United Kingdom okulları hakkında bilmeniz gerekenler
The United Kingdom is the largest, most-studied, and most-stratified independent school market in the world. Most international families don't appreciate how much variance exists inside it — between a 600-year-old major boarding school like Eton and a 200-student day school in Surrey, there is more difference in academic culture, fee level, and admissions style than between an average UK school and an average Swiss school. So your first decision isn't "UK or Switzerland" — it's "which UK".
We split the UK market into three working tiers. Tier 1: The major HMC boarding schools — Eton, Harrow, Westminster, Winchester, St Paul's, Charterhouse, Sevenoaks, Marlborough, Tonbridge. £45,000-65,000 per year, intensely selective at 13+ entry, Oxbridge offer rates 30-50% at the very top end. Tier 2: Strong selective day and boarding schools — Brighton College, Wellington, Repton, Uppingham, King's Canterbury, plus the larger London day schools (City of London, Highgate, Latymer). £30,000-50,000, broader academic ranges, still real Oxbridge pipelines. Tier 3: Solid mid-market schools — usually £20,000-35,000, often with more modest selectivity but excellent pastoral care, particularly for international families landing in the UK without much British-system experience.
Curriculum: A-Levels remain the dominant sixth-form qualification. The IB Diploma is offered by maybe 80-100 schools and growing. Pre-U exists at the top end (Eton, Charterhouse, Westminster's sixth form) as a more flexible alternative to A-Levels for Oxbridge candidates. For most international families, the choice is A-Levels vs IB. If your child is Oxbridge-focused and clearly strong in 3-4 subjects, A-Levels concentrate the academic effort. If breadth matters or your child is more all-rounder, IB is still the safer bet.
Admissions timeline is the single biggest mistake international families make. The major schools open registration 4-5 years before entry. Eton, Harrow, Winchester require registration before the child's 11th birthday — closing-the-door dates that are not negotiable. For 13+ entry (the dominant entry point), Common Entrance prep starts in Year 7 (age 11). For 16+ sixth form entry, you've got more flexibility, but the top sixth form schools still want UKiset / school-specific tests + interviews 12-18 months out. If your child is currently age 11+ and you're starting the search now, the realistic options narrow fast — the advisor call is where we surface what's still genuinely available.
Boarding vs day: Different products. UK boarding (full or weekly) is what made the British system famous — the house system, the formal structure, the intense academic-to-extra-curricular rhythm. UK day schools, especially the major London selective day schools, are academically equivalent to top boarding but socially very different — your family stays close, friendships form locally, university transitions are smoother. For Turkish and international families: full boarding is the dominant choice for relocations under age 16 because it solves the supervision problem; day schools work better when at least one parent is also relocating to the UK.
Risk factors: (1) Common Entrance and 11+ are real exams — children who haven't done UK-style prep need 18-24 months of structured tutoring to be competitive. (2) The boarding houses at the very top schools are intense social environments — they suit confident, sociable students, less so introverts who haven't lived away from home. (3) The cost ceiling has risen sharply post-VAT change in 2025 — some schools added 20% effectively overnight. Confirm 2026-27 fees in writing before deciding. (4) University application timelines (UCAS) start in Year 12 — late arrivals to the UK system can find sixth form rushed if they haven't done GCSEs in-system.
"The biggest mistake international families make in the UK is not the school choice — it's missing the registration deadline. Eton's 11+ list is closed before most families have even started the conversation."
— Kevin Park · UK Boarding Specialist, London











