This guide compares seven maths tutoring platforms in France - pricing, session formats, tutor qualifications, and results by school level.
Maths is a sticking point for a lot of students - from primary school arithmetic all the way up to calculus in Terminale. In France, that pressure is amplified by how much the Baccalauréat weighs on maths, and by the fact that Parcoursup university applications are directly affected by how students score.
Mathematic is an independent site that compares maths tutoring platforms in France. We look at Superprof, Les Sherpas, Complétude, Anacours, and Kartable - evaluating each by school level, format (online or in-person), pricing, and where they operate.
What students need depends on where they are in school. At primary (ages 6–11), the focus is arithmetic and basic number sense - getting those foundations right matters more than it might seem. At middle school (ages 11–15), algebra, geometry, and statistics show up for the first time, and that transition is where a lot of students start falling behind. High school introduces calculus, probability, and sequences. By Terminale (Year 13), the curriculum is dense - complex numbers, linear algebra, and exam modules that feed directly into Parcoursup scores.
If you're looking to tutor, the busiest markets are Paris, Lyon, Toulouse, and Lille. Paris has the most volume and the highest rates (€25–€50/hour); Lyon and Toulouse are active with slightly less competition. Graduate students, certified teachers (agrégé, certifié), and engineers all find consistent work.
The guides below cover both school level and city. Each one compares platforms by price and format, with advice for students and tutors.
This guide compares seven maths tutoring platforms in France - pricing, session formats, tutor qualifications, and results by school level.
Gaps in primary school maths compound. This guide covers the best platforms for ages 6–11, focused on arithmetic, number sense, and problem-solving before the habits get hard to change.
Collège is where maths starts to get abstract - algebra, geometry, statistics, all at once. This guide covers the best platforms for ages 11–15.
Lycée maths - calculus, sequences, probability - is a step up in difficulty, and university admissions make the stakes real. This guide covers the best platforms for ages 15–18.
In Terminale, maths is one of the highest-weighted subjects in the Baccalauréat and feeds directly into Parcoursup. This guide ranks the best platforms for final-year preparation.
Paris is France's biggest tutoring market. Demand is consistently high, rates run €25–€50/hour, and qualified tutors - teachers, engineers, graduate students - find work without much trouble.
Lyon has a large student population - Université Claude Bernard, ENS de Lyon - and steady demand for maths tutors throughout the year.
Toulouse has a lot of engineers and engineering students. That creates consistent demand for technically-minded maths tutors. This guide covers the best platforms in the Occitanie region.
Superprof is the obvious answer because everyone knows it - but that's also its problem. With hundreds of thousands of tutors listed, you're doing a lot of filtering yourself. Les Sherpas is smaller, more selective, and the profiles tend to be more reliable. Complétude and Anacours feel more like agencies: someone matches you with a tutor, which costs more but removes the guesswork. Kartable is its own thing - structured exercises, no live tutoring, useful for self-starters who just need the content. For most families, Les Sherpas or Superprof with careful filtering is where I'd start.
More than the headline figures suggest, once you account for frequency. Budget tutors - student, online, group - start around €15/hour. Experienced in-person tutors in Paris at Terminale level regularly charge €50-60. Most people land somewhere in the €25-40 range. That's manageable, but it adds up fast if sessions are weekly. One thing nobody advertises loudly enough: the crédit d'impôt covers 50% of tutoring costs in France for taxpayers. It effectively halves the price. Worth knowing before you rule something out on budget alone.
The platform barely matters at that age. Seriously. What matters is whether the tutor actually likes working with young kids - because not all of them do. A bored student tutoring for pocket money and a retired teacher who loves primary school maths both show up on Superprof at similar rates. The difference in outcome is enormous. Look at profiles carefully, ask about experience with that age group specifically, and trial one session before committing to anything.
Calculus is a part of it which includes limits, derivatives and integrals. You also need to know about probability and statistics sequences, complex numbers and linear algebra. The jump from Première (Year 12) to Bac (Year 13) can be tough for students. The amount of material almost doubles. To pass the Bac you need to understand the subjects, not just recognize them. One thing that surprises people is how important probability and statistics are in the exam. Many students think they are easier, than calculus so they don't study them as. The thing is, they are not easy. They just have types of challenges. You need to be careful and prepare well for them.
Pick Superprof or Les Sherpas and write a profile that's actually specific - not "I'm passionate about maths" but "maths degree from Lyon 1, specialized in probability, prepped 12 Terminale students over two years." Set a rate you'd genuinely accept. Underselling yourself attracts time-wasters. The first few students are the hardest to get; after that, referrals do most of the work. One practical note: declare your income from day one. The paperwork as an auto-entrepreneur is simpler than it looks - and the crédit d'impôt means your clients are getting a 50% subsidy, which you can legitimately use in your pitch.