Experts weigh in as updated admissions policy eases pressure on September-December born children, but stress developmental readiness remains key.
A major change to school admissions in the UAE is set to reshape family decisions and classroom demographics from the 2026–27 academic year. The UAE has approved shifting the age cut-off from August 31 to December 31, allowing children who turn three at any point during the admission year to start Pre-Kindergarten.
Under the new policy, children must reach the required age—three for Pre-KG, four for KG1, five for KG2, and six for Grade 1—on or before December 31 of the admission year. The Ministry of Education has stated there will be no exceptions.
The move is a significant relief for families of children born between September and December, who previously faced being held back a full year. Dubai resident Musa Abdulkarim, whose son was born on September 20, 2022, said the change altered his family’s trajectory.
“It helped me a lot because it was creating a lot of problems for my family life,” Abdulkarim shared. He had planned for his wife and children to return to Jordan so his son could start school on time. “Nobody likes to live alone without his/her family… Now they will not go and continue living here.”
For UAE national Alya Al Ketbi, whose son missed the old cut-off by just three days, the new rule restores a sense of fairness. “Children born in the same year should be in the same class,” she noted.
However, educators and psychologists emphasize that eligibility does not automatically equal readiness.
“We understand that age alone does not define readiness,” said Lisa Crausby OBE, GEMS Group Chief Education Officer. She explained that schools implement a 6-8 week observation period to assess how children adapt socially, emotionally, and physically.
Dr. Sneha John, a licensed psychologist, cautioned that social-emotional skills are strong predictors of long-term success. “Children who start school too early relative to their developmental readiness often show patterns including poor effortful control, elevated anxiety, and difficulty sustaining attention,” she said.
Some parents, like Dubai-based Bhavya Rao, are still choosing to delay entry based on individual needs. She held her younger daughter back to allow for emotional maturation. “Starting school isn’t just about knowing letters or numbers — it’s about coping with the classroom, friendships and expectations,” Rao explained.
Medical experts suggest the flexibility is beneficial. Dr. Mohammed Ziad Mansoor, a specialist paediatrician, stated that while younger starters may need initial support, “research shows that starting school a few months earlier or later generally does not cause long-term harm.”
The policy also standardises age placement across international curricula offered in the UAE, providing clearer alignment for families regardless of their chosen educational system.







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