The Guide
Mon, 15 June 2026

Cities / Dubai / Credence High School

Credence High School

CBSE-affiliated Indian-curriculum school in Al Quoz, founded 2014, serving roughly 2,000 pupils through Class 10 and 12 board examinations.

Credence High School campus
Credence High School, Al Quoz. Photograph · School

Curriculum
International
Fees, annual
AED 15k–27k
Ages
3 to 18
Pupils
~2,000
Founded
2014

Established as a CBSE-affiliated institution, Credence High School positions itself within Dubai's large Indian curriculum school sector serving the emirate's substantial Indian expatriate community. The school follows the Central Board of Secondary Education curriculum leading to Class 10 and 12 board examinations, competing with established CBSE schools like Springdale and various GEMS institutions. Located in Al Quoz area, it operates with fees reportedly ranging from AED 13,000 to AED 16,000 annually, making it one of the more affordable international school options in Dubai.

The school markets itself as 'the most happy school of Dubai' and emphasizes making learning 'fun and adventurous' through its campus design and facilities. However, the limited availability of detailed parent reviews, academic performance data, or independent assessments makes it challenging to verify these claims. Unlike Dubai's premium international schools that regularly publish examination results and university placement statistics, Credence High School maintains a relatively low public profile with minimal online discussion among parent communities.

Strengths

  • Affordable CBSE education compared to premium Dubai international schools
  • Serves the large Indian expatriate community with familiar curriculum
  • Claims to focus on making learning enjoyable for students
  • Al Quoz location accessible to families in central Dubai areas

Considerations

  • Very limited public information about academic outcomes and university placements
  • Minimal parent feedback available online compared to other Dubai schools
  • No clear data on facilities, extracurricular programs, or teaching quality
  • Unclear KHDA inspection ratings or accreditation status
  • May lack the resources and facilities of larger, more established Dubai schools

Annual fees

Year level Age Fee
Pre-KG 3 AED 15,000
KG-2 4 AED 15,850
KG-1 4 AED 15,850
Grade-1 6 AED 17,850
Grade-2 7 AED 17,850
Grade-3 8 AED 19,950
Grade-4 9 AED 19,950
Grade-5 10 AED 22,050
Grade-6 11 AED 22,050
Grade-7 12 AED 24,000
Grade-8 13 AED 24,000
Grade-9 14 AED 26,000
Grade-10 15 AED 26,000
Grade-11 16 AED 27,000
Grade-12 17 AED 27,000

One-time fees

Item Age Fee
Application Fee AED 525


CBSE Indian curriculum, co-ed, in Al Quoz 4 off Sheikh Zayed Road. Founded 2014, around 2,000 pupils across roughly 30 nationalities. KHDA has rated the school Very Good across the last three inspection cycles, having lifted from Acceptable in the early years to Good and then Very Good once Principal Deepika Thapar Singh's tenure bedded in. Parent commentary skews warm and consistent: small-school feel inside a mid-sized roll, named-and-known relationships with teachers, a principal who is reachable, and a wellbeing policy that parents actually notice in day-to-day life. The sharpest external watch-points come from KHDA itself: consistency of teaching in the primary phase and Arabic, particularly speaking, where the school still trails its strongest indicators. Fees sit in the mid range for an Indian school in Dubai.

Positives

  • Leadership and approachability. Principal Deepika Thapar Singh, in post since 2016, comes up repeatedly as the centre of gravity. Parents describe her as reachable on message, and the leadership team is credited for the climb from Acceptable to Very Good across successive KHDA cycles.
  • Pastoral care and wellbeing. The wellbeing policy is one of the most consistent threads in parent feedback. Children are described as happy to be there, one-to-one attention from class teachers is named often, and pastoral provision is rated highly in inspection.
  • Inclusion. Active Students of Determination provision, with more than a hundred pupils on individual plans and a worked-up framework for supporting them. The inclusion offer is unusually developed for an Indian-curriculum school in this fee band.
  • Communication with parents. Direct lines from teachers and leadership, supported by WhatsApp and the school's own platform. Parent surveys reflect this as a strength rather than a friction point.
  • Facilities for the price. A seven-acre campus with swimming pool, athletics track, full sports courts, performing arts spaces and a thousand-seat auditorium. Generous for a mid-fee Indian school.

Considerations

  • Primary teaching consistency. KHDA has flagged inconsistency of teaching in the primary phase across recent inspection cycles. The headline rating sits at Very Good, but the strongest classroom practice is not yet uniform.
  • Arabic, particularly speaking. Arabic, and speaking skills in particular, lag the school's other indicators. A standing watch-point in inspection commentary and a familiar pattern for Indian-curriculum schools in Dubai.
  • Fees in context. Annual fees run roughly AED 16,500 to 28,000, mid-range within the Indian-school segment. Some families still flag the price relative to other CBSE options nearby.

Leadership

Deepika Thapar Singh

Deepika Thapar Singh is the CEO-Principal of Credence High School in Dubai, a position she has held since March 2016. Previously, she served as Principal of The Air Force School in New Delhi from 2007 to 2016.

Accreditations

  • KHDA 01

  • CBSE Grade 10 (2024-25) 100% pass rate, school average 85%, topper 98.6%
  • CBSE Grade 12 (2024-25) 100% pass rate, school average 83%, topper 96.8%.

Near Al Khail Mall, Al Quoz - Dubai - United Arab Emirates

School website