UK Grammar Schools · Directory

Every state grammar school in England, with the facts that matter.

State grammars are non-fee-paying, academically selective schools admitting pupils by an 11+ entrance exam. There are 163 of them in England across 36 Local Authorities — and 126 are profiled here with admissions test, gender intake, founding date and a link to the official school site. Use this directory to shortlist schools your child has a realistic chance at, then read each profile for the test board, sixth-form options and oversubscription policy.

163
State grammars in England

Concentrated in 36 LAs. Kent has the largest single system (33), then Buckinghamshire (13). All are free to attend.

11+
Selection age

Children sit the 11+ in Year 6 — usually early-to-mid September. Most use GL Assessment or CEM; Essex CSSE and some others set their own paper.

~17%
Typical qualifying threshold

Most grammars publish a qualifying standardised score around 121. That's roughly the top 17% nationally — but it's a threshold, not a guarantee of an offer.

31 Oct
Application deadline

You apply for secondary places through your home Local Authority by 31 October of Year 6, after the 11+ results land in mid-October.

What you'll find in each school profile

Town & region

Town, county and the selective region the school sits in — useful when you're working out catchment radius from your address.

Gender & sixth form

Whether the school takes boys, girls or both, plus what happens at sixth form (some all-boys / all-girls grammars go co-ed at 16).

Admissions test

The exam board (GL, CEM, ISEB) and whether the school sets its own additional paper on top of the standard LA test.

Founding date & type

Year of foundation and school type (Academy, Foundation Grammar, Voluntary Aided) — relevant for governance and ethos.

Official site link

Direct link to the school's own website for current admissions policy, open days, exam dates and last-year cut-off distances.

Other schools nearby

Related schools in the same selective region so you can quickly see your child's wider options inside one Local Authority.

Reading the regions below

  1. Pick your region first. Click a region tile to jump straight to its schools — or use the chips to filter the list in place.
  2. Filter by gender. If you've decided already on a single-sex or mixed environment, narrow the list before tapping in.
  3. Search any name. Type a school, town or county into the search box for an instant match across the directory.
  4. Click through for the full profile, admissions test, and a direct link to the school's official website.

If your child sits the 11+ in two different selective regions (it's common to register in both Kent and Medway, for example), each will appear as a separate test on a separate weekend in September.

Browse by region

Region
Type

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Grammar school questions, answered

How many grammar schools are there in the UK?

There are 163 state grammar schools in England and a further 66 in Northern Ireland. Scotland and Wales have none. They are concentrated in a handful of areas — Kent alone has 32, Lincolnshire 14, Buckinghamshire 13, and boroughs like Sutton, Trafford, Wirral and Barnet have strong clusters. This directory profiles 126 of the most-applied-to schools.

How do I apply to a grammar school?

Two separate steps. First, register for the 11+ test directly with the school or the local authority — usually between May and early July of Year 5. Second, list the school on your local authority Common Application Form (CAF) by 31 October of Year 6. Missing either step means no place, even with a top score.

What score do you need to pass the 11+?

Most areas standardise scores to a scale of roughly 69–141, with a typical qualifying line around 121 (about the top 25–30% of the cohort). Super-selective schools — Henrietta Barnett, Tiffin, QEB, Pate's — effectively require the top 5–10%. Each school profile in this directory notes its admissions test; check the school's own site for the current cut-off.

Do you have to live in catchment to get a place?

It depends on the school's allocation model. Rank-only schools (Pate's, QEB) take the highest scorers regardless of address. Distance-based schools (Tiffin, Reading School) require a qualifying score, then offer places to the nearest applicants. Most schools use a hybrid. Check the admissions criteria linked from each profile.

When should my child start preparing?

Most successful candidates start structured practice 12–18 months before the test — spring of Year 4 or early Year 5. Little and often beats cramming: 15–20 minutes a day, plus one full mock a week from Easter of Year 5. Every worksheet and mock paper on Quest Arena is free.

What subjects does the 11+ test?

Four core areas: English (comprehension, vocabulary, SPaG), Maths, Verbal Reasoning and Non-Verbal Reasoning. The exact mix varies — Lincolnshire tests only reasoning, Medway includes extended writing, CSSE Essex uses free-response maths. Each school profile lists the test used, and our exam guides cover every major format.