how often do ofsted visit
Ofsted does not visit on a fixed annual schedule; how often they come depends on the type of setting and the most recent inspection outcome. In practice, most mainstream schools are inspected roughly every 4 years, while early years and out‑of‑school settings are usually inspected less often unless there are concerns.
Ofsted visit frequency
- For most government‑funded schools, the “normal” pattern is:
- Schools previously judged good or outstanding are inspected in some form around every 4 years.
* Schools judged inadequate or requires improvement are re‑inspected sooner, often around 2 to 2.5 years, and may also receive monitoring visits.
- Ofsted can inspect any school at any time if serious safeguarding or quality concerns are raised, so the cycle is a guide, not a guarantee.
Early years and wraparound care
- New daycare and out‑of‑school providers (such as breakfast or after‑school clubs) are usually inspected within 30 months of registration.
- Established early years and out‑of‑school settings are generally inspected at least once every 6 years, with earlier re‑inspection if they are graded inadequate or require improvement.
What this means for “how often do Ofsted visit”
- If you are in a typical school, you would normally expect Ofsted approximately every 4 years, sooner if your last inspection was not good or if serious concerns are reported.
- If you run or work in an early years or out‑of‑school setting, you might see Ofsted less often (within 30 months for new providers and then at least every 6 years), again with faster visits if there are issues to follow up.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.