Which Year Groups Are Hardest to Enter at Jakarta International Schools?
Not every year group is equally competitive. Nursery, Year 1 and Year 7 are the three entry points where demand consistently exceeds supply.

Originally published: 25 February 2026 · 5 min read
TL;DR
- Nursery / Early Years (ages 2-4) is the most competitive entry point across JIS, BSJ, ISJ and AIS - this is where most families first enter the system
- Year 1 (age 5) is the second bottleneck: families who did not start at nursery try to enter here, and class sizes are set
- Year 7 (age 11) is the secondary entry point - particularly competitive at BSJ, where families target the IGCSE pathway
- Upper years (Year 10+) are the easiest to enter because families leaving Jakarta create regular openings
- The mid-tier schools (NAS, ACG, NJIS) are rarely oversubscribed at any entry point
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Jakarta Intercultural School
- Curriculum
- IB Primary Years / IB Middle Years
- Fees
- US$17K – US$36K
- IB
- IB Average: 35.8
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British School Jakarta
- Curriculum
- English National Curriculum / IB MYP
- Fees
- US$18K – US$32K
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ACG School Jakarta
- Curriculum
- IB PYP / Cambridge Lower Secondary
- Fees
- US$14K – US$24K
- IB
- IB Average: 35 (2022)
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The Independent School of Jakarta
- Curriculum
- English National Curriculum
- Fees
- US$10K – US$32K
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Australian Independent School Jakarta
- Curriculum
- Australian Curriculum / IB Diploma
- Fees
- US$12K – US$22K
- IB
- IB Average: 33.5
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Three entry points consistently see more applicants than places across Jakarta's premium schools.
Nursery / Early Years (ages 2-4)
This is the primary entry point for the international school system in Jakarta. Families who intend to stay for a full school career - Nursery through to Year 13 or Grade 12 - enter here. The demand is highest because:
- It is the first opportunity to secure a place at a premium school
- Once a child is enrolled, they are almost always guaranteed progression through the school
- Families who miss the nursery intake face a harder path later
At JIS, Early Years 1 (age 3) is the key entry point. At BSJ, it is Kukangs/K1 (ages 2-3). At ISJ, Pre-Nursery (age 2) and Nursery (age 3) are both competitive - ISJ's deliberately smaller year groups mean fewer places. At AIS, Preschool 3 (age 3) is the starting point.
Year 1 (age 5-6)
Year 1 is the second bottleneck. This is where families who did not enter at nursery try to join. It is also a common entry point for families relocating to Jakarta with a child who has already completed a year of school elsewhere.
The maths is simple: class sizes are set. Children who entered at nursery take up most of the places. The remaining spots go to new entrants, and there are fewer of them than there are applicants.
At BSJ, Year 1 fees jump significantly - from $11,713 at K2 to $24,083 at Year 1 - which can create a small amount of natural attrition. But the places that open are filled quickly.
Year 7 (age 11-12)
Year 7 is the secondary entry point. Families who were at a different school for primary - or who have arrived in Jakarta with older children - target Year 7. At BSJ, this year group sees particular pressure because families specifically choose BSJ for its IGCSE pathway and want their child to start at the beginning of Key Stage 3.
JIS has more capacity at middle school (Grades 6-8) than BSJ at Year 7, but specific year groups within the middle school can still be tight. ISJ currently runs to Year 8 and does not yet offer secondary - but when its secondary campus opens in September 2028, Year 7 will become a competitive entry point there too.
School by School
| School | Hardest Entry Points | Typical Wait | Easier Entry Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| JIS | EY1 (age 3), Kindergarten (age 5) | 6-12 months | Upper elementary, middle school |
| BSJ | K1 (age 3), Year 1, Year 7 | 6-12 months | Upper primary (Y4-6), Sixth Form (limited) |
| ISJ | Pre-Nursery (age 2), Nursery (age 3) | Variable - smaller year groups | Years 4-8 (when space exists) |
| AIS | Preschool 3 (age 3) | 3-6 months | Upper primary, secondary |
| NAS | Rarely oversubscribed | Minimal | All year groups |
| ACG | Rarely oversubscribed | Minimal | All year groups |
| NJIS | Rarely oversubscribed | Minimal | All year groups |
The pattern is clear: premium schools have pressure points. Mid-tier schools do not. If your timeline is tight and you need a confirmed place, the mid-tier schools offer certainty.
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FAQs
Is Year 12 / Sixth Form entry difficult?
It depends on the school. BSJ has limited places in its IB Diploma programme and entry is competitive - students need strong IGCSE results (or equivalent). JIS is more flexible because of its larger year groups. Entry at this level requires a strong academic record regardless of school.
Are Indonesian nationals treated differently in admissions?
At SPK schools (all Jakarta international schools holding SPK status), Indonesian nationals can enrol. JIS, BSJ and ISJ all have significant Indonesian cohorts. Admissions criteria are the same - but some schools manage nationality ratios to maintain diversity, which can mean different wait times for different passport holders.
Do siblings always get priority?
Almost always. Every premium school in Jakarta gives siblings some degree of priority. But sibling priority does not guarantee a place in oversubscribed year groups - it moves you up the list, not to the front of it.
What if I only need a school for one or two years?
This happens frequently in Jakarta. Corporate postings of 2-3 years are common. Schools are used to short-tenure families and will not hold it against you in admissions. Apply normally. If you are entering at a less competitive year group (upper primary, secondary), the process is often quicker.
Can my child start mid-year if we miss the intake?
Yes - most schools accept mid-year entry if they have space. See our [guide to mid-year transfers](/insights/mid-year-transfer-international-school-jakarta) for the process and timing.
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About the author
Mia Windsor is the Managing Editor of The International Schools Guide. She covers school fees, admissions, curriculum and relocation in Jakarta.