April 17, 2026
A practical guide for parents comparing private schools Choosing a private school for your child is one of the most significant decisions you will make as a parent. The options across South Africa are wide and growing. From long-established independent schools in Sandton and Pretoria to newer campuses stretching down the KwaZulu-Natal North Coast, the private school sector now serves well over 500 000 students nationally (Independent Schools Association of Southern Africa, 2024). But more choice does not always make the decision easier. It can mean more noise, more open days plus more conflicting advice from well-meaning friends. This guide is designed to cut through that. It gives you a structured, honest framework for evaluating any private school in South Africa, so that when you make your choice, you make it with your eyes open. Work through each section below, then use the printable checklist at the end when you visit schools in person. What Should You Know Before You Start Looking at Schools? The biggest mistake parents make is jumping straight to school websites before sitting down to figure out what matters most to their own family. A school that is perfect for your neighbour's child may be completely wrong for yours. Start with your child, not the school's reputation Think carefully about how your child learns. Do they thrive in a structured, high-pressure environment? Or do they need a more nurturing setting with room to explore? Some students flourish in large schools with a wide variety of peers and resources. Others do better in smaller communities where every teacher knows their name. Consider any specific learning needs early. If your child has been identified with dyslexia, ADHD, or any other learning difference, confirm upfront that the schools on your shortlist have the resources and trained teaching staff to support them properly. Not all private schools do, regardless of what their brochure implies. How do you set a realistic private school budget? Private school fees in South Africa vary considerably. Day school fees at well-known Gauteng independents range from roughly R90 000 to over R200 000 per year and that figure does not always include uniforms, textbooks, extracurricular activities, or school trips (MySchoolFees, 2025). Boarding school fees in KwaZulu-Natal can add another R80 000 to R130 000 annually on top of tuition. Decide on your ceiling before you fall in love with a school that sits well above it. A school that raises fees by 12 percent every year will look very different on your budget in 3-4 years . What Is the Difference Between IEB, Cambridge, and CAPS? South Africa's private school sector offers more curriculum options than most parents realise. Understanding the differences is important, particularly if your family might relocate internationally or your child has ambitions to study abroad. The Independent Examinations Board (IEB) is a South African assessment body that sets and marks matric examinations for independent schools. IEB schools follow a curriculum aligned to South Africa's national outcomes but assessed to a higher standard of moderation. IEB matric results are widely respected by South African universities, abroad and IEB candidates consistently outperform national averages on university entrance scores (Independent Examinations Board, 2023). The Cambridge International curriculum is offered by a smaller number of South African schools through IGCSE and A-Level qualifications. It is well recognised globally and suits families who anticipate an international move or want university options in the UK, Australia, or North America. The Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) is the national curriculum followed by schools. A CAPS school that is also a member of the Independent Schools Association of Southern Africa (ISASA) may offer superior facilities and smaller class sizes while still following the national matric path. The International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) is offered at the preparatory level by a number of South African independent schools, including IB World Schools. The IB PYP uses inquiry-based learning to develop internationally minded students. Some schools combine IB PYP in the preparatory phase with IEB matric in the college phase, giving students a globally aligned foundation while retaining access to South African university pathways. Which curriculum is right for your child? There is no single correct answer; If your child is likely to apply to South African universities and you value academic rigour within a local context, an IEB school is a strong choice. If international university applications are a priority, Cambridge or the IB Diploma Programme may be worth exploring. If you are comparing schools where one is IEB and one is CAPS, look beyond the curriculum label to the quality of teaching, the school's academic results and the learning environment. How Do You Evaluate a School's Culture and Values? This is the factor parents most often underestimate and the one they most frequently mention when explaining why they later moved their child to a different school. A school's culture is not something you will find in its prospectus. You have to go and feel it, use opportunities such as spend the day that Crawford International offers to prospective parents and students. What should you actually be looking for on a campus visit? Observe how students move around the school. Are they engaged and at ease, or do they seem anxious and hurried? Watch how teachers interact with students in the corridors and common areas, not just in the classroom you are shown. Notice whether the spaces look genuinely used or merely presented. Every school will tell you they value academic excellence, character development and the whole child. What you want to know is which of those things takes priority when there is a conflict. Schools that talk loudly about wellbeing but push students relentlessly from Grade 4 onwards are telling you something about what they actually prioritise. How does the school's religious or values orientation affect students? Many of South Africa's leading private schools have a religious foundation. For families who share that faith tradition, this can be a significant positive. For families who do not, it is worth exploring how the school's religious ethos plays out in practice; in assembly, in the pastoral programme and in how discipline is framed. There is a wide spectrum between a school that marks its heritage through occasional chapel and one where faith is woven through every element of school life. What does diversity and inclusion look like in practice? South Africa's social reality makes diversity a particularly meaningful factor for many families. Ask how the school approaches conversations about South African history and identity. A school that sidesteps these conversations entirely is not preparing students well for the country they will live and work in. Through their Respect, Diversity & Inclusion programme, Crawford International is one example of a school where these values are embedded across phases, giving parents a tangible sense of what that commitment looks like in practice. What Should You Look for in a School's Facilities and Extracurricular Programme? Private school fees, at their best, provide a richer educational experience than the classroom alone. Whether that matters to your family depends on your child and your values, but it is worth knowing exactly what is on offer before you sign Which facilities actually matter for learning? Good facilities are about function, not just impressiveness. A well-resourced science laboratory, a library with current titles and reliable technology infrastructure matter in ways a beautiful entrance atrium does not. When you visit, look at how the spaces are actually being used, not just what they look like on a guided tour. For boarding schools specifically, visit the boarding houses and talk to house-parents if you can. Ask about the staff-to-student ratio in the residence, weekend activities, and how the school manages homesickness, particularly in the early weeks of Grade 8. A school confident in its boarding offering will welcome those visits openly. Crawford North Coast does exactly that, operating an every-day-is-open-day policy and offering termly boarding so families can see for themselves how students are settled, supported and cared for. How do extracurricular programmes benefit students? Ask whether participation in sport and extracurriculars is compulsory or voluntary. Ask what the experience is like for the student who is not sporty in a school with a strong rugby culture. The answer will tell you a great deal about whether that environment is the right fit for your child. How Do You Assess Teaching Quality and Learning Support? The quality of teaching is the single greatest factor in whether a student thrives at school (Hattie, 2009). It is also one of the hardest things to assess from the outside. Here is what to look for. What does good teacher stability look like? A school that loses a significant proportion of its teachers each year has a problem, whether in management, salary packages or culture. Continuity matters enormously for students, particularly those who find it harder to build new relationships quickly. Ask about the qualifications and ongoing professional development of the teaching staff. Good schools invest in their teachers not just at the point of hiring but throughout their careers. Ask what professional development looked like in the last 12 months. Does class size affect academic outcomes? Smaller class sizes are one of the things parents most commonly cite when justifying private school fees. The evidence on class size and academic outcomes is more nuanced than the marketing suggests, but smaller classes do allow for more individualised attention from teachers, which matters more for some students than others (Blatchford et al., 2011). Ask for average class sizes across year groups, not just the figure for a flagship year or subject. What learning support should a private school offer? Ask specifically what learning support the school provides. Is there a dedicated learning support department? What qualifications do the staff hold? Is additional support included in the fees or billed separately? For parents of students with identified learning needs, this conversation should happen before you fall in love with a campus. How do you assess whether a school is financially sound? Ask about the school's fee increase policy and whether the governing body approves increases transparently. Ask whether the school has experienced financial difficulty in the last five years. Independent schools in South Africa are not immune to financial pressure and a school cutting corners on maintenance or staffing will show signs of it if you know what to look for. Are bursaries and scholarships available at private schools in South Africa? Many of South Africa's leading private schools offer merit-based or need-based bursaries that can significantly reduce the cost of attendance. These are rarely advertised prominently. Ask directly. If your child is academically strong, athletically gifted, or musically talented, it is worth exploring what is available before you assume a school is out of reach. Bursary applications typically require early engagement, often 12 to 18 months before the intended start date. When Should You Apply to a Private School, and What Does the Process Involve? South Africa's most sought-after private schools fill their places well in advance. In Gauteng, waiting lists at schools in the Sandton, Bryanston, and Pretoria East corridors can run to several years for popular entry grades. In KwaZulu-Natal, demand for well-located schools along the North Coast has grown sharply as the region attracts more permanent residents. When is the right time to apply? The practical answer is, earlier than you think. Many schools begin accepting applications for Grade 1 when a child is still in the early years of pre-school. For Grade 8 entry, parents typically need to apply during Grade 6 or early Grade 7 at the latest. Missing these windows does not mean missing out entirely, but it narrows your options and often places you on a waiting list rather than a confirmed spot. What does the admission process typically involve? Most independent schools in South Africa require the following as part of their admission process: A completed application form with supporting documentation An entrance assessment, academic and sometimes psychometric An interview with the student, and sometimes the parents Recent school reports and a reference from the current school Fee payer credit checks The entrance assessment at most schools is not a simple pass-or-fail exercise. It is used to understand the student, confirm the school can meet their needs, and identify any areas where early support will be useful. What questions should you ask during the admission process? What is the typical timeline from application to notification of outcome? Is there a waiting list and if so, how is it managed? What entry requirements or prerequisites apply to Grade 8 or Grade 10? What documentation is required, and by when? The 2026 Private School Checklist Use this checklist when visiting and comparing schools. Print it out and complete one per school. No single item makes or breaks a decision, but consistent gaps and hesitations across a checklist will point you in the right direction.