Teaching English abroad remains one of the cleanest ways to live overseas with employer-sponsored visa, housing assistance, and reliable income. Here’s the 2026 reality on TEFL certification, top destinations, and what you’ll actually earn.
Last verified: May 5, 2026.
Do you need a TEFL certificate?
Almost always yes. Most reputable employers require a 120-hour TEFL certificate. Get one from a course accredited by Trinity, Cambridge, or one of the major TEFL bodies. Cost: $200–$1,500 depending on online vs in-person. Online options like ITTT, International TEFL Academy, and TEFL Org are cost-effective.
You also typically need a bachelor’s degree — required for visa sponsorship in most countries. Without a degree, you’re limited to a few countries (Mexico, Cambodia, parts of Latin America) or off-the-books work (risky).
Top destinations in 2026
South Korea (best paid + most save)
- Salary: 2.1–2.7 million KRW/month (~$1,500–$2,000)
- Housing: usually provided rent-free
- Saving potential: $800–$1,500/month after expenses
- Visa: E-2 sponsored by school
- Programs: EPIK (public schools), Hagwons (private academies)
The highest realistic savings rate of any TEFL destination. Public school program (EPIK) starts hiring in October for March intake; February for September intake.
Japan
- Salary: ¥250,000–¥300,000/month (~$1,700–$2,000)
- Housing: not provided; expect ¥60,000–¥100,000/month
- Saving potential: $300–$700/month
- Visa: Specialist in Humanities + Instructor visa
- Programs: JET (gov’t program), Interac, Heart, AEON
JET is highly competitive but well-organized. Private dispatch companies (Interac, Heart) have lower salaries but easier acceptance.
China (post-pandemic shift)
- Salary: 12,000–25,000 RMB/month (~$1,700–$3,500)
- Housing: often provided or subsidized
- Saving potential: $1,000–$2,000/month possible
- Visa: Z visa
The 2021 ban on private after-school tutoring shifted the market significantly. Today most opportunities are with international schools, training centers (kindergarten level), or private K-12 schools. The market has tightened but salaries remain strong for qualified teachers.
Vietnam (best for newcomers)
- Salary: $1,500–$2,500/month for native speakers
- Cost of living: very low ($800–$1,200/month covers everything)
- Saving potential: $700–$1,300/month
- Visa: work permit (LD visa)
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City both have strong demand. Easier hiring than Korea/Japan; less paperwork.
Spain (Auxiliares de Conversación)
- Salary: €700–€1,000/month (it’s a stipend, not salary)
- Hours: 12–16 per week
- Best for: recent grads who want Spain experience, not savings
Government program with formal application. Won’t make you rich but is a clean visa pathway with manageable hours.
Thailand
- Salary: 30,000–55,000 THB/month ($850–$1,550)
- Cost of living: very low
- Saving potential: modest ($200–$500/month)
- Visa: Non-Immigrant B + work permit
Best for lifestyle priorities, not earnings. International schools pay 70,000–150,000 THB; require qualified teachers.
Without a degree: limited options
Without a bachelor’s degree, your options narrow to: Mexico, Cambodia, parts of Latin America (off-the-books), and online teaching for foreign students. Online teaching can be done from anywhere and pays $14–$25/hour through platforms like Cambly, Preply, italki.
Practical checklist
- 120-hour TEFL certification (online OK if accredited)
- Bachelor’s degree (any subject)
- Background check (FBI for US, ACRO for UK)
- Apostilled documents (if for Korea, China, etc.)
- Health insurance (often included with employer; otherwise SafetyWing)
- Initial savings: $2,000–$4,000 to cover deposit, flights, first month
✓ Last verified: May 5, 2026.
How to evaluate options for your specific situation
Generic ‘best of’ lists give you the universe of choices. The real work is matching options to your specific situation. Three questions to ask yourself:
- What’s your time horizon? Short trips (weeks) need different solutions than long stays (months/years). Don’t optimize for the wrong duration
- What’s your risk tolerance? Established options offer predictability + premium prices. Newer or smaller options offer better deals + more uncertainty
- What’s your budget reality? ‘Best’ often correlates with ‘most expensive’. Identify the value that matters to you, ignore the rest
- What’s your fallback plan? If your primary choice fails (provider goes out of business, contract issues, etc.), what’s Plan B?
- What did people you trust actually do? Recommendations from people in similar situations beat generic listicles
Common patterns across all ‘best’ lists
- The well-known + premium option: reliable, fully-featured, expensive. Usually the safe choice but you pay 30-50% premium
- The challenger option: newer, cheaper, often better app/UX, less established. Worth considering if 6-12 months of operations show stability
- The deep value option: typically older, less polished, better unit economics. Good for those willing to manage rough edges
- The niche specialist: excellent for specific use cases, less broad. Compare carefully against general-purpose options
- The ‘bundle’ option: single provider for multiple needs (e.g., card + currency conversion + travel insurance). Convenience but rarely best in any single category
Red flags to watch for
- No regulatory registration: for financial services, anything not regulated by FINRA, FCA, ASIC, etc. = high risk
- No customer support beyond chatbot: when things go wrong, you need humans
- Hidden fees: total cost of ownership matters more than headline price. Read all fee schedules
- Unclear terms of service: ambiguous coverage, exclusions, jurisdiction = future disputes
- Pressure to commit immediately: good services don’t need urgency tactics. Take your time
- Online reviews trending negative: Trustpilot, Reddit, country-specific forums are gold for honest feedback
How to test before committing
- Trial period: if available, test 1-3 months on smaller commitment before locking in
- Small test transactions: for financial services, run small amounts through first
- Customer service test: ask hypothetical questions, time response, evaluate quality
- Read 1-star and 5-star reviews: dismiss the polarized; the 3-star reviews are most informative about real performance
- Talk to current users: social media, forums, in-person meetups for honest input
Updated annually: things change
Service quality changes over time. Top providers in 2024 may have slipped in 2025. Newer providers may have improved dramatically. Re-evaluate annually if you’re committed to a category. Things to monitor: customer support response times, app performance, fee changes, regulatory issues, ownership changes.
When ‘best’ doesn’t matter
Sometimes the difference between best and good-enough is marginal compared to the time spent researching. Decision fatigue is real. For low-stakes decisions, pick a top-3 option and move forward. The opportunity cost of perfectionism on minor details is usually higher than the cost of imperfect choice.
Detailed scenarios and case studies
Real situations from people who have gone through this process show patterns that generic guides miss.
Scenario A: The straightforward path
Sarah, mid-30s software engineer, transferred from her US tech company to its UK office. Sponsor handled visa paperwork, employer paid all fees. Total time from offer to UK arrival: 14 weeks. Initial costs covered: visa, IHS, relocation allowance £8,000. First-year additional out-of-pocket: rental deposit, council tax, utilities setup, furniture (~£4,000). Lessons: working with established sponsors smooths the entire process, but still budget personal funds for setup costs not covered by relocation allowance.
Scenario B: The complicated case
Marco, 42, applying with non-EU spouse and 2 children. Income evidence required for entire family, not just primary applicant. Discovery: Marco’s freelance income from previous tax year fluctuated, requiring both Category B (current) and Category C (savings) income calculations. Process took 9 months. Lessons: complex income situations need 3-4 month preparation buffer; consult OISC adviser for non-standard cases.
Scenario C: When things go wrong
Aisha, applying for residence visa, was rejected on first attempt due to insufficient proof of relationship to UK partner (only 18 months cohabiting documented). Reapplied 6 months later with additional bank account statements, joint travel records, and family witness statements. Approved second time. Lessons: rejected applications can be addressed with stronger evidence; always document genuine relationship continuously, not just at application time.
Year-by-year financial expectations
- Year 1 (the setup year): all the upfront costs hit. Visa fees, deposit, accommodation setup, furniture, savings for emergencies. Net financial: typically negative or breakeven
- Year 2 (settling in): regular salary + reasonable lifestyle. Some savings possible. Costs decrease as setup is done
- Year 3-4 (building): career progression, salary increases, optional investments + pension contributions. Save 15-25% of salary if possible
- Year 5+ (settled): mature financial state. Property purchase consideration, more aggressive investing, family planning
Mistakes that compound over time
- Not filing taxes correctly in first year: creates ongoing issues. UK HMRC, Spanish Hacienda, German Finanzamt all expect compliance from day one of residence. Failures attract penalties + interest year-over-year
- Inadequate insurance in first year: a single uncovered medical event can wipe out savings. Test coverage with smaller claims first to verify processes
- Not building local credit history: credit cards, mortgages, certain rentals require local credit history. Apply for entry-level cards in months 1-3 of residence to start building
- Putting all money in one institution: if your bank has issues, you have no fallback. Multiple banks (or fintechs) reduces single-point-of-failure
- Not maintaining home country tax obligations: US citizens must file annually regardless of residence. Other nationalities have varying rules. Consult cross-border tax adviser
Key documents to maintain throughout your stay
- Original passport(s): never give to landlords or employers — make certified copies
- Residence permit / BRP / TIE / Residente Temporal card: mandatory in many countries to carry on person
- Visa documentation: original visa stamp + supporting docs you submitted (CoS, sponsor letter, etc.)
- Tax filings: all tax returns, withholding certificates, contributions to pension/social security
- Employment + income evidence: contract letters, payslips for last 6 months minimum, employer reference
- Banking statements: 2 years of statements organized by year
- Insurance certificates: health, travel, professional indemnity, home insurance coverage proof
- Lease/property documents: tenancy agreements, mortgage statements, council tax registration
- Healthcare records: registration letters, GP visits, NHS number / Spanish SIP / German Krankenkassenkarte
Building toward citizenship if that’s the goal
If long-term settlement and eventually citizenship is your goal, intentional planning from year 1 helps:
- Track absences from country meticulously: the 180-days-in-12-months rule (UK ILR) or its equivalents in other countries are strictly checked. A spreadsheet from day 1 prevents surprises
- Maintain continuous lawful status: any gap (e.g., visa renewal delay leaves you ‘between’ visas) breaks the qualifying period
- Engage with the country: volunteer, join local communities, attend cultural events. ‘Integration’ is implicit in some citizenship reviews
- Build local support network: employers, professional bodies, neighborhood references all matter for character checks
- Save consistently: citizenship applications cost £1,500-2,000 per person + supporting test/study costs. Plan for it
Frequently asked questions
How long does the full process take from start to finish? Typically 3-9 months depending on visa type, country, and your preparation level. Plan for the upper end + a buffer.
Can I do this without professional help? Yes for straightforward cases. But complex situations (mixed-source income, prior visa refusals, specific tax considerations) benefit from regulated immigration advisers (OISC in UK, equivalents elsewhere) and cross-border tax specialists.
What if my visa is rejected? Most countries allow appeals or fresh applications. Address the specific reasons for refusal in re-application. Don’t ignore — re-applications without addressing issues fail at higher rates.
Are there backup options if my primary path falls through? Always have Plan B. If your primary visa fails, alternative routes exist (different visa categories, different countries, different employers). Research your full landscape, not just primary option.
How does this affect my home country status? Tax residency rules vary. Most countries trigger tax residency at 183 days/year of presence. Talk to a cross-border tax adviser before becoming tax resident in a new country if you have significant assets.
Can I do this with a family? Most major routes allow spouse + children as dependents. Each adult dependent typically pays separate fees. Children can typically attend state schools. Verify specific country rules for your situation.
Final practical advice
- Start research 6-12 months before your target move date
- Document everything in writing — verbal agreements with employers/landlords/clerks rarely hold
- Build a financial buffer (12 months living costs minimum) before committing
- Connect with current expats via Facebook groups + Reddit + LinkedIn before arrival
- Don’t optimize for speed if it means cutting corners — slower thorough applications succeed more
- Track every interaction with immigration authorities (dates, names, what was said)
Related guides on this site cover specific aspects in more detail. Use them as supplementary reading after this overview.
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