Where to start
Choosing a nursery in Croydon can feel overwhelming. There are dozens of settings — nurseries, pre-schools, childminders, day nurseries attached to schools — and they all sound similar from the outside. The good news: you don't need to visit every one. You need to know what to actually look for, and to trust your instincts when you walk through the door.
This guide walks through the things that genuinely matter, in the order you should think about them. It's written for parents starting from scratch — whether you're returning to work, planning ahead from pregnancy, or moving to Croydon and starting fresh.
1. Check Ofsted — but read the report, not just the rating
Every registered nursery in Croydon is inspected by Ofsted. You can search any setting at reports.ofsted.gov.uk using the name or postcode.
The rating — Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement, or Inadequate — is a useful starting point. But the headline can be misleading on its own. A 2018 rating doesn't tell you much about how the setting runs in 2026. And two settings rated Good can be very different in feel.
What to read for in the full report:
- Leadership and management — is the manager described as visible, ambitious, and clear about safeguarding?
- Quality of education — does the report describe the curriculum positively, or use phrases like “activities are not always planned”?
- Behaviour and attitudes — are children described as engaged, settled, and confident?
- Date of inspection — anything older than 4 years deserves a fresh question on tour: “What's changed since your last inspection?”
Just Little Kidz is Ofsted-registered. Our full inspection report is available on the Ofsted website — we're happy to point you straight to it when you visit.
2. Staff ratios and qualifications
Staff-to-child ratios in England are set by statutory guidance:
- Under 2: 1 adult to 3 children
- 2-year-olds: 1 adult to 5 children (or 4 if not all staff are qualified)
- 3 to 5-year-olds: 1 adult to 8 children (or 13 with QTS)
These are minimums. Some Croydon settings run higher ratios — meaning more adults per child. Ask on tour. You're allowed to ask exactly how many qualified practitioners will be in your child's room on a typical day.
Beyond the numbers: ask about staff turnover. A nursery where the team has been together for years is almost always a happier place to be a child. High turnover usually points to deeper issues with leadership, pay, or culture.
3. Opening hours and flexibility
Croydon has nurseries running everything from term-time-only 9am–3pm sessions to extended 7am–7pm year-round day nurseries. Be clear about what your week actually looks like:
- Do you need early drop-off for a commuter rail journey into London Bridge or Victoria?
- Do you need late pick-up for occasional long days?
- Will you need holiday cover during school breaks?
- Can you flex your days week-to-week, or are sessions fixed?
Don't pick a nursery that fits your ideal week. Pick one that fits your hardest week.
4. Fees and what's included
Croydon nursery fees typically range from around £70 to £95 per day, depending on the setting and your child's age. But the headline daily rate is only part of the picture. Ask about:
- Are meals included? Some settings charge separately for breakfast, lunch, tea and snacks. It can add up quickly.
- Are nappies and wipes included? A few settings provide them; most ask families to bring their own.
- What about consumables — sun cream, art materials, nappy cream?
- Is there a registration deposit? What's refundable and when?
- Are there extras for trips, photography, summer events?
Two nurseries with the same headline rate can end up costing very different amounts a month once everything is added in. Ask for a full sample invoice for the week your child is likely to attend.
5. Funded hours acceptance
Most established Croydon nurseries accept government-funded hours. Depending on your family's circumstances and your child's age, you may be entitled to:
- From 9 months: 15 funded hours/week for eligible working families
- 2-year-olds: 15 funded hours/week for eligible families (income/benefits-based)
- 3 and 4-year-olds: 15 funded hours/week for all; up to 30 hours for working families
Check your eligibility and get your code at childcarechoices.gov.uk. When you tour, ask exactly how the nursery applies funded hours to your bill — some apply them flatly, others stretch them across the year. The maths can affect your monthly outgoing significantly.
6. Location and the Croydon commute
Croydon is one of London's best-connected boroughs — East Croydon, Norwood Junction, Thornton Heath and West Croydon are all on busy commuter lines, and the tram network adds even more flexibility. Think about which station you actually leave from, then look for nurseries on the way (not in the opposite direction).
Things to factor in:
- Buggy and car-seat access at drop-off. Is there safe parking? A pavement wide enough for a double buggy?
- Tram or bus routes that match your commute home, especially for late pick-ups.
- Distance from home or work — close to one is more important than “halfway between” if there's any risk of unexpected pick-up.
- Whether the nursery feels part of the community — local park visits, library trips, community events.
Just Little Kidz Croydon is on London Road, CR7 7YE — close to Thornton Heath, with strong bus and tram links from across Croydon and easy access for parents commuting into central London.
7. Visit. In person. Ideally more than once.
Photos on a website only tell you so much. The smell of a setting, the sound when you walk in, the energy of the children — you can only feel these in person.
If you can, visit two or three Croydon nurseries before deciding. And if you're unsure, ask for a second visit at a different time of day. Mornings feel different from afternoons. Rainy days feel different from sunny ones. A well-run nursery will welcome a second look.
Things to notice while you're there:
- Are the children actively engaged, or wandering aimlessly?
- Are staff at child-level, talking with children — not just supervising?
- Is the manager visible? Do they greet the children by name?
- Does the setting feel calm and well-organised, or chaotic and reactive?
- How does the team handle a tantrum, an upset child, or a transition between activities?
8. Trust your gut
You will know. After every tour you do, sit in the car or on the bus on the way home and ask yourself one question: could I leave my child here tomorrow and feel okay?
If the answer is anything other than “yes”, keep looking. The right nursery feels right. It's not always the most expensive, or the most expensively-decorated — but you'll feel something settle when you walk in.
Croydon has many good nurseries. The right one for your family is the one where your child is met as an individual, where the team is settled and skilled, and where you feel listened to from the very first conversation.
Why families choose JLK Croydon
We're not the right nursery for every family — and that's fine. But for the families we work with, here's what they tell us makes the difference:
- A genuinely settled team — many of our practitioners have been with us for years
- A real key-person system — your child has one familiar adult who builds a deep relationship with them
- Freshly prepared meals included as standard, with allergies and cultural preferences catered for
- Extended hours available at Croydon (7am–7pm) for families with long commutes
- All funded entitlements accepted — from 9 months upwards
- Clear, honest fees — no surprises on your invoice
Come and see for yourself
The honest test of any nursery is how it feels when you walk through the door. Book a free tour at JLK Croydon — come without commitment, ask anything you like, and see what your child's days could look like.