A-level Further Maths Tutor: How to Find One Who Can Actually Teach It
How to find an A-level Further Maths tutor who can teach your child's exam board and optional module route, prepare them for STEP if needed, and how Tutorwise verifies tutor credibility.
A-level Further Maths Tutor: How to Find One Who Can Actually Teach It
If your child is aiming for a maths, physics, engineering or computer science degree, an A-level Further Maths tutor is the single most useful investment you can make in the two years before university — and the right one is someone who can teach the specific optional module route your child is sitting, on your child's exam board, and prepare them for university admissions tests like STEP if they need it. Further Maths is a separate, second A-level, taken alongside A-level Maths, and it is significantly harder to find a tutor who can teach it well than one who can teach GCSE or standard A-level Maths. This guide explains what to check before you book, and how Tutorwise helps you tell a genuinely qualified tutor from a confident-sounding one.
Further Maths is a second A-level, not a harder version of Maths
The first thing to understand is that Further Mathematics is its own qualification. A student does not "do harder Maths" — they sit A-level Maths and A-level Further Maths as two distinct A-levels, usually across Year 12 and Year 13. You cannot take Further Maths on its own; it sits on top of Maths. That matters when you look for a tutor, because a tutor who is comfortable with A-level Maths is not automatically comfortable with Further Maths. The Further Maths content goes well beyond the standard course: complex numbers, matrices, further calculus, differential equations, hyperbolic functions, and — depending on the options chosen — further mechanics, further statistics, or decision mathematics.
So the question is never just "can you teach A-level Maths?" It is "can you teach the Further Maths content, on my child's board, including the optional modules the school has entered them for?" A tutor who fudges that answer will waste your money and your child's time. A good one will ask which board and which options before they quote you a rate.
How Tutorwise lets you check credibility, not just read a bio
Most tutoring sites hand you a self-written profile and leave you to guess. A tutor types "Oxbridge maths graduate, 10 years' experience" into a box, and you have no way to know whether any of it is true. For a niche, high-stakes subject like Further Maths — where the wrong tutor is worse than no tutor — guessing is exactly what you want to avoid.
Tutorwise works differently. Every tutor carries a credibility score that the platform computes, rather than a claim the tutor writes about themselves. That score is built from real, checkable signals: whether the tutor has passed a verified DBS check, whether their identity has been confirmed, whether their qualifications are on file, the outcomes they have actually delivered for past students, and genuine reviews from families who have worked with them. A parent choosing a Further Maths tutor is not trusting a paragraph of self-description — they are reading a score that only goes up when a real signal backs it.
Two parts of that model matter most for Further Maths. First, verification: an unverified profile cannot earn a full score on Tutorwise at all, so the tutors you see near the top are people whose identity and background checks have actually cleared. Second, delivered outcomes: because the score rewards results a tutor has genuinely produced, a tutor who repeatedly gets students through Further Maths to strong grades rises above one who simply lists it as a subject. Compare that with an ordinary directory listing, where a tutor who has never taught Further Maths in their life can tick the box and appear beside a specialist. On Tutorwise, the box-tick is not enough — the signal has to be real for the score to reflect it.
That is the honest use of a tutor's page: not a place to be impressed by a bio, but a place to check whether the credibility is earned.
Match the exam board and the optional modules
Here is where Further Maths gets specific, and where a general "maths tutor" search will let you down. Further Maths is offered by several exam boards — Edexcel, AQA, OCR and OCR (MEI) — and each structures its optional content differently. A-level Maths is fairly standardised across boards; Further Maths is not. The core pure content is common, but the options — Further Mechanics, Further Statistics, Decision Maths, and additional pure — are chosen by the school, and the papers your child sits depend on those choices.
That means the correct first question to a prospective tutor is: "My child is doing Edexcel Further Maths with the Further Mechanics and Decision options — can you teach those?" A tutor who only ever taught the Statistics route may be excellent, but they are the wrong fit for a Mechanics-and-Decision student. This is the same principle that applies when you match an A-level science tutor to your exam board: the board and the module choice are not administrative detail, they are the whole shape of the course.
Ask the tutor directly which boards and which options they have taught to exam. On Tutorwise you can see a tutor's stated specialisms alongside their computed credibility, so you are cross-checking a claim against verified signals rather than taking it at face value. If a tutor cannot tell you, without hesitation, which options they cover, treat that as your answer.
If your child is aiming for a top STEM degree, ask about admissions tests
Further Maths and university admissions are tightly linked, and this is often the real reason a family goes looking for a tutor. Several leading universities either require Further Maths or make it a strong preference for maths, physics, engineering and computer science courses — and a number of them set additional admissions tests on top of A-levels. STEP (the Sixth Term Examination Paper) is used by Cambridge, Warwick and Imperial for mathematics offers; the MAT and TMUA are used elsewhere for maths and computer science admissions. These tests are not simply "harder A-level questions" — they reward mathematical problem-solving under unfamiliar conditions, and preparing for them is a distinct skill.
So if your child is targeting a competitive STEM course, a Further Maths tutor who has coached STEP, MAT or TMUA is worth far more than one who has only taught the A-level syllabus. Ask specifically: "Have you prepared students for STEP?" A tutor who has will talk fluently about the difference between STEP I, II and III, and about pacing a two-year preparation rather than a last-minute cram. A tutor who has not should say so — and that honesty is itself a good sign. This is closely tied to timing: leaving admissions-test preparation too late is one of the more common regrets families have, and it is worth reading our note on what to do when a student is falling behind at A-level before you decide how much runway you have.
What to check before you book
Bring it together into a short checklist. Before you commit to a Further Maths tutor, confirm:
- The board and options. They can teach your child's exact board and the specific optional modules (Further Mechanics, Further Statistics, Decision, additional pure) the school has entered.
- Verified credentials. Their identity and DBS check have cleared — on Tutorwise this shows in the computed credibility score, not just a claim in a bio.
- Delivered outcomes. They have a track record of getting Further Maths students to the grades they needed, backed by real reviews rather than testimonials they wrote themselves.
- Admissions-test experience, if relevant. If your child needs STEP, MAT or TMUA, the tutor has actually coached it.
- Fit with your child. Further Maths rewards a tutor who can make abstract content click — complex numbers and differential equations are where confident students often stall. A short trial session tells you more than any profile.
The reason this checklist matters is simple: the cost of the wrong Further Maths tutor is not just the money. It is a term of a two-year course spent with someone who cannot cover the material, discovered too late to fix. Getting the match right the first time is the whole point.
Find a Further Maths tutor you can actually trust
Tutorwise was built so that "can I trust this tutor?" has a real answer rather than a hopeful guess. Every tutor's credibility is computed from verified checks, qualifications and delivered outcomes, so when you search for an A-level Further Maths tutor you are choosing from people whose background you can actually see. Start by filtering for A-level Further Maths, check the credibility signals, and message two or three tutors with your child's board and module options before you book a trial. For the wider picture on choosing well, see how to choose a tutor you can actually trust and our guide to finding a GCSE or A-level maths tutor.
Frequently asked questions
Is A-level Further Maths harder than A-level Maths? Yes, meaningfully. Further Maths is a separate second A-level that builds on the standard Maths content and adds topics such as complex numbers, matrices, further calculus and differential equations, plus optional modules in mechanics, statistics or decision maths. It is designed for students who are strong at Maths and want to stretch further, which is why finding a tutor who can teach it well is harder than for standard A-level Maths.
Do I need a different tutor for Further Maths than for A-level Maths? Not necessarily a different person, but you do need someone who is confident with the Further Maths content specifically. A tutor comfortable with A-level Maths is not automatically comfortable with Further Maths. Ask directly whether they have taught Further Maths to exam, on your child's board, including the optional modules the school has chosen.
Does my child need Further Maths for a university maths or engineering degree? Several leading universities require or strongly prefer Further Maths for maths, physics, engineering and computer science courses, and some also set admissions tests such as STEP, MAT or TMUA. Check the specific entry requirements for the courses your child is considering, and if admissions tests are involved, look for a tutor who has coached them.
How does Tutorwise help me pick a Further Maths tutor? Tutorwise gives each tutor a credibility score the platform computes from real signals — verified DBS and identity checks, qualifications on file, delivered outcomes and genuine reviews — rather than a self-written bio. For a niche subject like Further Maths, that lets you tell a genuine specialist from someone who has simply ticked the subject box, before you spend anything.
How do I check which Further Maths options my child is sitting? Ask the school or check the exam entry details — the school chooses the board (Edexcel, AQA, OCR or OCR MEI) and the optional modules (Further Mechanics, Further Statistics, Decision or additional pure). Once you know those, you can match a tutor to the exact route your child is taking rather than to Further Maths in general.
Frequently asked questions
Is A-level Further Maths harder than A-level Maths?
Yes, meaningfully. Further Maths is a separate second A-level that builds on the standard Maths content and adds topics such as complex numbers, matrices, further calculus and differential equations, plus optional modules in mechanics, statistics or decision maths. It is designed for students who are strong at Maths and want to stretch further, which is why finding a tutor who can teach it well is harder than for standard A-level Maths.
Do I need a different tutor for Further Maths than for A-level Maths?
Not necessarily a different person, but you do need someone who is confident with the Further Maths content specifically. A tutor comfortable with A-level Maths is not automatically comfortable with Further Maths. Ask directly whether they have taught Further Maths to exam, on your child's board, including the optional modules the school has chosen.
Does my child need Further Maths for a university maths or engineering degree?
Several leading universities require or strongly prefer Further Maths for maths, physics, engineering and computer science courses, and some also set admissions tests such as STEP, MAT or TMUA. Check the specific entry requirements for the courses your child is considering, and if admissions tests are involved, look for a tutor who has coached them.
How does Tutorwise help me pick a Further Maths tutor?
Tutorwise gives each tutor a credibility score the platform computes from real signals — verified DBS and identity checks, qualifications on file, delivered outcomes and genuine reviews — rather than a self-written bio. For a niche subject like Further Maths, that lets you tell a genuine specialist from someone who has simply ticked the subject box, before you spend anything.
How do I check which Further Maths options my child is sitting?
Ask the school or check the exam entry details — the school chooses the board (Edexcel, AQA, OCR or OCR MEI) and the optional modules (Further Mechanics, Further Statistics, Decision or additional pure). Once you know those, you can match a tutor to the exact route your child is taking rather than to Further Maths in general.