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.
German tutors on TutorLab
Browse profiles, see rates and contact tutors directly.
Mark Bamforth Languages
Experienced language tutor offering German, French and EFL in Stroud