Your child is struggling in maths. Or English. Or you just want them to stay ahead. The first instinct for many parents is: “should I get a tutor?”
Private tutoring is booming in the UK. More families than ever are paying for weekly one-to-one sessions, driven partly by post-pandemic learning gaps and partly by growing anxiety about KS2 attainment. But tutoring isn’t right for every child, every situation, or every budget. And for many KS2 families, a good educational app does the same job — and does it better.
Here’s an honest comparison to help you decide.
The Real Cost of Private Tutoring
Private tutoring in the UK typically costs £20–£40 per hour for KS2 children, with qualified teachers at the higher end of that range. In London and major cities, expect to pay more.
Private tutor
- Once a week, 1 hour
- £120/month
- £1,080/school year (9 months)
- One subject only (typically)
- Fixed weekly schedule
Educational app
- Every day, 15–20 mins
- £7/month or £60/year
- Under £60/school year
- Three subjects (Maths, English, Science)
- Any time, any device
A weekly tutor costs roughly 18x more per year than an educational subscription. That doesn’t mean tutors aren’t worth it — but it does mean the comparison deserves an honest look.
What a Tutor Does Well
A good tutor is genuinely powerful in the right situation. Here’s what human tutoring provides that an app cannot:
- Real-time explanation of specific misunderstandings — a tutor can diagnose why a child is getting fractions wrong and explain it six different ways until it clicks
- Accountability and relationship — a child who likes their tutor will try harder because they don’t want to disappoint them
- Flexible problem-solving — if a concept isn’t landing, a tutor changes approach immediately
- Writing feedback — for written work, a tutor can provide nuanced feedback that an app cannot match
- Your child has a specific, diagnosed gap that a teacher has flagged
- Your child is significantly behind peers and needs intensive, personalised catch-up
- Your child responds well to human relationship and accountability
- You’re preparing for 11+ or selective school entrance exams
- Your child has a learning difference that requires specialist teaching
What an App Does Better
For consistent daily practice — which is what most KS2 children need most — a well-designed educational app has significant advantages over weekly tutoring:
- Daily consistency — 15 minutes every day beats one hour once a week for building and retaining skills. Spaced practice is far more effective than weekly cramming.
- No scheduling — no waiting for Tuesday at 4pm. Your child can practise on Sunday morning or Monday after school. Progress doesn’t stop over holidays.
- Multiple subjects — a tutor typically covers one subject. An app can cover maths, English and science in the same session.
- Adaptive difficulty — good educational apps identify where your child is strong and weak and serve them appropriate questions — something a tutor can only do in a weekly one-hour window.
- Progress visibility — parents can see exactly what was practised, how well, and on which topics — in real time, not just at the next session.
- No anxiety — some children find one-to-one tutoring high-pressure. An app is patient, non-judgemental, and doesn’t make a child feel embarrassed about getting something wrong.
- Your child needs consistent daily practice, not intensive catch-up
- You want to cover multiple subjects affordably
- Motivation is the main challenge — the child needs a reason to want to practise
- Scheduling a weekly tutor is difficult around family life and activities
- Your child is on track but you want to support steady progress
- Budget is a consideration
The honest answer for most KS2 families: The majority of children don’t have a specific diagnosed gap that requires a tutor. They need consistent, engaged daily practice across their subjects. For that — which describes most KS2 children — a well-designed app is more effective, more convenient, and dramatically cheaper. Tutors are powerful but narrow. Apps are broader and more consistent.
Can You Use Both?
Yes — and some families do. A weekly tutor for targeted catch-up in one area, combined with daily app practice for ongoing fluency across all subjects, covers both bases. The key is being clear about what each is for: the tutor addresses specific gaps, the app builds and maintains daily habits.
Without SATs pressure in Wales, the need for intensive tutoring is generally lower than in England. The most valuable home learning for Welsh KS2 children is consistent daily practice that builds genuine skills — exactly what a good app provides. If your school hasn’t flagged specific concerns, daily practice at home is almost certainly sufficient for most Welsh primary school children.
Daily practice. Three subjects. Real motivation.
Bucket Filler covers KS2 Maths, English and Science for £6.99/month — less than the cost of a single tutoring session. Your child earns real rewards. You see their progress in real time. Try free.
Start your free trial