Usually, the phone calls begin before the bump appears. A more subdued and strategic discussion about lists, deposits, and which side of the river has openings in two years starts around the 12-week scan, frequently before the parents have informed their own mothers. It sounds ridiculous until you hear it happening at the next table in a Tuesday morning café in Chelsea.
Over the past few years, the market for upscale bilingual nurseries in London has evolved from a specialized concern of foreign bankers to something much bigger and somewhat different. Walking past the South Kensington converted townhouses with their hand-painted French signage gives the impression that the city has quietly established a parallel childcare economy, where a spot at the right nursery is viewed more as an asset than a service. You can learn everything from the waiting lists. Some span two years. Others only accept names through referrals and are completely closed.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Sector | Early-years bilingual childcare (ages 3 months–5 years) |
| Primary market | Central and West London — Kensington, Chelsea, Clapham, Hammersmith |
| Dominant second language | French, with Mandarin and Spanish growing fast |
| Typical annual fees | £22,000–£36,000 per child, full-time |
| Average waiting list length | 12–24 months; some sites closed to new entries |
| Notable operator example | Raphael Nursery, founded 2017, three sites planned |
| Regulator | Ofsted |
| Government funding scheme | 15–30 funded hours, expanded September 2024 |
| Reported shortage | Only 29% of UK councils have enough places for under-twos (Coram Family and Childcare report) |
| Staff-to-child ratio (under 2s) | 1:3 |
| Typical staff count per 80-child site | 30–35 |
| Operating hours | Generally 8am–6pm, Monday–Friday |
The math is harsh. Nowadays, full-time fees at the top end comfortably exceed £30,000 annually, which is more than the post-tax income of many parents attempting to find housing. Nevertheless, demand continues to rise. Less than one in three British councils have enough nursery spaces for children under two, according to Coram’s most recent report. This is a significant decrease from the previous year, and London, predictably, is most affected. The premium tier rises when the supply collapses.
A helpful case study of how this is happening on the ground is Raphael Nursery. The family-run business was established in 2017 by Caroline-Laure and Guilhem in remembrance of their late son. It currently operates in two immersive French-English locations, Clapham and Hammersmith, both of which have waiting lists.

Their most recent proposal, which was submitted to the Fulham and Hammersmith Councils, is to renovate a vacant former chapel in West Kensington that was previously home to the Grenadian Consulate. Eighty kids. 35 employees. To manage the school-run choreography, drop-offs were spaced out throughout the morning. With the exception of the end users being three years old, this type of property play wouldn’t seem out of place in a commercial real estate brief.
It’s more difficult to determine whether the bilingual component is actually about language learning or if it has evolved into something more akin to a social marker. Most likely both. Over the years, parents I’ve spoken to have mentioned cognitive research, aspirations for a second passport, and grandparents in Lyon. However, it also subtly conveys the prestige of raising a child in a specific type of home. It’s difficult to ignore how frequently the brochures emphasize “environment” and “immersion” over, say, results.
The goal of the increased government childcare program was to relieve pressure. Rather, it appears to have had the opposite effect in the premium segment, drawing more middle-class families into an already competitive market. It’s still unclear if London’s bilingual nursery boom is sustainable or if it’s just the early stages of a dungaree-clad real estate bubble. The lists continue to expand for the time being. Additionally, a chapel is being measured for cots somewhere in West Kensington.
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