If you've Googled "when do KS2 SATs results come out 2026", here's the short answer: Tuesday 7 July 2026. That's the date the Standards and Testing Agency publishes results to schools.
Most parents stop reading at that line. The longer answer is more useful — because there are two other dates around it that matter, and one of them schools don't usually announce.
The official date
The STA assessment timetable confirms Tuesday 7 July 2026 as the day school-level KS2 results are released. From that morning, schools can access results in their secure portal and start preparing the individual reports parents will eventually see.
Important note: that's not the day you'll get the results. It's the day the school gets them.
When parents actually get them
This is where the variation kicks in. Different schools release results to parents on different days. The norm is between Tuesday 7 July and Friday 11 July — but some schools wait until the end of term to send them home, and a small number include them in the end-of-year report a couple of weeks later.
You should expect, at minimum:
- A scaled score for each subject — reading, maths, GPS
- A spelling score — out of 20, from the spelling part of the GPS paper
- Whether your child reached the expected standard (a scaled score of 100 or above) in each subject
- Whether your child reached the higher standard (a scaled score around 110+ depending on the subject)
You won't typically receive: raw marks, the marked papers, or a breakdown by topic. More on how scaled scores work here.
The date schools don't usually mention
The third date — the one most parents never hear about — is the date your child's secondary school receives the results.
Secondary schools receive incoming Year 7s' SATs scores from the National Pupil Database in late June, usually about ten days before primary school publication. That means the school your child starts in September often already knows their SATs scores by the time you do.
How to read the results when they arrive
Three rules that save a lot of anguish:
1. The scaled score is not a percentage. A scaled score of 100 doesn't mean 100%. It means "exactly on the expected standard". The scoring is statistical, not absolute. A full guide on reading scaled scores here.
2. The expected standard is "100 or above", not "100 exactly". Anything from 100 to about 120 is at or above the expected standard. The higher standard usually kicks in around 110 — but this changes year to year because the scaling is recalibrated annually.
3. A score below 100 isn't a verdict. 38% of children don't meet the expected standard in the combined measure in any given year. That's roughly a quarter of a million children. National averages here. It's a starting position for Year 7, not a fixed label.
What to do on the day the results arrive
Whatever the result, the protocol is the same:
- Read the results privately first. Don't open the envelope in front of your child. Take a moment to absorb the numbers before you share them
- Decide your tone before you say anything. Whatever the numbers, the first thing you say lands hardest. "Look at this, you should be proud" beats "Hmm, let me see"
- Share the score with your child calmly. Don't compare to the friend down the road. Don't email the family WhatsApp group
- Don't make plans based on the result for at least 24 hours. The instinct to immediately "do something" about a low score, or "celebrate big" about a high one, both produce regret
The right response to a SATs score is the same response you'd want for your child: warm, proportionate, calm. The score is a number. Your child is a child. The two are not the same.
What the results don't tell you
- Whether your child is ready for secondary school. They are. They're 11. They will be ready
- What "set" they'll be in. That's decided by the secondary school using a basket of indicators — not just SATs
- What their GCSEs will look like. Strong KS2 correlates with GCSE outcomes, but it doesn't determine them. The chain is real but not deterministic
- How hard they tried, how much they grew, or who they're becoming. Those things aren't on the score sheet
One date for the diary
Mark Tuesday 7 July 2026 in your calendar. The schools get them then. You'll get them in the days after. Stay calm. Don't refresh the inbox. They'll arrive when the school is ready to release them.
SATs results 2026: published 7 July, released to parents in the following days, already with the secondary school by late June. The right preparation for the day is a calm tone, a private first read, and a 24-hour pause before any plans. Full guide to reading the results here.
Sources: STA, "Key stage 2 assessment timetable" (2025–26); DfE, National Pupil Database documentation; DfE, Secondary School Use of KS2 Data (2025)
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