Choosing Teaching Country

A Simple Guide to Choosing a Country for Your First Teaching Job Abroad

According to the British Council, there are over 1.5 billion English learners worldwide, and that creates teaching opportunities across many countries. It’s good news for aspiring teachers that the demand for teachers keeps growing.

But that doesn’t make choosing your first country any easier. We know it’s overwhelming to decide where to teach English abroad. You’ve got dozens of countries to choose from, each with different visa rules, salary ranges, and cultural expectations.

That’s why in this article, we’ll walk you through the practical factors like legal requirements and cost of living that will help you decide where you can teach. By the end, you’ll know how to match your qualifications and goals with the right country.

So, let’s figure out where your teaching abroad adventure should start.

The Realities of Choosing a Teaching Country

Choosing a teaching country requires weighing legal requirements, financial realities, and lifestyle factors that tourists never have to think about. Conversely, when you’re planning a vacation, you just pick based on beaches, food, or landmarks.

Your home country ties are important, too. For example, can you easily fly back for family emergencies? Will the time difference make it impossible to video call your friends? These aren’t dealbreakers, but they do affect your daily life in ways a two-week holiday never would.

The country you pick will influence how much you save, what career opportunities open up, and how comfortable you feel daily. Also, keep in mind that a beautiful destination doesn’t automatically translate into a great teaching job.

Understanding Basic Qualifications

Before you fall in love with teaching in Japan or Spain, you need to know if they’ll actually hire you. It’s because every country has different legal requirements for foreign teachers. So what works in Thailand might disqualify you in South Korea.

Understanding Basic Qualifications

Here are some basic qualifications that you need to maintain.

Citizenship and Legal Requirements

Many countries legally require teachers to hold citizenship from native English-speaking nations. We’re talking about the USA, Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. These citizenship rules are visa requirements that decide whether you can gain employment at all.

On the other hand, some places prefer native speakers but will hire fluent non-natives with clear accents. To give you an idea, if you speak English perfectly but don’t hold citizenship from one of those countries, you’ll find opportunities in many countries across Latin America and parts of Europe.

Your Degree and Teaching Credentials

A four-year university degree is mandatory in countries like South Korea and Vietnam for work visas. The subject might not always be important, but you need that piece of paper to get through immigration.

Also, some European countries accept two-year degrees, while others hire teachers without formal university credentials. Spain and Italy even hire based on language skills rather than strict degree requirements.

Pro Tip: We recommend adding a TEFL certification to your portfolio from organizations like International TEFL Academy. That credential proves you know how to teach, even if your degree is in something completely unrelated to education.

Age Restrictions You Should Know About

Many Asian countries prefer hiring teachers under 55 years old (turns out your years of experience don’t always count in your favor). We know it can be frustrating, but some schools have strict cutoffs based on visa regulations or retirement age policies in their country.

In fact, some Middle East positions have even stricter age cutoffs around 40, and their highest age of employee requirement is 60 years. European schools are usually more flexible about age compared to stricter Asian hiring practices.

Pro Tip: If you’re over 50, we suggest you research several countries before getting too attached to one region.

Cultural Differences You’ll Experience

When you understand cultural expectations before you arrive, it helps you avoid awkward mistakes and settle in faster. Because they directly affect how you teach, communicate, and interact with students every single day.

Take a look at some of the common cultural differences you may experience.

Gender Considerations in Different Regions

Gender considerations might not show up as set rules, but they reflect deep cultural traditions about gender roles in education.

Like when, male teachers often find higher demand in Middle East countries due to cultural preferences around teaching boys. And then, all-girls schools across various regions specifically seek female teachers for their classrooms.

Which means, if you’re a woman interested in the Middle East, you should look for international schools or all-girls institutions. Men might have easier access to certain positions, but that doesn’t mean women can’t find great jobs there.

Cultural Differences You'll Experience

Teaching Style Expectations in Different Cultures

Teaching styles can vary among countries, too. To give you an idea, in Japan and South Korea, students rarely question their teacher’s authority, as it’s considered disrespectful there. But in European classrooms, you might face constant challenges and debate.

Neither approach is wrong, but they require completely different teaching strategies. And the quicker you adapt, the smoother your first few months will go.

Consider Cost of Living vs. Salary Beforehand

The cost of living can eat into your earnings if you’re not careful with it. A $3,000 monthly salary sounds amazing until you realize rent in that city costs $1,800.

Now here’s a comparison nobody tells you upfront: high salaries in expensive cities like Seoul might leave you with less money to save than a moderate paycheck in Vietnam (that’s a lesson most learn after signing the contract).

It’s best to research rent costs, food prices, and transportation before you get excited about a big salary number. Because housing alone can swing your monthly budget by hundreds of dollars.

Choosing Teaching Country: Comparing Asia, Europe, and the Middle East

Each part of the world will give you distinct advantages depending on what you’re looking for in your first teaching job. That’s why you need to research the region that matches your goals, instead of the one that sounds most exciting.

These are the pros and cons of teaching experiences in different regions.

Teaching English Abroad in Asia

Through our placement work with Australian teachers since 2007, we’ve seen Asia consistently offer the smoothest entry point for first-timers. You’ll find competitive salaries, comprehensive benefits, and well-established support systems for new teachers.

In fact, Asian countries usually hold out the most teaching English positions with clear hiring seasons and standardized contract terms. For instance, countries like China, South Korea, and Vietnam have a lot of demand for English teachers, which means more positions to choose from and better negotiating power for contracts.

International schools and language academies actively recruit year-round, along with job placement assistance that handles visas and housing. This type of structured environment works well for first-time teachers who want predictability in their international experience.

Choosing Teaching Country: Comparing Asia, Europe, and the Middle East

Europe’s More Flexible Teaching Scene

Here’s an FYI: European countries often require more hustle. ESL teachers here typically need to sort out their own work permits and visa situations, which takes more effort than the all-inclusive packages that Asia usually has to offer.

It’s because many European schools prefer hiring teachers already in-country rather than sponsoring visas from abroad, so be prepared to handle logistics yourself.

The pay is generally lower, but you get easier travel access to dozens of countries on weekends. Say, a teaching position in Prague lets you explore Vienna, Budapest, and Berlin without expensive flights.

Middle East Opportunities Need Cultural Understanding

Middle East teaching jobs typically offer the highest salaries with tax-free income and generous benefits packages.

But don’t celebrate too early. These positions usually need more experience and better credentials than entry-level jobs in Asia. You’ll compete against professionals with years of teaching English under their belts.

Plus, cultural understanding and adaptation are more significant here. So, you need to research the lifestyle expectations before accepting offers. The financial rewards are substantial, but you need to be realistic about whether you’re ready for that environment as a first-time teacher.

Here’s a comparison chart for the three regions at a glance:

CategoryAsiaEuropeMiddle East
Best ForFirst-time teachersTravel-focused teachersHigh-income seekers
Salary & BenefitsGood pay + strong perksLower pay, fewer perksHighest pay, tax-free
Visa & HiringVery structured, lots of supportHarder; often must be in-countryFormal, strict requirements
Work EnvironmentStable, well-supportedFlexible but less stableProfessional, high expectations
LifestyleEasy adjustment, strong expat sceneGreat weekend travelComfortable but culturally different
Experience NeededLow–moderateModerateHigh

Time for Teaching Abroad at Your Favorite Destination

In the end, matching your qualifications and preferences with the right country can make or break your first year of teaching abroad. That is precisely why you need to start with countries where you meet the basic legal requirements. After that, narrow them down by comparing salary against the cost of living.

But try not to overthink this decision. You don’t need to find the perfect country, but rather be open to adaptation. Once you’re actually teaching English abroad, you’ll learn what you really want from the experience.

If you’re ready to learn more about your options and create a plan for teaching abroad, visit Biography Shelf and talk to our placement team about where your qualifications can take you.

Teacher mentoring students in a bright classroom

How to Tell If a Teaching Placement Is a Good Fit

You can tell if a teaching placement is a good fit by looking at the school staff, the support you receive, and how the experience helps you grow. When these things align, a good placement builds your skills and confidence, whereas a bad one leaves you stressed and questioning everything.

Yet many new teachers don’t realize this until they’re already in one. While the idea of working with students in real classrooms is exciting, not every school sets you up for success.

Some placements help you grow. Others make your first year harder than it needs to be.

Luckily, there are clear signs you can spot early on. This guide breaks down what to look for, what to avoid, and how to decide if a teaching placement fits your goals.

Stick around to learn how it all works.

What Makes a Teaching Placement Worth Your Time?

A teaching placement is worth your time when it offers hands-on classroom time, supportive school staff, and real opportunities for professional development. When a placement offers all three, you walk away with skills and practical knowledge that actually prepare you for your first year.

Let’s break down what each of these looks like in practice.

School Staff Who Actually Support You

The best part about supportive school staff is that they make your daily experience smoother and far less stressful.

Ideally, you need teachers who answer your questions without making you feel like a burden. This kind of support means they take time to explain things, offer feedback, and check in on how you’re doing in the classrooms. When the staff genuinely care about your learning, you settle into your role faster.

A Placement Experience That Builds Real Skills

You might be wondering why some placements feel like a waste of time. It usually comes down to hands-on hours.

Without enough real teaching time, you end up unprepared for your first year. That’s why the Institute of Education Sciences stresses quality preparation, clinical experience, and ongoing mentorship for new teachers.

Room for Professional Development

Not every placement will be your cup of tea, and that’s okay. What counts is finding a school that invests in your growth. You’ll see this through workshops, feedback sessions, or structured training.

If a school skips training, they likely see you as free labor. But when they push you to grow, that shows they care about your future.

Red Flags to Watch for in Your First Year

Red flags don’t always look obvious at first. But they tend to show up early through poor communication, vague instructions, or missing feedback. Paying attention to them in the first few weeks can save you from a difficult experience.

Concerned student teacher struggling with missing support

Below are a few warning signs worth knowing.

Limited Contact with the Professional Experience Office

A responsive professional experience office can be a lifesaver when problems arise during your placement. They should check in regularly to see whether you’re facing any challenges and offer support as needed.

However, if you struggle to reach them, getting support when issues arise becomes much harder. And strong programs don’t do this. They communicate throughout your entire placement and make contact easy.

Unclear Expectations from Day One

Let’s be honest here, nobody does well with vague instructions. You deserve clear directions on tasks, responsibilities, and evaluation criteria from day one.

For example, some placements hand you a classroom without explaining your goals or how you’ll be evaluated. When that happens, you end up guessing your way through. Schools like this rarely have the structure to train you properly.

No Mentorship or Feedback Loop

Feedback is more valuable than most people realize. Without it, you won’t know what you’re doing right or wrong.

Through our practical knowledge working with teachers, we’ve seen how regular assessment speeds up growth. That’s why a mentor who observes your lessons and offers constructive notes can boost your progress.

Pro Tip: If you notice more than one of these red flags in your first few weeks, it’s worth speaking up early or reconsidering the placement altogether.

How to Decide If This Placement Works for You

Deciding that a placement works for you comes down to three things: asking the right questions, trusting your gut, and matching it to your goals.

Here’s what to focus on.

Ask the Right Questions Early

Asking the right questions upfront saves you from unpleasant surprises down the road.

You should ask about mentorship structure, daily responsibilities, and support systems. And don’t shy away from the awkward ones either.

If you need further information, reach out to previous trainees for their advice. Their honest answers will tell you a lot about what to expect.

Trust Your Gut After the First Week

Believe it or not, your instincts often pick up on problems faster than logic does. So pay attention to the school environment and how staff treat you.

That uneasy feeling here and there? It’s usually right. A lack of respect or support early on often points to deeper issues. Trust that sense and don’t brush it aside.

Compare It to Your Long-Term Goals

A good placement should prepare you for where you want to be, not just fill a requirement. That means thinking about the skills you’re building and how they fit your future teaching career.

When those align, the right placement will support your development and set you up for what’s next. But a mismatch now could slow your progress later. So keep future placements in mind as you make your choice.

Ready to Find Your Fit?

Finding the right teaching placement can feel overwhelming, especially for new teachers. The wrong choice leads to stress, wasted time, and slow growth. But with the right approach, you can avoid these problems and set yourself up for a rewarding experience.

This guide covered what makes a placement worth your time, red flags to watch for, and how to evaluate your options. Following these steps can save you from frustration and help you find the right fit.

Looking for programs that prioritize your learning and support? Biography Shelf is here to help.

Explore our placements and take the next step in your teaching career today.

Teachers' Lifestyle Abroad

How Teachers Can Build a Life Abroad That Feels Like Home

Teachers build a life abroad that feels like home by creating daily routines and finding their people. Slowly, unfamiliar spaces start to feel comfortable.

Sounds simple, right? But the teachers’ lifestyle abroad goes far beyond Instagram moments. It takes real effort, patience, and a bit of trial and error over time.

We’ll show you how. Stick around. This guide covers building routines, connecting with the community, and managing the real costs of moving abroad. Think local coffee spots, budgeting basics, and everything in between.

Your first year teaching overseas doesn’t have to feel lonely or confusing. Stay with us. Let’s figure this out together.

What Does Expat Life Really Look Like for Teachers?

Expat life for teachers is a mix of ordinary days and unexpected adventures. You’ll spend most of your time lesson planning, grabbing coffee, and figuring out public transport.

Let’s be real here. The glamorous travel image fades pretty quickly. What stays is a comfortable rhythm of teaching, exploring your city, and settling into local culture.

Teachers in many countries face similar challenges, too. Loneliness creeps in. Culture shock hits harder than expected, and you find yourself missing familiar faces back home.

But over time, you find your people. Local expat meetups help, and so do online communities like InterNations. Colleagues who get it become close friends too. That’s when a new country starts feeling like yours.

And it all begins with building a routine that grounds you.

Building Routine in a New Country

setting up your workspace and finding local spots

Building a routine early helps everything else fall into place. It’s because a predictable schedule lets you hit the ground running (even when your surroundings still feel unfamiliar).

Two things help most: setting up your workspace and finding local spots you can call your own.

1. Set Up Your Workspace Early

Unpack your teaching materials first, so your professional life feels grounded from day one. Then create a dedicated lesson planning area at home (trust us, lesson planning on your bed gets old fast). Even familiar desk items like photos or a favorite mug make your new space feel less foreign.

2. Find Your Local Spots

In your first week, pick a nearby cafe, gym, or park to call your own. Visit the same spots regularly.

Soon enough, locals start saying hello, remembering your order, and nodding as you walk in. Comfort sneaks up on you that way.

Once your routine feels solid, the next step is finding your people.

Finding Community When Moving Abroad

Moving abroad can feel lonely at first. But finding your people? That part comes faster than most teachers expect.

For starters, expat groups on Facebook are a solid first step. They connect you with other expats who understand your situation. Local language exchange meetups help you break the ice with friendly locals, too.

Through our years of placing teachers overseas, we’ve seen school colleagues become lifelong friends. You share similar schedules, face the same challenges, and naturally bond over time.

Cost of Living: What Teachers Should Expect

Salaries and cost of living vary a lot depending on where you teach. While a few countries let you save big, others offer lifestyle perks instead of hefty paychecks.

The Middle East and Costa Rica are good examples of both.

Middle East Salary Packages

Countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia often include housing allowances and annual flights home. That means rent is sorted, and you’re not paying out of pocket to visit family each year.

And here’s the kicker. Tax-free salaries mean teachers in the Middle East save far more compared to Western Europe.

Pro Tip: Always read the full contract before signing. What’s included varies from one school to the next.

Costa Rica Lifestyle Costs

Costa Rica keeps costs low with affordable rent, fresh seafood, and cheap street food. However, salaries run lower than in Asian countries. Teachers here typically earn $600-$1,000 per month, compared to $1,700-$3,000 in places like South Korea or Japan, according to Go Overseas.

Based on feedback from teachers we’ve placed, most trade big savings for a slower pace and beaches at their doorstep.

Beyond the budget, staying connected to family and friends back home is the next piece to sort out.

How Do You Stay Connected to Your Home Country?

You stay connected to your home country through regular calls, planned visits, and small reminders of home. Living abroad for a few years changes your relationship with family and friends, but it doesn’t break it.

For example, regular video calls with family and friends keep those bonds strong (time zone math is nobody’s favorite hobby, but it’s worth the effort). Care packages with favorite snacks or hometown treats help ease the tough weeks, too.

And don’t forget to plan annual trips home during school breaks. A plane ticket once a year gives you something to look forward to. While you’re building roots back home, picking up the local language helps you grow roots abroad too.

Language Classes: Are They Worth It When Living Abroad?

picking up the local language can shift your whole experience.

Absolutely. Believe it or not, picking up the local language can shift your whole experience.

Here’s why it helps and how to get started.

Benefits of Local Language Learning

Even basic phrases go a long way. Ordering food, catching public transport, and chatting with neighbors all become easier. Locals appreciate the effort, too, and that’s often how real friendships start. Also, it makes you far less dependent on English-speaking expat circles.

Language Exchange Communities

Many cities host free language exchange events where locals want to practice English with you. Plus, these meetups are social hangouts too. No pressure, just casual conversation and new phrases picked up naturally.

And if you want to prepare ahead of time, language learning apps like Duolingo help you learn the ropes before you even land.

Once you’ve got the language basics down, everything else starts clicking into place.

Your Next Chapter Starts Here

Moving abroad as a teacher brings real challenges. New surroundings, unfamiliar faces, and a different culture can shake anyone’s confidence at first.

But here’s the good part. Teachers around the world turn these exact challenges into rewarding experiences every single day, and you can too.

We’ve covered building routines, finding community, managing costs, staying connected to home, and learning the local language. Each step brings you closer to feeling settled. These are the building blocks of a fulfilling expat life.

Take the first step today. Our team at Biography Shelf will guide you through every detail you need to land your ideal teaching position overseas.