London School Admissions Appeals

Didn't get your first choice school? Understand your chances before you appeal — and which London boroughs have the highest success rates.

Data: 2016–2024 All 32 London boroughs Primary & secondary Updated annually
Offer Day 2025: Secondary offers went out on 1 March 2025. Primary offers on 16 April 2025. If you didn't receive your first choice, you have the right to appeal. The deadline is usually 20 school days after the offer was made. Use this data to understand your realistic chances.
29,640
Secondary appeals heard in London 2024
View trend →
21%
Average secondary appeal success rate
By borough →
8,999
Primary appeals heard in London 2024
View trend →
18%
Average primary appeal success rate
By borough →
24%
Foundation school success rate (highest)
See breakdown →
16%
Community school success rate (lowest)
See breakdown →
Appeal success rates over time 2016–2024
Percentage of appeals that were successful
London — proportion of heard appeals that resulted in a place being awarded
Appeals by London borough 2024
Borough Appeals lodged Success rate Verdict
Success rate by school type 2024
Which school types are most likely to overturn a refusal?
Foundation and voluntary aided schools run their own appeals — historically higher success rates
Should you appeal?
01

Know your grounds

Appeals succeed on two grounds: the admission authority made an error, or the school's case for keeping numbers down is outweighed by your child's need to attend. The second is harder to win but more common.

See success rates by borough →
02

Foundation schools are worth it

Foundation and voluntary aided schools (most faith schools) have a 24% success rate — significantly above average. If your child was refused a faith school place on distance grounds, it's almost always worth appealing.

See success rates by school type →
03

Gather your evidence

Medical or social needs linked specifically to that school carry most weight. Sibling links, proximity arguments, and academic fit all help but rarely win on their own. Start gathering evidence the day you receive the refusal.

GOV.UK — how to appeal →
04

Check the admissions code

If the school made a procedural error — wrong distance measurement, incorrect application of their faith criteria, or failing to consider your circumstances — you have a much stronger case. Request the school's full admissions file.

Read the Admissions Appeals Code →
05

Infant class size rules

For Reception, Year 1 and Year 2, class sizes are capped at 30. Appeals for these year groups can only succeed if the school made an error. Success rates are much lower — typically under 5%.

See primary appeal rates by borough →
06

Accept another offer

Accepting a school place does not affect your right to appeal. Always accept the offer you've been given while pursuing your appeal — it protects your child's right to a school place whatever happens.

Find alternative schools near you →
Useful resources
GOV.UK — Appeal a school place
Official guidance and your rights
School Admissions Appeals Code
The rules appeal panels must follow
DfE Appeals Statistics
Raw data from Explore Education Statistics
Find schools near you →
View Ofsted ratings and admissions data
Data sources: DfE Admissions Appeals statistics published via Explore Education Statistics (2016–2024). Borough-level figures are estimates based on LA-level aggregates from the annual APAD collection and direct academy returns. School-level appeal data is not centrally published by DfE for all school types — community and voluntary controlled schools report via their local authority only. Success rates rounded to nearest whole number. Data updated annually, typically in the autumn term following the admissions year.