Deltamath is a web-based math platform used across grades 6 through 12, with more than two million students on it during the 2024–2025 school year. The deltamath login sits at deltamath.com, and most users get in through a standard email-password combo, a Google school account, or Clever SSO. This guide walks through the sign-in steps, account setup for students and teachers, and what to do when access breaks.
How to Access the Deltamath Login Page
Open a browser and go to deltamath.com. The login button is in the top-right corner of the homepage.
Type in the email tied to your account and your password. Students at schools running Google Workspace can skip the password field and sign in with their Google account directly. Schools using Clever can authenticate through Clever Instant Login without creating a separate Deltamath password.
On Chromebooks, the login works smoothly because Deltamath runs fully in the browser with no installation. If you’re figuring out which device works best for school tasks, this breakdown of Chromebooks versus laptops for students covers the tradeoffs.
Creating a Student Account with a Teacher Code
New students need a classroom code from their teacher before they can register. The code links the account to the right class roster.
Student Registration Steps
| Step | What to Do |
|---|---|
| 1 | Click “Create Account” on deltamath.com |
| 2 | Select the student option from the dropdown |
| 3 | Enter the teacher-provided classroom code |
| 4 | Fill in name, email, and password |
| 5 | Save the login details somewhere safe |
Students under 13 can register with just a username and skip the email field. Teachers can’t always reset these accounts, so writing the password down matters.
Teacher Account Setup and Classroom Codes
Educators follow a separate path. Pick the teacher account type at signup, verify the email, then create the first class from the dashboard.
Every classroom generates its own six-digit code that stays active for the full academic year. Teachers share this code with enrolled students, who enter it once during registration. A teacher running four class periods ends up with four codes.
If a student transfers mid-year, they can add a new teacher code through account settings without losing old coursework. The Manage Login and Teachers panel handles this.
What You Get After the Deltamath Login
Once signed in, the dashboard shows assigned work, due dates, and completion status. The core tools focus on active practice rather than video lectures.
| Tool | Function |
|---|---|
| Instant grading | Answers checked the moment you submit |
| Randomized retries | Each attempt uses different numbers |
| Progress tracker | Visible to both student and teacher |
| Built-in calculator | Handles expressions, functions, systems |
| Graphing tool | Plots parabolas, trig curves, exponentials |
| Help videos | Included with PLUS and INTEGRAL tiers only |
Resetting a Forgotten Deltamath Login Password
Click “Forgot Password” on the sign-in screen. Type in your registered email. A reset link lands in the inbox within a few minutes.
Check the spam folder if nothing shows up. For classroom-managed student accounts, teachers can trigger a reset directly from their dashboard, which is faster than the email route.
Single sign-on accounts don’t use this flow. Anyone signing in through Google Workspace, Clever, or ClassLink needs to reach out to the school’s IT administrator instead.
Fixing Common Deltamath Login Problems
Most login failures trace back to three things: cached data, browser extensions, or the wrong URL.
- Clear cache and cookies in the browser settings
- Disable ad blockers or script blockers temporarily
- Try a different browser or an incognito window
- Confirm the URL reads deltamath.com exactly — phishing clones use similar domains
Since the platform is browser-only, it runs reliably on Chrome OS devices. For context on how web-based tools perform across Chrome OS, this piece on Chromebook apps and extensions for students is worth a look.
Deltamath Account Tiers and Pricing
The base version is free for students and teachers. Schools purchase upgrades through district licensing.
Deltamath PLUS unlocks step-by-step video tutorials for each topic and costs around $125 per teacher per year. INTEGRAL adds custom test-building tools and the ability to write original problems, priced higher at roughly $225 annually.
Practice problems, automatic grading, and progress tracking stay available without a subscription. Most schools that buy licenses do so for the video help feature, which students can access on any device, including school-issued Chromebooks. Districts budgeting for devices often weigh software costs alongside hardware — this rundown of top Chromebook picks for students covers the hardware side.
Using Deltamath on Chromebooks and Other Devices
Deltamath works on anything with a modern browser. That includes Chromebooks, Windows laptops, Macs, iPads, and Android tablets.
Chromebooks handle it especially well because the platform needs no installation and barely taxes system resources. Schools with one-to-one device programs — a setup covered in this guide to Chromebooks in the classroom — tend to default to Chromebook deployments for exactly this reason.
Younger users on school-issued devices often get Chromebooks first, and parents picking a device for home use can check this Chromebook guide for kids to match features with age.
FAQs
Is Deltamath free for students?
Yes. The core version is free and covers practice problems, automatic grading, and progress tracking. Video help videos require a PLUS or INTEGRAL subscription purchased by the school.
What if I lost my teacher code?
Ask your teacher to resend it. Teachers can view all active classroom codes from their dashboard under Class Settings. Codes stay valid for the full academic year.
Can I use Deltamath without an email address?
Students under 13 can register with just a username, skipping email verification. Older students and teachers need a valid email to create an account and reset passwords.
Does Deltamath work offline?
No. Deltamath needs an active internet connection because all problems, grading, and tracking run on their servers. Nothing is stored locally on the device.
Can parents see student Deltamath progress?
Parents don’t get direct access. Students can share their progress page or screenshots. Teachers can also generate progress reports and email them to parents on request.

