GED Programs 2026 June — Find GED Classes and Prep Programs Near You
Pass your GED Programs 2026 June exam on the first attempt. Practice questions with detailed answer explanations, hints, and instant scoring.


Types of GED Programs
GED programs come in four main formats: in-person classroom instruction, online courses, hybrid models, and self-study. Each format suits a different type of learner, and most states offer several options at little or no cost.
In-person GED classes are held at adult education centers, community colleges, and libraries. They provide direct access to instructors, structured schedules, and peer support. These classes are ideal for learners who benefit from face-to-face interaction and accountability.
Online GED programs let you study at your own pace from home. Platforms such as GED.com, Khan Academy, and GED Academy offer full curricula covering all four GED subjects: Mathematical Reasoning, Reasoning Through Language Arts, Science, and Social Studies.
Hybrid programs combine scheduled in-person sessions with online coursework. Many community colleges offer hybrid formats that give you flexibility during the week with optional in-person tutoring or lab time.
Self-study is the lowest-cost option. You use free resources — textbooks, YouTube tutorials, and practice tests — to prepare on your own timeline. Self-study works best for disciplined learners who already have a strong academic foundation.
For a state-by-state breakdown of where to enroll, see our guide to free ged classes near me.
Online GED Prep Programs
Online programs have made GED preparation accessible to millions of adults who cannot attend in-person classes due to work, family, or geography. Below are the most widely used platforms in 2026.
GED.com is the official testing platform run by GED Testing Service. It offers GED Ready practice tests ($6.99 each) that predict your readiness to pass. The website also includes free study materials and links to local classes.
Khan Academy provides completely free video lessons and practice exercises for all four GED subjects. Its Math and Science libraries are particularly strong. Khan Academy is the best zero-cost supplement for any GED program.
GED Academy (passGED.com) is a dedicated GED prep platform with adaptive lessons, progress tracking, and full practice tests. Plans start at around $9.99 per month and include a passing guarantee on some tiers.
Kaplan GED offers structured self-paced courses with printed study guides. Kaplan is best for learners who want a textbook-style approach alongside digital content.
Coursera and edX occasionally feature free adult education courses in math, literacy, and science that align closely with GED content. These are useful supplemental resources rather than complete programs.
For structured practice on every GED subject, GED practice tests on PracticeTestGeeks are free and cover all four exam sections.

How to Find GED Programs Near You
The fastest way to locate a local GED program is through one of three national directories.
COABE Directory (coabe.org): The Coalition on Adult Basic Education maintains a searchable directory of adult education providers by state and county. Filter by GED preparation to see programs close to your ZIP code.
CareerOneStop (careeronestop.org): Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor, CareerOneStop's "Find Local Help" tool connects you to American Job Centers that offer free GED prep and job training in your area.
State Adult Education Agencies: Every state has a dedicated adult education division within the department of education. Search "[your state] adult education GED programs" to reach the official program locator for your region.
GED Testing Service (ged.com): The "Find Classes" feature on ged.com lists state-approved GED preparation providers. Results include in-person and online options.
When you contact a program, ask about enrollment requirements (age, residency, income), class schedule and format, whether placement testing is required, and availability of support services such as tutoring, childcare, and transportation.
For learners in New York, our detailed guide to GED in New York covers city and state programs, testing centers, and enrollment steps.
GED Program Costs
GED preparation costs range from completely free to a few hundred dollars depending on the program type. The test itself costs $36.25 per subject ($145 total for all four subjects) in most states.
- Free state and federally funded programs ($0): Adult education centers (WIOA-funded), community college non-credit GED programs, public library prep resources, American Job Center classes, and Khan Academy online curriculum. Available to most adults without a high school diploma.
- Low-cost online prep platforms ($9.99–$29.99/month): GED Academy (passGED.com), Study.com GED prep, Mometrix GED study guide (one-time purchase), and GED Ready practice tests ($6.99 per subject).
- Structured prep courses ($75–$150 one-time): Kaplan GED complete prep, GED Testing Service official prep bundle, and community college credit-bearing programs. Best for learners who want a complete printed and digital course.
- GED exam fees ($36.25 per subject): Four subjects total = $145 in most states. Check your state adult education office — many states subsidize or waive GED test fees for income-eligible adults.

Accelerated GED Programs
- ✓Intensive daily or near-daily instruction (2–4 hours per session)
- ✓Prioritizes GED-specific test strategies over comprehensive subject review
- ✓Uses official GED Ready practice tests to track weekly progress
- ✓Focuses first on subjects with the highest passing rates (Social Studies, Science) to build momentum
- ✓Typical eligibility: placement scores at 8th grade level or higher in all subjects
- ✓Available through select adult education centers, workforce programs, and online bootcamps
- ✓Some accelerated programs offer peer cohorts for motivation and accountability
- ✓Average completion time: 6–8 weeks for well-prepared adults; 10–14 weeks for those needing moderate review
GED Programs for Working Adults
One of the most common barriers to GED completion is a full-time work schedule. Most adult education programs have adapted to this reality by offering evening, weekend, and fully asynchronous options.
Evening classes are the most common accommodation. Many adult education centers run GED courses Monday through Thursday from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM, or offer a Tuesday/Thursday evening schedule for workers with split days off.
Weekend classes are offered by some community colleges and workforce programs, typically on Saturday mornings or Sunday afternoons. Weekend cohorts tend to be smaller and benefit from more personalized instructor attention.
Self-paced online programs allow you to study during any available window — early mornings, lunch breaks, or late nights. GED Academy and Khan Academy are the most flexible options for workers with unpredictable schedules.
Employer-sponsored GED programs are available at select large employers and through union training funds. If your employer has a tuition assistance or workforce development program, ask whether it covers GED preparation costs.
Practical tips for working adults: study in 30–45 minute blocks rather than long sessions; take one GED subject at a time to reduce workload; use commute time for audio-based review; and notify your instructor about your work schedule so they can adjust pacing. For Spanish-speaking adults balancing work and study, our GED en Español guide covers bilingual program options and Spanish-language testing.
GED Pros and Cons
- +GED has a defined, publicly available content blueprint — candidates know exactly what to prepare for
- +Multiple preparation pathways (self-study, courses, coaching) accommodate different learning styles and schedules
- +A growing ecosystem of study resources means candidates at any budget level can access quality preparation materials
- +Clear score reporting allows candidates to identify specific strengths and weaknesses for targeted remediation
- +Professional recognition associated with strong performance provides tangible career and academic benefits
- −The scope of tested content requires substantial preparation time that competes with existing professional or academic commitments
- −No single resource covers the full content scope — candidates typically need multiple study tools for comprehensive preparation
- −Test anxiety and exam-day performance variability mean preparation effort does not always translate linearly to scores
- −Registration, preparation, and potential retake costs accumulate into a significant financial investment
- −Content and format can change between exam versions, making older preparation materials less reliable
GED Programs Questions and Answers
Related GED Guides
About the Author
Registered Sanitarian & Food Safety Certification Expert
Cornell University College of Agriculture and Life SciencesThomas Wright is a Registered Sanitarian and HACCP-certified food safety professional with a Bachelor of Science in Food Science from Cornell University. He has 17 years of experience in food safety auditing, regulatory compliance, and foodservice management training. Thomas prepares food industry professionals for ServSafe Manager, HACCP certification, and state food handler examinations.



