The Guide
Sat, 16 May 2026

Cities / Kuwait City / American School of Kuwait

American School of Kuwait

Founded in 1964 as Kuwait's first American school, ASK serves around 1,800 students from 40+ nationalities across a tri-campus facility in Hawalli, offering Pre-K through Grade 12 on the US curriculum. MSA-accredited since 1971 and a member of NESA, the…


Curriculum
American
Fees, annual
KWD 3–5k
Ages
3 to 18
Pupils
~1,800
Founded
1964

The original American school in Kuwait, opened September 1964 in a Sharq villa with 75 students. ASK has been the default school of the western, non-Arab expat community for sixty years and runs an American curriculum across one of the largest campuses in the country.

Around 1,800 students from over 60 nationalities, with a higher western-expat mix than any other American-curriculum school in Kuwait. Accredited by Middle States and CIS. Facilities include 145 classrooms, ten science labs, two gyms, an indoor 25-metre pool, and large outdoor fields. Fees run roughly KWD 3,314 to KWD 5,191. Head is Monique Livsey.

Long-time families value the breadth of facilities, the strong athletics programme, the genuinely international student body, and the fact that ASK is the school most US oil-and-gas, embassy, and military families default to. Critics say teaching has slipped from its peak and the school has become more business-driven. Best fit for North American families wanting an American curriculum and a real expat peer group.


Fee Age Type Amount
KG1-KG2 3 Annual KWD 3,314
Grades 1-5 6 Annual KWD 4,306
Grades 6-8 11 Annual KWD 4,636
Grades 9-12 14 Annual KWD 5,191
Deposit (non-refundable) One-time KWD 100

  • ASK has the longest history of any American school in Kuwait, and many parents and ex-students describe it positively, citing diverse classmates, an established curriculum and good housing for staff. One Reddit user called it the oldest and best school in Kuwait.
  • Teacher feedback runs sharply different, and consistently so. Multiple ex-staff, posting separately and across years, describe the school as a for-profit business with absentee ownership, weak admin, and pressure on teachers without meaningful support. One ex-teacher described being on a bus at 5:15am to prep, with admin offering little backing.
  • Retention is the recurring concern. One former teacher reported four years that started excellent and ended terrible. Others say base salaries had not risen in over six years. Several say they would not return to Kuwait.
  • Parent and student commentary on platforms outside teacher forums is more positive on the everyday experience: friendly classmates, dedicated teachers in some divisions, varied extracurriculars including a Real Madrid Foundation football tie-up.
  • Safety and child-protection reports surface in international teacher forums, including allegations of staff misconduct and weaknesses in the school's response. Parents weighing the school should treat these as worth investigating.

Head of school

Ms. Monique Livsey

Ms. Monique Livsey has been part of the American School of Kuwait community since 2001, serving in various roles including teacher and administrator. She is dedicated to fostering a caring and inclusive environment for over 2,000 students from more than 50 countries, emphasizing the importance of lifelong learning and community engagement.

Accreditations

  • Middle States Association Commissions on Elementary and Secondary Schools 01
  • Council of International Schools 02

  • AP Pass Rate 88%
  • Average SAT Score 1,380+

Hawalli, Kuwait

School website