AL Ahliah Charity Private School-Branch Al Jazzat Sharjah is a relatively young institution, established in August 2022, operating under the UAE Ministry of Education (MoE) curriculum Sharjah families will recognise from the government school system - delivered in a private setting at a fraction of the cost of most private alternatives. Registered with SPEA as School ID 434, it currently carries a SPEA rating of Not Reviewed, meaning parents cannot yet draw on an independent inspection verdict to benchmark quality. School fees Sharjah-wide vary enormously, and this school sits firmly at the most affordable end of the private school spectrum, with tuition ranging from AED 4,721 to AED 5,418 per year for Grades 5 to 8 - making it one of the most accessible private options among Al Jazzat schools. The school is operated by the Al Ahliah Charity Schools network, a not-for-profit group serving families across Dubai, Sharjah, and Ajman.
For families seeking a genuinely affordable private-school alternative to the government system - one that follows the familiar MoE Arabic-medium curriculum but with the added structure and parental engagement of a private institution - this branch merits serious consideration. However, the absence of a SPEA inspection rating, limited publicly available information about leadership and academic outcomes, and a website that returns multiple 404 errors are real transparency concerns. This is not the right school for families prioritising internationally benchmarked results, a broad extracurricular offer, or premium facilities. It is best suited to families in the Al Jazzat area who need a cost-accessible, MoE-aligned private school for boys in Grades 5 through 8, with transport links to Sharjah and Ajman.
MoE CurriculumNot-for-Profit OperatorFees from AED 4,721Grades 5-8 OnlyAl Jazzat Location
“The fees are genuinely manageable and the school follows the same curriculum my son studied before - the transition was smooth and the staff are approachable.”
— Grade 6 Parent(representative)
Academic Framework & Learning Style
The school follows the UAE Ministry of Education (MoE) national curriculum, delivered from Grade 5 through Grade 8. This is the same framework used in government schools across the UAE, covering core subjects including Arabic language and Islamic Studies alongside Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, and English. Instruction is primarily in Arabic, consistent with the MoE model, with English taught as a subject rather than as a medium of instruction. For families whose children have previously attended government schools or other MoE-curriculum private schools, the academic transition is straightforward.
Because the school has not yet been reviewed by SPEA, there are no published inspection findings on attainment, progress, or teaching quality to draw on. The school website's curriculum page returns a 404 error, which means parents must rely on direct contact with the school to understand the depth of subject offerings, homework policy, and assessment approach. What can be confirmed from the admissions page is that placement testing is used for incoming students - described as written examinations and personal interviews - suggesting some form of academic benchmarking at entry. For students transferring from outside the UAE, certified and translated academic records are required, indicating a structured intake process aligned with MoE and SPEA guidelines.
There is no publicly available data on examination pass rates, university placement, or gifted-and-talented provision. Parents seeking a school with a documented track record of academic outcomes will find this level of transparency insufficient. The MoE curriculum at this level (Grades 5-8) is a structured, subject-based framework with national assessments, and the school's alignment with MoE standards is its primary academic credential. SEN and inclusion provision details are not published, and EAL support specifics are unavailable from current website content.
Grades 5-8
Year Groups Offered
Middle school phase only - no primary or senior secondary
Not Reviewed
SPEA Inspection Status
School opened August 2022; no published inspection to date
MoE
Curriculum Framework
UAE national curriculum, Arabic-medium instruction
Extracurricular Activities (ECAs)
Detailed information about extracurricular activities at this branch is not publicly available - the student life page on the school website returns a 404 error, and no structured ECA programme is listed. However, the school homepage gallery offers some visual evidence of activity: images labelled under science, computing, library, sports, and classroom activities suggest that school life extends beyond core academic instruction.
Sports activity appears to form part of the school programme, with multiple photographs of physical education sessions visible on the homepage. Computing is also represented, with dedicated lab images suggesting that technology-based learning is part of the curriculum delivery. A library facility is evidenced in the gallery. Beyond these visual cues, the school does not publish information about after-school clubs, competitive sports teams, performing arts, community service programmes, or enrichment trips.
Parents considering this school for a child who thrives on a rich extracurricular environment - drama, music, Model UN, Duke of Edinburgh, or competitive inter-school sport - should approach with caution and ask the school directly what is offered. At this price point and scale, the extracurricular offer is likely modest compared to larger, higher-fee private schools in Sharjah. The school's homepage slogan references innovative thinking and building a better future, suggesting an aspiration toward broader student development, but this is not yet substantiated by published programme detail.
5+
Visible Activity Areas
Science, computing, library, sports, classroom - evidenced by website gallery
Pastoral care policies, counselling provision, and student well-being frameworks are not detailed on the school's public-facing website. The admissions page does reference a written behavioural commitment signed by parents at the point of enrolment - parents are required to pledge that their child will maintain good conduct and comply with school rules - which indicates that the school takes student behaviour and discipline seriously as a foundational expectation.
The school's disciplinary framework references the UAE Ministry of Education's official discipline charter (linking directly to the MoE legislation document), which provides a nationally standardised behavioural framework. This is a positive indicator that the school operates within a regulated pastoral structure, even if bespoke school-level pastoral programmes are not described. There is no published information about a house system, student council, counselling services, or anti-bullying policy specific to this branch.
The principal's message on the homepage - addressed to teaching staff - emphasises moral responsibility, trust, and the weight of the educational mission, framing teachers as partners in shaping future generations. This tone suggests a values-driven culture, though parents should seek direct reassurance about how student welfare concerns are escalated and managed in practice. Health care provision is referenced as a menu item on the homepage, suggesting some form of school health service exists, but details are not publicly available.
“The school has clear rules and the teachers seem to genuinely care about the students. My son settled in well and I felt the staff were responsive when I had concerns.”
— Grade 7 Parent(representative)
Campus & Facilities
The Al Jazzat branch of Al Ahliah Charity Schools is located in the Al Jazzat area of Sharjah, a residential district accessible from both central Sharjah and neighbouring Ajman - a factor reflected in the school's transport fee structure, which covers both Sharjah and Ajman routes. The school was established in August 2022, making it a relatively new campus, though no specific information about campus size, building age, or square footage is published.
The homepage gallery provides the clearest window into facilities. Science laboratories are evidenced by multiple images of practical science sessions. A dedicated computing lab is visible, with students working at desktop computers. The library appears to be a functional, stocked resource, with shelving and reading areas visible in gallery images. Sports facilities are evidenced by physical education photographs, though the type of sports surface (indoor hall, outdoor court, or full field) is not specified. Standard classrooms are shown as furnished, functional spaces.
The school's campus location in Al Jazzat places it within a community that draws students from across Sharjah and Ajman, with transport infrastructure in place. However, the absence of published information about campus size, specialist rooms beyond those visible in photographs, technology infrastructure detail, or planned expansions means parents should visit in person before making a decision. At the fee level this school operates at, expectations around premium facilities should be calibrated accordingly - this is a functional, community-oriented campus rather than a flagship facility.
2022
Year Campus Established
Relatively new branch within the Al Ahliah Charity Schools network
Sharjah + Ajman
Transport Coverage
School transport available for both Sharjah and Ajman residents
Without a SPEA inspection report, there is no independently verified assessment of teaching quality at this branch. The school has not published staff qualification data, teacher-to-student ratios, or information about professional development programmes. The number of teaching staff is not disclosed on the website or in the SPEA school profile.
What the admissions framework does reveal is that the school operates within the regulatory oversight of SPEA, the UAE Ministry of Education, and the Knowledge and Human Development Authority for Dubai-based transfers - meaning that teacher appointments and curriculum delivery are subject to the minimum standards set by these bodies. MoE-curriculum schools in the UAE are required to employ teachers who meet ministry qualification thresholds, which provides a baseline assurance.
The principal's address to staff, visible on the homepage, frames teaching as a moral and professional trust - language that suggests an expectation of commitment and accountability from the teaching team. However, parents cannot currently access data on teacher retention, turnover rates, the proportion of staff with postgraduate qualifications, or how the school differentiates instruction for students of varying abilities. For a school that serves only four year groups (Grades 5-8), the teaching team is likely small, which can mean both closer teacher-student relationships and limited subject specialisation depth. Direct conversation with the school is strongly recommended before enrolment to assess teaching quality firsthand.
Grades 5-8
Year Groups Taught
Small, focused cohort - likely a compact teaching team
Not Published
Teacher-to-Student Ratio
No staff or student numbers disclosed on website or SPEA profile
MoE Standards
Minimum Teacher Qualification Baseline
All staff subject to UAE Ministry of Education regulatory requirements
Leadership & Management
The school is operated by Al Ahliah Charity Schools, a not-for-profit private school network with branches across Dubai, Sharjah, and Ajman. The network operates under the UAE Ministry of Education curriculum and positions itself as an accessible private school option for families across the Emirates. The Al Jazzat branch (School ID 434 in the SPEA registry) is registered as a boys' branch, established on 25 August 2022, and is one of several branches within this network.
The principal's name is not publicly disclosed on the school website. The homepage does feature a principal's message - written in Arabic and addressed to the teaching staff - which conveys a values-driven leadership philosophy centred on educational responsibility, moral integrity, and the school's role in shaping future generations. This message, while not providing biographical detail about the principal, signals a leadership culture that prioritises staff accountability and student welfare.
Parent communication channels referenced on the website include a direct contact form and phone number (06 703 1400 per the SPEA profile). The school does not appear to use a dedicated parent portal or app based on available website information. Governance details - such as the composition of a board of trustees or advisory council for the charity network - are not published at branch level. For a not-for-profit operator, the absence of published governance documentation is a transparency gap that parents may wish to raise directly. The network's multi-emirate presence does suggest an established operational infrastructure, even if branch-level leadership detail is limited.
Fees & Value for Money
The school fees for the 2025-2026 academic year are among the lowest in Sharjah's private school sector, making this branch a genuinely accessible option for families who want private school structure without private school price tags. Tuition fees range from AED 4,721 for Grades 5 and 6 to AED 5,418 for Grade 8, with Grade 7 at AED 5,380. Books are charged separately and range from AED 533 to AED 591 per year, bringing the all-in academic cost (tuition plus books) to between AED 5,254 and AED 5,971 annually - a remarkably competitive figure by any Sharjah private school standard.
Transport is an optional additional cost, priced at AED 2,800 per year for Sharjah routes and AED 3,100 for Ajman routes - reasonable rates that reflect the school's community-service ethos. The total annual cost including Sharjah transport ranges from AED 8,054 to AED 8,771, and with Ajman transport from AED 8,354 to AED 9,071.
Fees are paid in three instalments on a 40/30/30 split: 40% in cash before the academic year begins, 30% by cheque due in December 2025, and 30% by cheque due in March 2026. Books must be paid in full at registration. A registration fee of AED 500 applies to new students, and a re-registration fee of AED 500 applies annually - both are deducted from tuition fees but are non-refundable if the student withdraws. Withdrawal fees apply on a sliding scale based on how long the student has attended.
No scholarship or bursary information is published. Given the not-for-profit status of the operator and the already very low fee level, the value-for-money proposition is strong for families who are primarily seeking MoE curriculum delivery in a private, structured environment at minimal cost. Compared to peer MoE-curriculum private schools in Sharjah, this school sits at the most affordable end. Families expecting premium facilities or a broad extracurricular programme at this price point will need to adjust expectations accordingly.
AED 4,721
Lowest Annual Tuition (Grade 5-6)
AED 5,971
Maximum Tuition + Books (Grade 7)
PhaseAnnual Fee
Middle School
4,721
Middle School
4,721
Middle School
5,380
Middle School
5,418
Additional Costs
Books - Grade 5538(annual)
Books - Grade 6533(annual)
Books - Grade 7591(annual)
Books - Grade 8553(annual)
Transport - Sharjah2,800(annual)
Transport - Ajman3,100(annual)
New Student Registration Fee500(one-time)
Re-registration Fee500(annual)
Discounts & Concessions
No published discounts
Scholarships & Bursaries
No scholarship or bursary programmes are published on the school website. Given the school's not-for-profit status and already very low fee structure, families in financial need should contact the school directly to discuss any available support.
The Final Verdict: Who Is This School For?
AL Ahliah Charity Private School-Branch Al Jazzat occupies a clear and legitimate niche in Sharjah's education landscape: it is a low-cost, not-for-profit, MoE-curriculum private school serving boys in Grades 5 to 8 in the Al Jazzat area. For the right family, it represents genuine value. For the wrong family, the gaps in transparency and the absence of a SPEA rating will be dealbreakers.
The school's strongest case is its fee structure - at under AED 6,000 all-in per year, it undercuts virtually every other private school in Sharjah while still offering the structure, parental engagement, and private-school ethos that families seek when moving away from the government system. The not-for-profit operator model means fees are kept low by design, not as a temporary promotional offer. The Al Jazzat location with transport to both Sharjah and Ajman makes it practically accessible for a wide catchment.
The honest caveats are significant: no SPEA inspection rating exists, the school website is partially broken with multiple 404 errors, leadership information is not published, and there is no data on academic outcomes, extracurricular breadth, or inclusion provision. Parents are being asked to make a decision with limited information. A school visit, direct conversation with the principal, and a review of the school's internal data on student progress are essential before committing.
THE “RIGHT FIT”
Families in Al Jazzat, Sharjah, or Ajman seeking an affordable, MoE-aligned private school for boys in Grades 5-8, who prioritise cost accessibility and a structured Arabic-medium learning environment over premium facilities or internationally benchmarked outcomes.
THE “WRONG FIT”
Families who require a published SPEA inspection rating to benchmark quality, who are seeking a broad extracurricular programme, English-medium instruction, or who expect the level of transparency and digital communication infrastructure typical of higher-fee private schools in Sharjah.
“
For our budget, there was no better option in the area. The school is straightforward - it does what it says it will do, and the fees are honest.
— Grade 8 Parent
Strengths
Among the lowest private school fees in Sharjah at AED 4,721-5,418 per year
Not-for-profit operator keeps fees low by design, not as a promotion
Follows the familiar UAE MoE national curriculum for seamless transitions
Transport available for both Sharjah and Ajman residents
Structured admissions process aligned with MoE and SPEA requirements
Part of an established multi-emirate charity school network
Accepts students from Dubai, Sharjah, and Ajman - broad eligibility
Areas for Improvement
No SPEA inspection rating published - quality cannot be independently verified