Register
It looks complicated, but most families only deal with one phase. Here's the calm, plain-English version of the 2026 Primary 1 Registration Exercise — with the dates that matter and the mistakes worth avoiding.
The 2026 Primary 1 Registration Exercise is for children born between 2 January 2020 and 1 January 2021, who will start Primary 1 in January 2027. It runs fully online from 30 June to 30 October 2026. You can see your child's eligible phases and schools on the MOE portal from 9am on 30 June 2026.
Breathe. The phases look intimidating, but each one is for a specific group — and most families only ever use a single phase.
Your child registers in the 2026 exercise if they were born between 2 January 2020 and 1 January 2021 (both dates inclusive). They will start Primary 1 in January 2027.
Not sure your little one is ready for big school yet? That's a separate — and very good — question. See our guide to getting your child ready for Primary 1.
Find the first phase your child qualifies for — that is usually the only one you'll use. Registration each day runs 9am to 4:30pm, and every phase is online — no queueing.
| Phase | Registration | Results | Who it's for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | 30 Jun – 2 Jul | 8 Jul | Child has a sibling currently studying in the school |
| Phase 2A | 9 – 10 Jul | 17 Jul | A parent or sibling is an alumnus; or a parent is on the School Advisory/Management Committee or staff; or the child is from the school's MOE Kindergarten |
| Phase 2B | 20 – 21 Jul | 27 Jul | Parent has volunteered at the school (40+ hours); or is a member of the affiliated church/clan; or an active community leader |
| Phase 2C | 28 – 30 Jul | 11 Aug | Every child not yet registered can apply here (at least 40 places are kept aside for this phase) |
| Phase 2C Supplementary | 17 – 18 Aug | 27 Aug | Children not successful in Phase 2C, registering at a school with vacancies |
| Phase 3 | October | — | International students (non-Citizens, non-PRs) |
Dates verified against MOE's official registration phases and key dates page (last updated 29 April 2026). Always confirm on MOE's P1 registration pages before you act.
A phase only goes to balloting if there are more applicants than places. When that happens, priority is given in this order:
So for popular schools, living within 1km is a real advantage — but for most schools, every child in the phase gets a place without any balloting at all.
Here's what we've learned in over 20 years of watching children start school: the name on the school gate matters far less than how ready your child feels walking through it. A child who can listen, focus, read simple words and count with confidence will thrive anywhere. One who's anxious and behind will struggle even at a "branded" school.
The readiness that matters is built in the year before P1 — listening, focus, early reading and numeracy, and the habit of sitting and trying. That's exactly what our P1 Preparatory programme builds for K2 children, and what Star Tots Playgroup lays the foundation for long before that.
The 2026 exercise runs online from 30 June to 30 October 2026. Phase 1 is 30 June–2 July, Phase 2A is 9–10 July, Phase 2B is 20–21 July, Phase 2C is 28–30 July, and Phase 2C Supplementary is 17–18 August. You can view your child's eligible phases on the MOE portal from 9am on 30 June 2026.
Children registering in the 2026 exercise (born 2 January 2020 – 1 January 2021) start Primary 1 in January 2027.
Yes. Phase 1 eligibility doesn't register your child automatically — you still submit the registration during the Phase 1 window (30 June–2 July 2026).
Distance only matters if a phase is oversubscribed and goes to balloting. Priority then goes to Singapore Citizens within 1km, then 1–2km, then beyond 2km, followed by Permanent Residents in the same bands.
Every Singapore Citizen child is guaranteed a place in a primary school. If your first choice is full, your child is placed in a nearby school with vacancies — and a strong P1 foundation will serve them well wherever they go.
A focused bridge into Primary 1 for K2 children — the English, Maths and focusing habits they'll need from day one.
See programme → GuideThe skills that actually matter on day one — and a sensible preparation timeline for K2 children.
Read guide → GuideThe 8 bands, the 4–32 score and Posting Groups — what the new scoring really means for your child.
Read guide →Whichever school your child enters, a confident start is built in the year before. Tell us your child's level and we'll suggest the right class at your nearest centre.