The Guide
Mon, 15 June 2026

Cities / Dubai / The Sheffield Private School Dubai (TSPS)

The Sheffield Private School Dubai (TSPS)

British-curriculum school in Al Nahda 2, founded 2004, with around 1,200 pupils from Foundation Stage through A Levels.

The Sheffield Private School Dubai (TSPS) campus
The Sheffield Private School Dubai (TSPS), Al Nahda. Photograph · School

Curriculum
A-Levels
Fees, annual
AED 24k–45k
Ages
3 to 18
Pupils
~1,200
Founded
2004

Located in Al Nahda 2 near Zulekha Hospital, The Sheffield Private School follows the British National Curriculum and appears to have been operating for several years based on scattered mentions across expat forums. The school reportedly recruits teaching staff primarily from the UK, suggesting alignment with British educational standards and teaching methods. However, unlike other international schools in Dubai that generate extensive parent discussion and comparison, this institution maintains virtually no visibility in education forums or review platforms.

The limited available discussion includes brief mentions of the school functioning within Dubai's British curriculum market, with one forum post describing it as 'a very good school' that may occasionally lack resources but has 'dedicated and well-trained staff.' However, other comments raise concerns about school structure and facilities. The school's positioning appears to serve families seeking British education in the Al Nahda area, though its complete absence from major school comparison discussions and parent review platforms suggests it operates with minimal market visibility compared to Dubai's established British institutions.

Strengths

  • Reportedly employs dedicated UK-trained teaching staff
  • Follows established British National Curriculum
  • Located in family-friendly Al Nahda community
  • Some forum mentions describe it as 'very good school'

Considerations

  • Virtually no parent discussions or reviews available online
  • Minimal visibility in Dubai education forums compared to other schools
  • Limited information about facilities, academic outcomes, or school culture
  • Some concerns raised about resources and school structure
  • Difficult to assess quality without substantial community feedback

Annual fees

Year level Age Fee
FS1 3 AED 23,631
FS2 4 AED 23,631
Year 1 5 AED 28,059
Year 2 6 AED 28,059
Year 3 7 AED 28,059
Year 4 8 AED 28,059
Year 5 9 AED 28,059
Year 6 10 AED 28,059
Year 7 11 AED 33,231
Year 8 12 AED 33,231
Year 9 13 AED 33,231
Year 10 14 AED 36,921
Year 11 15 AED 36,921
Year 12 16 AED 44,563
Year 13 17 AED 44,563

One-time fees

Item Age Fee
Application Fee AED 500


A rising British school in Al Nahda 2 that has steadily climbed under Roger Hancock since 2020, holding Good with Very Good features at KHDA and an Outstanding from the first BSO inspection in February 2025. Families talk about a warm, settled community and one of the broader IGCSE and A Level subject ranges available at this fee level. Arabic and Islamic Education remain the standing development points, and the buildings, while well kept, are in the middle of a phased refresh rather than a rebuild.

Positives

  • Academic breadth and value. Annual fees run roughly AED 23,000 to 44,000, which buys an unusually wide IGCSE and A Level subject menu for the price, including humanities and arts options many similarly priced schools drop. A Level results in 2024 were 32% A*-A and 100% pass, with IGCSE at 51% A*-A. The value-for-money read among parents sits well above the Dubai norm.
  • Leadership and direction. Roger Hancock arrived in 2020 from Dubai English Speaking College and is described as visible around the building and present with parents. Inspectors credit senior leaders with a clear school-improvement agenda, and the upward KHDA trajectory and the recent Outstanding BSO rating both track that.
  • Pastoral and community feel. The school reads as friendly and family-like, with a mixed nationality intake and a wellbeing provision rated Very Good. Parents talk about children who want to be there, low rates of considering a move, and easy access to staff.
  • Inclusion provision. Inclusion support is not charged on top of fees, with three dedicated rooms, qualified specialists, and individual plans for the 66 students on the SEN register. For an affordable British school in Dubai this is a notable structural commitment.

Considerations

  • Arabic and Islamic Education. Attainment in Arabic and Islamic Education sits below the rest of the school and has been flagged for improvement across recent inspections. For Arabic-first families this is the standing question mark.
  • Facilities. The site has science and ICT labs, two pools, an auditorium, AstroTurf, and a covered netball court, but inspectors and visitors describe the buildings as attractive yet slightly tired. A multi-year refurbishment is underway rather than complete.
  • Teaching consistency. The picture is generally positive, with parents praising kind and cooperative teachers, but some report unevenness lesson to lesson. Primary Maths and Secondary English slipped from Very Good to Good in the most recent KHDA cycle.

Leadership

Roger Hancock

Roger Hancock is the Principal of The Sheffield Private School Dubai, with over 30 years of experience in education. He previously served as Assistant Headteacher at Dubai English Speaking College before joining TSPS in May 2021.

Accreditations

  • Council of International Schools 01
  • British Schools Overseas (DfE) 02
  • British Schools in the Middle East accreditation 03

  • Result A-Level 100% pass rate, 69% A*-B, 91% A*-C 2025
  • Result IGCSE 47% A*, 69% A*-A, 84% A*-B, 96% A*-C 2025

Al Nahda 2, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

School website