Schools near you

Click a link below to search the official directories for :

Tip: MySchool shows NAPLAN results, ICSEA scores (socio-educational advantage), and student numbers. Higher ICSEA doesn't always mean better - it measures the school's community, not teaching quality.
School Types in Australia
G

Government (Public) Schools

Free for all Australian residents and most visa holders. Funded by the government. You enrol at your local zoned school based on your address.

Cost: Free (small voluntary contributions ~$50-200/year)
C

Catholic Schools

Low-cost private schools run by the Catholic church. Open to all faiths. Generally good academic results with lower fees than independent schools.

Cost: ~$1,500-$5,000/year primary, $3,000-$10,000/year secondary
I

Independent (Private) Schools

Private schools with their own governance. Wide range from affordable to elite. May have specific entry requirements or waiting lists.

Cost: $5,000-$40,000+/year
For visa holders: Your children can attend public school on most visas. Temporary visa holders (482, 500, 417) may need to pay international student fees ($5,000-$15,000/year) depending on your state. Partner visa (820/309), regional visa (491/494), and humanitarian visa holders usually pay domestic (free) rates.
Enrolment Tips for New Migrants
  • You enrol at your local zoned school. In Australia, each public school has a catchment zone based on your home address. You have a right to enrol at your zoned school.
  • Enrolment is free for most visa holders. Citizens, PR, partner visa (820/309), humanitarian, and NZ citizens pay nothing at public schools.
  • You can enrol mid-year. Unlike some countries, Australian schools accept enrolments at any time during the year. You don't need to wait for a new term.
  • English support is free. If your child doesn't speak English fluently, schools provide free ESL (English as a Second Language) support through specialist teachers.
  • School starts at age 5. Children can start Kindergarten (Prep/Foundation in VIC/QLD) the year they turn 5. It's compulsory from age 6.
  • The school year runs Feb to Dec. Four terms of about 10 weeks each, with 2-week breaks between terms and 6 weeks over Christmas/summer.
  • Uniforms are required. Most Australian schools have uniforms. They're usually available second-hand from the school's P&C for $5-20 per item.
  • Bring your visa and address proof. To enrol, you'll need your child's passport, visa grant letter, proof of address (utility bill or rental agreement), and immunisation history.
Enrolment Document Checklist

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How school catchments and enrolment work in Australia

Public schools in Australia operate on a "catchment area" or "intake zone" system. Each school is assigned a specific geographic area, and children who live within that area are guaranteed enrolment. Children outside the catchment can apply but enrolment is at the principal's discretion and usually only available if there are spare places after catchment students. This is why where you rent or buy can determine where your kids go to school - sometimes for 13 years.

Catchment boundaries follow specific streets, not suburbs. It is common for one side of a street to be in a high-performing school's catchment while the other side is zoned to a different (sometimes lower-performing) school. Always check the catchment for the exact address before signing a lease, especially in cities like Sydney and Melbourne where boundaries can be unintuitive.

Where to find official catchment maps

School performance: how to interpret the data

The most reliable independent data source for Australian schools is the federal government's My School website. Every school - public, Catholic, and independent - publishes:

The key insight: look at NAPLAN performance relative to ICSEA, not in absolute terms. A school that scores slightly below the national average but well above its ICSEA prediction is actually outperforming. A school that scores above average but below its ICSEA prediction is underperforming relative to its demographic.

Selective and specialist schools

Outside the catchment system, every state runs selective schools and specialist schools. These select students by competitive exam, audition, or aptitude test rather than residence. Notable examples:

Frequently asked questions

I just arrived - how quickly can I enrol my child?

Public schools must enrol any child living in their catchment within a few weeks of the application. You typically need: passport, visa grant letter, proof of address (rental agreement is usually sufficient), and previous school records (translated if not in English). Some schools require an "intake assessment" for new arrivals to determine year-level placement and language support needs.

What if my child does not speak English?

Every state has an English as an Additional Language program (EAL or EAL/D) for newly arrived students. NSW and VIC have intensive English language schools and centres where children spend 6-18 months learning English before transitioning to mainstream schools. Other states embed language support within mainstream schools. None of this costs anything for public school students.

Can I get my child into a school outside our catchment?

It depends on the school. Popular schools fill up with catchment students alone and rarely accept out-of-catchment students. Smaller schools or those with surplus places will consider out-of-catchment applications. Apply early (often 6-12 months before the start of the school year), explain your specific reasons, and accept that the answer is often no.

How are class sizes determined?

Government primary school class sizes are typically capped at 26-30 students depending on state and year level. Public secondary schools are usually 24-30 per class. Catholic and independent schools vary - some elite independents advertise 18-22 per class as a selling point, but many Catholic systemic schools have similar sizes to public schools.

Do I need to apply by a specific date?

For Year 7 entry to selective schools and elite independents, applications often close 12-18 months before entry. For standard public schools and Catholic systemic schools, you can apply any time, but applying in Term 3 the year before entry is much smoother than applying mid-year. International applications usually need 4-6 months lead time for student visa processing.

What about kindergarten and preschool?

Each state runs slightly different early childhood pathways. The year before primary school (called Kindergarten in NSW, Prep in QLD/VIC, Reception in SA) is part of the public school system and free. Preschool/kindergarten for 3-4 year olds is run separately, often through community kinders or long day care centres, with varying state subsidies on top of the federal Child Care Subsidy.

What this finder doesn't include

For comprehensive school data, always use the federal government's free My School website rather than commercial school-ranking sites.

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