Benchmark · Updated 20 May 2026
What private tutors actually charge in Australia in 2026 — broken out by syllabus track (HSC, VCE, QCE, ATAR, WACE, SACE, NTCET, TASC), subject, capital city, lesson format (1:1 vs group vs online), and experience level. Operator-direct numbers, not marketplace averages.
Step 1 — The Experience Ladder
Tutor pricing in Australia segments cleanly by experience. These are the bands parents understand and the bands tutors should price into — moving up the ladder is a function of qualifications, results, and supply scarcity in a chosen subject.
| Experience tier | Full range | Typical | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uni-student tutor (1st–2nd year) | $30 – $50/hr | $35 – $45/hr | Most common pricing for first-time tutors out of high school. Often advertised on Airtasker, Facebook groups and Star Tutors. Limited pricing power until results testimonials are built. |
| Uni-student tutor (3rd+ year or postgrad) | $50 – $80/hr | $55 – $70/hr | Maths, science and English students approaching Honours can comfortably command this band — particularly with their own strong HSC/VCE record. Education students on prac begin to price into the upper band. |
| Qualified teacher tutor (registered + experienced) | $80 – $130/hr | $90 – $110/hr | Currently or formerly registered with TRB (VIC), NESA (NSW), QCT (QLD) etc. with 3+ years classroom teaching. Parents pay a clear premium for marking, syllabus knowledge and lesson planning. |
| Subject specialist / former HSC / VCE marker | $120 – $200/hr | $140 – $180/hr | Ex-NESA/VCAA markers, head teachers, selective-school veterans. Charge a premium tied to a specific subject (Maths Extension 2, English Advanced, Chemistry). Often booked 6–12 months in advance for Year 12. |
| Group of 4–6 students (HSC / VCE) | $25 – $40 per student/hr | Revenue $100 – $240/hr | Per-student price is lower, but total session revenue is significantly higher than 1:1. Common at suburban tutoring centres and weekend programs. Often paired with workbook + exam-paper bundle. |
Tutor hourly rates are not regulated in any Australian jurisdiction. All rates exclude GST unless stated; sole-trader tutors below the $75k threshold typically do not charge GST.
Syllabus 1 — New South Wales
NSW has the deepest tutoring market in Australia — selective schools, the OC programme, and intense Year 12 competition sustain premium pricing for Extension subjects and specialist science. Rates below are Sydney-metro averages for 1:1 lessons.
| HSC subject | 1:1 hourly rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| English Standard | $60 – $80/hr | High demand, broad supply — sits at the lower end of the HSC band. |
| English Advanced | $70 – $100/hr | Dominant Year 12 subject. Most experienced tutors charge $85–$95/hr in Sydney. |
| English Extension 1 / 2 | $90 – $130/hr | Specialist supply; major works module pulls rates to the top of the band. |
| Mathematics Standard | $55 – $80/hr | Most common Year 12 maths course. Supply is broad — sits in line with English Standard. |
| Mathematics Advanced | $70 – $100/hr | Strong demand; uni-student tutors with a Band 6 history price toward the top. |
| Mathematics Extension 1 | $80 – $120/hr | Demand outstrips supply in most suburbs. Selective-school catchments at the high end. |
| Mathematics Extension 2 | $100 – $150/hr | Specialist supply; former markers and uni maths postgrads regularly charge $130–$150/hr. |
| Physics | $80 – $120/hr | Engineering and physics undergrads typical; qualified teachers price at the top of the band. |
| Chemistry | $80 – $120/hr | Medical/dental school applicants drive demand for top-tier Chemistry tutors. |
| Biology | $70 – $100/hr | Largest science cohort; broad tutor supply keeps rates in line with English Advanced. |
| Modern History | $70 – $100/hr | Essay-marking skill is the differentiator. Tutors with HSC marker experience charge a clear premium. |
| Legal Studies | $70 – $100/hr | Law-student tutors common. Year 12 case-law and essay focus pulls rate above general humanities. |
| Economics | $80 – $120/hr | Smaller cohort and narrow supply of qualified tutors — sustained pricing premium. |
| Business Studies | $65 – $95/hr | Broad supply; commerce undergrads dominate. Sits between English Standard and Advanced. |
Syllabus 2 — Victoria
VCE rates track Sydney closely. Inner-east Melbourne, bayside, and Glen Waverley sustain top-of-band rates, particularly for Specialist Maths, English Language and Literature.
| VCE subject | 1:1 hourly rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| English | $60 – $100/hr | Compulsory subject — largest VCE cohort and broadest tutor supply. Inner Melbourne pricing skews higher. |
| English Language | $80 – $120/hr | Linguistics-focused, narrower tutor supply; specialist premium clearly visible. |
| Literature | $80 – $120/hr | Essay-marking skill drives the premium. Selective-school tutors at the top of the band. |
| Mathematical Methods | $70 – $110/hr | Dominant VCE maths course. Engineering and actuarial undergrads price toward the top. |
| Specialist Mathematics | $90 – $140/hr | Narrow supply; ex-VCAA assessors and maths PhDs regularly charge $120+/hr. |
| Further Mathematics / General Mathematics | $60 – $90/hr | Broadest VCE maths cohort. Uni-student tutors common at the low end. |
| Physics | $80 – $120/hr | Engineering students and physics teachers. Year 12 demand peaks in T2. |
| Chemistry | $80 – $120/hr | Pre-med pathways drive demand; bio-med and pharmacy undergrads price at the upper end. |
| Biology | $70 – $100/hr | Largest VCE science. Broad tutor supply, pricing in line with English. |
| Legal Studies | $70 – $100/hr | Law-student tutors dominant. Case-law and essay practice drive sessions. |
| Accounting | $70 – $100/hr | Commerce/accounting undergrads. Demand modest, pricing stable. |
| Psychology | $70 – $100/hr | Large cohort; psychology undergrads make up most supply at the lower end. |
Syllabus 3 — Queensland
The QCE has been Queensland's senior secondary system since 2020. Rates track 5–15% below Sydney/Melbourne for equivalent subjects, reflecting both the cost-of-living differential and a shallower specialist tutor supply.
| QCE subject | 1:1 hourly rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| General Mathematics | $60 – $90/hr | Broadest QCE maths cohort. Brisbane suburbs sit in the middle of this band. |
| Mathematical Methods | $70 – $100/hr | Demand from QUT/UQ engineering applicants drives the upper end. |
| Specialist Mathematics | $80 – $130/hr | Narrow supply; ex-QCAA endorsers and maths postgrads at the top of the band. |
| English | $60 – $90/hr | Compulsory; broad tutor supply keeps the median moderate. |
| Literature | $70 – $100/hr | Essay-marking skill drives the premium. Selective-entry / academy schools at the top. |
| Physics | $70 – $110/hr | Engineering and physics undergrads typical. Brisbane premium of ~10% over regional QLD. |
| Chemistry | $70 – $110/hr | Medical school applicants drive demand. UQ med students common at the top of the band. |
| Biology | $60 – $100/hr | Large cohort. Tutors price in line with general English. |
| Economics | $70 – $110/hr | Narrower supply than NSW/VIC; sustained pricing premium in Brisbane CBD. |
| Modern History | $60 – $95/hr | Essay-focused; humanities postgrads at the top of the band. |
Other Syllabus Tracks
Smaller markets with narrower public data. Rates are typically 5–15% below Sydney/Melbourne equivalents, with capital-city premiums of 10–15% over regional rates.
Format Economics
The choice between 1:1 and small-group is the single biggest revenue lever in a tutoring business. Same hour of tutor time — very different per-session revenue and customer experience.
Premium of 40–80% over the per-student group rate. Full personalisation, complete attention, individualised pace — this is the product Year 12 families pay for when results matter. Tutor time is fully consumed by a single student.
Per-student rate is lower, but total session revenue is significantly higher. The economics work best with 3–6 students max for HSC/VCE — beyond that, the experience drifts toward classroom teaching and pricing power drops.
Format Premium
Online delivery is no longer a discount product. Top-tier tutors price online at parity with in-person — sometimes higher, because they can reach the entire country from a single postcode.
No travel cost, more flexibility, easier rescheduling. Year 12 cohort increasingly defaults to online — especially during exam block. Tutors save 30–60 minutes per session vs travel.
Premium often baked into the headline rate rather than billed separately. Inner-city dwellings cluster well; outer-suburb travel is the cost driver.
Tutor travel is the constraint. Regional clients often share travel cost across a group of 2–3 households or split a longer fortnightly session.
Transport cost is shared between tutor and student. Common with high-school cohort whose parents prefer a public venue.
Centre handles bookings, marketing, room, payment processing. Tutor sees $35–$70/hr take-home; centre charges $80–$120/hr to families.
City Benchmarks
Reference points for the most-tutored subjects in each capital. Use these to calibrate your own pricing against the local market.
| City / Market | Reference benchmark | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sydney | HSC English Advanced 1:1: $85 – $110/hr | Eastern suburbs and North Shore at the top of the range. Selective-school catchments (Hornsby, Strathfield, Cherrybrook) sustain a clear pricing premium. |
| Melbourne | VCE Methods 1:1: $80 – $100/hr | Inner-east and bayside at the top. Glen Waverley, Balwyn and Camberwell sustain Methods/Specialist demand year-round. |
| Brisbane | QCE Methods 1:1: $70 – $90/hr | Toowong/St Lucia (UQ catchment) and Indooroopilly cluster high-demand. Northside (Chermside) trails by ~$10/hr. |
| Perth | WACE Maths 1:1: $65 – $85/hr | Western suburbs (Subiaco, Nedlands, Claremont) at the top. Joondalup and southern suburbs ~10% below. |
| Adelaide | SACE Maths 1:1: $60 – $80/hr | Eastern suburbs and Norwood/Burnside cluster demand. North and south suburbs trail by 10–15%. |
| Canberra (ACT) | ATAR Maths 1:1: $70 – $95/hr | Smaller market, higher household income — pricing tracks Melbourne. ANU undergrads dominate tutor supply. |
| Hobart (TAS) | TASC Pre-Tertiary Maths 1:1: $60 – $85/hr | Small market; UTAS undergrads dominate supply. Online interstate tutors increasingly fill the specialist gap. |
| Regional NSW / VIC | 10 – 20% below capital city | Tutor travel is the constraint. Online delivery is the dominant solution and is now priced like the capital city. |
| Online-only | Priced like Sydney / Melbourne | Tutor location is irrelevant — top-tier specialists price by syllabus knowledge, not postcode. Online-only tutors from regional areas compete at capital-city rates. |
Pricing Power
Six clear signals that move a tutor from the bottom to the top of their experience band. Each is concrete — not a marketing line — and each is something parents will pay for in writing.
Maths Extension 2, Specialist Maths, English Extension 2, IB HL Maths and Mandarin Advanced have narrow tutor supply and broad demand. The pricing premium is sustained year-round and tightens further between July and the exam block.
Ex-NESA, VCAA, QCAA assessors charge a 40–60% premium over a similarly experienced tutor without marking history. The signal is concrete and parents pay willingly — especially for Year 12 essay subjects.
Current or former classroom teachers registered with the state Teacher Regulation Authority typically charge a 30–50% premium over a uni-student tutor. Lesson-planning skill and syllabus depth are the differentiators.
Band 6, 99+ ATAR, 45+ IB student results, written parent references, and selective-school entry rate — these convert pricing power directly. One concrete result is worth more than 12 months of generic marketing.
Year 5 OC and Year 6 selective preparation in NSW is a distinct premium market. Tutors with a track record of Knox, James Ruse, Sydney Boys, North Sydney Girls placements regularly charge $120–$180/hr.
Latin, Mandarin Advanced, Japanese Extension, Specialist Maths, French Extension and similar narrow-supply subjects sustain premium pricing — often $140–$200/hr in capital cities — purely on the supply constraint.
Pack Structures
Most tutoring businesses sell either casual lessons, lesson packs, or both. Packs improve cashflow and commitment; casual billing is more flexible. The common structures and their discount conventions are below.
Common entry-level commitment. 5 lessons at $90/hr is $450 upfront — manageable for most families and reduces booking friction.
Standard term-by-term commitment. 10 lessons at $90/hr is ~$810 upfront. Improves cashflow and reduces no-show rate.
Less common; sometimes split across two terms. Tutor must reserve the time slot — the higher discount reflects the commitment.
Last-minute trial exam preparation. Short notice + scarce slots = premium pricing. Common between mid-September and the start of HSC/VCE exams.
Per-student rate is below 1:1 but total session revenue is well above. Pairs naturally with branded workbooks and past-paper packs.
Common product: 4 × 2-hour sessions over a single school-holiday week. Often priced at a small discount per hour against casual rates, with one workbook included.
Below-market pricing systematically attracts price-sensitive families who churn quickly. Parents looking for Year 12 results read a $40/hr rate as 'low-experience' and skip it. Price in line with your experience band, defend the rate with a strong intake conversation.
A 10-lesson pack paid upfront beats a weekly invoice for both sides. Cashflow is smoother, no-show rates fall, and the family feels the commitment. Pair with a clear ACL-compliant 12-month expiry and a simple refund policy.
Index your rate to CPI + your experience growth (year of tutoring, certifications, results). Communicate the rate change 6–8 weeks in advance with a written note. Existing clients almost always accept a 5–10% annual lift; new clients see only the new rate.
A 4-student HSC group at $30/student/hr is $120/hr revenue — versus $80/hr 1:1. Add a $50 branded workbook, and total per-session revenue exceeds $170. Run groups for repeatable cohort subjects (HSC English Advanced, VCE Methods) and reserve 1:1 for premium / specialist subjects.
$30 – $50/hr is the standard band for a uni-student tutor in their first year of tutoring, particularly if they're tutoring high-school subjects they recently completed. Avoid going below $30/hr — it signals low quality to parents and squeezes your margin once travel time is counted. Once you have 2–3 strong student results, lift to $50 – $70/hr; once you have a year of consistent results and a waiting list, move to $70 – $100/hr.
Currently or formerly registered classroom teachers typically charge $80 – $130/hr in capital cities, with experienced specialists (head of department, subject coordinator, ex-marker) regularly at $130 – $200/hr. The premium over uni-student tutors reflects lesson-planning skill, syllabus depth, marking standards, and the parents' perception of accountability that comes with teacher registration (TRB, NESA, QCT etc.).
Most sole-trader tutors operate below the $75,000 GST registration threshold and therefore do not charge GST — their headline hourly rate is the price the family pays. Once turnover exceeds $75,000 you must register for GST and either absorb the 10% GST in the existing rate or raise the rate by 10%. Tutoring centres and incorporated tutoring businesses almost always quote ex-GST in their pricing schedule.
Yes — Extension 1 and 2 Maths, English Extension 1 and 2, and equivalent VCE Specialist Maths and Literature subjects sustain a clear pricing premium over the standard course. The combination of narrow tutor supply (most uni students can't tutor Extension 2 Maths) and concentrated demand from selective-school catchments means $100 – $150/hr is the standard band for Maths Extension 2 and Specialist Maths, with former markers at $150 – $200/hr.
Industry standard is: 24+ hours notice = no charge, less than 24 hours = 50% of lesson fee, no-show = 100% of lesson fee. Document this in your intake email and confirm acceptance in writing before the first lesson. Australian Consumer Law requires the cancellation policy to be 'fair' (proportionate to actual loss) — a full-fee charge for a no-show is defensible because the tutor's time slot is non-recoverable; charging full fee for a cancellation 48 hours ahead is not.
Online lessons (Zoom, Google Meet, Teams) typically sit at the same rate as in-person or 5–10% lower. The tutor saves travel time and the family saves transport time; both sides win. In-home lessons typically include a $10 – $25/hr travel premium, sometimes baked into the headline rate rather than billed separately. Since 2022, online-only tutors have priced in line with capital-city rates regardless of their own location — top tutors in regional areas now compete in Sydney and Melbourne at full rate.
OneBookPlus is the AU-built workspace for private tutors and tutoring centres. Bookings, lesson packs, parent portal, results tracking — and pricing reports that show you exactly how your rates compare to the benchmarks in this guide.
Last reviewed and updated: by Bishal Shrestha