In January 2006, the college won its bid to build a new multimillion-pound school site. Construction began in the summer of 2008 and the first phase was completed in 2010, ready for the start of the academic yearin September. The second phase of the building, the outdoor sport pitches, was completed in July 2011. The £55 million new school was built on the old site and includes a media suite, library, sports hall, a hall known as 'The Devon Hall', and an artificial grass sports pitch. £32 million was funded from the Building Schools for the Future programme. The new buildings are:
Abbotsham or A Block - English, Library, SEN and offices
Brunel or B Block - History, Geography, Languages, RE, PSHE, Law and Sociology
Chichester or C Block - Textiles and Food Technology
Galileo or G Block - Science, Maths, ICT, Business and Health & Social Care
Hepworth or H Block - PE, Sports halls, Drama
Academics
Bideford College offers GCSEs and BTECs as programmes of study for pupils, while students in the sixth form have the option to study from a range of A Levels, OCR Nationals and further BTECs.
Performance
Figures published by the UK Government in February 2008 showed Bideford College had made significant improvements in the key stage 3 exams taken by 14-year-old students. Over the previous four years the school’s aggregate score for the exams in English, Maths and Science has risen from 177 to 237 out of 300. This placed Bideford College joint 21st nationally in the table of most improved secondary schools published by the DCSF. Bideford was also in the top 20 percent of schools nationally based on the progress made from year 7 to year 9. An OFSTED inspection took place on 2−3 May 2013 and was judged to require improvement, that leadership and management had not brought about improvements sufficiently, examination results for Key Stage 4 students were not as good as they should be, and the quality of teaching was not consistently good or better because some lessons did not engage all students. The improvements were the new buildings, student attendance, learning support, and that bullying was rare. The school's latest OFSTED inspection took place on 14–15 January 2015. The overall judgement of the school was that it is in an inadequate state and requires special measures. The principal, Veronica Matthews, and chairman of governors, Doug Bushby, resigned a week prior to the report's release, which had raised suspicions over the result, since OFSTED said that "Leaders have failed to tackle the key issues identified at the previous inspection" and that "Governors have little understanding of the reasons why students underachieve, they are over reliant on information from the Principal." The Sixth Form was also deemed inadequate, learning was not checked thoroughly by teachers during lessons, literacy skills were not developed well enough, and disadvantaged students made poor progress compared to their peers. An interim principal, Andrew Kilpatrick, was appointed until current principal Lyndsey Kane took over. Another OFSTED inspection took place on 16–17 October 2018, and the school was now classed as Requiring Improvement. Lyndsey Kane's principalship were praised for bringing "about improvement in pupils’ behaviour and attendance. She has stabilised the school and earned the respect of pupils and parents and carers." A lot of the problems were improved from 2013, although the teaching was deemed "not yet consistently good".