Bursary applications: when to apply and what documents schools ask for is a question that has become significantly more urgent since 1 January 2025. That is the date from which all education services provided by private schools in the UK became subject to VAT at the standard rate of 20%. Fees that were already stretching household budgets have risen further, and the pool of families who need bursary support has widened considerably.
What changed?
The VAT change is not just a headline number. The GOV.UK guidance is explicit that VAT applies to the total received in return for providing education, and that includes amounts covered by bursaries. Boarding fees are also caught: boarding services provided by private schools are subject to VAT at 20%. If a school bundles education and meals or transport into a single fee, the whole package carries a single VAT liability.
"VAT is due on the total of everything that is received in return for providing education to the student, including amounts paid by parents and external bursaries." — GOV.UK, January 2025
For bursary families, this has a practical consequence that often goes unnoticed: a school's published bursary may cover a percentage of the headline fee, but that headline fee is now VAT-inclusive. Whether a school has absorbed some of the VAT into its bursary calculation or passed it on in full is something every applicant should verify directly before submitting financial documents.
Why this matters to private school parents
Schools set bursary budgets annually, and that budget is finite. More families applying — because the cost of attending without support has risen — means more competition for the same pot. Getting your application in early, and getting it right, matters more in 2026 than it did in 2023.
The House of Commons Library briefing on private school VAT documents the political and financial context: this policy shift was contested and significant. Schools have responded differently. Some have raised fees by the full 20%. Others have partially absorbed the rise. That variation means bursary awards expressed as percentages are not directly comparable across schools in the way they once were.
For boarding families, the exposure is even greater. Day fees plus boarding, both now VAT-rated, can place full-fee costs well above the threshold at which many school means-testing models begin to taper support sharply. If you are applying for a bursary at a school with a boarding component, confirm explicitly whether the award covers boarding VAT or just tuition.
Which schools, ages or areas are affected?
Every ISI-inspected independent school in England is affected. The ISI inspection portal lists over 1,300 institutions, covering every phase from junior through senior and including boarding and day schools. This is not a London issue or a senior school issue: the VAT change applies from Reception upwards, at prep schools as readily as at secondary schools.
The year groups where bursary applications cluster most heavily tend to be Year 7 (11+ entry), Year 9 (13+ entry at schools that use Common Entrance), and Sixth Form. At most schools, these are also the points where the formal admissions assessment happens, which creates a timing tension: you are simultaneously preparing your child for an academic assessment and assembling what can be a significant financial disclosure package.
Some prep schools also award bursaries at Year 3 (7+ entry) or Year 5 (9+ entry). If your child is at a prep and you are hoping to move to a senior independent school at 11 or 13, the prep school's bursary and the senior school's bursary are separate applications with separate deadlines. Do not assume one informs the other.
What documents schools typically ask for
Schools vary, but the document list for a means-tested bursary assessment is consistently more demanding than most parents expect. You should prepare to supply most of the following, and verify with each individual school whether additional items are required.
- P60s for all earning adults in the household, usually the two most recent tax years
- SA302 forms (self-assessment tax calculations) if either parent is self-employed, a company director, or has investment income
- Three to six months of payslips for employed parents
- Most recent accounts for any business in which a parent holds a significant stake
- Mortgage statement or rental agreement to establish housing costs
- Savings and investment account statements, typically the most recent three months
- Pension statements for any defined-benefit schemes, because schools often impute an asset value
- Evidence of any other income: rental income, dividends, maintenance payments received
Some schools also ask for a signed declaration of assets, including property owned overseas. If one parent is not resident in the UK, expect the school to request equivalent documentation translated and verified. This is not unreasonable, but it takes time to arrange.
The financial assessment is usually conducted by an independent third party rather than by the school's own bursary officer. Several schools use the same specialist agencies. The assessor calculates a notional family income figure and maps it against the school's published award thresholds. You will not always see the assessor's report, but you should ask the school whether you can request a review if the initial award seems inconsistent with your circumstances.
What parents should do next
Start the document-gathering process at least three months before the school's stated bursary deadline. That deadline is almost always earlier than the general admissions deadline, sometimes by several weeks. Missing it typically means joining a waiting list or reapplying in the following cycle.
Register for the school's open day well in advance, and use it specifically to ask the bursary registrar (not the admissions registrar) two questions: what is the income threshold above which no award is likely, and what percentage of last year's applicants received an award? Schools that run genuinely open bursary programmes will answer both questions directly. Those that deflect are worth noting.
If your income includes irregular elements — a bonus, freelance work, or business profit — prepare a brief covering letter explaining the variance between years. Assessors see a snapshot; context helps. Schools have discretion, and a clear narrative is more useful than a confusing set of accounts with no explanation.
For families where one parent is not working or has recently returned to work, some schools will impute a potential income for the non-working parent when assessing the award. Ask whether this applies before you submit. If it does, factor that into your expected award level.
Confirm how the school calculates its bursary against the VAT-inclusive fee. Given that VAT is due on the total received in return for providing education, including amounts paid by external bursaries, the net cost to your household depends entirely on how the school has structured its award post-January 2025. Get the net annual figure in writing before accepting a place.
What to track in Houseroom
Bursary deadlines, fee levels, and award structures are the three variables that shift most frequently and matter most to families in this position. Houseroom tracks published fees across London's independent schools so you can compare what you would actually pay at each school on your shortlist, before you invest time in a bursary application. Use Houseroom to compare the schools you are considering, then take the narrowed shortlist to the open day conversations that actually move the process forward. Compare fees.