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A Level Tuition Fees In Singapore: A Practical Comparison Guide For JC Students

Updated May 2, 2026A Levels
Tutorly.sg editorial team
Singapore-focused study guides aligned to MOE exam formats.
  • Tutorly.sg has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
  • Tutorly.sg has been used by thousands of users in Singapore

If you’re comparing A Level tuition fees in Singapore, expect rough ranges like $1–$3/hour for private tutors and $1–$3/month at tuition centres, while 24/7 AI help from Tutorly.sg starts from a tiny fraction of that.

The key is not just “cheap vs expensive”, but cost per hour of real learning, flexibility, and how well each option actually supports you towards your H 2 content and A Level grades.

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Why A Level Tuition Fees Feel So Confusing (And What This Guide Will Do)

JC life is already packed: lectures, tutorials, CCAs, PW, maybe part‑time work. On top of that, you (or your parents) are trying to figure out:

  • Is $1/hour for a H 2 Math tutor “worth it”?
  • Why is one centre $1/month and another$1/month?
  • Can you survive with just school + self‑study + something cheaper like an AI tutor?

This guide is written for JC 1–JC 2 students and parents in Singapore who want a clear, honest comparison of A Level tuition fees and how to evaluate them.

You’ll get:

  • A step‑by‑step way to compare tuition fees (beyond just price tags)
  • A simple comparison table: private tutor vs tuition centre vs Tutorly.sg
  • An exam strategy guide to make your tuition investment actually show up in your grades
  • Budgeting worksheets (with harder variants) to calculate your total A Level tuition costs
  • Common mistakes people make when choosing tuition based on fees alone

If at any point you feel, “I just need help with a question now”, you can try Tutorly instantly here. It’s a 24/7 AI tutor website built specifically for Singapore’s MOE syllabus, from Primary to JC 2, and it’s already been used by thousands of students here.


Step-by-step Tutorial: How To Compare A Level Tuition Fees In Singapore

Instead of just asking, “How much is A Level tuition?”, ask:

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“For my budget, which option gives me the most effective learning per dollar and per hour, for my actual subjects?”

Here’s a clear 6‑step process.

Step 1: Know The Typical A Level Tuition Fee Ranges

These are rough ranges in Singapore (as of recent years). Actual rates depend on tutor profile, location, and subject.

1. Private 1‑to‑1 tutors (home or online)

  • Undergrad / non‑MOE: ~$1–$3/hour
  • Ex‑MOE / experienced full‑time tutors: ~$1–$3/hour
  • “Star” / ex‑JC teacher / top‑tier: ~$1–$3/hour (sometimes higher)

2. Group tuition centres (small groups, usually 4–20 students)

  • H 2 subjects: often around $1–$3/month per subject
    • Typical: 1 lesson/week, 1.5–2 hours per lesson
    • Works out to roughly $1–$3 per hour of group teaching

3. 24/7 AI tutor (like Tutorly.sg)

  • Costs are usually subscription‑based, not per hour
  • Because it’s an AI website, you’re paying much less per “effective hour” of use
  • You can ask questions anytime, not limited to 1–2 hours a week

You can see detailed info about Tutorly’s A Level AI tutor here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore

Step 2: Calculate Your Real “Cost Per Hour Of Learning”

Fees alone don’t tell you much. Work out the effective cost per hour.

Example A: Tuition centre

  • $1/month for H 2 Math
  • 4 lessons/month
  • 2 hours per lesson

Total hours = 4×2=84 \times 2 = 8 hours/month

Effective cost per hour:
Cost per hour=$3608=$45/hour\text{Cost per hour} = \frac{\$360}{8} = \$45/\text{hour}

Example B: Private tutor

  • $1/hour
  • 1.5 hours per week
  • 4 weeks per month

Total hours = 1.5×4=61.5 \times 4 = 6 hours/month

Cost per month = 90 \times 6 = \540$

Cost per hour is still 9090, but now you know you’re paying $1/month.

Example C: AI tutor (subscription)

Let’s say (hypothetical example) you pay $1/month and you use it about 20 hours worth of Q&A + revision.

Cost per hour:
$3920=$1.95/hour\frac{\$39}{20} = \$1.95/\text{hour}

Even if you only use 10 hours:
$3910=$3.90/hour\frac{\$39}{10} = \$3.90/\text{hour}

This is why AI support is often used on top of tuition or as a lower‑cost alternative.

Step 3: Compare Not Just Price, But Flexibility & Availability

Now, compare options more holistically.

OptionPrice (rough)FlexibilityAvailability (time slots / urgency)
Private tutor~$1–$3/hour (1–2 x/week)Medium – you fix a slot; can reschedule but not last‑minuteLimited – depends on tutor’s schedule; tough for urgent same‑day help
Tuition centre~$1–$3/month per subject (fixed weekly class)Low – fixed class timings; replacement lessons limitedLow – only during class; maybe WhatsApp but not guaranteed
Tutorly (website)Subscription, typically far below tuition fees overallVery high – you log in anytime, ask as many questions as plan allows24/7 – instant responses, good for urgent doubts before tests

If you’re the kind who suddenly panics at 11pm the night before a H 2 Chemistry test, paying $1/hour for a tutor won’t help at that moment. An AI tutor website like Tutorly can.

If you want to test this out, you can get help now on Tutorly.sg and throw it a real A Level question you’re stuck on.

Step 4: Match The Option To Your Subject & Situation

Not every subject needs the same level of paid support.

Ask yourself honestly:

  1. Which subjects are my weakest?
    • E.g. H 2 Math E/FforpromosE/F for promos, H 2 Chem (barely passing)
  2. Which subjects are content‑heavy but I can self‑study?
    • E.g. H 1 Econs or GP for some students
  3. What is my realistic budget per month?

A common strategy I see from JC students:

  • Premium support for 1–2 key H 2 s e.g.privatetutororstrongcentreforMath/Chem/Physicse.g. private tutor or strong centre for Math/Chem/Physics
  • AI tutor + school notes for other subjects e.g.Econs,GP,H1subjecte.g. Econs, GP, H 1 subject

This reduces total monthly cost while still giving strong support where it matters most for university admissions.

Step 5: Check What You Actually Get For The Fee

For each option, list exactly what’s included.

For a private tutor:

  • 1‑to‑1? Online or physical?
  • Materials provided (notes, question banks, past year papers)?
  • WhatsApp support outside lesson?
  • Experience with your JC J1vsJ2pacing,yourschoolsexamstyleJ 1 vs J 2 pacing, your school’s exam style?

For a tuition centre:

  • Class size 5vs20makesahugedifference5 vs 20 makes a huge difference
  • Whether they follow MOE A Level syllabus tightly or just generic content
  • Whether they provide topic‑wise summaries, exam skills, and timed practice
  • Whether they cover TYS, school papers from top JCs, and updated question trends

For Tutorly.sg:

Tutorly is a 24/7 AI tutor website built specifically for Singapore students. For A Levels, that means:

  • You select your level e.g.JC2e.g. JC 2 and subject H2Math,H2Chem,H2Physics,H1/H2Econs,etc.H 2 Math, H 2 Chem, H 2 Physics, H 1/H 2 Econs, etc.
  • You paste/type a question (can be similar to your tutorials or school papers)
  • Tutorly checks your final answer, then shows step‑by‑step solutions aligned to MOE A Level expectations
  • You can ask follow‑up questions until you genuinely understand the method

Tutorly has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA) and is already used by thousands of students in Singapore, so you’re not exactly “experimenting” with something untested.

You can see the A Level‑specific info here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore

Step 6: Decide Your Mix (Not Just One Option)

Most JC students don’t use just one thing. A realistic mix could be:

  • 1 subject with a private tutor e.g. H 2 Math at $1/hour, 1.5 hours/week
  • 1 subject at a tuition centre e.g. H 2 Chem at $1/month
  • All subjects supported by Tutorly for day‑to‑day questions and revision

This way:

  • The “expensive” hours are used for deeper conceptual work and exam skills
  • The cheaper AI hours are used for daily practice, clarifying small doubts, and last‑minute revision

Exam Strategy Guide: Maximising A Level Results Relative To Tuition Investment

Paying for tuition doesn’t guarantee grades. The question is: How do you use each paid hour to move your grade closer to your target?

1. Use Expensive Hours For What Only Humans Do Best

Private tutors and centre teachers are most valuable for:

  • Diagnosing why you keep making certain mistakes
  • Watching how you think aloud and correcting your approach
  • Giving you exam strategies specific to A Level papers and your JC

So for each paid lesson:

  • Go in with specific questions:
    • “I keep losing marks in integration by substitution. Can we go through 3–4 past year questions on that?”
    • “How do I structure a 25‑mark H 2 Econs essay under 30 minutes?”
  • Ask for timed practice under exam conditions
  • Ask them to point out patterns in your scripts (e.g. you always misread “hence” parts)

Don’t waste $1/hour on things you could have clarified with a cheaper or free resource.

2. Use AI Hours For Repetition And Breadth

A Levels reward:

  • Speed (finishing papers on time)
  • Accuracy (not losing silly marks)
  • Exposure to many question types

This requires lots of practice, which is where an AI tutor website is efficient:

  • You can drill 10–20 questions on one topic in a single evening
  • Every time you’re stuck, you ask Tutorly:
    • “Explain why this step uses chain rule instead of product rule”
    • “Show me how to approach this H 2 Chem equilibrium question from scratch”
  • You get step‑by‑step solutions, then try similar questions again

Because Tutorly is available 24/7, you don’t need to wait till your next tuition session. This makes your paid human hours more productive, since you’ve already cleared basic doubts.

To see how this feels in practice, you can start using Tutorly now while reading this article and test it with a real H 2 question.

3. Plan Your Tuition Around Key A Level Milestones

Think in phases, not just “tuition forever”.

J 1 (Term 1–2):

  • Focus on building strong foundations in H 2 subjects
  • If budget is tight, start with AI + maybe 1 human subject
  • Aim to be comfortable with lecture content before promos

J 1 Promos Period:

  • Increase practice volume (TYS, school papers)
  • Use AI for daily drilling and clarifying mistakes
  • Use human tutors to fix systemic issues (e.g. always failing vectors)

J 2 (Term 1–2):

  • Content ramp‑up + revision of J 1 topics
  • Consider adding a centre or tutor if your J 1 results were weak
  • Use AI to maintain consistency e.g.35questionsdailypersubjecte.g. 3–5 questions daily per subject

Prelims & A Levels:

  • Focus on timed practice, full papers
  • Use AI for fast marking and full solutions
  • Use tutors for exam‑style mock sessions and feedback

This phased approach prevents you from overspending too early or too late.

4. Track Your “Return On Tuition”

Every 1–2 months, ask:

  • Has my grade improved? e.g.fromEtoCinH2Mathe.g. from E to C in H 2 Math
  • Do I feel more confident with exam‑style questions, not just tutorial questions?
  • Am I relying too heavily on tutor explanations instead of trying first?

If you’re spending $1/month and your grade hasn’t moved at all in 3–4 months:

  • Either the tuition style isn’t working for you
  • Or you’re not doing enough self‑practice in between

In both cases, re‑allocating some budget to a different tutor, centre, or more consistent AI practice may be smarter.


Worksheet Practice: Budgeting And Calculating Total A Level Tuition Costs

Let’s treat this like a mini A Math / Econs exercise, but about your real life.

You can actually do the sums, so you and your parents know what you’re committing to.

Part A: Basic Budgeting Questions

Q 1.
You’re in JC 1. You want:

  • 1 private tutor for H 2 Math at $1/hour, 1.5 hours per week
  • 1 tuition centre for H 2 Chemistry at $1/month 8hours/month8 hours/month

(a) What is your total tuition cost per month?
(b) What is your effective cost per hour for each subject?

Try before reading the outline answer below.

Outline Answer:

(a) H 2 Math:

  • Weekly hours = 1.5
  • Monthly hours (approx) = 1.5×4=61.5 \times 4 = 6
  • Cost = 70 \times 6 = \420$

H 2 Chem:

  • Given = $1/month$

Total = 420 + 320 = \740$ per month

(b) Effective cost per hour:

  • Math: $1/hour$ (already given)
  • Chem:
    $3208=$40/hour\frac{\$320}{8} = \$40/\text{hour}

Q 2.
You decide to drop the H 2 Chem centre and instead:

  • Use Tutorly.sg subscription at $1/month
  • Still keep your H 2 Math tutor as before

You end up using Tutorly for about 15 hours of Chem + other subjects per month.

(a) What is your new total monthly tuition + Tutorly cost?
(b) What is your effective cost per hour for Tutorly?
(c) How much do you save per month compared to the previous plan?

Outline Answer:

(a) Math tutor: $1/month Tutorly: \1/monthTotal= Total =420 + 39 = $459$

(b)
$3915=$2.60/hour (approx)\frac{\$39}{15} = \$2.60/\text{hour (approx)}

(c) Old plan: $1/month New plan: \1/monthMonthlysavings: Monthly savings:740 - 459 = $281$


Part B: Harder Budgeting Variants (More Like Econs / Math)

Q 3 (Harder).
You are JC 1 now and will be in JC 2 next year. You plan for 18 months of support (from now till A Levels):

  • H 2 Math private tutor: $1/hour, 1.5 hours/week, 4 weeks/month
  • H 2 Physics tuition centre: $1/month, 1.5 hours/week
  • Tutorly.sg subscription: $1/month across all subjects

Assume you keep this plan constant for 18 months.

(a) Compute the total cost over 18 months for each component.
(b) Compute the overall total.
(c) If your parents budgeted $15,000 for A Level support, what percentage of the budget will this plan use?

Try this carefully; this is similar to multi‑step A Math / H 1 Econs style calculation.

Outline Answer:

(a) H 2 Math tutor:

  • Weekly hours = 1.5
  • Monthly hours ≈ 1.5×4=61.5 \times 4 = 6
  • Monthly cost = 80 \times 6 = \480$
  • 18‑month cost = 480 \times 18 = \8,640$

H 2 Physics centre:

  • Monthly cost = 280280
  • 18‑month cost = 280 \times 18 = \5,040$

Tutorly:

  • Monthly cost = 3939
  • 18‑month cost = 39 \times 18 = \702$

(b) Overall total:

8,640+5,040+702=$14,3828,640 + 5,040 + 702 = \$14,382

(c) Percentage of $15,000 budget:

14,38215,000×100%95.88%96%\frac{14,382}{15,000} \times 100\% \approx 95.88\% \approx 96\%

So this plan uses about 96% of the allocated budget.


Q 4 (Harder Variant – Optimisation Style).

Your parents want to keep total A Level support below $10,000 over 18 months.

You are considering two plans:

Plan A

  • H 2 Math private tutor: $1/hour, 1.5 hours/week
  • H 2 Chem tuition centre: $1/month
  • No AI tutor

Plan B

  • H 2 Math tuition centre: $1/month
  • H 2 Chem tuition centre: $1/month
  • Tutorly.sg: $1/month

Assume:

  • 4 weeks per month
  • Math tutor in Plan A = 90 \times 1.5 \times 4 = \540$/month

Compute:

(a) Total 18‑month cost for Plan A
(b) Total 18‑month cost for Plan B
(c) Which plan fits the $10,000 budget, and by how much does it under‑ or overshoot?

Outline Answer:

(a) Plan A

  • Math tutor: $1/month$
    • 18 months: 540 \times 18 = \9,720$
  • Chem centre: $1/month$
    • 18 months: 320 \times 18 = \5,760$

Total Plan A:
9,720+5,760=$15,4809,720 + 5,760 = \$15,480

(b) Plan B

  • Math centre: $1/month$
    • 18 months: 280 \times 18 = \5,040$
  • Chem centre: $1/month$
    • 18 months: 320 \times 18 = \5,760$
  • Tutorly: $1/month$
    • 18 months: 39 \times 18 = \702$

Total Plan B:
5,040+5,760+702=$11,5025,040 + 5,760 + 702 = \$11,502

(c) Budget = $10,000

  • Plan A: 15,48015,480 → exceeds budget by 15,480 - 10,000 = \5,480$
  • Plan B: 11,50211,502 → exceeds budget by 11,502 - 10,000 = \1,502$

Strictly speaking, neither plan fits the $10,000 limit.
But Plan B is closer to the target and easier to adjust (e.g. shorten duration, reduce months, or rely more on AI).


Real-Life Scenario: JC 2 Panic Before Prelims

Imagine this:

You’re in JC 2 at a neighbourhood JC. H 2 Math has been a consistent D/E. Prelims are in 6 weeks, A Levels in a few months. Your parents can afford either:

  • A premium ex‑JC Math tutor at $1/hour for 1.5 hours/week, or
  • A more affordable centre at $1/month + Tutorly subscription

If you take the premium tutor, you get maybe 9 hours before prelims.
If you take the centre + Tutorly, you get weekly classes plus unlimited 24/7 Q&A for all your daily practices.

In situations like this, it’s not just “expensive = better”. It’s:

“Which setup lets me ask the most questions, do the most exam‑style practice, and get timely help when I’m stuck?”

For many students, a good centre + consistent use of Tutorly for self‑practice can be more cost‑effective than relying only on a few hours of premium tutoring.

You can simulate your own situation by actually listing:

  • Weeks left to prelims / A Levels
  • Hours of tuition you can realistically attend
  • Hours of self‑study + AI help you can commit to

Then choose the mix that lets you maximise total quality practice hours, not just “highest price per hour”.


Common Mistakes When Choosing A Level Tuition Based On Fees Alone

Let’s go through the traps I see most often from JC students and parents.

Mistake 1: Assuming Higher Fee = Guaranteed A

A $1/hour tutor might be:

  • Amazing for some students (clear explanations, targeted practice)
  • Totally mismatched for you (teaching style, personality, pace)

Always:

  • Ask for trial lessons where possible
  • After 2–3 sessions, check if you actually understand more and perform better on real questions
  • Look at your own effort between lessons; no tutor can fix a lack of practice

Mistake 2: Ignoring “Hidden” Time Costs

A cheaper centre far from your house might:

  • Cost $1/month (good deal on paper)
  • But require 1 hour travel each way

That’s 2 extra hours per week gone, which you could have used for practice or rest.

When comparing fees, factor in:

  • Travel time
  • Energy level (late‑night classes after CCA?)
  • Whether you can realistically stay consistent

Sometimes a slightly more expensive but nearby option is better overall.

Mistake 3: Overloading On Tuition And Under‑investing In Self‑Study

Some students end up with:

  • 3–4 tuition subjects
  • Almost every weekday evening booked

Then they have no time left to:

  • Redo questions
  • Summarise notes
  • Reflect on mistakes

Remember: A Levels test your independent problem‑solving, not how well you listen in class. You need time to struggle a bit with questions on your own.

This is where something like Tutorly is useful—you can keep tuition hours reasonable, then rely on on‑demand help during self‑study instead of booking more classes.

Mistake 4: Not Matching The Option To The Subject Type

Some subjects respond better to certain kinds of support:

  • H 2 Math / H 2 Physics / H 2 Chem
    • Need lots of problem‑solving practice
    • AI tutor + question banks + occasional targeted 1‑to‑1 can be very efficient
  • H 2 Econs / GP
    • Need help with essay structure, evaluation, and examples
    • Human

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👉 Try a question now and see how fast you can improve.

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