To help you get started, here is WhichSchoolAdvisor.com's complete guide for international students on applying to a day and boarding school in the UK, including information on visas, admissions, tours and scholarships.
Anyone currently living overseas who wants to apply for a state-funded school place must have a right of abode in the UK (have a British passport, be a British citizen etc) or a valid work permit. If you do not, then you will need to apply to an independent (also known as a private or public) school, which charges tuition fees.
Yes. If you are not a British passport holder, you can apply for a Child Student Visa if you’re aged between four and 17 years old and you want to study at an independent school in the UK. You will need to have the following:
You can make a visa application up to six months before your course starts, and a decision is typically made within three weeks. The cost of the visa application is £348. You can stay in the UK for up to four months after your course finishes.
Remember, you will need the CAS number for your visa application, so you must apply to the school first.
This Child Student Visa has replaced the Tier 4 (Child) student visa, and allows international students to get visas more easily and to stay in the UK post-study.
Visit whichschooladvisor.com/uk for independent reviews on some of the most popular prep and senior schools in the UK for international students, with information including curriculum, fees, facilities and exam results.
You can apply for your child to attend from as young as four years old at some schools, but boarding is not usually an option until at least seven years old. The standard exam entrance points for most academically selective boarding independent schools are 4+, 7+, 8+, 11+, 13+ and 16+.
Most schools have a fixed admissions process that requires you to apply by the end of November for the following academic year. There are then entrance exams and interviews in December or early January. Some schools including Wycliffe College and ACS International Schools take applications at any point in the academic year, so it's always worth checking.
You can submit an online application as a first step, and if living overseas your child may be asked to take part in an admissions interview or exams via Zoom or another video app. (In 2020-21, all entrance exams have been taken remotely due to school closures.)
All documents must be supplied to the school in English or a certified translation.
Confirmation of places is sent out by most UK independent schools in early February, ahead of the start of term in September of that year.
If your child has or is applying for a Child Student Visa, you can apply for a Parent of a Child Student visa. Your child must be aged between four and 11 years when you apply, and be attending an independent school in the UK.
You must also:
While individual schools may have their own cap, there is no limit on the number of international students who can come to the UK.
Most schools will require international students to have a good command of the English language. However, there are several schools offering pre-boarding school programmes for non-English speakers. These include Rossall School, Dover College, Bedford School, Taunton International, St Bees School, and Sherborne International. Others offer one year GCSE Development Programme with in-built English Language Support, such as Wycliffe College.
Also, most schools will offer individual or group lessons in English as an additional language, as well as mother tongue language programmes.
Costs will vary across the range of day and boarding schools in the UK. When reviewing the cost of your child’s education, you will need to factor in the tuition fees, additional charges for boarding, trips, exams, uniforms, and extra-curricular activities.
Most schools offer a limited number of scholarships, and these are open to all students. You can apply for a scholarship at the same time as applying for a school place; some schools will automatically consider all children for a scholarship as part of the entrance exams process.
If your child is staying in education in the UK without you, they must either be boarding at their chosen school, or live with other family members in the UK.
If parents are living or working abroad, they need to appoint a guardian, resident in the UK who can be contacted in an emergency, and who will act on their behalf; they must also be able to look after your child during half-terms and other holidays and exeat weekends.
Whenever the school closes, students must go to live with their parents or an appointed guardian. While some schools will close for exeat weekends (a leave of absence from a boarding school), others will have open exeats where leaving the school is optional.