school highlights Mad Science Club as a route for children who want to go further.
Sport is extensive and facilities-driven. The campus description includes eight pitches for football and rugby, cricket squares, multiple nets, tennis and netball courts, and a heated outdoor swimming pool. A separate extracurricular overview also describes a substantial fixtures programme, which helps children learn competition habits and team discipline in a normalised way, not only for the “sporty few”.
Clubs also include plenty of non-obvious options. The wraparound programme lists activities such as Lego, Construction, Makaton, Chess, Board Games, Choir, Photography, Computing, Ballet and Golf. This breadth is particularly useful for children who need a “third space” beyond classroom and sport to feel confident.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, the school publishes fees on a per-term basis. Day fees are:
Years 5 to 8: £6,716 per term
Years 3 to 4: £6,036 per term
Years 1 to 2: £4,897 per term
Reception: £4,246 per term
It also publishes one-off and common extras, including a £110 registration fee and a £545 deposit to secure a place. Lunch is listed separately, with different rates for younger years and prep, and individual music lessons are listed as £27.90 per 30-minute lesson.
On VAT, the school states that for 2025 to 2026 it will pass on 8.5% of the 20% VAT charge to parents, with no underlying inflationary tuition fee increases.
Financial help exists, but published detail is more about availability than percentages. The school references a bursary fund intended to support pupils on bursaries and to add additional recipients over time, and it also points to scholarships as a consistent feature of senior-school transition.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound care is clearly defined and starts early. The school publishes wraparound care from 7:30am to 6:00pm, with separate structures for Nursery to Year 2 and for Years 3 to 8. For prep (Years 3 to 8), the standard day is listed as 8:25am to 4:00pm, with breakfast club from 7:30am and after-school care running through to 6:00pm.
Holiday cover is also mentioned, with a holiday club running 9:00am to 4:00pm during specified weeks in April, December and summer.
Meals are provided across Nursery to Year 8 by Thomas Franks, with the catering page emphasising balanced menus aligned to government guidance.
For travel, the school describes itself as positioned on the edge of Tonbridge town centre and accessible by car or public transport.
The admissions commitment for Nursery is unusually structured. The policy indicates Nursery places are linked to a prior commitment to Reception, typically well ahead of entry. This suits families planning early, but it may feel restrictive for those who prefer to decide year-by-year.
Specialist teaching and setting from Year 3 can be a big shift. Many pupils thrive with subject specialists earlier; a minority may need time to adjust to multiple teachers and different expectations.
Fees plus extras are not trivial. Lunch, music lessons, wraparound care, and technology levies are published separately, so it is worth mapping your likely total cost across a normal term.
Outcomes depend on fit. The school publishes strong scholarship and destination evidence, but pupils will benefit most when the senior-school target matches their academic and co-curricular profile, not just a prestige shortlist.
Hilden Grange suits families who want an all-in-one prep journey from early years through to 13, with clear structure, strong pastoral systems, and a credible senior-school pipeline evidenced by published scholarship and destination material. It is also well matched to children who enjoy variety, specialist teaching, and a timetable that includes serious sport and music rather than treating them as optional extras. Best suited to families who are comfortable planning ahead, both financially and in admissions timing, and who value a school where wellbeing and behaviour expectations are explicitly taught rather than assumed.
It has recent, formal evidence of meeting the full set of regulatory standards, including safeguarding, from an ISI inspection in February 2025. For outcomes, the school publishes senior-school destinations and scholarship records, including 114 scholarships since 2019 and a further 27 scholarships reported in 2025.
For 2025 to 2026, published day fees range from £4,246 per term (Reception) to £6,716 per term (Years 5 to 8). The school also lists a £110 registration fee and a £545 deposit to secure a place.
Admissions are direct to the school and are described as flexible, with entry possible at multiple points if there is space. The published process includes registration via an online account, then a taster session, with Nursery and Reception typically using a shorter taster and Years 1 to 8 using a full-day visit. Open mornings are stated to run during the school year on Fridays, typically once per term.
Yes. Wraparound care is published as running from 7:30am to 6:00pm, with separate timings and pricing structures for Nursery to Year 2 and for Years 3 to 8.
The school publishes destination material and examples include Tonbridge, Sevenoaks, Sutton Valence and Radnor House, alongside scholarships in multiple disciplines.
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.