5 /5
Average rating 5 ⭐ with 77+ reviews.
36 $/h
Great value: 98% of our stats tutors offer the first lesson free! And a statistics lesson usually costs around $36 per hour.
2 h
Super-fast replies: our tutors typically respond within 2h. No waiting around—get cracking on probability and data analysis sooner.
Filter by specialisation—whether you need help with hypothesis testing, regression analysis, or SPSS software. Compare qualifications, reviews, and rates across in Melbourne.

Maths
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Jhon
5
Message your chosen tutor to discuss your goals—descriptive statistics for uni, ATAR prep, or business analytics. Book securely and pay only after each session.

Grab a Student Pass for unlimited lessons over a month—perfect if you've got exams coming up. Learn inference, sampling methods, and statistical modelling at your own pace in Melbourne.

A statistics course introduces you to the tools used to make sense of numbers and patterns.
A private tutor can map these concepts to your coursework so each topic clicks into place.
The average cost of statistics lessons in Melbourne is around $36/h.
Several factors influence the price:
Comparing several profiles helps you find the best value for your budget.
To make statistics stick, work through examples rather than just reading formulas.
Working one-on-one with a tutor helps you progress faster because feedback is immediate and specific.
Statistics tutors in Melbourne have an average rating of 5/5.
This score comes from 77 authentic evaluations left by real students.
Check the reviews to select a statistics tutor whose teaching style matches yours.
Browse our hand-picked statistics tutors who specialise in everything from psychology statistics to biostatistics. Whether it's VCE, HSC, or university-level support—you'll find the right fit.
| ✅ Average price : | $36/h |
| ✅ Average response time : | 2h |
| ✅ Tutors available : | 423 |
| ✅ Lesson format : | Face-to-face or online |
Statistics sits right on the line between maths and real-world decision making. It shows up in school, uni, work, and even in daily news. The good part is that once it “clicks”, it starts feeling more like problem solving than memorising.
And tutoring is not a niche thing anymore. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported in Education and Work, Australia (2023) that people with higher qualifications have higher employment rates than those with lower qualifications. Statistics is one of those subjects that supports many pathways, from health to business to engineering, because it’s used everywhere.
On Superprof, the hourly rate for statistics tutoring in Melbourne usually sits in the $40 to $150 per hour range for academic high school tutoring (AUD). VCE specialists can charge more depending on experience and results, often within the broader VCE specialist range of $50 to $200 per hour. The “right” price depends on what you need: a patient tutor to rebuild the basics, or targeted VCE exam prep with timed practice and feedback.
Quick reality check: tutoring costs are not tax deductible for families in Australia, so it’s worth choosing a tutor who is a good fit and has clear lesson goals.
When you compare options, look for trust signals that matter in Melbourne: a Working with Children Check (WWCC), strong reviews, and experience with the VCE curriculum if you’re in Year 11 or Year 12.
Some students do best when stats leaves the textbook and lands somewhere familiar. Melbourne has plenty of “data moments” you can use in lessons, which helps everything stick.
Melbourne is also a city where many students juggle big goals, like competitive programs, scholarships, and strong ATAR results. That pressure is real. A good statistics tutor can help you organise your study plan around the school calendar, especially heading into Term 3 and Term 4 when VCE revision ramps up.
Here’s the plain-English version: statistics is about collecting data, describing it clearly, and making careful guesses about what it means. It rewards students who can explain their thinking, not just punch numbers into a calculator.
Statistics is an academic discipline, and the skill is part maths, part reasoning, part communication. In good Statistics lessons in Melbourne, you’ll usually see these ideas come up again and again, just in harder forms each time.
Probability is the maths of chance. It’s how you answer questions like “What are the odds?” but with clear steps, not vibes. Sampling is how you collect data from a smaller group so you can say something about a bigger group, like surveying 200 people to estimate a result for Melbourne.
Correlation means two things move together, like “more study hours, higher scores” in a dataset. It does not automatically mean one causes the other, which is where people get caught out. Regression is a method for modelling that relationship, often by fitting a line (or curve) to data to help predict outcomes.
Then there’s hypothesis testing, which sounds scarier than it is. It’s a structured way to check whether a pattern in your data is likely real, or could have happened by chance. In VCE-style questions, this often links to interpreting results and writing a short conclusion that matches the context.
A Melbourne tutor might practise this using relatable datasets, like tram delay times on different routes, daily temperatures across seasons, or simple surveys about study habits. The content stays the same, but the examples make it easier to picture what the numbers mean.
Build a “methods checklist” for the question types you see most. Keep it on one page. For example, for a hypothesis test you might list: define the hypotheses, choose a significance level if given, compute the test statistic, compare to critical value or p-value, write a conclusion in context.
Why does this work? Because in exams, nerves make students skip steps. A checklist gives you something steady to follow, even when your brain is noisy. A statistics tutor can help you create this checklist and then drill it with timed practice until it becomes automatic.
Whether you’re in Year 10 building foundations, in Year 11 getting serious, or in Year 12 aiming to lift your ATAR, the right support makes a big difference. On Superprof, you can browse 423 profiles and compare statistics tutors in melbourne by price, reviews, availability, and teaching style.
If you’re deciding between a few options, prioritise practical details: does the tutor understand VCE expectations, can they explain concepts in plain language, do they provide exam-style questions, and do they have a WWCC if they’re teaching school-age students?
Ready to get started? Jump onto Superprof and find statistics tutors melbourne students recommend, book a first chat, and set up Statistics lessons in Melbourne that fit your schedule, either in-person or online.
Alina
Statistics tutor
Alina is an exceptional educator. Her teaching methodology is marked by clarity and a deep mastery of the subject matter—traits she conveys with remarkable patience and attentiveness. It is truly impressive how she managed to hold my 14-year-old...
Rozana, 2 weeks ago
James
Statistics tutor
He solve my questions super efficiently. Happy face
Eunice, 3 years ago
Dr peter
Statistics tutor
Dr Peter is an excellent and prompt communicator. He is very knowledgeable and knows what to do.
Lutfun, 4 years ago
Amr
Statistics tutor
Amr went above and beyond to help me with some very difficult tasks. I couldn't find any other tutor on superprof that was willing to help me with these particular topics. I highly recommend him! Very knowledgeable and very kind.
Simo, 4 years ago
Richard
Statistics tutor
We has asked Richard to help our son who is in grade 6 with his maths this year. We have found Richard to be a lovely young man - very polite and reliable. We have only had a couple of lessons but we find him to be a competent teacher and he is...
Domenic, More than 5 years ago
Alex
Statistics tutor
Alex is genuinely such an excellent tutor!! He’s incredibly articulate and has a knack for breaking down tricky material into pieces that finally make sense. He’s patient and generous with his time, always happy to go over things until they...
Kimi, 2 days ago