The Guide
Wed, 24 June 2026

Cities / Zurich / School of Tomorrow

School of Tomorrow

A young, founder-led private school in central Zurich and Uster built around personalised, project-based learning across mixed-age classrooms. A choice for families who actively want a non-traditional model and are comfortable backing a school still finding its rhythm.

School of Tomorrow campus
School of Tomorrow, Zürich. Photograph · School

Fees, annual
CHF 29k–34k
Founded
2021

A young, founder-led private school in central Zurich and Uster built around personalised, project-based learning across mixed-age classrooms. A choice for families who actively want a non-traditional model and are comfortable backing a school still finding its rhythm.

Founded 2021 by Diego De Nicola. Bilingual German and English. Kindergarten through primary and into secondary and Gymnasium. Each child works to an individual learning plan that maps to the Swiss Lehrplan 21 and extends beyond it, with emphasis on what the school calls twelve core competencies.

The day school structure runs Monday to Thursday from 8am to 6pm, with Friday optional and flexible vacation weeks. Lessons are project-based and interdisciplinary, with mixed-age classes the norm rather than year groups. Founder testimonials and early parent voice point at strong communication and individual attention. The flip side of a four-year-old school is that there is little long-run track record on secondary outcomes yet.


Annual fees

Year level Age Fee
Kindergarten 4 CHF 29,400
Primary 6 CHF 30,600
Secondary & Gymnasium 12 CHF 34,200
Friday Club (KG & Primary) CHF 5,400

One-time fees

Item Age Fee
Registration fee CHF 500
Materials (Primary onwards) CHF 1,000
Deposit CHF 3,000


  • Founded 2021 in Zurich and Uster, the school is too new for an independent review base. Reddit, Mumsnet and PullPush returned no results.
  • All available parent commentary sits on the school's own references page; testimonials are short, named or first-name only, and consistent with the school's positioning as a personalised, project-based bilingual alternative to mainstream Swiss schooling.
  • Recurring themes in those testimonials: rapid multilingual progress (German, English, Italian noted by one kindergarten parent), children feeling individually recognised, and personality development.
  • The school is a recognised IB Diploma Candidate School working toward IB World School status from 2027, and operates inside the Canton of Zurich's Lehrplan 21 framework. Tuition is CHF 29,400-34,200, broadly mid-range for Zurich private schools.
  • Wanderlog, Local.ch and IB-directory pages add no parent commentary beyond what the school publishes itself.
  • Net read: signal too thin for a useful synthesis. Recording as such; revisit once an independent review base develops.

Positives

  • Multilingual progress. School-curated testimonials repeatedly cite quick gains in German and English from young learners, with at least one trilingual outcome.
  • Personalised, project-based approach. Parents and the school describe a 12-competency framework focused on intrinsic motivation, with flexible scheduling for families.

Considerations

  • Independent review base. No third-party survey or forum signal exists. Visible commentary is limited to school-published references, ISD aggregates and editorial directory pages.

Leadership

Diego De Nicola

Diego De Nicola founded the School of Tomorrow with a vision to innovate how education meets the future. He emphasizes that children should not merely store what once was or understand what exists now, but should create what is yet to come. His educational philosophy centers on fostering intrinsic motivation, developing personality, and creating personalized learning pathways connected to local and global communities.


Augustinerhof 1, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland

School website