Muscat has a small but solid international school market. The top schools produce results well above regional averages, the city is easy to live in, and you have more genuine choice here than the size of the place might suggest.
The schools
British School Muscat
British School Muscat is the go-to for British curriculum families and has been for decades. It's not-for-profit, sits in Madinat Al Sultan Qaboos, and runs GCSE and A-Level pathways from ages 3 to 18. The 2025 inspection by the British Schools Overseas inspectorate rated it exemplary, which is the top grade and reflects a school that has earned its reputation rather than coasting on it.
Results are strong: 72% of A-Level grades at A*-B in 2025, and 98% of GCSE students achieving Grade 4 or above. Class sizes are manageable and teacher continuity is better than you'd find at many comparable schools in the region. Fees run approximately USD 11,000-USD 27,000/year depending on year group. It's the closest thing Muscat has to a benchmark school.
ABA Oman International School
ABA Oman International School is Muscat's serious IB option. It was the first school in the Oman region to offer all three IB programmes, and it has been running since 1987 with around 940 students from over 65 nationalities. That's a small school in IB terms, and small works well here: class sizes are tight, teachers tend to know students individually, and the pastoral side of the school has a genuine presence.
The school has produced two perfect 45-point IB Diploma scores, which is meaningful for a school of this size. Fees run approximately USD 14,000-USD 26,000/year. For families already in the IB system or targeting universities that value the IB Diploma, ABA is the natural home in Muscat. It's in Al Irfan, which puts it slightly south of the main MSQ cluster but still very accessible.
The American International School of Muscat
The American International School of Muscat is the only K-12 American-curriculum school in Oman, which makes the choice fairly clear if you're on a US company package or your children are already in the American system. It offers AP courses through to Grade 12, is accredited by CIS and NEASC, and draws from over 45 nationalities.
One genuinely distinctive element is the Discover Oman strand, an outdoor and experiential learning programme that uses the country's landscape as a classroom. Whether that lands as a selling point depends on your child. For families who've been posting around the Gulf and want something that feels a bit less like every other American school, it's worth knowing about. Fees are approximately USD 15,000-USD 29,000/year.
Cheltenham Muscat
Cheltenham Muscat is part of the Cheltenham College family and opened relatively recently in Al Bandar. It runs KG1 through Grade 12 on the British curriculum, with IGCSE and A-Level pathways. The 2025 GCSE results showed students achieving double the UK average proportion of Grade 9s, which is a strong result, particularly for a newer school still building its cohorts.
The Al Bandar location puts it further from the MSQ core than BSM or ABA, but that suits families choosing to live in the newer coastal developments. Fees run approximately USD 10,000-USD 21,000/year, making it meaningfully more affordable than British School Muscat at comparable year groups while offering a credible academic track.
Downe House Muscat
Downe House Muscat is Oman's only all-girls British school and another member of the Al Bandar school cluster. It's part of the Downe House UK family and runs from KG1 through Grade 12. The 2025 A-Level results put 100% of students at A or B grades, which is a remarkable figure and reflects a small but academically focused cohort.
For families considering a single-sex secondary education, there is no comparable option in Muscat. Fees run approximately USD 9,000-USD 19,000/year, which is competitive for the inspection-rated pedigree on offer.
A'Soud Global School
A'Soud Global School is a Cambridge-pathway British curriculum school in Al Seeb, running from KG1 through Grade 12 with class sizes capped at 25. The 2024 Cambridge results put students at the top of Oman rankings for both IGCSE and A-Level, which is a strong claim for a school that doesn't have the established name recognition of BSM.
It's worth paying attention to for families living west of the city or for those who find BSM oversubscribed. Fees are approximately USD 8,000-USD 19,000/year, toward the affordable end of the English-medium market. The Kindergarten outdoor learning programme has been featured by Cambridge International, which suggests a school that thinks carefully about its early years provision.
Muscat International School By Amity
Muscat International School By Amity is one of Muscat's longer-established international schools, running since 1989 and now on a new 30,000 sqm campus in Qurum. It's part of the global Amity Education Group and serves over 54 nationalities from Foundation Stage through Sixth Form, with IGCSE and A-Level pathways. The campus opposite the Natural Park is a decent location for families in the Qurum and Shatti Al Qurum areas.
Fees run approximately USD 10,000-USD 19,000/year. Parents generally describe it as a solid, mid-range option with a warm community feel. It doesn't have the inspection headlines of BSM or the IB pedigree of ABA, but it's a functioning, established school at a price point that makes sense for self-funding families.
The Sultan's School
The Sultan's School is worth knowing about even though it operates differently from the other schools on this list. It's a bilingual English-Arabic school in Al Seeb offering IGCSE and the IB Diploma alongside the Omani national curriculum, for students from KG1 through Grade 12. One of the most established schools in Oman, it has a significant Omani student body alongside international families.
If your children are bilingual or near-bilingual in Arabic, or if you want them to genuinely engage with the country you're living in rather than existing inside an international bubble, this is the most interesting school in Muscat. Fees are approximately USD 7,000-USD 15,000/year, making it the most affordable of the serious options.
Al Sahwa Schools
Al Sahwa Schools is an IB World School in Shatti Al Qurum with around 1,100 students from 31 nationalities, operating since 1993 under the Royal Office and Royal Oman Police Pension Funds. It's CIS-accredited and authorised for the full IB continuum, with IGCSE and Thanawiya Amma also available. For families who want IB but find ABA's location or waitlist a difficulty, Al Sahwa is the natural alternative to explore.
Fees run approximately USD 6,000-USD 12,000/year, which makes it the most affordable IB continuum option in the city. The Shatti Al Qurum location is convenient for families living near the coast.
ABQ Azzan Bin Qais International School
ABQ Azzan Bin Qais International School in Bawshar is the top recipient of Cambridge Outstanding Learner Awards in Oman, which is a consistent and verifiable measure of academic performance at IGCSE and A-Level. It was also the first school in Oman to achieve dual CIS and COBIS accreditation, and runs on a 1:1 Chromebook model with around 1,500 students across 42 nationalities.
Fees are approximately USD 6,000-USD 14,000/year, making it one of the more accessible schools in terms of price for a school with genuine accreditation and exam result evidence. The Bawshar location is less central than MSQ, which matters for commute planning.
International School of Oman
International School of Oman in Bosher offers IGCSE and A-Level pathways on the British curriculum from KG1 through Grade 12. Fees start at around USD 6,000/year and top out around USD 11,000/year, making it among the most accessible English-medium schools in the city.
For self-funding families who need to keep costs manageable without giving up a recognisable qualification pathway, ISO is worth including in a shortlist. It's not the most prominent school in Muscat, but it has the facilities and the Cambridge pathway in place.
A note on French and Indian-curriculum schools
Lycée Français International de Mascate near the airport is the only French-curriculum school in Oman, part of the AEFE network, with around 271 students and a 100% baccalaureate pass rate. If your children are in the French system, this is your only option in Muscat, and the small size and international accreditation make it a reasonable one.
Indian School Muscat is the main CBSE option in the city with around 9,000 students, reflecting the size of Oman's Indian community. Fees are well below the English-medium international schools at approximately USD 1,200-USD 1,600/year.
Where people live
Muscat is a linear city stretched along the coast, which means geography and commute time are simpler than in cities with sprawling suburban grids. The main international family areas are in the north, which is also where most of the established schools are.
Madinat Al Sultan Qaboos and Al Khuwair
MSQ is the centre of gravity for international families and has been for years. Villas, embassies, international hotels, and most of the established international schools are within easy reach. It's the first place corporate relocation packages tend to point. Rents are higher here than elsewhere in Muscat, with a three-to-four bedroom villa typically in the OMR 700-OMR 1,200/month range, but the convenience is real.
Shatti Al Qurum and Qurum
Running west from MSQ along the coast, Shatti and Qurum are popular with families who want to be near the sea and closer to the commercial areas of Al Khuwair. Good access to Al Sahwa, MIS By Amity, and a reasonable commute to BSM. Rents are broadly similar to MSQ with slightly more variety in apartment versus villa options.
Al Bandar and the coastal south
Al Bandar is a newer residential development south of the airport that has attracted families partly because of the Cheltenham Muscat and Downe House campuses opening there. It's pleasant and quiet, with a marina and community facilities, but it's a longer drive to MSQ than most families anticipate. Worth considering seriously if you're working in the airport or industrial south, or if one of those two schools is your primary choice.
Al Seeb
West of the city, Al Seeb is more local in character and less obviously international, but A'Soud Global School is here, and The Sultan's School is within reach. Rents are lower. For families who prefer living outside the international bubble or who are at those schools, it works well, but you'll need to be comfortable with a longer drive to the MSQ concentration of international facilities.