The proportion of parents successfully appealing against their child's allotted school has risen.
Figures for England for 2004/05 - the latest available - show 35.5% went in their favour, up from 34.6% in 2003/04.
The Department for Education and Skills said that panels had heard 59,300 appeals, about 100 fewer.
The proportion of successful appeals over primary school places rose from 32.9% to 34.5%. For secondaries it went up from 35% to 35.7%.
Schools Minister Lord Adonis said: "Clearly not all parents will be happy with the school they are allocated and the best solution is to ensure there is a good school in every community, which is what our reforms are all about.
"We are also tightening up the admissions code in our education bill."