Quote from the Education Secretary in response to data out today
on primary and secondary applications and offers. The combined
preferred offer rate (97.5%) is up 0.1 percentage points on last
year - the highest rate since the data collection began in
2014/15.
Education Secretary, , said:
"The predicted exodus from private schools simply hasn't happened
and today's data proves it.
"Critics warned state schools would be swamped with new pupils.
They were wrong. They said private schools would close en masse.
They haven't.
"We are rebalancing the system to focus on the 94% of kids in
state schools, a majority that has been sidelined for too
long.
Background
Full data is here: Release home - Primary and
secondary school applications and offers - Explore education
statistics - GOV.UK
-
Does this data show that private school VAT has caused
an influx of pupils into the state sector?
No. Applications to state schools have fallen, not risen. The
proportion of families getting a place at one of their preferred
schools is at its highest since records began. There are 1.2
million unfilled places across the system.
Class sizes and pupil-teacher ratios remain broadly stable. The
government has recruited over 4,600 additional teachers against
its 6,500 pledge, with fewer teachers leaving the profession than
at almost any point on record.
None of this is consistent with a system absorbing a sudden surge
of new pupils. Private school pupil numbers remain firmly within
historical patterns seen over the last 20 years.
-
But first preference rates are slightly down overall
doesn't that show strain?
The 0.1ppt dip in combined first preference is driven by a
marginal fall in primary, while secondary first preference is
actually up to its highest rate since 2017. More importantly, the
proportion of all families receiving an offer at any preferred
school is the highest on record.
It's right that families have good schools to choose from and the
measure that matters most - whether families end up with no
preferred school at all - is at a near-record low.
-
What about London, where private school density is
highest?
London consistently shows lower first preference rates due to the
structure of its admissions - parents can express up to six
preferences rather than three, leading to more speculative
applications.
In 2026, 94.3% of secondary applicants and 98.3% of primary
applicants in London received an offer from one of their six
preferred schools. That is not a system under pressure.