
Since the private school VAT change, effective 1 January 2025, private school tuition and boarding in the UK have been subject to 20% VAT, and from 1 April 2025 most charitable schools in England lost business rates relief.
This has shifted the question from “will fees rise?” to “can even larger schools cope?” Pressure is evident across the independent school sector. Pupil numbers in England fell between January 2025 and January 2026, and several schools were removed from the register in 2024. At the same time, new schools continued to open in 2025 and 2026, showing that the sector is both being squeezed and reshaped simultaneously.
| Change | When It Applied | Why It Matters |
| VAT on private school education and boarding | 1 January 2025 | Core tuition and boarding fees are now standard-rated |
| Prepayments caught | Payments from 29 July 2024 for terms starting on or after 1 Jan 2025 | Paying early did not always avoid VAT |
| Loss of charitable business rates relief (England) | 1 April 2025 | Many schools lost the 80% mandatory discount unless an exception applied |
The business rates change is significant because charitable relief had previously reduced bills by 80%. Schools focused on pupils with EHCPs generally keep this relief.
A key point is that 20% VAT does not automatically mean fees rise by 20%. Schools can reclaim input VAT, leaving an average net VAT cost of about 15% of fee income. Average fee rises of around 10%, though some schools absorb more costs and others pass on more to parents.
Read: Everything About HMRC v Colchester Institute VAT Dispute
The pressure isn’t just about one tax. In England, there are 2,474 private schools, of which 1,127 are charities. Around 1,024 of these schools lost charitable rates relief.
Even though smaller schools face higher per-pupil increases, large schools still face significant total costs, especially with staffing, estates, and borrowing commitments.
Most schools will not immediately close. They may first:
Financial pressure can build over time before a school reaches a breaking point.
Yes, closures are happening, but context matters.
This includes voluntary closures and regulatory removals. VAT alone cannot be blamed. The impact of VAT is difficult to predict in terms of how many additional closures will result.
Since 2000, England averages 74 closures and 83 new openings per year, showing a natural turnover.
Larger schools are under more financial pressure, pupil numbers are down, and some bigger schools are no longer shielded from challenges previously felt mostly by smaller schools.
Practical steps matter more than headlines.
Read: Getting Your Business Ready for the Summer’s Temporary VAT Cut
At Apex Accountants, we support independent schools with the practical side of VAT changes:
The biggest mistake is to reduce this story to a simple slogan. VAT and the loss of business rates relief have definitely increased pressure; pupil numbers in England’s independent sector have fallen for two consecutive years, and closures continue, but this does not isolate VAT as the sole cause and does not yet prove a clear wave of private-school closures in the UK.
A more accurate headline would be this: larger private schools are no longer protected from the same financial pressures that have already hit smaller schools, but the official evidence still points to a sector in costly transition, not a one-line collapse story.
From 1 January 2025, with certain prepayments made from 29 July 2024 also caught if they related to terms starting on or after 1 January 2025.
No. Official estimates point to an average fee rise of around 10%, not a flat 20%, because schools can reclaim input VAT on relevant costs.
No. VAT on fees applies across the UK, but the removal of charitable business rates relief applies in England.
Not necessarily on a per-pupil basis: in the matched cohort, schools with more than 1,000 pupils show a lower per-pupil rates increase than very small schools, but their cash increase per school is still large.
Yes, where they are wholly, or almost wholly, made up of children below compulsory school age.
Educational extracurricular activities are taxable, but childcare-based before- or after-school clubs and holiday clubs that consist of care are exempt.
Yes, where the placement is funded by the local authority and the school is named in the pupil’s EHC plan, the local authority can reclaim the VAT through existing processes.
Not usually. Where a separate bursary funds part of a specific child’s fee, VAT still applies to the full fee; only a school funding its own bursary to itself is outside scope.
Yes. Application and registration fees that must be paid for a pupil to attend are treated the same as normal school fees for VAT.
No. Official closure data mixes voluntary closures with regulatory removals, and the policy impact note says it is difficult to assess how many extra closures the measure will cause.
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