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Ripley Court School is an independent day prep in Ripley, Surrey, educating children from Nursery through to Year 6. Its appeal is easy to understand, a compact school community on a sizeable site, with facilities that are unusually strong for a prep of this size, including an indoor swimming pool and a dedicated forest school offer.
Leadership has been in transition over the last two years. The most recent ISI inspection (June 2024) recorded Mr Gavin Ryan as acting headteacher, having taken up the position in April 2024, with a headmistress also listed in the school details section of the report. A later school announcement (published February 2025) described Mr Ryan as the new headmaster, which aligns with the current listing on official records.
For families, the practical headline is that the school sits in a competitive Surrey prep market, but differentiates itself through its grounds, structured prep ethos, and a curriculum that external review describes as stimulating, with strong safeguarding practice and clear next steps around feedback consistency.
The setting is one of the school’s defining features. Historic England records the Ripley Court School building on Rose Lane as Grade II listed, which matters less as a badge, and more because it usually signals a traditional main building footprint and a site that has been adapted over time rather than purpose-built in one go.
In day-to-day culture, the most useful external evidence comes from the June 2024 ISI report. It describes a school where pupils benefit from varied opportunities beyond lessons to build self-confidence and develop new interests, and where older pupils take on leadership roles that develop practical life skills such as perseverance and time management. Those details are important because they point to a prep that is aiming for more than neat exercise books, it wants pupils to practise responsibility in small, visible ways.
Early years gets specific mention in the same report, with leadership described as effective and the environment as warm and welcoming. For Nursery and Reception families, that is the tone you want, a clear emphasis on settled routines and a safe, predictable start, rather than “schoolified” early years.
As an independent prep, Ripley Court does not sit neatly in the same published performance framework that drives comparison for state primaries, and recent national testing data is not presented here. The more reliable lens is whether teaching and assessment practices are coherent and whether pupils are supported to make progress from their starting points.
The June 2024 ISI inspection supports a positive picture. It notes that teachers plan interesting activities and use questioning that helps pupils achieve well and enjoy learning. The main developmental point was about consistency, leaders were advised to ensure marking and feedback in all subjects consistently help pupils understand how to improve their work. In plain English, the fundamentals look secure, but parents should expect the school to keep tightening how feedback works across different classrooms and subjects, so the experience is as consistent in Year 6 as it is in Year 2.
Support for pupils with additional needs is also explicitly referenced. The inspection states that pupils with special educational needs and disabilities make good progress because of effective individual support, and that pupils with English as an additional language receive nurturing support to build proficiency quickly enough to access all subjects confidently.
Ripley Court positions itself as a traditional prep with breadth, and there are three practical implications for families.
First, the curriculum is described as stimulating by external review, with leaders providing a strong programme within and beyond lessons. That kind of statement matters when it is paired with concrete facilities and enrichment, and Ripley Court’s site supports it, the school is described in independent listings as set in 19 acres with an indoor pool and forest school. The implication is that learning can be routinely reinforced through practical settings, sport, outdoor learning, and structured clubs, rather than being limited by space.
Second, look for how the “prep” aspect is expressed as children get older. The inspection highlights leaders’ use of assessment information over time to form an accurate view of performance and to target strategies that improve outcomes. For parents, that usually translates into more deliberate tracking and intervention in Key Stage 2 years, and it is sensible to ask how this shows up in Year 5 and Year 6 for maths, writing, and verbal reasoning style work that often underpins senior school entrance routes.
Third, there is a clear safeguarding culture embedded in staff training and systems, including how pupils are taught to stay safe online and how concerns can be raised, including via worry boxes. In a prep context, that tends to correlate with pupils who are comfortable asking for help, which is a meaningful indicator of emotional safety.
As a prep ending at Year 6, the key question is transition. Ripley Court sits in an area with a dense cluster of independent and high-performing state secondaries within reasonable travel distance, so “fit” matters more than a single destination list.
If your child is academically confident and likely to pursue selective routes, you will want clarity on how the school balances ambition with wellbeing in Year 5 and Year 6, particularly given the inspection’s recommendation about consistent feedback.
Ripley Court is explicit, via independent listings, that the main entry points are Nursery, Reception, and Year 3, with scholarships available from Year 3. Entry at other points may be possible subject to availability, which is typical for a prep of this size.
For families targeting 2026 entry, the most concrete published dates available in accessible sources relate to visiting and open events. A dedicated visit and events page lists multiple open mornings in 2026, including 25 February 2026, 22 April 2026, and 27 May 2026, plus a Reception stay-and-play event on 30 January 2026. These kinds of events are usually the moment when schools explain assessment, availability, and how they handle places in oversubscribed year groups, so it is worth treating them as part of the admissions process rather than optional marketing.
A practical tip for parents comparing options is to use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to keep a single shortlist and record which schools offer Year 3 scholarships, which offer forest school as a timetabled feature, and which have specialist sport facilities like a pool, then match that to your child’s temperament and interests.
The strongest evidence here is the safeguarding section of the June 2024 ISI report. It describes a comprehensive safeguarding policy implemented effectively, regular and role-specific training (including early years), strong coordination between pastoral and safeguarding staff, and appropriate use of external agencies where required. It also notes that pupils feel safe and are encouraged to raise worries either directly with adults or via worry boxes.
In practice, that combination tends to produce two things parents care about, pupils who know which adults to go to, and staff who are trained to treat small concerns seriously before they become bigger issues.
Ripley Court’s co-curricular offer looks broader than average for a prep of this size, and the distinctive point is that the facilities support it.
An indoor swimming pool changes what is possible in a Surrey prep. It enables structured swimming within curriculum time and makes team-based aquatic activity feasible. The school is also described as offering a wide range of sports in independent listings, including rugby, hockey, netball, cricket, tennis, cross-country, and swimming. The implication is that sporty children can find a “home” quickly, while less-sporty children have enough variety to discover something they tolerate, then gradually enjoy.
The school is explicitly described as having its own forest school. For many children, especially in Nursery through Year 2, that kind of provision is not an optional extra, it is a behavioural and emotional regulator. Outdoor routines often support attention, resilience, and social problem-solving in a way that classroom-only weeks do not.
The directory listing includes specific activities such as chess, ballet, yoga, and adventure training. Those are useful signals because they cover very different pupil “types”, strategic thinkers, performance-focused pupils, children who need movement, and those drawn to challenge activities.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
For admissions exploration, the school’s visit page shows multiple open mornings across spring 2026, which suggests a structured programme for prospective families rather than ad hoc tours only.
Ripley Court’s 2025 to 2026 fees are published in an independent schools yearbook listing. The figures are per term and explicitly state that fees include VAT.
Nursery and Transition: £4,145 full time (10 sessions) or £1,250 part time (minimum 3 sessions)
Reception: £4,980 per term
Years 1 to 2: £5,295 per term
Year 3: £6,630 per term
Year 4: £6,790 per term
Years 5 to 6: £7,165 per term
Scholarships are referenced as available from Year 3 in the same listing, and the ISBI directory also flags bursaries and financial assistance, but without published award values or proportions in accessible sources. The sensible next step for parents is to ask how scholarships differ from bursaries in practice, what the school typically assesses for Year 3 awards, and whether awards are mainly recognition, fee reduction, or both.
Leadership transition timing. The most recent ISI report recorded an acting headteacher taking up post in April 2024, followed by a later announcement naming Mr Gavin Ryan as headmaster. Families who value stability should ask what has changed since the 2024 inspection and what has stayed deliberately consistent.
Feedback consistency as an improvement focus. The June 2024 inspection’s recommended next step was about ensuring marking and feedback consistently helps pupils understand how to improve. Ask how the school has responded and what “good feedback” looks like across Year 3 to Year 6.
Fees step up materially through the school. The per-term cost rises significantly from Reception through Year 6. It is worth modelling the full journey cost early, then discussing what financial assistance is realistically available.
Facilities can shape expectations. A pool and forest school create opportunities, but they also set a tone, active, outdoorsy, busy. If your child prefers quieter routines, ask how the school balances high activity with calm space and structured downtime.
Ripley Court School suits families who want a traditional prep model on a sizeable site, with strong sport and outdoor learning baked into the weekly rhythm, not bolted on. The latest ISI inspection indicates that standards are met across all regulatory areas, with safeguarding a clear strength and a focused next step around consistency of feedback.
Best suited to children who thrive with structure, enjoy physical activity, and benefit from learning that regularly moves beyond the classroom. The key decision points are affordability over the full prep journey and whether the school’s academic ambition and co-curricular pace match your child’s temperament.
The most recent ISI inspection (June 2024) found that all key standards were met, including safeguarding. The report describes a stimulating curriculum and pupils who benefit from opportunities beyond lessons to build skills and confidence.
For 2025 to 2026, published per-term fees range from £4,980 in Reception to £7,165 in Years 5 to 6, with early years session fees listed separately. Families should confirm what is included and any extras when applying.
A published visits page lists several open mornings in spring 2026, including 25 February 2026, 22 April 2026, and 27 May 2026, plus a Reception stay-and-play event on 30 January 2026. Booking requirements should be checked when registering to attend.
Independent listings describe Nursery, Reception, and Year 3 as the main entry points, with entry at other stages possible if places exist. Parents should ask about waiting lists and class size pressures in the relevant year group.
The admissions team can explain criteria, timing, and typical award structure.
Get in touch with the school directly
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