Ofsted

What Happens During an Ofsted Inspection? A Behind-the-Scenes Guide

Ofsted inspections affect every school in England, but most parents have little idea what actually happens. Here's a detailed look at the inspection process and what it means for your child's school.

CH
Charlotte Hughes
Former Deputy Head Teacher
28 January 2026
8 min read

Types of Inspection

Under the new framework, there are several types of inspection:

Graded inspections

These are the most comprehensive and result in a detailed report card. They typically last two days and involve a team of inspectors. All schools receive a graded inspection at some point in their inspection cycle.

Ungraded inspections

Shorter inspections (usually one day) that check whether the school continues to provide a good standard of education. Formerly called "Section 8" inspections, these can be converted to a full graded inspection if inspectors identify concerns.

Urgent inspections

Triggered by serious concerns — safeguarding issues, a significant decline in standards, or complaints.

Before the Inspection

Notification

Schools typically receive one working day's notice of routine inspections. The lead inspector calls the head teacher, usually on Tuesday afternoon for a Wednesday-Thursday inspection.

During this call, the inspector will:

What the school does

Between the call and the inspection:

You may receive a link to the Ofsted Parent View survey — do complete it, as inspectors read every response.

During the Inspection

Day 1

Day 2

What inspectors actually look at:

In classrooms:

In books and work:

Talking to pupils:

Talking to staff:

After the Inspection

The draft report

The school receives a draft report within 18 working days. The head teacher can check for factual accuracy but cannot challenge the inspectors' professional judgements.

The published report

The final report is published on the Ofsted website within 30 working days of the inspection. Under the new system, this takes the form of a detailed report card rather than a single headline grade.

What happens next

How Parents Can Contribute

Useful Resources


Ofsted inspections can feel like a big deal — because they are. But they're designed to ensure every child receives a good education. As a parent, your voice is part of that process. Use it.

Ofsted inspection school quality graded inspection ungraded

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