Tonbridge School Interview: Tips and Common Questions

Author

Harris Darroch

Date

June 16, 2026

Category

Admissions Guides

Tonbridge School Interview: Tips & What to Expect
By the EBA Admissions Team Updated for 2026 entry 6 min read

Tonbridge School interviews boys as part of its 13+ assessment, and the interview matters more than its length suggests. On the assessment afternoon your son has a one-to-one conversation with a member of the teaching staff, and boys who go on to the provisional exams in Year 7 have a further short interview. Both are friendly rather than formal, but Tonbridge uses them to judge intellectual curiosity, independent thinking and genuine fit. This guide explains what the interviews involve, what the school looks for, and how to help your son prepare without turning him into a rehearsed performer.

The interview at a glance
Format
A one-to-one interview with a member of teaching staff
When
On the assessment afternoon, and again at the provisional exams
Alongside it
A carousel of activities, individual and collaborative
They look for
Intellectual curiosity, independent thought, academic ambition
Tone
Conversational rather than an interrogation

What the Tonbridge interview involves

Tonbridge's 13+ interview is a short, one-to-one conversation with a member of the teaching staff, rather than a formal panel. It sits within the assessment afternoon, alongside a carousel of activities that lets boys work both individually and collaboratively. Boys who receive a provisional offer have a further short interview when they return for the provisional exams in Year 7. Because the interviews are conversational and built around your son as an individual, they feel more like a friendly discussion than an examination, and their purpose is to see how a boy thinks, what engages him, and whether he will thrive at Tonbridge. A boy who is comfortable talking about his interests, and honest when he is unsure, comes across far better than one delivering answers learned by heart.

What Tonbridge is looking for

Tonbridge places strong emphasis on intellectual curiosity, independent thought and academic ambition, and the interview is where these come through. Within a relaxed conversation, the interviewer is forming a picture of whether a boy genuinely enjoys ideas, whether he can think for himself rather than simply repeat what he has been told, and whether he will contribute to the life of the school.

The interview is about how a boy thinks and what engages him, not how many facts he can recite.

This shapes how you prepare. A boy who can talk warmly about a book he loves, a subject that fascinates him, or an idea he has been turning over, and explain why, will impress far more than one who arrives with polished, pre-packaged answers.

Common interview themes

No two Tonbridge interviews are identical, but they tend to explore familiar ground. Your son may be asked about the subjects and activities he enjoys and why, about a book he has read or an interest he pursues, and about what attracts him to Tonbridge in particular. The conversation may touch on his current school, his family and what he does outside lessons, and a boy applying for boarding may be asked how he feels about living away from home. Because the school values independent thinking, he may also be invited to think aloud about an idea or a problem, so questions without a single right answer are common. None of this needs a scripted response. What helps is a boy who has thought a little about why he wants to go to Tonbridge and can speak honestly and with enthusiasm about himself.

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Tonbridge prizes a boy who can think for himself. When an interviewer poses an open question, they are far more interested in how a boy reasons toward an answer, and whether he will change his mind when he hears a good argument, than in whether he lands on a particular response. A willingness to think aloud is exactly what the school wants to see.

How to prepare your son

The aim is a confident, genuine boy, not a rehearsed one, so the best preparation looks very little like exam practice. The single most useful thing you can do is have real conversations at home, so your son is used to expressing and explaining his opinions. Encourage him to think about what he enjoys and why, and to come up with a question or two he would genuinely like to ask about Tonbridge. Reading with reflection helps, since a boy who reads widely has more to say and thinks more readily, and any experience of being away from home makes the prospect of boarding feel familiar rather than daunting. A single, relaxed practice conversation can settle nerves, but more than that risks making him sound coached. For the academic side that runs alongside the interview, our guide to the Tonbridge assessment covers the wider process.

Interview preparation that works

Help your son make the most of the Tonbridge assessment

Our consultants run realistic, supportive mock interviews tailored to Tonbridge's style, building genuine confidence rather than rehearsed answers. Book a free consultation to find out how we can help.

Book a free consultation

On the day

A few practical things help your son give his best account. A good night's sleep matters more than last-minute preparation, and arriving in good time means he is relaxed rather than flustered. He should know that the staff he meets want him to do well, and that it is completely fine to pause and think before answering, or to say he is not sure. Encourage him to throw himself into the carousel of activities, share his ideas, work readily with the other boys, and be himself in the interview. Because Tonbridge values independent thinking, a boy who treats the conversation as a chance to share what he genuinely thinks, rather than a test to pass, tends to come across exactly as the school hopes.

A note for parents

It is natural to want to prepare your son thoroughly, but Tonbridge's staff are experienced at telling a genuinely curious boy from a heavily coached one, and they consistently favour the former. Your most valuable contribution is not drilling answers. It is giving your son a home where ideas are discussed, opinions are welcomed, and reading and real interests are part of daily life. That preparation lasts well beyond a single afternoon, and it happens to be exactly what the school is trying to find.

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