South Korea has been one of the world’s top destinations for English teachers for more than two decades, and it remains one of the most lucrative and well-structured markets in Asia. A combination of high salaries, generous benefits (including free housing and flights), a low cost of living outside Seoul, and a famously vibrant culture makes Korea an attractive choice for both first-time and experienced teachers. Whether you want to teach children at a private hagwon, lead classes in a public school through EPIK, or lecture at a university, Korea offers a clear path with predictable terms.
This guide covers everything you need to teach English in South Korea: the legal and document requirements (which are stricter than most countries), realistic salaries, the E-2 visa process, cost of living, the best cities to work in, school types, hiring seasons, housing, transportation, healthcare, and taxes. Use the left-hand navigation to jump to any section.
Overview
South Korea employs an estimated 20,000+ foreign English teachers across its public schools, private academies (hagwons), universities, and corporate training programs. English is a core subject from elementary school through university entrance, and the country’s export-driven economy — home to Samsung, LG, Hyundai, and SK — creates strong demand for business English. The Korean government has invested heavily in English education for decades, most visibly through the EPIK (English Program in Korea) scheme that places native speakers in public schools nationwide.
Korean teaching contracts are among the most standardized and generous in the ESL world. A typical full-time package includes a monthly salary of 2.1-2.3 million KRW for entry-level roles, free furnished single-tenant housing (or a housing allowance), round-trip airfare reimbursement, a one-month severance bonus at the end of a 12-month contract, and 50/50 contributions to national pension and health insurance. Together these benefits make the effective compensation significantly higher than the headline salary suggests.
Why teachers choose South Korea
- High savings potential — free housing plus a competitive salary lets many teachers save USD 1,000+ per month.
- Generous benefits — flights, housing, severance, and pension refund for eligible nationalities.
- Safety and convenience — extremely low crime, world-class internet, and 24/7 conveniences.
- Travel hub — easy jumping-off point for Japan, China, and Southeast Asia.
- Strong expat community — large foreign populations in Seoul, Busan, and Daegu.
Requirements
South Korea has some of the strictest and most rigidly enforced requirements of any ESL market, driven by the E-2 (foreign-language instructor) visa rules. The requirements are non-negotiable for the standard teaching path: there is no equivalent of “pay your way in” — you either meet all of the criteria or you do not qualify. The most distinctive hurdle is the requirement for criminal-background checks that must be apostille-authenticated, which can take months to obtain.
The core E-2 visa requirements
- Citizenship from one of seven designated countries — USA, UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa. No exceptions, even for fluent English speakers from other countries.
- Bachelor’s degree — any major, from an accredited university in one of the seven countries (or with an apostille).
- FBI federal background check (or national equivalent) — clean record, apostilled, and issued within the last 6 months.
- TEFL/TESOL certification (100+ hours) — required for EPIK and most public school roles; preferred for hagwons. A practicum component boosts pay and eligibility.
- Valid passport from one of the seven designated countries, with at least 6-12 months of validity.
- Health check and drug test — completed in Korea after arrival; drug offenses are taken very seriously.
Requirements by school type
| School type | Degree | TEFL | Experience | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hagwon (private academy) | Required | Often preferred | None | Easiest entry; year-round hiring |
| EPIK (public school) | Required | 100h required | None (helps pay) | Spring/fall intakes |
| University | Required (Master’s preferred) | Preferred | 1-3 years | Best conditions; competitive |
| International school | Required + teaching license | — | 2+ years | Highest pay; needs formal credential |
The document timeline
Because the FBI background check can take 8-12 weeks to process in the US (and apostille authentication adds more time), you should begin gathering documents 4-6 months before your intended start date. Once your documents are in Korea, the visa issuance letter typically takes 1-2 weeks.
Salary
South Korean teaching salaries are quoted as a monthly figure and almost always come as part of a package that also includes free housing, flights, and severance. Entry-level hagwon and EPIK salaries typically start at 2.1-2.3 million KRW per month, with pay rising based on experience, location (rural bonuses), and qualifications. Universities and international schools pay the most, often 2.5-3.5 million KRW plus benefits.
Because housing is almost always provided, the headline salary is largely disposable income. A single teacher earning 2.2 million KRW with free housing can comfortably save 1 million KRW or more per month, depending on lifestyle — making Korea one of the best savings destinations in the ESL world.
| School type | Monthly salary (KRW) | Annual with severance | Typical extras |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hagwon (entry) | 2.1M-2.3M | ~27M-30M | Housing, flights, severance |
| EPIK (entry) | 2.0M-2.2M | ~26M-29M | Housing, settlement allowance, rural bonus |
| EPIK (experienced) | 2.4M-2.7M | ~31M-35M | Multiple school bonus if applicable |
| University | 2.5M-3.5M | ~32M-46M | Long vacations, overtime |
| International school | 3.0M-4.5M+ | ~39M-58M+ | Housing allowance, flights, pension |
Standard benefits (on top of salary)
- Free furnished housing — a single-occupancy studio (one-room/officetel), or a housing allowance of 400,000-500,000 KRW/month.
- Round-trip airfare — reimbursed on arrival and at the end of the contract.
- Severance pay — one month’s average salary for each full year completed, paid at the end of the contract.
- 50/50 health insurance and pension — employer matches your contributions.
- Paid vacation — typically 10-20 working days plus national holidays.
Pay-scale multipliers for EPIK
EPIK uses a tiered pay scale (Tiers 1-3) that rewards a TEFL certificate with a practicum, a Master’s degree, teaching experience, and a degree in education or English. Moving up one tier typically adds 100,000-200,000 KRW/month. Rural and multiple-school placements come with additional bonuses of 100,000-200,000 KRW/month.
Visa
The visa that almost all foreign English teachers use is the E-2 (Foreign Language Instructor) visa, which is restricted to citizens of the seven designated English-speaking countries. The visa is tied to a specific employer and a specific location, so changing jobs means getting a new visa or a letter of release. Universities may use the E-1 (professor) visa, and licensed international school teachers can use the E-2 or a specialized work visa.
The E-2 process has two main stages: gathering and apostilling your original documents in your home country, then having your Korean employer apply for a visa issuance letter (Confirmation of Visa Issuance) from Korean immigration. Once issued, you take the letter and passport to a Korean consulate to receive the actual visa, then fly to Korea and convert it to a residence card (ARC) within 90 days.
E-2 visa process
- Secure a job offer and sign a contract with a Korean school or program.
- Gather documents — degree (apostilled), FBI/national background check (apostilled), sealed university transcripts, passport copy, photos, signed contract, and self-health assessment.
- Ship documents to Korea — your employer files for the visa issuance letter with local immigration.
- Receive visa issuance number (usually 1-2 weeks).
- Apply at a Korean consulate in your home country with the issuance number and passport.
- Enter Korea and register at the local immigration office within 90 days to receive your Alien Registration Card (ARC).
- Complete the health check and drug test in Korea after arrival.
Important visa notes
- Restricted to seven nationalities — no exceptions for E-2; F-series visas (for ethnic Koreans, spouses, and permanent residents) allow more flexibility.
- Visa is employer-specific — to change jobs mid-contract, you need a letter of release from your current employer.
- Visa runs are no longer practical — you must process through a consulate in your home country.
- Bringing dependents is possible on F-3 (dependent) or F-6 (spouse) visas, but housing and fees are usually your responsibility.
Cost of Living
South Korea’s cost of living is moderate by developed-country standards, and because housing is almost always provided by the employer, a teacher’s actual monthly expenses are quite low. Seoul is the most expensive city — comparable to mid-tier European capitals — while Busan, Daegu, Daejeon, and smaller cities are noticeably cheaper. Even in Seoul, eating out at local restaurants is affordable, with meals from 6,000-10,000 KRW common.
The biggest discretionary expenses for most teachers are eating Western food, drinking and nightlife (especially in Seoul’s Itaewon and Gangnam districts), and travel. Teachers who eat local food, use public transit, and avoid expensive hobbies can save a large share of their salary.
Monthly budget estimate (single person, Seoul, housing provided)
| Expense | Monthly cost (KRW) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent | 0 (provided) | Utilities ~50,000-100,000 |
| Utilities (gas, electric, internet) | 80,000-150,000 | Higher in winter (ondol heating) |
| Phone | 30,000-60,000 | Prepaid or budget plans available |
| Groceries | 300,000-450,000 | Imported goods are pricey |
| Eating out | 300,000-500,000 | Local meals 6,000-10,000 |
| Transport (T-money) | 50,000-100,000 | Subway base fare ~1,400 |
| Health insurance (employee share) | ~3.5% of salary | Withheld from pay |
| Pension (employee share) | ~4.5% of salary | Refundable for some nationalities |
| Misc / savings | 1,000,000+ | Often the largest category |
Affordability by city
Living costs outside Seoul run roughly 15-30% lower. Busan offers a coastal lifestyle at lower cost; Daejeon and Daegu are affordable inland hubs; smaller cities like Jeonju or Gwangju can be very cheap. The trade-off is fewer Western amenities and a smaller expat community, which some teachers prefer for immersion.
Best Cities
Korea’s major cities are well-connected by high-speed KTX rail (most within 2-3 hours of Seoul), so even teachers based in smaller cities have easy access to the capital. Each region has its own character, dialect, and lifestyle. Below are the most popular bases for English teachers.
Seoul
The capital and the heart of the job market, with the highest concentration of hagwons, public schools, universities, and corporate training jobs. Seoul offers world-class dining, nightlife, shopping, and culture — but rents (for those not in provided housing) and discretionary spending are the highest in the country. Popular expat areas include Itaewon, Hongdae, and Gangnam.
Busan
Korea’s second city and largest port, famous for its beaches, seafood, mountains, and a more relaxed pace than Seoul. Busan has a large expat community, strong hagwon and university markets, and a lower cost of living. The Haeundae and Gwangalli beach districts are popular with teachers.
Incheon
Adjacent to Seoul and home to Korea’s main international airport, Incheon offers a quieter suburban feel with easy access to the capital. It has a steady supply of public school and hagwon jobs, plus international schools serving the expatriate community in Songdo.
Daegu
A major inland city in the southeast, known for its textile industry, hot summers, and a strong public-school and hagwon market. Daegu is more affordable than Seoul or Busan and has an active foreign teaching community.
Daejeon
A science and transport hub in central Korea, home to KAIST and several research institutes. Daejeon offers a balanced lifestyle, lower cost of living, and easy KTX access to Seoul, Busan, and Daegu. The teaching market skews toward hagwons and public schools.
Schools
South Korea’s English-teaching market is dominated by two large segments — private academies (hagwons) and public schools (EPIK and direct hires) — with universities and international schools making up a smaller but lucrative top tier. Each has distinct working hours, conditions, and cultures.
Hagwons (private academies)
Private after-school academies where Korean students of all ages study English, math, science, and other subjects. Hagwons are the most common employer of new foreign teachers, hire year-round, and typically run from afternoon into evening. Conditions vary widely — chains like Chungdahm and SDA are more structured, while smaller independent hagwons can be more flexible or more chaotic. Reading the contract carefully and researching the specific school on forums is essential.
EPIK (English Program in Korea)
A government program that places native English speakers as co-teachers in Korean public elementary and secondary schools. EPIK offers standardized contracts, generous benefits, predictable hours, and long school holidays. Hiring is concentrated in two intakes (spring and fall) and is competitive. Rural placements come with additional bonuses.
Public schools (direct and through offices of education)
Beyond EPIK, some metropolitan and provincial offices of education hire foreign teachers directly, often through partnered recruiting agencies. Conditions are similar to EPIK: school hours, co-teaching with a Korean teacher, and long vacations.
Universities
University positions are the most sought-after jobs in Korean ESL, offering higher pay, shorter hours, long vacations, and prestige. They typically require a Master’s degree and 1-3 years of experience in Korea. Many university teachers also teach adjunct hours at nearby hagwons or companies to supplement income.
International schools
Schools following American, British, or IB curricula, serving expatriate and wealthy Korean families. They require a formal teaching license and usually 2+ years of experience, and offer the highest overall packages — often including housing allowances, flights, and tuition for dependents.
Hiring Seasons
Korea has two main hiring peaks driven by the school year (which begins in March), plus continuous year-round hiring for hagwons. Public school positions follow a fixed recruitment calendar, while hagwons hire whenever a teacher leaves or a new class opens — often with only 1-2 months’ notice.
The main hiring cycles
- EPIK spring intake — applications open August-October for February/March start. Begin documents 4-6 months ahead.
- EPIK fall intake — applications open February-April for August/September start.
- Hagwons — hire year-round, with the busiest periods in February-March and August-September as teachers rotate.
- Universities — positions typically posted 6-9 months ahead, with most advertised in autumn for March starts.
- International schools — follow the international school recruitment calendar (October-March) via services like Search Associates and Schrole.
Recommended timeline
- 5-6 months out — start the FBI background check (US applicants), order transcripts, and complete a TEFL if needed.
- 3-4 months out — apostille degree and background check, gather letters and references, and apply to EPIK or recruiters.
- 1-2 months out — interview, sign a contract, send documents to Korea, and receive visa issuance letter.
- 2-4 weeks out — apply at a Korean consulate and book flights.
Housing
Housing is one of the biggest benefits of teaching in Korea: nearly every standard teaching contract includes free furnished single-occupancy housing, usually a studio apartment (called an one-room or officetel) within commuting distance of the school. This single benefit is the main reason teachers in Korea can save so much. If you prefer to find your own place, most employers offer a monthly housing allowance of 400,000-500,000 KRW instead.
What employer-provided housing looks like
Teacher studios are typically 20-30 m² with a bed, wardrobe, desk, kitchenette, and bathroom. They usually come furnished with basics (TV, fridge, washing machine, air conditioner, gas stove) but teachers often add their own bedding, cookware, and decor. Quality varies by school — research the specific employer before signing.
The Korean deposit system (Jeonse and Wolse)
If you rent on the open market, Korea has two unusual rental systems:
- Wolse (monthly rent with deposit) — a deposit of 5-15 million KRW plus monthly rent. Most common for expats.
- Jeonse (lump-sum deposit, no monthly rent) — a large deposit (often 50-80% of the property value) returned at the end of the lease, with no monthly payments. Rarely available to foreigners without significant capital.
Employers usually pay the deposit on your provided apartment, which is why housing feels “free” — the landlord holds the deposit (key money) and you live there rent-free or at a low monthly rent. Always confirm in writing what happens to the deposit if you leave early.
Transportation
South Korea has an outstanding, affordable public transportation system. The subway networks in Seoul, Busan, Daegu, and other major cities are extensive, clean, and integrated with buses. Intercity travel is served by the high-speed KTX, which connects Seoul to Busan in under 3 hours. Most teachers never need a car.
Getting around day to day
- T-money card — a rechargeable smart card for subways, buses, and taxis nationwide; small per-ride discounts apply.
- Subway — base fare around 1,400 KRW (adult, with T-money); the Seoul network is one of the largest in the world.
- Buses — color-coded (green = local, blue = main, red = express) and very frequent; transfers are free with T-money.
- Taxis — affordable by Western standards (base fare ~4,000-4,800 KRW); many accept T-money. Some apps (Kakao T) support English hailing.
- Bicycles and scooters — public bike-share (Seoul’s “Ttareungi”) and electric scooter rentals are common in cities.
Long-distance travel
The KTX high-speed train is the fastest way between cities, with frequent departures. For cheaper options, Mugunghwa and ITX trains, express buses, and low-cost domestic flights (Jeju Air, Jin Air) cover most of the country. International ferry services connect Busan to Japan, and Incheon to China.
Healthcare
South Korea has a universal National Health Insurance (NHI) system that is affordable, high quality, and accessible. All legal foreign residents are required to enroll, and teachers’ contributions are split 50/50 with the employer, deducted automatically from salary. For around 60,000-130,000 KRW per month (your share), you get access to clinics and hospitals nationwide at low out-of-pocket costs.
A routine doctor visit typically costs 5,000-15,000 KRW with the NHI card, and prescriptions are heavily subsidized. Wait times are generally short, and major hospitals in Seoul (such as Severance, Asan, and Samsung) have international clinics with English-speaking staff.
How the NHI works for teachers
- Automatic enrollment once you have an ARC and are employed — your employer registers you.
- 50/50 split — you and your employer each pay roughly half the monthly premium.
- Low out-of-pocket — typically 20-30% of the cost of most treatments.
- Dental and vision — basic services covered; cosmetic work is not.
Practical health tips
- Bring prescriptions — some common medications (including ADHD stimulants and certain painkillers) are restricted or banned in Korea; carry a doctor’s letter and check Korean regulations.
- Drug testing — Korea tests for drugs as part of the visa health check; even legal-in-your-home-country substances (including marijuana) can lead to deportation.
- International clinics — major hospitals in Seoul and Busan have English-speaking international desks for expats.
Taxes
Taxes in South Korea are relatively low for foreign English teachers compared with many Western countries, and most are withheld automatically from salary. The headline income tax rate for typical teacher salaries is low (often 3-6% effective), and there are several deductions and a year-end tax settlement that frequently results in a refund.
The main taxes you will pay
| Tax | Rate | How it’s paid |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax (national) | 6-35% (progressive; ~3-6% effective at teacher salaries) | Withheld monthly |
| Local income tax | 10% of income tax | Withheld monthly |
| National Health Insurance | ~7% of salary (split 50/50) | Withheld monthly |
| National Pension | 9% of salary (split 50/50) | Withheld monthly; refundable for some |
| VAT | 10% | Built into prices |
| Severance pay | 1 month/year | Paid at contract end |
Year-end tax settlement (YTS)
Each February-March, employees file a year-end tax settlement that reconciles withheld tax against actual liability. Many deductions are available — for dependents, medical expenses, private pension contributions (up to 4 million KRW into a personal pension plan), and more. Most teachers receive a modest refund (50,000-300,000 KRW); your school’s HR will usually help you file.
The pension refund
If you are a citizen of a country with a totalization agreement with Korea (currently including the US, Canada, and Australia — but not the UK or South Africa), you can claim a lump-sum refund of your pension contributions when you leave Korea permanently. For a teacher earning 2.2 million KRW/month, this refund is often 1-2 million KRW per year worked — a meaningful end-of-stay windfall. Apply at the National Pension Service within 12 months of leaving.
FAQs
How much can I realistically save teaching in Korea?
Most single teachers on a standard 2.1-2.3 million KRW salary with free housing save 1-1.5 million KRW (roughly USD 750-1,100) per month. Teachers in cheaper cities, those who avoid nightlife and Western groceries, and those with private tutoring income can save substantially more.
Do I need to speak Korean?
No. Most teaching jobs use English-only in the classroom, and many schools prefer it. However, learning basic Korean will make daily life — shopping, doctors, bureaucracy — much easier, and Korean coworkers will appreciate the effort.
What if my hagwon turns out to be bad?
Unfortunately, hagwon horror stories are real. Read your contract carefully before signing, research the specific school on forums like Waygook.org and Reddit’s r/teachinginkorea, and keep records of hours and pay. The Labor Board and Korean Labor Standards Act provide recourse for unpaid wages or contract violations, but resolving disputes from abroad is difficult.
Is EPIK better than a hagwon?
It depends on your goals. EPIK offers stability, predictable hours, long holidays, and a structured benefits package, but less control over placement and (often) a slower classroom pace. Hagwons pay similarly, hire year-round, and offer more variety, but hours run late and conditions vary more. Many teachers start at a hagwon and move to EPIK or universities later.
Can I bring my partner or family?
Yes, on an F-3 (dependent) visa if you are the primary E-2 holder with stable income. Dependents cannot freely work — they need permission and, for paid work, a separate visa. Family-sized provided housing is rare, so you will usually need to take a housing allowance and rent your own apartment.
How long does the visa process take?
From signing a contract to arriving in Korea is typically 2-4 months, with the bottleneck being the FBI background check and apostille for US applicants. Begin gathering documents 4-6 months before your intended start date to avoid delays.




