Find the maths page that matches the question you searched for.
Browse topic guides, worked examples, GCSE revision pages, comparison pages, and solver pages built around high-intent maths searches. If you already have a question, you can open the solver tool later.
Start with algebra, GCSE revision, geometry, calculus, comparisons, or solver pages.
Search intent
How to solve simultaneous equations
Page content
- Worked examples
- Common potential mistakes
- Related revision pages
Optional next step
- Type your own problem
- Upload a worksheet photo
- Use the solver tool
Why this helps
Start with the worked page that matches the topic, then use the solver tool only if you want to test your own version of the problem afterwards.
Browse the topic hubs that map to real maths search intent.
These hubs are organized around algebra, geometry, calculus, GCSE revision, and tool comparison searches so the site can grow into a true SEO library, not just a tool landing page.
Quadratics, factorising, simultaneous equations, rearranging formulas, and more.
43 live guides in this cluster.
Browse Algebra guidesPythagoras, angles, circles, trigonometry, area, and volume.
2 live guides in this cluster.
Browse Geometry guidesDerivatives, integration, stationary points, and worked differentiation steps.
2 live guides in this cluster.
Browse Calculus guidesRevision-style guides covering high-intent GCSE maths searches.
10 live guides in this cluster.
Browse GCSE maths guidesComparison pages for people evaluating AI maths tools and alternatives.
9 live guides in this cluster.
Browse Maths tool comparisonsStructured explanations for harder algebra and calculus-style questions.
This cluster is planned next and currently routes to the solver tool.
Open solver toolStart with the pages that match the searches people use most often.
Each page is built to rank for a specific maths search, answer the topic clearly, and only then offer the solver tool as a secondary next step.
A plain-language guide to solving quadratic equations using factorising, the quadratic formula, and completing the square.
A GCSE-style guide to solving simultaneous equations using elimination and substitution.
Worked examples showing how to factorise common algebraic expressions, including quadratics.
Worked trigonometry examples showing how to choose sine, cosine, or tangent and solve common right-angle triangle questions.
A revision-style page with common GCSE algebra question types, worked examples, and step-by-step methods.
Compare AI maths solvers for worked steps, explanation quality, and direct problem testing.
The public site is now built like a maths search destination.
The goal of the public site is to capture high-intent maths traffic with useful pages, then route the right visitors into the solver tool, email list, or comparison content.
Pages such as completing the square, simultaneous equations, and derivative methods.
GCSE and exam-style pages that collect worked examples around one curriculum topic.
Pages for people searching Photomath alternatives, Gauth alternatives, and similar queries.
Programmatic pages built around specific problem forms, such as quadratics and factorisation examples.
Capture visitors comparing maths tools before they choose one.
These pages serve high-intent searches like alternatives and tool comparisons, while still giving users a path into the solver tool if they want to test it for themselves.
Compare a Photomath alternative for worked steps, answer-checking, and clearer explanation quality.
Compare a Gauth alternative for worked steps, explanation quality, and clearer answer-checking.
Compare AI maths solvers for worked steps, explanation quality, and direct problem testing.
Use the solver tool when you want to test one specific maths problem.
The guides and revision pages do most of the work on the public site. The solver beta is there as an optional next step when you want to test a typed question, photo, or worked answer directly.
Free account
Create an account if you want to try the limited solver beta after reading the public maths pages.
- Typed and photo solver beta access
- Useful for testing one exact problem after reading a guide
Later release
Paid access later
Billing and broader solver access will only be introduced once the public guide library and traffic base are much further along.
Start with the guide, then use the tool only if you still need it.
Most visitors should get value from the guide pages, worked examples, and revision content without needing an account straight away.
If you already know the exact problem you want to test, you can create a free account and try the limited solver beta as a follow-up step.
AI can make mistakes. Check important answers independently before relying on them.
Questions people ask before using a maths page or solver tool.
Found this useful?
Share the page with someone who is searching for the same maths topic before they go straight to a solver.
Already know the exact problem? Use the tool after the guide content.
The solver tool is now positioned as a secondary product surface. It is there when a guide page is not enough and you want to test a typed problem, uploaded photo, or worked answer directly.
Best when you already know the exact question you want to test in the solver tool.
Best for worksheets or handwritten pages when typing would take longer than uploading.
Best when you want the tool to comment on a potential mistake in a worked method.
Keep track of new maths pages and solver beta progress.
Use a free account as the current follow-up route if you want to come back for new guides, future updates, or a direct solver-beta test later.
A free account is the current follow-up route for returning to the solver beta and future guide updates as the public library grows.
Need live help beyond the guide page?
If a topic still feels stuck after the public page, you can contact CureMath about live-help needs for that topic. This gives us a real signal for future tutor matching and support offers.
What to include
- The topic or page you were reading
- The exam level or year group you care about
- Your country or timezone if live help timing matters
This is a live-help enquiry route, not an instant tutoring checkout. It helps CureMath understand demand and shape future partner or tutor options around real topics.
Contact about live help