Tuition Centre Website or Facebook Page, which one better in Singapore 2026?

Tuition centre website or Facebook page — which does your Singapore centre need in 2026? What parents trust, the trade-offs, and why the website wins.

Tuition Centre Website or Facebook Page? (Singapore 2026)

TL;DR / Key takeaways

  • A Facebook page is great for engaging existing parents; a website is what converts new ones who find you on Google.
  • Choosing between a tuition centre website or Facebook page? The honest answer is both — but the website is the anchor.
  • A page can’t be ranked for “P5 Science tuition Yishun,” and you don’t own it. A website is rankable and owned.
  • If you can only build one first, build the website. Webi Garoo builds you a free working prototype so it’s risk-free.

Most tuition centres in Singapore start with a Facebook page — it’s free, fast, and where parents already hang out. Then comes the question every growing centre eventually asks: do I really need a website too, or is the page enough? If you’re weighing up a tuition centre website or Facebook page, here’s an honest comparison and a clear answer.

Singapore’s tuition and enrichment industry is large and competitive — MOE’s overview of the private tuition industry underlines just how many centres parents can choose from, and its 2025 update confirms demand keeps rising. Looking credible against that backdrop matters more than ever.

What a Facebook page does well

Let’s be fair to the page. For a tuition centre, Facebook (and Instagram) is genuinely useful:

  • It’s free and familiar. You can post results, photos and updates in minutes.
  • It has reach. Parent groups and shares spread your wins organically.
  • It feels human. Comments, reactions and Messenger make you approachable.

For staying in touch with current parents and showing your centre is active, a page is excellent. The trouble starts when it’s your only presence.

Where a Facebook page falls short

When deciding between a tuition centre website or Facebook page, these gaps matter:

  • Google can’t really rank it. When a parent searches “Primary 5 Science tuition Yishun,” Facebook posts rarely surface. A website page targeting that phrase can.
  • You don’t own it. An algorithm change, a hacked account, or a policy strike can wipe out your presence overnight. You rent the page; you own a website.
  • It buries the basics. Subjects, levels, timings, fees and location get lost under a feed of posts. Parents have to dig — and many won’t.
  • It looks less established. Fair or not, a serious centre with no website can read as part-time or temporary.

Tuition centre website or Facebook page: side by side

FactorWebsiteFacebook page
Found on Google search✅ Rankable❌ Rarely surfaces
You own / control it✅ Yes❌ Rented from Meta
Shows subjects/fees clearly✅ Structured⚠️ Buried in feed
Engaging existing parents⚠️ Limited✅ Excellent
Organic sharing / reach⚠️ Limited✅ Strong
Credibility for new parents✅ High⚠️ Mixed
Cost to startLow–MidFree

So which should your centre choose?

The honest answer is both — but the website is the anchor. Think of it like this: your Facebook page is the conversation, and your website is the home that conversation points to. The page keeps existing parents engaged; the website converts the new parent who found you on Google and is comparing three centres at once.

If you can only build one thing first, build the website. It’s the asset you own, the one Google can rank, and the one that turns a stranger into a trial booking. The page then amplifies it — every post can link back to the site.

A simple rule of thumb:

  • Brand-new, near-zero budget, just testing the waters? Start with a Facebook page.
  • Serious about enrolments and being found on Google? You need a website, with the page supporting it.

Nearly every centre ready to grow lands in the second group. The tuition centre website or Facebook page debate usually ends with “the website, plus the page” — and centres that delay the website keep losing the search-driven parents to competitors who already have one.

How to make your website and Facebook page work together

Once you stop seeing it as website or Facebook page and start running both, the goal is to make them feed each other. A simple system:

  • Website = the destination. It holds your subjects, fees, timings, proof and enquiry form — everything a deciding parent needs in one structured place.
  • Facebook page = the megaphone. Every post (a result, a tip, a class photo) ends with a link back to the matching page on your site.
  • Reviews bridge both. Encourage happy parents to review you on Google and Facebook; each builds trust on a different surface.
  • One consistent message. Same centre name, same colours, same offer across both, so a parent who hops from your page to your site feels they’re in the right place.

Run that loop and your Facebook engagement constantly funnels new parents to a website that actually converts them.

A 30-day plan to add a website to your Facebook presence

If you already have a page and want to add the missing anchor:

  • Week 1: Get a simple website live — subjects, levels, location, enquiry form, WhatsApp button.
  • Week 2: Add the website link to your Facebook “About,” page button, and bio.
  • Week 3: Publish two posts that each link to a specific page on your site.
  • Week 4: Ask five parents for reviews and set up an instant auto-reply on your enquiry form.

In a month you move from “tuition centre website or Facebook page” to a connected setup where each strengthens the other — without abandoning the followers you’ve already built.

Frequently asked questions

Is a Facebook page enough for a tuition centre in Singapore?

For engaging current parents, yes. For being found by new parents on Google and looking established, no — a page alone leaves search-driven enrolments on the table.

Should I build a tuition centre website or a Facebook page first?

If you must choose one, build the website — it’s rankable, owned, and converts new parents. Then use the page to amplify it. Ideally you run both.

Why can’t my Facebook page rank on Google like a website?

Google indexes and ranks web pages built around specific topics and keywords. Social feeds are designed for engagement inside the platform, not for ranking local search queries like “Sec 3 A-Maths Jurong.”

Do I lose my Facebook followers if I add a website?

No. They complement each other. Keep posting on the page and link each post to the matching page on your site, so engaged followers become enquiries.

How do I get a tuition centre website without a big upfront cost?

Webi Garoo builds you a free working prototype first; you only pay if you decide to launch it. That removes the cost-and-hassle reason most centres stay stuck on the page alone.


The reason so many centres stay stuck on “just the Facebook page” is the hassle and cost of building a real website. So we removed both — keep your page, and let us hand you the website to anchor it. Webi Garoo builds you a free working prototype of your tuition centre website, and you only pay if you want to launch it. No upfront cost, no obligation. See how the free prototype works →

Sources:
1. Private Tuition and Enrichment Industry — MOE Singapore
2. Private Tuition (2025) — MOE Singapore

Written by the Webi Garoo team — we build websites and AI automation for Singapore tuition centres.