Exam intelligence brief
Premium admissions analysis built from the current evidence stack
Norfolk House School
11+ exam brief for parents: how the process works, how competitive it really is, and what current evidence says about the score profile needed.
Editorial read
No official pass mark, offer score, or applicant-per-place figure is published in the provided Norfolk House admissions evidence. The official 11+ pages refer to how Norfolk House prepares its Year 6 pupils for senior-school entrance, describing the process as "an exacting and rigorous process, particularly here in north London" and noting that in 2024 "18 independent schools and 3 state-selective ('grammar') schools have so far put forward offers to our pupils."
Our view
Small co-educational north London prep school with a strong emphasis on pastoral warmth and 11+ destination outcomes.
Best suited to
Families wanting a nurturing prep environment with visible focus on senior school transition.
Watch out for
Official admissions pages in the evidence do not clearly spell out incoming selective thresholds.
At a glance
The fastest way to understand the pressure, score picture, and process shape.
How hard is it to get in?
IndicativeVery high
This is a selective process, so families should plan on it as a competitive application.
What score matters most?
IndicativeNo official pass mark
Start with no official pass mark as a working guide, but treat it as indicative unless the school publishes a formal threshold.
What is the process?
Still checking1 stage
Followed by interview
What should families do first?
IndicativeCheck deadlines now
Confirm dates directly with the school before planning prep around them.
Evidence signal
Sources
52
Official
12
High confidence
71%
Some exam details are still provisional
Where the school does not publish clean thresholds or final offer floors, this brief labels those figures as indicative rather than confirmed.
Provider
Still checkingStill Being Verified
assessment format
Stages
Still checking1 stage
selection process
Typical exam date
Still checkingStill being verified
usual sitting window
Registration deadline
IndicativeCheck school website
latest safe action point
Planning and deadlines
Timeline
Register
Check school site
last safe registration point
Sit the exam
Assessment window
usual test timing
Offers
School offer cycle
school process
What is actually tested
Papers & format
Paper structure still expanding
We have the overall admissions picture for this entry point, but the paper-by-paper exam structure still needs stronger grounded evidence.
Interview and stage design
How the later selection process works
Interview detail still being verified
How they decide who gets in
Scoring & selection
What the score really means
Use this as a planning guide, not a guaranteed cutoff.
No official pass mark, offer score, or applicant-per-place figure is published in the provided Norfolk House admissions evidence. The official 11+ pages refer to how Norfolk House prepares its Year 6 pupils for senior-school entrance, describing the process as "an exacting and rigorous process, particularly here in north London" and noting that in 2024 "18 independent schools and 3 state-selective ('grammar') schools have so far put forward offers to our pupils."
Competitive range
Range pendingDetailed score-band guidance is still being expanded from the current evidence.
Competition level
IndicativeHigh
how selective this feels
Volatility
Pattern readStable
year-to-year movement
Plain-language interpretation
In plain English: the school does not publish a guaranteed pass mark. Use no official pass mark as a working guide, and read the competitive range band as the point where every extra mark matters.
How selective this really is
Competition
How difficult this feels in practice
Competition metrics are being consolidated from the current evidence pack.
Waiting list
ObservedActive
movement intelligence
Trend
Pattern readStable
recent pattern
Historical trend
Official school news highlights strong 11+ outcomes across multiple years, including a dated 2024 results article and a 2026 homepage news excerpt noting "More Exceptional Results for the 11+", but no consistent score series is published.
Waiting-list reality
No official waiting-list detail for 11+ is published in the provided evidence.
What strong preparation looks like
Prep roadmap
Strong candidate profile
The profile of stronger candidates is still being expanded from the current evidence base.
Borderline profile
Borderline-candidate guidance is still being refined from the score and waiting-list evidence.
Focus areas to prepare
Common misconceptions
- The school's published 11+ material is mainly about pupils leaving for senior schools, not a published incoming 11+ entry threshold.
- There is no official pass mark or offer score published in the provided admissions evidence.
- There is no officially published 11+ pass mark to aim for.
- Strong exam performance alone may not be enough if interview and overall profile also matter.
What happens after the test
Results & waiting list
Waiting-list intelligence
- No official waiting-list detail for 11+ is published in the provided evidence.
What the current score evidence means
No official pass mark, offer score, or applicant-per-place figure is published in the provided Norfolk House admissions evidence. The official 11+ pages refer to how Norfolk House prepares its Year 6 pupils for senior-school entrance, describing the process as "an exacting and rigorous process, particularly here in north London" and noting that in 2024 "18 independent schools and 3 state-selective ('grammar') schools have so far put forward offers to our pupils."
What families commonly say about the process
Parent signals
Practical note
Parent voice is still being expanded for this school and will appear here once the community signal is stronger.
Community signal in review
What this brief is grounded in
Sources & trust
Total sources
Counted52
evidence points
Official sources
Grounded12
school or regulator
High confidence
Strong base71%
current signal strength
Data completeness
Usable now60%
exam brief completeness
Trust note
Grounded in 52 evidence points, including 12 official sources. 71% of the current brief is high confidence, with 23% coming from official evidence.
Source mix