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West Midlands Consortium 11+ registration closes 26 June 2026 · Score-led · Real catchment area

Apply to King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys, in plain English.

King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys is a heavily oversubscribed selective boys' grammar in Kings Heath, south Birmingham — around 870 families applied for 2025 entry, for 120 Year 7 places. Boys sit the shared West Midlands Grammar Schools Consortium 11+ and must reach the school's qualifying score; places are then filled in rank order of score, with priority to boys living in the school's catchment area of named Birmingham wards. Register your son for the test via the King Edward VI Foundation by 4pm on 26 June 2026 — separately from, and months before, the October Common Application Form.

Selective grammar · boys Vicarage Road, Kings Heath, Birmingham Updated for September 2027 entry Data verified
120 places
Year 7 places
18 wards
Catchment area
5 criteria
Decide who gets a place
£0 fees
State-funded grammar
Next deadline
days left
01 · Start here

The three things to know first.

If you read nothing else on this page, read these. They're the bits that catch parents out.

i.

You register for the 11+ test by 26 June 2026 — long before the CAF.

Camp Hill Boys uses the shared West Midlands Grammar Schools Consortium 11+ — one registration and one test sitting covers the Foundation's Birmingham grammar schools. Registration is online via the King Edward VI Foundation and closes at 4pm on 26 June 2026 — months before, and completely separate from, the October Common Application Form. Miss the registration deadline and, apart from exceptional circumstances, there is no route to a place for 2027 entry.

ii.

This is a score-led school — but with a real catchment.

Every applicant must reach the school's qualifying score in the test; below it, a boy is not eligible. Above it, Camp Hill Boys — unlike its super-selective Foundation brother schools — has a genuine catchment area: boys who live inside it are ranked ahead of boys outside it once the looked-after and Pupil Premium places are filled. A quarter of places are set aside for Pupil Premium boys, in-catchment first.

iii.

The catchment is 18 named wards — check yours.

The catchment area is the home addresses inside 18 south and central Birmingham wards (Kings Heath, Moseley, Hall Green, Sparkhill, Acocks Green, Selly Park, Billesley and more). It is defined by ward, not by distance — so check which ward your address falls in at birmingham.gov.uk/wardlookup. Your son must live at the qualifying address on the CAF deadline, 31 October 2026.

02 · How to apply

Four steps — the first deadline is summer, not October.

Registering for the consortium 11+ test (step 1) closes at 4pm on 26 June 2026 — months before the CAF deadline that catches most families out. Registering for the test is not the same as applying for the school.

1
Register for the consortium 11+ test — by 26 June 2026.
Register your son online via the King Edward VI Foundation. Test information is published from May 2026 and registration closes at 4pm on 26 June 2026. If your son needs access arrangements for a disability or medical need, a separate form must be submitted by 12 June 2026. Late registrations are only tested in exceptional circumstances.
BY 26 JUN 2026
2
Sit the 11+ test — a Saturday in early September 2026
The West Midlands Grammar Schools Consortium 11+ is taken on a Saturday in early September 2026 — standardised papers in verbal, numerical and non-verbal reasoning. One sitting is shared across the Foundation's grammar schools. A boy must reach Camp Hill's qualifying score (published on the Foundation website before the test) to be eligible; results are sent to parents in October, before the 31 October preference deadline.
EARLY SEP 2026
3
Apply on your council's Common Application Form
Name King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys on your home council's CAF by 31 October 2026 — apply through whichever council you live in, not directly to the school. Birmingham residents apply via Birmingham City Council. Completing the test registration alone is not an application. Your son must live at the address you give on the CAF deadline.
BY 31 OCT 2026
4
Hear back on National Offer Day
Your council notifies you with one offer on or about 1 March 2027. Reply by 15 March 2027 to accept, decline, or request the waiting list. Appeals cannot be lodged until after National Offer Day. Year 7 begins September 2027.
1 MAR 2027
03 · Who gets a place

If more boys reach the standard than there are places, these 5 criteria decide.

A boy with an EHCP naming the school is admitted first, within the 120 (the Admission Number reduces accordingly). Everyone else who reaches the qualifying score is then placed in the order below. Distance from the front gates — straight-line, measured by the council's computerised system — is the ranking or tie-break within several criteria. Tap any criterion to see the exact wording.

04 · The catchment

A real boundary — 18 named wards.

King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys — unlike its super-selective Foundation brother schools — has a genuine catchment area, defined by electoral ward rather than by distance. It covers 18 wards across south and central Birmingham: Acocks Green, Balsall Heath West, Billesley, Bordesley & Highgate, Bordesley Green, Bournbrook & Selly Park, Brandwood & King's Heath, Druids Heath & Monyhull, Hall Green North, Hall Green South, Highter's Heath, Moseley, Small Heath, South Yardley, Sparkbrook & Balsall Heath East, Sparkhill, Stirchley, and Tyseley & Hay Mills. In-catchment boys who reach the priority score are ranked ahead of boys living outside the area.

Distance is straight-line, measured by the local authority's computerised system from the applicant's home to the school's front gates using Ordnance Survey co-ordinates. It is used to rank in-catchment Pupil Premium boys and to break ties; there is no single published distance cut-off — the catchment is the ward list, not a radius.

See the catchment area on the GrammarBound map
A worked example

Inside the wards: priority. Outside: only if places remain.

Boy A lives in Moseley — one of the catchment wards — so once he reaches the priority score he is ranked ahead of out-of-catchment boys (criterion 4), or in the Pupil Premium band if eligible. Boy B lives in Edgbaston, a Birmingham ward that is not on the list, so he is only considered under the final all-by-score criterion (5), after in-catchment boys. Both must reach the qualifying score; the catchment ward decides priority.

05 · If your son doesn't get a place

You have two routes, and you can use both.

Ranked, not first-come

Waiting list

If your son isn't offered a place, he goes onto a ranked waiting list of boys who reached the qualifying score but didn't receive an offer from Camp Hill or a more-preferred school. When a place comes free in the first term of Year 7 it goes to the next boy under the same oversubscription criteria — not first-come-first-served, and with no need to re-sit the test. From January of Year 7 onwards, places are filled by in-year application and a separate test. The school does not admit into Years 10 or 11.

Priority on the waiting list is not based on the date you applied or asked to join.

Independent panel

Appeal

You have a statutory right of appeal against the Governing Body's decision not to offer a place. Send written grounds of appeal to the Clerk to the Governors; an appeal is arranged within 30 school days of the request and heard by an independent panel. A repeat appeal in the same year, for the same school, is only heard if your circumstances have materially changed. Appealing does not affect your son's waiting-list position.

06 · Sixth form entry

Joining Year 12 at Camp Hill Boys.

The sixth form admits internal Year 11 students who meet the academic requirements, plus up to 40 external places for students from other schools, who apply directly to the school.

Entry requirements at GCSE

The grade floor.

Entry is scored on a 'Best 8' — your best six GCSEs plus GCSE English Language and Mathematics, each grade worth its number in points. You need at least 54 points to study three A-levels (64 for four or more), which must include at least a grade 6 in English Language or Literature and a grade 6 in Mathematics. To take a subject at A-level you also need at least a grade 7 in that subject at GCSE (Further Maths needs grade 9 in GCSE Maths; two grade 8s in Double Science to take a science). Full subject-specific grades are on the school website.

54
Best 8 points (3 A-levels)
6+
English & Maths
7
to take a subject at A-level
Applying for Year 12

Apply direct to the school.

External applications go directly to Camp Hill Boys — not through the CAF. Offers are conditional on achieving the required GCSE results in the subjects applied for, and on course capacity. If the 40 external places are oversubscribed, applicants are ranked first by looked-after status, then by Pupil Premium eligibility (up to 25% of external places, by predicted Best 8 score), then by highest predicted Best 8 GCSE score — ties settled by the average of the three A-level subjects, then by proximity to the school.

07 · Common questions

The things parents always ask.

It can be — but only if your son scores very highly. Out-of-catchment boys are placed in the final criterion (5), after in-catchment boys, and are ranked purely by test score. A Pupil Premium boy from outside the catchment can also be considered under criterion 3, to top up the 25% Pupil Premium share. Otherwise, a strong out-of-catchment score is your only realistic route.