How Much Does Maths Tutoring Cost in Australia?

A breakdown of what Australian parents actually pay for maths tutoring in 2026, from private tutors to online platforms, with tips on getting value for money.

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How Much Does Maths Tutoring Cost in Australia?

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Your child needs help with maths. The first question, after "will this actually work," is usually "what is this going to cost me?"

The answer in Australia in 2026 ranges from free to eye-watering, depending on what you choose. Here is an honest breakdown.

Private tutoring: $60 to $150 per hour

One-on-one private tutoring is the most common option, and the most expensive. What you pay depends on where you live, the tutor's experience, and whether they come to you or you go to them.

Typical rates in 2026:

  • University student tutor: $40 to $70 per hour. Often found through platforms like Tutoring For You or local uni job boards. Quality varies enormously.
  • Experienced teacher/tutor: $80 to $120 per hour. Usually a qualified teacher moonlighting or a full-time tutor with years of experience. More reliable results.
  • Premium/specialist tutor: $120 to $150+ per hour. Often marketed for selective school prep or HSC/VCE/QCE preparation. The premium is partly for their track record.

At two sessions per week with an experienced tutor, you are looking at $8,000 to $12,000 per year. Per child.

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What you get: Personalised attention, flexibility to focus on exactly what your child needs, a human who can read your child's body language and adapt in real time.

What to watch out for: No guarantee of quality. Some tutors just do the homework with the student rather than teaching understanding. Cancellations and scheduling can be a hassle. And there is no easy way to track progress between sessions.


Tutoring centres: $40 to $80 per session

Group tutoring centres like Kumon, Kip McGrath, and NumberWorks are a step down in cost from private tutoring.

Typical rates in 2026:

  • Kumon: Around $160 to $200 per month for maths. Sessions are short (30 minutes) and heavily worksheet-based.
  • Kip McGrath: Around $50 to $70 per 80-minute session, usually once or twice a week.
  • NumberWorks: Similar range to Kip McGrath.

What you get: Regular structure, a physical location (which can help with routine), and curriculum-aligned content in most cases.

What to watch out for: Group settings mean less individual attention. Kumon in particular is very repetition-heavy, which works for some students but can be soul-crushing for others. The fixed schedule can clash with sport, music, and other activities.


Online tutoring platforms: $20 to $60 per session

Online one-on-one tutoring through platforms like Cluey Learning or TutorFinder typically costs less than in-person tutoring.

Typical rates in 2026:

  • Cluey Learning: Around $50 to $70 per session, with packages bringing the per-session cost down.
  • Marketplace tutors (Superprof, Tutoring For You): $30 to $80 per hour depending on the tutor.

What you get: Convenience of home-based learning. Wider choice of tutors since you are not limited by geography. Usually easier to reschedule.

What to watch out for: Screen fatigue is real, especially for younger students. The quality still depends entirely on the individual tutor. Some platforms lock you into packages.


AI tutoring apps: $0 to $30 per month

This is the newest category, and it is growing fast. AI-powered tutoring platforms provide interactive, personalised maths help at a fraction of the cost of human tutoring.

Typical costs in 2026:

  • Khan Academy: Free. Excellent for self-motivated learners, but not aligned to the Australian Curriculum.
  • Mathletics: Around $20 per month (or free through school). More drill-focused than teaching-focused.
  • Mathspace: $20 to $30 per month. Australian-made with step-by-step guidance.
  • imSteyn: $15 per month for up to 3 children. Built for Australian students, aligned to the Cambridge textbook, with a Socratic teaching approach and parent dashboard.

What you get: Available whenever your child wants to study. No scheduling hassles. Consistent quality (no bad tutor days). Progress tracking built in. Dramatically lower cost.

What to watch out for: Not all AI tutoring is equal. Some apps just give answers when asked, which teaches nothing. Look for platforms that guide students to figure things out themselves. And check whether the content actually matches what your child is learning at school.


The real cost comparison

Here is what a year of maths help looks like for one child:

OptionFrequencyAnnual cost
Private tutor (experienced)2x per week$8,000 to $12,000
Tutoring centre2x per week$4,000 to $6,000
Online tutor2x per week$3,000 to $6,000
AI tutoring appUnlimited$0 to $360

The difference is significant. That does not mean the cheapest option is always the best, but it does mean cost should not be the only factor. A $15/month app that your child uses four times a week will likely produce better results than a $100/hour tutor they see once a fortnight.


How to get the best value

  1. Start with the free options. Talk to your child's teacher. Use school support programs. Try Khan Academy or the free tier of an Australian platform.
  2. Use AI tutoring for regular practice. The biggest advantage of apps is availability. Your child can get help at 8pm on a Tuesday when no tutor is available.
  3. Reserve private tutoring for specific needs. If your child has a particular area they are really stuck on, a few targeted sessions with a good tutor can be worth the investment.
  4. Track progress, not just hours. Whatever you choose, make sure you can see whether your child is actually improving. Hours spent does not equal learning gained.

Where imSteyn fits

imSteyn costs $15 per month and covers up to three children. It is aligned to the Cambridge textbook, uses a Socratic method that builds genuine understanding, and gives parents a dashboard showing exactly where their child stands.

It is not a replacement for a great teacher. But for regular, consistent maths practice that actually teaches rather than just drills, it is hard to beat the value. Try it free for 7 days and see for yourself.

imSteyn

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the imSteyn Team

We're building an AI maths tutor that helps Australian students discover answers, never just gives them away. Built by parents, for parents.

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