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CSSE 11+ registration closes 19 June 2026 · One shared test · SS0–SS9 catchment area

Apply to Westcliff High School for Girls, in plain English.

WHSG is a selective girls' grammar on Kenilworth Gardens in Westcliff-on-Sea that admits 192 girls a year through the shared CSSE 11+ — the one test used by the Consortium of Selective Schools in Essex. Around 880 girls apply for those 192 places: all must reach the pass mark, then places go in rank order of score — but where you live matters, because up to 80% of the places are reserved for girls living in the school's SS0–SS9 catchment area. Register with the CSSE by 19 June 2026 — separately from, and months before, the October council application.

Selective grammar · girls (11–18) Kenilworth Gardens, Westcliff-on-Sea Updated for September 2027 entry Data verified
192 places
Up to 154 reserved for the catchment
CSSE 11+
One shared Essex test
SS0–SS9 postcodes
Southend & Castle Point catchment
£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 CSSE 11+ directly with the consortium — by 19 June 2026.

WHSG does not run its own test. It uses the CSSE 11+, the single test shared by the Essex selective schools, sat as two papers — English and Maths — and age-standardised. You register through the CSSE website; registration opens 12 May 2026 and closes on 19 June 2026. The test is normally a Saturday in mid-September (19 September 2026). Registering for the test is separate from naming WHSG on your council form — you must do both, and miss the registration and there is no route to a 2027 place.

ii.

Where you live decides most of it — up to 80% of places are reserved for the catchment.

Passing the test only gets your daughter into the ranking. A local quota of up to 154 of the 192 places (around 80%) is reserved for girls whose home is in the school's catchment — postcode districts SS0 to SS9 (Southend-on-Sea, Westcliff, Leigh, Rochford, Rayleigh, Benfleet and Canvey Island) — allocated to the highest scorers among them. Only the remaining ~38 places go to girls from outside the area. Living inside the catchment is the single biggest factor after the test itself.

iii.

Pupil Premium and Free School Meal girls get 'preferential consideration'.

Within both the catchment and out-of-area pools, a slice of places is ring-fenced for girls entitled to 'preferential consideration' — those in receipt of Free School Meals or the Pupil Premium (which includes children of serving Armed Forces personnel). You must declare it on the CSSE Supplementary Information Form when you register — it can't be added later, and evidence is required.

02 · How to apply

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

Registering for the CSSE 11+ (step 1) closes on 19 June 2026 — months before the CAF deadline that catches most families out. Registering for the test is not the same as naming WHSG on your council application; you must do both.

1
Register for the CSSE 11+ — by 19 June 2026.
Register your daughter through the CSSE website. Registration opens 12 May 2026 and closes on 19 June 2026; late registrations are not accepted. Use the CSSE Supplementary Information Form to declare Free School Meals / Pupil Premium 'preferential consideration' or access arrangements, with evidence. One CSSE registration covers every Essex consortium school you list — you do not register separately for WHSG.
BY 19 JUN 2026
2
Sit the CSSE 11+ — 19 September 2026
The test is normally a Saturday in the first half of the autumn term — 19 September 2026. It is two papers, English and Maths, with age standardisation applied by the CSSE. Girls normally test at a local CSSE centre. Results are issued in October, before the council deadline, so you know whether your daughter reached the pass mark before you finalise your form.
19 SEP 2026
3
Apply on your council's Common Application Form
Name WHSG on your home council's application form by 31 October 2026 — apply through whichever council you pay Council Tax to, not directly to the school. Southend families apply via Southend-on-Sea City Council; Essex families via Essex County Council. Without naming the school on the form, a place cannot be offered even with a qualifying score. Your daughter's catchment status is set by her permanent home address as assessed in the Southend admissions booklet.
BY 31 OCT 2026
4
Hear back on National Offer Day
Your council notifies you with one offer on 1 March 2027. Reply by 15 March 2027 to accept, decline, or ask to join the waiting list, which the school holds until 31 December of the entry year. Year 7 begins September 2027.
1 MAR 2027
03 · Who gets a place

If more girls pass than there are places, this order decides.

Girls with an EHCP naming WHSG are admitted first, within the 192. Everyone else must reach the pass mark in the CSSE test; qualifying girls are then ranked by standardised score and placed in the order below. Tap any criterion to see the exact wording.

04 · The catchment area

A postcode boundary — it reserves up to 154 of the 192 places.

WHSG's catchment is not a radius but a list of postcode districts: SS0 to SS9 — Westcliff-on-Sea, Southend, Leigh, Shoeburyness, Rochford, Hockley, Rayleigh, Benfleet and Canvey Island. It is not a tiebreaker — it is the gate for up to 80% of the places. A local quota of 154 of the 192 places is reserved for girls whose home address falls in those postcodes, offered to the highest scorers among them; only the ~38 places left over are open to top scorers from outside the area. Score sets your daughter's rank, but living inside the catchment is what puts her in the running for the bulk of the places.

Distance only breaks a final tie: where girls have identical standardised scores competing for the last place, priority goes first to those entitled to 'preferential consideration', and then to whoever lives nearer the school by straight-line measurement from the front door to the nearest pupil entrance. A girl living closer but outside the SS0–SS9 catchment is still behind every in-catchment girl.

See the catchment on the GrammarBound map
A worked example

Inside SS0–SS9: in the race. Outside: a high score only.

Girl A lives in Leigh-on-Sea (SS9), inside the catchment, so her score puts her straight into the running for the 154 reserved places. Girl B lives in Basildon, outside SS0–SS9: even with a higher score she competes only for the ~38 open places left after the catchment quota is filled. Distance never moves an out-of-area girl ahead of an in-catchment girl.

05 · If your daughter doesn't get a place

You have two routes, and you can use both.

Held to 31 December

Waiting list

A girl who sat the test but isn't offered a place is held on a waiting list, ranked by test result within each category, until 31 December of the entry year. When a place comes free, it goes to the next girl in the same category — an in-catchment vacancy to the next catchment girl, an open vacancy to the next out-of-area girl — not first-come-first-served. After 1 January, admission follows the school's in-year arrangements.

A move into the SS0–SS9 catchment after the closing date is taken into account on the waiting list, with documentary evidence of the new permanent address.

Independent panel

Appeal

You have a statutory right of appeal against the decision not to offer a place, exercisable once places have been offered (normally after National Offer Day). Appeals are lodged directly with the school and heard by an Independent Appeal Panel, which is independent of the school and whose decision binds both sides; appealing does not affect your daughter's waiting-list position.

06 · Sixth form entry

Joining Year 12 at WHSG.

WHSG admits external students into its Sixth Form — and at this stage it is open to boys and girls, not just girls. The catchment area does not apply: Sixth Form entry is decided purely on GCSE results. External applicants apply directly to the school, not through the council.

Entry requirements at GCSE

The grade floor.

Applicants are expected to obtain at least 52 points across their best 8 GCSEs (each 9–1 grade scored on its number — a grade 9 is worth 9 points, a grade 8 worth 8, and so on), and to achieve a minimum of grade 5 in GCSE English and Mathematics. Certain A-level subjects then carry their own higher GCSE grade requirement in that subject, set out on the school's website.

52
points over best 8
5+
English & Maths
A-level
subject GCSE rules
Applying for Year 12

Apply direct to the school.

Sixth-form applications go straight to WHSG through the online form on the school website. The Year 12 admission number is 200, with 184 places kept for internal students and a minimum of 16 places for external applicants who meet the entry requirements; where there are more qualified candidates than places, the upper limit also takes account of subject-course capacity. See the WHSG website for the current form and subject requirements.

07 · Common questions

The things parents always ask.

It's possible but harder. Only about 38 of the 192 places are open to girls from outside the catchment, and they go to the highest scorers in that pool. If your daughter is a strong candidate it can be worth a try, but for most out-of-area families the realistic route to WHSG is to have a permanent home address inside one of the SS0–SS9 postcode districts.