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Award-Winning Economics Tutors

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Earning a 4.0 at Wharton's Business Economics program means Carina didn't just study microeconomic models like price discrimination and game theory — she applied them to real business cases where firms make strategic decisions under uncertainty. She's now deepening that foundation with a master's at...
University of Pennsylvania
BS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Erik
I am a graduate from the University of Florida, University of Pennsylvania, and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. I have graduated with scholarship honors in Chemical Engineering with a Bachelor of Sciences from University of Florida, Masters of Computer and Information Technology from UPenn,...
University of Pennsylvania
MMG

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Sara
Mechanical engineering at Columbia means Sara is constantly applying economic reasoning — optimization under constraints, cost-benefit trade-offs, resource allocation — even if the coursework calls it something different. That quantitative instinct translates well when tackling economics topics like...
Columbia University
Bachelor's (in progress)

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Harleen
I am a Molecular Engineering major at the University of Chicago, I am currently taking time off to focus on other aspects of my career but I don't want to stop tutoring outside college campus!. I am a child of immigrants and have spent my life tutoring my siblings and younger students, and I loved...
University of Chicago
BS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Danielle
I am an entrepreneurial travel-loving media professional living in New Orleans. I have a Master in Business Administration from Tulane University and I love teaching all sorts of subjects, especially math. In terms of hobbies, you can find me long-distance running, studying data science, exploring ...
Tulane University of Louisiana
MS
Northwestern University
MS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Tallulah
Supply and demand curves are straightforward enough on their own — the real challenge is applying them to market scenarios, policy questions, and graph interpretation under exam pressure. Tallulah's business minor at Northwestern gave her a solid grounding in micro and macro principles, and she conn...
Northwestern University
Bachelor

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Anthropology and sociology trained David to think about how societies organize resources, distribute power, and respond to scarcity — which turns out to be exactly what microeconomics is about, just with different vocabulary. His statistics teaching background means he's comfortable with the quantit...
University of Pennsylvania
PhD
Kenyon College
PhD
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Three Bachelor of Science degrees — including one in Economics — mean Charlotte has spent serious time inside the models and frameworks that drive introductory and intermediate coursework, from elasticity and market structures to GDP accounting and monetary policy mechanics. Her 36 ACT and 5.0 tutor...
Vanderbilt University
BS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
My B.A. is from Duke University and I completed all non-dissertation requirements for the Ph.D. in economics from the University of Pennsylvania, which was then the 7th-ranked Economics Ph.D. Program in the U.S. I also taught macro- and micro-economics at La Salle and Drexel Universities. I was ra...
University of Pennsylvania
AM
Duke University
AM

Certified Tutor
2+ years
I have an MBA from Rice University and both real-world business experience and teaching experience. Most recently, I taught a first-year college course in Microeconomics for nine years, in addition to other classes in the university's international trade program. My students came from over 30 countr...
Rice University
MBA
Top 20 Business Subjects
Meet Our Expert Tutors
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Wyatt
SAT Subject Test in World History Tutor • +45 Subjects
I completed my bachelor's in Psychology at the University of Georgia and now am finishing my master's degree in Work and Organizational Psychology at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. I am passionate about helping students succeed because I am passionate about the subjects I tutor and I believe I have the ability to help them see the interesting parts of those subjects. In previous positions I've had the opportunity to work with students and found it incredibly valuable and rewarding. I tutor in social sciences, English, and writing, and I would say my favorite subject of those is psychology. I would describe my tutoring style as student-driven and adaptable. I want to tutor in the way that you learn best. Outside of academia, I like hanging with my friends, reading, traveling, playing sports, cooking, and generally trying to fill my life with quality experiences.
Margot
AP Statistics Tutor • +45 Subjects
I am a student at Boston College studying Economics and English. I have an excellent academic record, haven taken 14 AP courses throughout high school, and have preformed well on many standardized exams. I strive to help other students to do the same! I have three years of experience tutoring peers at high school, college, and privately, primarily in English, Math, and SAT prep. Though I tutor a range of subjects, I am most passionate about helping students conquer Standardized Tests (specifically the reading and writing sections) and English. I want to help students excel on Standardized Exams so they can pursue their higher education goals. I direct my tutoring towards identifying students' learning methods and catering to those to establish continued engagement in doing so, I hope to foster a love of learning similar to mine. Outside of tutoring and school, I enjoy reading and believe that reading consistently is the key to succeeding in writing and preforming well on Standardized Exams. My love for creative writing has also led me to draft a novel which I am continuing to edit, and as an Assistant Director of the Campus Activities Board at Boston College I plan live music-focused events to engage students on campus.
Blair
Statistics Graduate Level Tutor • +50 Subjects
I enjoy helping students by explaining concepts in ways that make sense to them, by eliciting their feedback and tailoring my approach to their individual needs, and by conveying my enthusiasm for the learning process. It's great to see the light come on and to see their progress. I have an undergraduate degree in Politics from Princeton, a post-baccalaureate certificate in Quantitative Studies for Finance from Columbia, and an MBA from London Business School. I served as an officer in the Marine Corps and have worked in a number of academic and private-sector positions. I founded and am currently running an analytics-focused consulting practice.
Diana
AP Statistics Tutor • +41 Subjects
I received my MBA graduate degree from Georgetown University and my Electrical Engineering Bachelors degree from San Diego State University. I worked for Sony Electronics for over a decade as a Senior Electrical Design Engineer, leading hardware designs of newly introduced features of Sony's High-Definition televisions. I have also managed a privately-owned business. I have always been passionate about tutoring. For example, I tutored math, calculus and physics in college, and I volunteered in educating seniors in computer skills. I especially enjoy tutoring students who are interested in learning the subject themselves. Whether they are good at it is irrelevant as I will work very hard to ensure they have the right foundation to be confident and enthusiastic about the topic at hand. In my spare time, I enjoy reading, traveling, biking and playing the piano. I also enjoy meeting people from different cultures and backgrounds.
Reed
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects
Hi my name is Reed and I am a graduate from Carleton College with a degree in Economics. I have a passion for helping students learn and achieve their academic and personal goals. At Carleton, I played Varsity Soccer, hosted a radio show, and served as an economics prefect/TA for introductory microeconomics classes. In this role, I both held classroom sessions and tutored students individually. It was rewarding to see the results of my efforts and the impact I could have on other students. I am at an expert level in many math and economics areas. The key to my process is helping you not just 'get the answer' but also understanding the process of how to get there. I want to help students of all ages and make them think and have fun while learning.
Nico
AP Statistics Tutor • +62 Subjects
I'm a student at Yale University majoring in both Economics and Global Affairs. Over the past 4 years, I am lucky to have worked with students of all ages and helped them reach their full potential. I offer tutoring services in all subjects, and I'm particularly interested in English, Economics, Government, and Math. My teaching philosophy centers on creating a safe, welcoming environment where students can learn at their own pace. Outside of academics, I enjoy spending time outside and enjoying good food with family and friends.
Jacqueline
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +160 Subjects
As a dedicated educator with a PhD in German Studies from Cornell University, I am passionate about nurturing student success through personalized tutoring. With over 7 years of teaching experience, I specialize in a wide array of subjects, including AP courses in Physics, English, and Calculus, as well as German language instruction. My teaching philosophy centers on collaboration and constructive feedback, fostering a supportive environment where students feel confident to express their ideas and enhance their skills. I am deeply motivated by the opportunity to inspire curiosity and a love for learning in my students, helping them not only to achieve academic goals but also to develop critical thinking and writing abilities that will serve them well beyond the classroom.
Benicio
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am a current student of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where I am studying biology and Spanish primarily. I've tutored for many years under school programs in a variety of subjects, but I am most passionate about biology, math, and history. I like to use my personal experience in these subjects as a stepping stone to help those that I tutor. I find that a teacher's connection to the subject is valuable in forming a student's own connection and understanding.
Joey
AP Statistics Tutor • +79 Subjects
Howdy! My name's Joey, I love all things music and tech as well as hitting the gym. I hold degrees in mechanical and aerosapce engineering as well as scientific computing from the University of Glasgow and University of Pennsylvania. I've been an instructor and TA at both institutions and I greatly enjoy sharing knowledge!
Heberto
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +42 Subjects
I am a graduate of The University of Colorado, Boulder and Harvard Kennedy School. I received my Bachelor of Arts in Economics and my Master in Public Policy with a focus on international and global affairs. Since graduation, I have worked in investment banking and management consulting, though I also have worked on government relations. While I tutor a broad range of subjects, I am most passionate about History, English Literature, and Math (namely algebra and pre-calc). In my experience helping students prepare for Standardized Tests, I like to focus on the writing and math assessments, as those tend to be challenging to many students. I believe in ensuring students are able to think independently and have the confidence to understand the material. I believe the subjects I tutor are necessary for students to succeed and I want to impart what I know to students. In my spare time, I enjoy reading about history and geopolitics, hiking, and writing.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find supply and demand curves conceptually challenging—not just plotting them, but understanding how shifts occur and predicting market equilibrium changes. Marginal analysis trips up many learners because it requires thinking at the margin rather than in totals, which is counterintuitive. Time value of money and present value calculations also cause frustration since they demand comfort with both the math and the reasoning behind why a dollar today is worth more than one tomorrow. Additionally, students struggle to connect abstract concepts like opportunity cost and comparative advantage to real-world scenarios, and interpreting financial statements (balance sheets, income statements, cash flow) requires understanding both the mechanics and what the numbers actually reveal about a business.
Microeconomics and macroeconomics require different mental models—micro focuses on individual actors (consumers, firms) and markets, while macro examines aggregate phenomena like GDP, inflation, and unemployment. A tutor helps students build these models separately before connecting them, ensuring they understand why a firm's pricing decision differs from how central banks manage inflation. For AP Economics or college-level courses, this distinction is critical because exam questions often test whether students can apply the right framework to a given scenario. Tutors also help students see how microeconomic principles (like elasticity) inform macroeconomic policy decisions, deepening conceptual understanding rather than just memorizing definitions.
Economics is built on logic and incentives, not formulas to plug into. A tutor guides you through the reasoning—for example, why the elasticity formula measures responsiveness to price changes, and how that elasticity determines whether a firm should raise or lower prices to increase revenue. Instead of memorizing that MR = MC at profit maximization, you'll understand why firms compare marginal revenue to marginal cost and what happens when they diverge. This approach transforms concepts like comparative advantage, the multiplier effect, and financial ratios from abstract rules into tools you can apply to new situations. When you understand the logic, you can tackle unfamiliar problems on exams rather than freezing when the specific scenario doesn't match a memorized example.
Strong Economics tutoring bridges the gap between textbook models and actual markets by analyzing real companies, industries, and economic events. For example, when learning about market structures, a tutor might examine why tech companies operate as near-monopolies, how barriers to entry protect their pricing power, and what that means for investors. Supply chain disruptions become concrete examples of how supply shocks ripple through markets and affect inflation. Understanding financial ratios like debt-to-equity or return on assets moves from calculation to analysis—what does a high ratio tell you about a company's risk and growth strategy? This real-world grounding helps students preparing for CFA exams, MBA programs, or careers in finance see Economics as a practical toolkit rather than abstract theory.
Economics demands comfort with algebra, percentages, and interpreting graphs—but also statistical reasoning and basic financial modeling. Students need to calculate elasticity, work with present value formulas, interpret regression results, and build simple financial models (like a pro forma income statement). Many struggle less with the math itself and more with setting up the problem correctly: knowing which formula applies, what variables mean, and how to interpret results in context. A tutor reinforces these skills by working through problems step-by-step, ensuring you understand not just how to solve an equation but why that equation represents the economic relationship you're analyzing. This foundation is especially important for students aiming toward accounting, finance, or economics majors where quantitative rigor increases significantly.
AP Economics (both Micro and Macro) demands that you not only know concepts but can apply them to novel scenarios—the exam tests reasoning, not memorization. College-level Economics goes deeper into mathematical modeling and assumes you've mastered foundational logic. A tutor helps you move from "I can solve this practice problem" to "I understand this principle well enough to apply it in an unfamiliar context." They also help you develop the habit of drawing graphs, labeling axes carefully, and explaining economic reasoning in writing—skills that are heavily weighted on AP exams and college problem sets. Additionally, tutors can address gaps in prerequisite math or logic early, ensuring you're not struggling with algebra when you should be focusing on economic intuition.
Financial statements (balance sheets, income statements, cash flow statements) confuse students because they require understanding both accounting mechanics (debits and credits, GAAP principles) and what the numbers reveal about business performance. A balance sheet isn't just a list of assets and liabilities—it shows what a company owns, owes, and the equity stake of owners. An income statement isn't just revenue minus expenses; it reveals profitability at different levels (gross profit, operating income, net income) and helps you spot trends. A tutor breaks down these statements piece by piece, explaining why certain items belong in certain places and what ratios derived from them (like ROA, debt-to-equity, current ratio) actually tell you about financial health and risk. This understanding is crucial for anyone pursuing finance, accounting, or business careers.
Opportunity cost—the value of the next-best alternative foregone—is foundational to Economics, but students often treat it as a definition rather than a lens for thinking about decisions. A tutor helps you see opportunity cost everywhere: in a firm's decision to invest in Project A versus Project B, in your choice to attend college versus work, in a country's decision to produce guns versus butter. The key is recognizing that opportunity cost is specific to the decision-maker and context; it's not a number you look up, but something you reason through. Once you internalize this thinking, you can analyze trade-offs in supply chains, resource allocation, and policy decisions with clarity. This conceptual shift transforms how you approach Economics problems and prepares you to think like an economist in real-world scenarios.
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