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The chair of governors of the fee-paying school in Hoppers Road says that it will probably close in August this year because of a long-term decline in pupil numbers.

Palmers Green High School is in Hoppers Road (photo: Google Streetview)

In a message on its website dated 19th January, the chair of governors of Palmers Green High School writes that, "with deep sadness", the governing board "is proposing to close the school in August 2026".

In reaction to the announcement, some people posting to social media have suggested that the school's problems are the consequence of removal of VAT exemptions for private schools with effect from January last year. However, the message makes no reference to this and states that the reason for the proposed closure is a long-term fall in student numbers: "PGHS has experienced a sustained and significant decline in numbers over many years, and the school does not have the capacity to continue to operate for another academic year".

According to government figures, the charitable 4 to 16 school, founded in 1905 by the Quaker Alice Hum and originally located in Osborne Road, has just 208 pupils, with capacity for 287.

For more information about the closure proposal, follow the links below.

Links

Shock over proposed closure of private school in Palmers Green (Enfield Dispatch 20 January 2026)

Palmers Green High School proposes closure (School Management Plus 20 January 2026)

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Athena Pavlou posted a reply
22 Jan 2026 10:26
I appreciate people have differing views about private schools but this is very sad news for the PGHS community. It is a school with a long and proud history, established by an extraordinary woman. It has been running for 120 years and it is heartbreaking that it has come to this. It is a great school with some fabulous, dedicated and inspirational teachers. I am so sad that the teaching careers of some will be ending on this note. I hope those that want to continue to work will find fulfilling roles elsewhere. I am also sad for the girls and families who will now have to find alternative schools at short notice. Some will be preparing for their GCSEs now and this will be terribly destabilising.
Falling student numbers is a problem faced by state schools too, with primary schools closing or merging. But I think the increased cost to parents has also been a factor for PGHS.
Against this demographic and economic backdrop, I have been surprised by some recent financial decisions taken by the school's leaders, which, I assume, cannot have helped the school's finances. Even without stretched finances, I am not sure whether spending money on a new facade in the summer, (after it was painted only a couple of years previously), a canteen upgrade, and the purchase of a neighbouring house on Hoppers Road, constituted an appropriate use of parents' fees, particulalry at a time when there were also well-publicised issues with the teachers' pension.
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