ClassKit
A quick guide to what ClassKit is built for, how it handles family visibility, and where it fits relative to other tutoring software.
Short answers for the questions tutors usually ask first.
If you are deciding between portal tools, client systems, or a general tutoring CRM, start here and then jump into the compare page.
ClassKit is designed for independent tutors and small tutoring practices that want one professional workspace for lesson follow-up, scheduling, family visibility, and renewals.
Yes. ClassKit includes a client portal so invited families can review homework, uploads, timeline updates, schedules, tutor details, and lesson credits from one place.
Yes. Tutors can publish availability through a public booking page that stays connected to the same workspace used for clients, lessons, and services.
Yes. Homework prompts, uploads, and feedback can stay attached to the client record so follow-up work is easier to track week to week.
Services can be set up with included sessions, minutes, and pricing, then attached to a client cycle so tutors can keep remaining lessons and renewals visible.
Not if your workflow fits ClassKit. The product is intentionally built so tutor operations and family-facing visibility live in the same system rather than being split across separate tools.
ClassKit supports renewal setup and payment-link workflows. Exact payment handling depends on your connected setup and the billing flow you choose for your clients.
Yes. The current product positioning is focused on independent tutors who want clearer operations without adopting a larger agency-style platform.
ClassKit is strongest when you want a calmer, client-centered workflow for a tutor-led practice. If you need multi-staff payroll, large-scale dispatching, or agency operations, a more operations-heavy platform may be a closer fit.
You can visit the compare page to see how ClassKit is positioned against TutorBird, TutorCruncher, and Teachworks.
The compare page is written around current public positioning from TutorBird, TutorCruncher, and Teachworks, then framed against the workflow ClassKit is building for.