Queen's College, London 11+ guide

Are you thinking about applying to Queen's College, London for 11+ entry? Find out everything you need to know about the admissions process and how to prepare for the entrance exam.
Key information for Queen's College, London
- School type: girls' independent day school
- Location: Central London (Harley Street)
- Admissions contact: admissions@qcl.org.uk
- 11+ exam: London 11+ Consortium
- Financial assistance: means-tested bursaries
- Scholarships: academic, art, dance, drama, music, sport, and all rounder
Important dates for 2027 entry
- Friday 6th November 2026: deadline for registration
- Friday 27th November 2026, Tuesday 1st December 2026, or Thursday 3rd December 2026: 11+ entrance exam
- 4th–7th January 2027: interviews
- Friday 12th February 2027: offers
- Wednesday 3rd March 2027 (12 noon): deadline for accepting offers
How to apply to Queen's College, London
Queen's College, London is selective. This means that your child will need to take an entrance exam to be eligible for a place.
You must register your child for Year 7 entry via the school website. Registration closes on Friday 6th November 2026. A non-refundable registration fee applies.
Queen's College is a member of the London 11+ Consortium and uses a shared entrance exam set by the Consortium. The exam takes place in late November or early December when your child is in Year 6, and is usually sat at their current school. Where this is not possible, it can be taken at one of the Consortium schools.
Children who perform well in the entrance exam are shortlisted for interviews, which take place in January.
You will receive the outcome in February. If your child is offered a place, you will have until early March to accept.
What will my child be tested on?
The Queen's College, London 11+ entrance exam is the London 11+ Consortium assessment. The whole test lasts 100 minutes and is taken online.
The Consortium assessment is designed to go beyond testing cognitive ability alone. It aims to discover a child's potential in creative and critical thinking, analysis, synthesis, and problem-solving. The test is split into two sections.
Section 1: Cognitive ability (adaptive)
The first section is an online, adaptive cognitive test. This means the difficulty of questions adjusts based on your child's answers, giving the school a more accurate picture of their ability. It covers verbal, mathematical, and non-verbal reasoning.
Verbal reasoning
Verbal reasoning questions assess your child's ability to think logically and solve problems using written information — such as words, letters, and language patterns. Children who read widely and have a broad vocabulary will be well-prepared for this section.
Maths
The maths questions are based on the Key Stage 2 national curriculum. Your child will be tested on their mathematical reasoning and ability to solve problems, not just recall facts.
Non-verbal reasoning
Non-verbal reasoning involves analysing visual information and identifying patterns using shapes and diagrams. These questions test spatial awareness, logic, and problem-solving skills. Playing puzzles such as Sudoku, Lego, or Rubik's Cubes can help your child build these skills.
Section 2: Problem-solving and creative thinking (non-adaptive)
The second section is non-adaptive, meaning all children see the same questions. It assesses your child's ability to think creatively and critically, analyse information, and approach problems from new angles. Some children may progress further through the questions than others.
How are places decided?
Children who perform well in the entrance exam are invited to the school for an interview in January. The interview is designed to explore each child's skills, aptitudes, and intellectual curiosity.
Places are offered in February. These are based on:
- their performance in the entrance exam
- the interview
- a reference from the headteacher at their current school
Financial information
Queen's College, London is a fee-paying school. Take a look at the school website for a full breakdown of fees per year group.
Financial assistance
When exploring independent schools for your child, scholarships and bursaries are worth considering. They can ease the pressure of school fees and open doors to opportunities that might otherwise feel out of reach.
Scholarships
Scholarships are awarded for a child's talent or achievement. While many schools focus on academic excellence, some offer awards in music, sport, drama, art, or other specialist areas.
Scholarships often come with a small fee reduction and acknowledge your child's talents, motivating them and boosting their confidence. Some schools automatically consider all applicants, while others may request an additional application, assessment or audition.
Visit your target school's website to see what scholarships are available and how to apply.
For more information, read: Your guide to independent school scholarships.
Bursaries
Bursaries are means-tested awards (based on a family's financial situation) designed to make independent education more accessible. Depending on your circumstances, a bursary could cover part or all of the school fees and sometimes extras like uniforms, lunches or school trips.
Families provide financial information to qualify, and awards are reassessed each year. For many families, bursaries make an excellent education possible that might otherwise seem out of reach.
Visit your target school's website to find out what bursaries are available and how to apply.
For more information, read: Bursaries: a parents' guide
How can I help my child prepare for the test?
Applying to senior school can feel like a big milestone, but preparation doesn't have to be overwhelming. Here's how you can help your child prepare for test day.
Stay on track with a clear plan
One of the hardest parts of exam preparation is knowing what to focus on, when, and how to make steady progress without it taking over family life.
A clear, structured plan helps your child feel less overwhelmed and more in control. It ensures they build skills in the right order, cover everything they need, and avoid last-minute cramming.
Atom's exam plan makes this easier. Enter your child's target schools and exam dates, and we'll create a personalised weekly plan tailored to the topics they'll be tested on. It shows them what to work on and when, adapts as they improve, and helps them build progress in a calm, manageable way — little and often.
That means less guesswork for you, less stress for them, and a clearer path all the way to exam day.
Build smart exam technique
As your child's knowledge grows, practice tests can help them feel more comfortable with the real exam format.
Atom's mock tests are exact replicas of real entrance exams. They're also unlimited — your child can take the same test repeatedly and see new questions each time. This helps them practise without repeating the same content.
Atom's mock tests are automatically marked. You'll see your child's standardised age score (SAS), where they're doing well, and what they should focus on next. You'll also learn how they compare to other children applying to the same school.
Encourage regular reading
Strong reading skills play a big role in preparation for entrance exams.
Encourage your child to read every day, even for just 10–15 minutes. The key is variety. Mix fiction and non-fiction, different genres, and a range of authors. This helps them become more confident in understanding tone, purpose, and meaning across different texts.
Over time, regular reading will:
- broaden their vocabulary
- improve comprehension and inference
- build confidence in tackling unseen texts
And just as importantly, it can help them enjoy reading — not just see it as exam preparation.
Looking for inspiration? Atom's reading and writing starter kit has suggestions spanning fiction and non-fiction for Years 3–6.
Celebrate progress, not just scores
When you're supporting your child through exam preparation, what really matters is knowing they're moving in the right direction — not just how they scored on a single test.
Atom's progress tracking gives you a clear, simple picture of how your child is doing in each topic and the direction they're moving in. You can see where they're on track, where they might need more practice, and spot progress as it happens.
That makes it easier to give meaningful encouragement, keep motivation steady, and focus on what matters most: consistent improvement, not just one-off results.
Take control of your child’s independent school prep.

Worried about keeping pace with the competition? Independent school exams can feel unpredictable, but your child’s preparation doesn’t have to be. Atom shows you exactly what to practise and how they’re performing, so you can stay ahead throughout the admissions process.
- Follow personalised weekly exam plans that show them what to learn next.
- Practise with mock tests that replicate their exam and generate new questions every time, so they build real exam skills.
- Track progress and see how they compare to others preparing for the same schools.
Start your free trial and help your child get ready for senior school entry.
