How to find a good German tutor near me

German has a smaller tutor pool than French or Spanish in most parts of the UK, since fewer schools offer it at GCSE and A-Level. A slightly wider search, including online options, usually produces better results than a purely local one.

Step 1: Confirm your child's exact exam board. AQA, Edexcel, Eduqas and OCR structure the speaking, listening, reading and writing assessments slightly differently. A tutor who knows the specific format can target practice precisely rather than teaching generally useful but exam-unspecific German.

Step 2: Weigh native fluency against exam-board knowledge. Native German speakers bring authentic pronunciation and natural conversation, which is valuable for speaking confidence. Qualified MFL teachers bring grammar teaching skill and mark-scheme fluency. Some tutors combine both — ask directly in your first message.

Step 3: Prioritise grammar-correction ability. German's case system and word order rules mean a tutor who systematically corrects recurring errors, rather than simply having a conversation, produces faster accuracy gains.

Step 4: Search online as well as locally. Because the local pool of German specialists is smaller than for French or Spanish, online tutoring genuinely widens your options rather than being a fallback.

Browse German tutors on TutorLab — rates and exam-board experience shown on every profile.

Find a German tutor on TutorLab

Browse profiles, compare rates and contact tutors directly, no agency fees.

Browse tutors

German tutors on TutorLab

Browse profiles, see rates and contact tutors directly.