TL;DR
UK state schools are free; private (independent) schools charge fees. Around seven percent of UK pupils attend private schools. The decision turns on academic outcomes, class size, facilities and personal priorities, as well as cost. From 2025 onwards VAT applies to private school fees in the UK.
Last reviewed: May 2026
KEY FACTS
- Around seven percent of UK pupils attend private schools
- Private school fees range from a few thousand pounds to over fifty thousand pounds annually for boarding
- VAT on private school fees was introduced from January 2025
- ISC schools account for around eighty percent of UK private education
- Private schools must be registered with the Department for Education and inspected
Overview
The UK education system has both state-funded and fee-paying tracks. State schools educate about ninety-three percent of pupils, are free, and are funded by central government via local authorities or academy trusts. Private schools (often called independent or, confusingly, public schools in some historical contexts) charge fees and operate as charities or businesses. The Independent Schools Council (ISC) represents most major private schools. The fee structure, academic outcomes and admissions models differ in important ways.
Cost: what private schools really charge
Day school fees vary widely: roughly six thousand to twenty thousand pounds a year at primary level, ten thousand to twenty-five thousand pounds at senior level, more for the most established schools. Boarding school fees are typically thirty thousand to forty-five thousand pounds annually. From January 2025, VAT at twenty percent applies to fees, which has lifted the headline cost. Bursaries and scholarships reduce fees for some pupils.
Class sizes and resources
Private schools typically have smaller class sizes (often fifteen to twenty pupils vs twenty-eight to thirty in state primary, thirty in state secondary). Sports, music, drama and other facilities are usually more extensive at fee-paying schools, especially established boarding schools. Specialist subject teaching (modern languages, additional subjects) is more available. State schools have made significant gains here in many areas but the comparison is asymmetric on average.
Academic outcomes
Private school pupils tend to achieve higher exam grades on average and go to selective universities at higher rates. The drivers include both school resources and the socioeconomic profile of fee-paying families. Many state schools, particularly grammar schools and high-performing comprehensives, achieve equivalent or better academic outcomes. Each school should be assessed on its own data rather than the sector average.
Bursaries, scholarships and access
Most established private schools offer bursaries (means-tested fee reductions, up to full fee remission in some cases) and scholarships (merit-based, typically smaller percentage discounts). Eligibility for bursaries usually requires household income disclosure; the bursary application is competitive. Scholarships are awarded on academic, musical, sporting or artistic merit through assessment days.
Admissions and entry assessment
Private schools assess applicants through entrance examination, interview and (often) a head's report from the current school. Common entry points are age four (pre-prep), seven (prep), eleven (senior), and thirteen (Common Entrance). Boarding schools take international applicants through similar processes. Application deadlines are often a year or more before entry; popular schools have waiting lists from before birth in some cases.
Schools across the UK nations
Schools systems vary by nation. England operates the structure described above with Key Stages, GCSEs and A levels. Scotland uses Primary 1-7 and Secondary 1-6 with National 5, Highers and Advanced Highers as the main qualifications. Wales operates a system close to England's but with the Welsh Baccalaureate as an additional qualification alongside GCSEs and A levels. Northern Ireland retains an eleven-plus transfer system and broadly follows the English structure for GCSEs and A levels.
Admissions are similarly devolved. Local authorities in each nation administer state-school admissions with broadly similar oversubscription criteria (siblings, faith, distance, looked-after children). Each nation publishes its admissions code: the School Admissions Code (England), equivalent guidance in Wales and Scotland, and the Department of Education Northern Ireland framework.
Funding routes also vary. Universal Infant Free School Meals apply in England; broader free meal schemes operate in Wales (all primary children) and Scotland (P1-P5 and free school meal eligibility for higher years). Childcare schemes including the Tax-Free Childcare scheme are UK-wide but the free hours offer for under-fives is set separately by each nation.
Key GOV.UK resources for new UK residents
The gov.uk website is the single front door for UK government services. Key services for newcomers include: gov.uk/apply-national-insurance-number for the NI number application; gov.uk/register-to-vote for the electoral roll; gov.uk/view-prove-immigration-status for the eVisa account and share codes; gov.uk/apply-renew-passport for British passport applications after citizenship; gov.uk/exchange-foreign-driving-licence for DVLA exchange.
Cross-cutting services include gov.uk/personal-tax-account for HMRC self-service (tax codes, employment history, NI record, state pension forecast), gov.uk/help-with-childcare-costs for the Tax-Free Childcare and free hours schemes, and gov.uk/sign-in-childcare-account for the parent-facing TFC portal. The NHS App at nhs.uk/nhs-app provides the parallel front door for health services.
For up-to-date practical guidance, the citizensadvice.org.uk and moneyhelper.org.uk websites cover the major newcomer scenarios. Citizens Advice operates free in-person and telephone advice across the UK; Money Helper is the consumer-facing site of the Money and Pensions Service offering free financial guidance.
Detailed admissions process timing and tactics
Reception applications open in autumn of the year before entry (around September of the year before September entry); the deadline is 15 January. Applications are made on the local authority's online portal. Parents rank up to six preferred schools. Each school's published admission criteria apply; popular schools usually fill from a tight catchment around the school.
Secondary applications (Year 7) follow the same model with deadline 31 October. National offer day is 1 March for secondary and mid-April for reception. Offers are made via email and the council portal. Parents can accept the offer and stay on waiting lists for higher preferences; appeals can be lodged for any refused preference.
In-year admissions for moves outside the standard timeline go directly to the local authority or to the school. Allocation is to the nearest available school; preferences are recorded but a place at a popular school cannot be guaranteed. Mid-year transitions are often disruptive; schools provide induction support. Parents moving home with school-age children should research the council's in-year admissions process well before the move date.
Practical timeline detail by month
Month one: confirm immigration status through the UKVI account, open a UK current account (digital bank for speed), secure a postal address, register with a GP, contact HMRC if working to start the tax record, apply for NI number.
Months two to three: register on the electoral roll, complete first council tax registration and payment plan, take out one or two utility direct debits, consider a credit-builder credit card after the bank account has thirty days of activity. Verify NHS access is working (request a routine GP appointment for a baseline health check).
Months four to six: utility relationships, broadband and mobile contracts on rolling or short-term plans. Consider ISA opening if tax-resident. Workplace pension auto-enrolment should have applied at month three for new employees. Review and consolidate any duplicated relationships.
Months six to twelve: credit file deepens through paid utilities, paid credit card and electoral roll registration. Mortgage and longer-term financial planning becomes feasible from month twelve. Two-year UK residence unlocks most mainstream credit products and many specialist financial planning routes.
Education outcomes, assessment and the wider system
UK school outcomes are measured by a range of metrics. The headline measures are GCSE grades (graded 9 to 1 in England, A* to G or equivalent legacy grades in other UK nations), A-level grades (A* to E), and progression to higher education or apprenticeships. The Department for Education publishes performance tables for schools (gov.uk/school-performance-tables) including Progress 8 measures, Attainment 8 measures and pupil destinations.
Ofsted (England) and equivalent bodies in the devolved nations inspect schools regularly and publish reports rated 'Outstanding', 'Good', 'Requires Improvement' or 'Inadequate'. The reports are public at ofsted.gov.uk and inform parental choice. Schools rated Inadequate or in special measures may be subject to academy conversion or leadership change.
Beyond exam outcomes, schools measure wider outcomes including attendance, pupil wellbeing, sport participation, music and arts engagement, and pupil voice. The Pupil Premium funding (additional money for pupils eligible for free school meals or looked-after) supports closing attainment gaps. The PE and Sport Premium funds primary school physical education. The Music Education Hubs deliver instrumental tuition in many areas.
Post-sixteen options include A-levels (academic), T-levels (technical, two-year programmes including a substantial work placement), apprenticeships at various levels (intermediate, advanced, higher, degree apprenticeships), and traditional further education college courses. The choice between academic and technical routes is significant; many pupils combine elements (e.g., A-levels plus an extra qualification, or an apprenticeship after A-levels).
Family life: schools, childcare, family benefits
Family-related services in the UK include the schools system (covered in detail in dedicated articles), the childcare scheme (free hours plus Tax-Free Childcare), Child Benefit (a non-means-tested benefit paid to families with children) and additional support through Universal Credit's child element for low-income families.
Child Benefit is claimed through gov.uk/child-benefit. The rate is set annually and paid weekly or four-weekly to the family's bank account. From 2024 the high-income charge applies where one parent earns over 60,000 pounds per year, with the benefit fully tapered above 80,000 pounds. Claiming Child Benefit also provides NI credit for the parent staying at home with the child, supporting their state pension record.
Tax-Free Childcare and the free hours offer for under-fives are the main childcare-cost supports for working parents. Universal Credit's childcare element covers up to eighty-five percent of childcare costs for eligible low-income working households. The combination depends on individual circumstances; the moneyhelper.org.uk childcare calculator helps families work out the best combination.
Statutory family leave includes Maternity Leave (up to 52 weeks), Paternity Leave (up to two weeks), Shared Parental Leave (up to 50 weeks shared between parents), and adoption leave. Statutory pay is at fixed rates set by HMRC; many employers offer enhanced pay above statutory. Employees should check their employer's family-leave policy as enhanced terms vary widely.
Beyond mainstream schools: alternative provision and support
Some children's needs are not met by mainstream schools. Alternative provision serves pupils who cannot attend mainstream school due to behaviour, mental health, medical needs or other reasons. Pupil referral units (PRUs) are the most common form; alternative-provision academies serve similar needs in some areas. The local authority is responsible for arranging alternative provision for pupils out of school for medical or other reasons.
Special schools serve pupils with significant SEN where mainstream provision is inadequate. Placement is through the Education, Health and Care Plan process. Specialisms vary: autism specialism, severe learning difficulties, profound and multiple learning difficulties, sensory impairment, complex medical needs, social, emotional and mental health needs. Independent special schools accommodate some pupils where the LA-maintained provision is unsuitable.
Home education is a legal option for any family. England requires no notification for never-enrolled children but requires deregistration letter for withdrawing from school. Wales introduced a statutory home education register from 2024-25; Scotland and Northern Ireland have separate frameworks. Home education resources include Education Otherwise, the Home Education Advisory Service and many local groups.
Boarding schools (state and independent) provide an alternative model where the child boards through the school week. State boarding schools (around thirty-five in England) charge for boarding but not for tuition. Independent boarding schools charge fees for both. The choice between day and boarding depends on family logistics, the child's preference and the financial position.
Newcomer documentation checklist and next steps
A useful documentation checklist for newcomers covers: passport (current, valid); UK visa or eVisa share code; UK address evidence (tenancy or temporary address letter); NI number documentation (or application reference if pending); UK bank account confirmation; tax record (HMRC personal tax account at gov.uk/personal-tax-account); NHS number (issued at GP registration); driving licence (foreign or UK photocard).
Storage of these documents matters. Originals should be kept in a secure place (not all in one bag carried daily). Photocopies and digital copies (encrypted cloud storage) provide backup. Some institutions require originals for verification; others accept certified copies. Solicitors and notaries can certify copies for a fee.
Recovery of lost documents is straightforward through the relevant agency: HMPO for passport, DVLA for driving licence, HMRC for NI number documentation, UKVI for eVisa account. Each has online and phone routes. Identity fraud reports should go to Action Fraud immediately; Cifas protective registration adds an extra layer of protection.
Reviewing the document set every twelve to twenty-four months helps catch upcoming expiries: passports expiring within six months of an intended trip may not be accepted by some destination countries; driving licences need renewal every ten years; eVisas remain current as long as the underlying immigration status remains.
For sensitive documents (deed poll, marriage certificate, gender recognition certificate) keeping multiple certified copies avoids the need to use the original repeatedly. The General Register Office issues additional copies of birth, marriage and civil partnership certificates for a small fee.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information for UK residents and newcomers. It is not legal, tax, financial or medical advice. Rules, rates, eligibility criteria and processes change frequently; readers should verify details with the linked primary sources or consult an authorised professional before acting on anything described here. References to specific firms, products or services are illustrative and do not constitute endorsements.
Frequently asked questions
Are private schools worth the money?
Depends on the family's financial position, the alternative state school, and the priorities. For families who can comfortably afford fees and whose local state schools are not strong, private school can deliver tangible benefits. For families stretching to pay fees at the expense of other priorities, the calculation is harder. There is no universal answer.
How do bursaries work?
Bursaries are means-tested fee reductions based on the household's income, assets and circumstances. Applications usually require recent tax returns, payslips and asset disclosure. Bursary awards range from small (a few percent) to one hundred percent fee remission plus uniform and trip costs. Larger bursaries are typically for outstanding candidates from low-income families.
Does VAT really apply to all private school fees?
Yes, from January 2025 the VAT exemption for private education was removed in the UK. Schools have applied twenty percent VAT to fees, with mitigating discounts in some cases. Some bursary-funded fees and certain SEN provisions may still be exempt where the school is providing a specifically defined service.
Can I switch from private to state easily?
Yes. Returning to the state sector is generally straightforward: apply through the local authority for the relevant school year. The state school assesses the child against its own admissions criteria; private-school history does not provide priority. Mid-year transitions go through in-year admissions and depend on vacancies.
Do private schools provide better university outcomes?
Private school pupils are over-represented at selective UK universities (Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial, UCL, LSE). The drivers include school resources, GCSE/A-level results and family background. Many state-school pupils achieve the same destinations through their own merit; the relationship is correlational rather than purely causal.
How do I find a good private school?
Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) reports and Ofsted reports cover most schools. The Good Schools Guide, Tatler Schools Guide and the ISC website list and review schools. Visiting in person is essential; the right fit depends as much on the family and child as on the school's reputation.