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Australian International School vs UWC South East Asia

🇸🇬 Singapore · Side-by-side comparison on verifiable public data.

Neither Australian International School nor UWC South East Asia sits in a market with a public inspectorate, so both are assessed on verifiable accreditation, curriculum authorisation, and published data rather than an official quality rating. Curriculum is the core differentiator: Australian International School offers Australian, IB, British while UWC South East Asia offers IB, Blended — the choice should follow the family's target qualification system. Both are day schools with fees in the same market band — see the table below for the figures, and verify against each school's own published fees.

Key Facts

Australian International SchoolUWC South East Asia
CurriculumAustralian / IB / BritishIB / Blended
Ages2 months–184–18
Languages of instructionEnglishEnglish
Annual feesSGD 43,030–53,518SGD 39,069–49,926
Enrollment2,3005,600
BoardingYesYes
AccreditationsCIS, WASC, NSW Government EducationCIS, WASC, EduTrust

Strengths

Australian International School
  • Genuinely distinctive Southern Hemisphere (January–December) academic calendar — ideal for families moving on the Australian school cycle
  • Broad multi-pathway curriculum: Australian Curriculum + IB PYP + Cambridge IGCSE + a choice of IB Diploma or NSW HSC at senior level
  • Very wide age span, from infant care (2 months) through Year 12, on one campus
  • Multiple recognized accreditations: CIS, WASC, IB World School, Cambridge International, NSW Government Education
  • Large, established community (opened 1993; ~2,300 students; 50+ nationalities)
UWC South East Asia
  • Deep, verifiable UWC-movement identity and mission focus on internationalism, peace and sustainability
  • Substantial scholarship programme driving diversity — ~30% of boarders are scholars; 100+ scholars from 47 countries in G8–12
  • Strong published IB Diploma outcomes: Class of 2025 average 36.4, 98.7% pass rate, 31.2% scoring 40+
  • Exceptional diversity: 100+ student nationalities and 80 home languages reported
  • Boarding offered at both campuses, rare among Singapore international schools

Trade-offs

Australian International School
  • !High fees: secondary tuition reaches SGD 53,518/year (2026), among the more expensive bands in Singapore
  • !For-profit ownership under Cognita
  • !Large size (~2,300 students) may not suit families seeking a small setting
  • !No independent regulatory inspection report is publicly available (external references are editorial, e.g. Good Schools Guide)
  • !The blended HSC/IB/IGCSE model, while broad, can be complex for families to navigate
UWC South East Asia
  • !Very large scale (5,600+ students across two campuses) may feel impersonal despite ~16-student classes
  • !High and rising fees plus a one-off SGD 4,992 enrolment fee, a development levy (SGD 9,537 first year) and boarding fees (~SGD 45,288/yr)
  • !Mission-fit, values-based admissions make entry selective and less predictable
  • !IB-only senior pathway (no verifiable A-Level/AP route)
  • !Some programmes are campus-specific (e.g. Dutch at Dover), so the two campuses are not fully interchangeable

Best Fit For

Australian International School
  • Families relocating on the Australian/Southern Hemisphere school calendar who want continuity of term timing
  • Families wanting a single school covering infancy through to age 18
  • Students who may benefit from a choice between IB Diploma and the Australian HSC at senior level
  • Families seeking an established, well-accredited, large international school in central-north Singapore
UWC South East Asia
  • Globally mobile families who value internationalism, service learning and the UWC mission
  • Students aiming for the IB Diploma as their senior qualification
  • Families seeking boarding within an international-cohort environment
  • Scholarship-eligible students from diverse backgrounds aligned with UWC's access mission

University Placement

School-reported · not independently verified

Australian International School

School-reported, unverified: AIS states '100% university acceptance' with '99% securing a top-choice placement,' names destinations including Melbourne, Stanford, Cambridge and NUS, reports 15% of students achieving 40+ IB points, and over $2.67M in scholarships in 2024. These are not independently verified.

UWC South East Asia

School-reported, unverified: UWCSEA publishes Class-of-2025 IB results — 605 candidates, average 36.4, 98.7% pass rate, 31.2% scoring 40+, 25% earning a bilingual diploma (as at 4 September 2025). University-destination claims were not independently verified.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I choose Australian International School or UWC South East Asia?

Australian International School is best for: Families relocating on the Australian/Southern Hemisphere school calendar who want continuity of term timing. UWC South East Asia is best for: Globally mobile families who value internationalism, service learning and the UWC mission. The right choice depends on target curriculum, budget, and family priorities — the two are not linearly comparable.

How do fees compare between Australian International School and UWC South East Asia?

Australian International School: SGD 43,030–53,518. UWC South East Asia: SGD 39,069–49,926. Verify against each school's own published fees; some figures are sourced from third-party aggregators.

What curricula do Australian International School and UWC South East Asia offer?

Australian International School: Australian, IB, British. UWC South East Asia: IB, Blended.

Do Australian International School or UWC South East Asia offer boarding?

Australian International School: offers boarding. UWC South East Asia: offers boarding.

This comparison is BrightKey's independent assessment using verifiable public data only. University-placement figures are school-reported and not independently verified. BrightKey takes no payments from schools. Our method →