The Guide
Mon, 15 June 2026

Cities / Jakarta / Mutiara Harapan Islamic School

Mutiara Harapan Islamic School

MHIS follows the Cambridge curriculum from Primary through A Levels while integrating Islamic values and teachings throughout the educational program. The school uses Project Based Learning methodology and offers Cambridge Checkpoint assessments, positioning itself as an international standard Islamic institution.

Mutiara Harapan Islamic School campus
Mutiara Harapan Islamic School, Greater Jakarta. Photograph · School

Curriculum
A-Levels
Fees, annual
IDR 7.3m–57m
Ages
3 to 18
Pupils
Est. 150
Founded
2005

MHIS follows the Cambridge curriculum from Primary through A-Levels while integrating Islamic values and teachings throughout the educational program. The school uses Project Based Learning methodology and offers Cambridge Checkpoint assessments, positioning itself as an international standard Islamic institution. Located in South Tangerang rather than central Jakarta, it serves families seeking Islamic education within an international framework, though specific fee information remains private.

The school maintains modern facilities including science laboratories, libraries, a mosque, and sports amenities on its campus. Parent testimonials highlight student confidence building and satisfaction with Islamic character development alongside academic achievement. MHIS has developed a dedicated mobile app for parent communication and school updates, suggesting active family engagement, though teacher reviews on employment platforms indicate mixed experiences regarding work-life balance and career development opportunities.

Strengths

  • Strong parent satisfaction rating of 3.9 out of 4
  • Cambridge curriculum with international standards
  • Islamic values integration with modern education
  • Project Based Learning methodology
  • Dedicated parent communication app
  • Modern facilities including mosque and laboratories
  • Established since 2005 with growing student body

Considerations

  • Located in South Tangerang rather than central Jakarta
  • Limited public information compared to established international schools
  • Mixed teacher reviews regarding work conditions
  • Fees not publicly disclosed
  • Lower profile in Jakarta's competitive international education market
  • Primarily serves Muslim families seeking Islamic education

Annual fees

Year level Age Fee
Preschool (TK) Annual Fee 4 IDR 7,260,000
Preschool (TK) SPP 4 IDR 47,400,000
Primary (SD) Annual Fee 6 IDR 10,395,000
Primary (SD) SPP 6 IDR 54,000,000
Secondary (SMP) Annual Fee 12 IDR 11,088,000
Secondary (SMP) SPP 12 IDR 57,000,000

One-time fees

Item Age Fee
Registration Fee TK IDR 500,000
Registration Fee SD/SMP IDR 600,000
Books and Learning Resources (TK estimate) IDR 1,500,000
Seat Reservation (all levels) IDR 7,500,000
Development Fee / Uang Pangkal TK IDR 36,700,000
Development Fee / Uang Pangkal SMP IDR 43,335,000
Development Fee / Uang Pangkal SD IDR 59,000,000


  • The clearest parent voice online is a long Indonesian blog review describing the campus as comfortable, classrooms well-maintained and the atmosphere relaxed compared with more academically aggressive Cambridge schools.
  • Parents value the SPK Cambridge plus Indonesian national curriculum mix and the moderate approach to Islamic education. Quran memorisation, Dhuha prayer and hijab are encouraged but not compulsory, which suits families who want faith integration without strict enforcement.
  • One long-tenure parent said their children, after about a decade at the school, never complained about academics or non-academics and described it as a second home.
  • Cost comes up as a positive: fees sit below comparable Cambridge schools such as Mentari Bintaro and Binus Serpong.
  • The recurring caveat is academic rigour. Parents who want hothousing say MHIS is the wrong school. Parents who want a calmer environment say that's the point.

Positives

  • Faith integration. Islamic practice is built into the day but not enforced; parents see this as a balanced rather than strict Islamic offering.
  • Campus and facilities. Open green spaces, clean classrooms and ample parking come up across reviews.
  • Fees. Cheaper than Mentari Bintaro and Binus Serpong for a comparable Cambridge SPK offer.

Considerations

  • Academic intensity. Parents describe the school as relaxed; a fit for families who don't want Cambridge pressure but a poor fit for those who do.

Leadership

Beth Calsas

Beth Calsas is an experienced education leader with over 30 years in teaching and administration, including roles as Executive Principal and Primary Principal at Sekolah Bina Persada. She holds qualifications from Philippine Normal University in Geology/Earth Science teaching and West Visayas State University in Education.

Accreditations

  • ID_KEMENDIKBUD 01

Jl. Pd. Kacang No.2, Pd. Kacang Tim., Kec. Pd. Aren, Kota Tangerang Selatan, Banten 15227, Indonesia

School website