
Al Mustaqbal International Private School, Sharjah
Tuition Fees & Cost Breakdown 2026
Last updated
Curriculum
American
SPEA
Good
Location
Sharjah, Al Yarmouk
Fees
AED 6K - 7K
Back to Overview
Tuition Fees
Grade LevelAnnual Tuition
KG 1 / FS 2
AED 5,890KG 2 / Year 1
AED 5,890Grade 1 / Year 2
AED 6,620Grade 2 / Year 3
AED 6,620Grade 3 / Year 4
AED 7,420Grade 4 / Year 5
AED 7,420Grade 5 / Year 6
AED 7,420Grade 6 / Year 7
AED 7,340Fees are subject to change. Please verify with the school for the most current rates.
Payment Terms
Payment terms not published on school website; contact admissions at admissions@greenfieldschool.ae or +97148856600
Additional Costs
Transport
Variable
annualNot itemised in available source data; contact school directly
Not itemised in available source data; contact school directly
Uniforms
Variable
one-timeNot itemised in available source data
Not itemised in available source data
Books and Materials
Variable
annualNot itemised in available source data
Not itemised in available source data
Registration Fee
Variable
one-timeContact admissions office for current figure
Contact admissions office for current figure
Discounts & Offers
Sibling Discount
Not confirmed in available source data; parents should enquire directly
Scholarships & Bursaries
No scholarship or bursary programme is referenced in available source data from the school website or the SPEA inspection report. Parents seeking fee assistance should contact the school admissions office directly.
Value for Money
Al Mustaqbal's school fees Sharjah parents will find genuinely accessible: the SPEA 2024 inspection data confirms a fee range of AED 8,100 to AED 16,210 per annum, positioning this as one of the most affordable American curriculum schools in Sharjah. The school serves KG1 through Grade 9, and fees scale across phases in line with this progression. For families in the Al Yarmouk and surrounding communities seeking an Arabic-friendly, English-medium American curriculum education without the financial burden of premium-tier institutions, this fee structure is a significant draw.
The school's website does not publish a detailed fee breakdown by year group, and the SPEA report provides only the overall range. Additional costs for transport, uniforms, books, and activity fees are not itemised in available source data. Given the school's community-oriented positioning and modest facilities profile, it is reasonable to assume that additional costs are proportionate to the fee level - but parents should request a full cost schedule directly from the admissions office before committing. In terms of value for money, the honest editorial position is this: at AED 8,100 to AED 16,210, you are paying for access to a structured American curriculum in a maintained, improving campus with a long community history. You are not paying for outstanding academic outcomes, premium facilities, or a rich co-curricular programme. For families who prioritise proximity, affordability, and cultural fit over academic prestige, this represents reasonable value. For families with higher academic ambitions, the gap between fee and outcome may feel uncomfortable.