The Belize Real Estate Insider

Episode 30: What Are the School Options in Belize?


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Episode 30: What Are the School Options in Belize?

For families considering Belize, schools are often the deciding factor. Today we're covering education options from pre-K through high school.

This is personal for us. Serena grew up here, went to school here. So we're not just giving you research—we're giving you lived experience.

Education System Structure (British Influence):

  • Preschool/Nursery: Ages 3-5
  • Primary School: Standards 1-8, roughly ages 5-13
  • Secondary School: Forms 1-4, roughly ages 13-17
  • Sixth Form/Junior College: Preparing for university

School is compulsory through age 14. The school year runs September to June.

Types of Schools:

Government Schools: Free or very low cost. Quality varies significantly by location. Larger classes, fewer resources—but some good schools exist.

Denominational Schools: Affiliated with churches (Catholic, Anglican, Methodist, etc.). Technically public but often have better resources and reputations. Many of the best schools fall in this category. The church provides the land and building; the government provides the teachers.

Private Schools: Fee-based, often with smaller classes and more individual attention. Quality and cost vary widely.

International Schools: Follow U.S., British, or international curricula. Limited options—only a few in the whole country. Most expensive but most aligned with foreign education systems.

Options by Location:

Belize City: Most options, including the only real international schools. QSI International School follows a U.S. curriculum. Several good denominational schools.

San Pedro: Multiple private schools including Island Academy, San Pedro Roman Catholic School, and others. Options have expanded significantly in recent years.

Placencia: Fewer options but growing. Local government primary schools in Placencia and Seine Bight. Private school: Placencia Academy. High school in Independence/Georgetown is accessible.

Hopkins: Local schools but limited private options.

Corozal: Public and denominational options. Some families use schools in Chetumal, Mexico for older students.

Cayo/San Ignacio: Several options including public, denominational, and some private schools.

Myth of the Week:

"Schools in Belize are all low quality. I'll have to homeschool."

Overstated. Are there excellent schools? Yes. Are there struggling schools? Also yes. Like anywhere, you have to research specific schools, not generalize.

Many expat kids do very well in Belizean schools—both academically and socially. The assumption that it's all low quality isn't accurate.

That said, homeschooling is popular among expat families who want U.S. curriculum alignment, have kids with specific needs, or want to travel without being tied to the school week.

Homeschooling in Belize:

Homeschooling is legal and common among expat families.

Benefits:

  • Flexibility, travel, lifestyle integration
  • Curriculum choice—can follow U.S. or other standards
  • Individual attention, especially valuable if local options are limited
  • Online resources: K12, Connections Academy, Time4Learning, etc.

Considerations:

  • Socialization requires intentional effort in small communities
  • Parent time commitment—someone has to teach
  • Testing and credentials—need to plan for standardized testing and transcripts for college

Some families do hybrid approaches—partial homeschool, partial local school attendance.

Costs:

  • Government/Denominational schools: Minimal—$100-500/year for fees and supplies
  • Private schools: $2,000-$8,000/year depending on school and level
  • International schools: $8,000-$20,000/year (comparable to U.S. private schools)
  • Homeschool: $500-$5,000/year depending on curriculum and support level

Factor in: uniforms (required at most schools), supplies, transportation, extracurriculars.

Serena's Experience:

"It was different, not necessarily worse. In Charleston, I went to a private school on Johns Island, and in Belize it was homeschool."

"When we moved here, Placencia Academy wasn't born yet, so we decided to use a homeschool out of California called Pear Blossom. I actually got real school books every year and was able to work at my own pace. I got more individual attention if I needed it, and the school was accredited—so if I wanted to go to college, I could."

"Would I have been more prepared for AP tests at a U.S. prep school? Maybe. Am I better prepared for actual life? I'd argue yes."

Listener Question: My Kids Are in Middle School. Is It Too Late to Move?

Not too late, but different considerations:

  • Curriculum alignment matters more — If they're on a college prep track, ensure credits transfer
  • Social adjustment can be harder for older kids with established friend groups
  • High school options are more limited than elementary
  • College prep needs attention — Standardized testing, transcripts, guidance counseling

Some families do a gap year or partial move during middle/high school, then return for senior year or college applications. Others commit fully and work with U.S. colleges from abroad. It's doable but requires planning.

How to Evaluate Schools:

  • Visit in person — You cannot evaluate a school from a website. Visit during the school year.
  • Talk to current parents — Expat parents with kids in the school are your best source.
  • Meet teachers and administrators — Their responsiveness tells you a lot.
  • Ask about curriculum — Subjects offered? How do they handle different learning needs?
  • Check facilities — Libraries, labs, computers, sports facilities.
  • Understand class size — Smaller is usually better in Belize's context.
  • Ask about expat students — How many? How do they integrate?

Extracurriculars and Sports:

More limited than U.S. schools. Soccer is popular, basketball exists. Some schools have limited sports programs, others almost none.

For activities like music lessons, martial arts, art classes—you'll often need to find those independently, not through schools. This is where community matters. Expat communities often organize activities.

Making the Transition Easier for Kids:

  • Involve them in the decision — Kids who feel they had input adjust better
  • Visit first as a family — Let them experience Belize before the move
  • Connect with other expat families — Built-in social network helps enormously
  • Maintain connections back home — Video calls, trips back, online relationships
  • Give it time — Adjustment takes 6-12 months typically. Don't panic at initial struggles.
  • Stay flexible — If one school isn't working, be willing to try another approach

Bottom Line:

Good education is available in Belize, but it requires research and intention. You can't just assume any school will wor...

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The Belize Real Estate InsiderBy David Kafka