Award-Winning GMAT Tutors
serving Los Angeles, CA
Who needs tutoring?
FEATURED BY
TUTORS FROM
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
Award-Winning GMAT Tutors serving Los Angeles, CA

Certified Tutor
Allen
Scoring 760 on the GMAT, Allen knows where the exam's real difficulty hides — not in any single quant concept or grammar rule, but in the pacing decisions and trap answer patterns that separate 700+ scores from the rest. He builds personalized study plans around diagnostic weaknesses, whether that m...
Yale University
B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science

Certified Tutor
14+ years
Caroline
Currently midway through her MBA at MIT Sloan, Caroline brings firsthand knowledge of what the GMAT actually tests and how each section connects to the quantitative and verbal reasoning business school demands. Her mechanical engineering background gives her a natural edge on the Quantitative sectio...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management
Washington University in St. Louis
Undergraduate degree

Certified Tutor
Hari
Hari's MBA in Finance and Management maps directly onto the GMAT's Quantitative and Integrated Reasoning sections, where data sufficiency problems and multi-source analysis trip up even strong math students. He teaches a triage system for pacing — knowing when to solve fully versus when to estimate ...
University of South Florida-Main Campus
Masters, MBA (Finance and Management)
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Albert
Cracking 650 on the GMAT requires different strategies for different score ranges, and Albert has helped students navigate that climb from both the quant and verbal sides. His finance-focused MBA work at UCLA and London Business School means he understands exactly what business schools expect — and ...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters in Business Administration
Wuhan University
Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism

Certified Tutor
The GMAT tests two things most prep courses treat separately: quantitative problem-solving and verbal-analytical reasoning. Carl bridges both — his doctoral training at Yale sharpened his ability to dissect arguments and evaluate evidence, while his math tutoring background keeps him fluent in data ...
Yale University
PHD, Medieval Studies
Yale University
Masters
University of Georgia
Bachelors, English

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jason
Preparing for the GMAT is as much about strategy as it is about content — knowing when to guess, how to manage section timing, and which question types deserve the most practice. Jason tackled the exam himself on the way to Michigan Ross and developed a study plan that balances quantitative fundamen...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Business Administration

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jason
Jason's GMAT prep draws on firsthand experience: he went through the process himself to earn admission to Columbia Business School's MBA program. He tackles both the quantitative and verbal sections, but his particular edge is on Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension, where his background in ...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Masters in Business Administration, Finance
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science in Applied Economics (focus in finance)

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Evan
Evan's graduate work in statistics gives him a natural edge on the GMAT's Data Sufficiency and quantitative reasoning sections, where knowing when you have enough information matters more than brute-force calculation. He also tackles the Analytical Writing Assessment with a structured, argument-driv...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Sociology
Harvard University
Current Grad Student, Statistics

Certified Tutor
James
The GMAT rewards structured thinking across Quant, Verbal, IR, and AWA — and James has taught all four sections for national prep companies over twenty years. He's especially sharp on data sufficiency questions, where he teaches students to evaluate what information is actually needed before doing a...
Yale University
Master of Arts, History of Art

Certified Tutor
16+ years
John
The GMAT tests quantitative reasoning, verbal analysis, and structured writing in a single sitting, and John's background spans all three areas — a 36 ACT composite on the math and science side, plus an English degree and years of essay coaching on the verbal side. He digs into the adaptive scoring ...
University of St Thomas
Bachelor of Fine Arts, English/Drama
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
Associates, Acting
Practice GMAT
Free practice tests, flashcards, and AI tutoring for GMAT
Other Los Angeles Tutors
Related Graduate Test Prep Tutors in Los Angeles
Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement varies based on your starting point and effort, but most students see gains of 50-100+ points with focused preparation. Students who work with a tutor typically improve faster because personalized instruction targets your specific weak areas—whether that's data sufficiency in Quant or reading comprehension strategies in Verbal. The timeline matters too: students who commit to 8-12 weeks of consistent study with expert guidance often see more dramatic improvements than those studying sporadically on their own.
The Quantitative section trips up many test-takers, especially the data sufficiency questions that require different logic than traditional math problems. The Verbal section also challenges students because reading comprehension passages are dense and time pressure is intense. A tutor can break down question formats, teach strategic approaches (like elimination techniques), and help you recognize patterns you might miss studying alone. Section-specific strategies make a real difference—for example, learning when to guess strategically on Quant can save critical time for harder problems.
Practice tests are essential—they're your best predictor of actual performance and reveal pacing issues you can't spot in individual drills. Most students benefit from taking a full practice test every 1-2 weeks as they build toward test day. A tutor helps you interpret practice test results strategically, identifying whether mistakes stem from timing, conceptual gaps, or careless errors. This analysis is crucial because your score improvement depends on fixing the right things, not just taking more tests.
Pacing is one of the biggest challenges on the GMAT because you have roughly 1.5-2 minutes per question, and difficult questions early in each section can eat into your time. Effective pacing requires knowing when to spend time working a problem versus when to make an educated guess and move forward. Expert tutors teach time-management strategies specific to each section, help you practice under timed conditions, and work with you to recognize question types quickly. Building this skill takes targeted practice—it's not something most students develop on their own.
Test anxiety often comes from uncertainty about what to expect or doubt about your preparation. Working with a tutor provides concrete evidence of progress—you see your weak areas improve and gain confidence in your strategies. Mock test experience under realistic conditions desensitizes you to the pressure. Tutors also teach tactical approaches to manage stress during the test itself, like breathing techniques and how to reset mentally between sections. Knowing you've thoroughly prepared specific concepts gives you something concrete to lean on when nerves hit.
Most students need 3-4 months of consistent preparation, though your timeline depends on your starting score and target score. A typical schedule involves 5-7 hours per week, split between content review, practice problems, and full practice tests. This might look like 2-3 focused tutoring sessions per week for targeted instruction, plus independent practice and drills between sessions. The combination of expert guidance and self-directed work is more efficient than either approach alone—a tutor accelerates learning by helping you focus your study time on what actually matters for your score.
A diagnostic or practice test reveals which concepts and question types trip you up, but interpreting those results requires knowing whether errors are conceptual misunderstandings, careless mistakes, or pacing problems. A tutor analyzes your practice tests systematically to separate patterns from one-offs. From there, the improvement strategy is targeted: concept review, strategic drills on specific question types, and then full-section practice under timed conditions. This focused approach beats generic test prep because it tackles your actual obstacles rather than wasting time on content you've already mastered.
Connect with GMAT Tutors in Los Angeles
Get matched with local expert tutors