Baraem Al Ain Private School sits firmly at the affordable end of Abu Dhabi's private school fee spectrum. With tuition fees ranging from AED 12,900 for KG1 to AED 27,200 at the upper end (as per ADEK TAMM official fee data for 2025-26), this is one of the most competitively priced MoE-curriculum private schools in the Bani Yas and Muwaylih schools area. For context, the ADEK-published fee range is AED 8,867 to AED 27,200 - the lower bound likely reflecting a minimum registration or administrative fee.
It is important to note that the ADEK TAMM fee data for 2025-26 shows tuition fees only for KG1, KG2, and Grade 1 explicitly (AED 12,900, AED 13,500, and AED 13,800 respectively). Tuition fees for Grades 2 through 12 are not itemised in the available TAMM data, though the published fee ceiling of AED 27,200 indicates that upper-school fees reach this level. Parents should confirm the exact per-grade tuition fee directly with the school's admissions office before enrolment.
Additional costs are clearly structured: school bus transport is AED 3,686 per year across all grades, and book fees range from AED 210 (KG1) to AED 950 (Grades 7-8). Uniform costs are standardised at AED 385 across all year groups. There are no exam fees in the traditional sense, as the school follows the MoE national curriculum rather than external examination boards.
On a value-for-money basis, Baraem Al Ain is a compelling proposition for families prioritising MoE curriculum education at an accessible price. The school's Very Good ADEK rating - with Outstanding features in the upper school - means parents are not simply buying affordability; they are accessing genuinely high-quality education, particularly for secondary-age students. Compared to British or American curriculum schools in Abu Dhabi where fees routinely exceed AED 50,000-80,000 per year, the value differential is substantial. The caveat is that the inclusion provision gap and curriculum design limitations are real, and families with children who need additional support may find that the lower fees come with a meaningful trade-off in specialist provision.