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Documents You’ll Need Before Applying

Getting hired as an ESL teacher is only half the battle — the other half is the paperwork. Immigration authorities are strict, and a single missing or improperly authenticated document can delay your visa by weeks or even derail a job offer entirely. This guide walks you through every document you need before applying for ESL jobs abroad, plus how to handle the often-confusing apostille and legalization process.

Why Document Preparation Matters

The ESL hiring market moves fast, but immigration bureaucracy moves slowly. Schools routinely extend conditional offers that depend on you being able to produce authenticated documents within a few weeks. If you wait until you have a job offer to start gathering documents, you’ll likely lose the position to a candidate who was already prepared.

As a rule of thumb, start gathering documents 2–3 months before you plan to apply. Background checks and apostilles in particular can take 6–12 weeks.

The Core Document Checklist

While requirements vary by country, the following list covers what virtually every employer and immigration authority will ask for:

1. Bachelor’s Degree Certificate

  • The original physical certificate (not a photocopy)
  • Notarized and apostilled copies for visa applications
  • Official transcripts (sealed, signed envelope) — some countries require these in addition to the diploma

If you’ve lost your original, contact your university’s registrar office to request a replacement. This can take 4–8 weeks.

2. TEFL/TESOL Certificate

  • Must show at least 120 hours of training
  • From an accredited provider (ideally with practicum/observed teaching)
  • Physical and digital copies

Some countries (notably China) now require the TEFL to be notarized and apostilled as well. If you hold a CELTA or Trinity CertTESOL, these carry extra weight.

3. Criminal Background Check

This is one of the most important and most-delayed documents. Requirements depend on your nationality and where you’ve lived:

  • US citizens: FBI Identity History Summary (fingerprint-based). Takes 4–8 weeks; faster through channeler services.
  • UK citizens: ACRO Police Certificate or DBS check.
  • Canadian citizens: RCMP Certified Criminal Record Check.
  • Australian citizens: Federal Police Check (AFP).
  • Irish citizens: Garda Síochána Police Certificate.
  • South African citizens: Police Clearance Certificate from SAPS.

If you’ve lived in another country for 6+ months in the past 5–10 years, you may need a background check from that country too.

4. Valid Passport

  • Must be valid for at least 12–18 months beyond your expected start date
  • At least 2–4 blank pages for visa stamps
  • Some countries require 18+ months validity to issue a work visa

Renew early. Passport renewals can take 8–11 weeks for routine service in the US, less with expedited service.

5. Professional References

  • 2–3 references on official letterhead where possible
  • At least one from a supervisor or manager
  • Contact details (email, phone) for verification
  • Signed and dated, ideally within the past 6 months

6. Passport-Style Photographs

  • Usually 4–6 photos required
  • White or light background
  • Straight face, neutral expression, no glasses
  • Specific dimensions vary by country — get several sets in different sizes

7. Official Transcripts

  • Sealed, signed copies from your university registrar
  • Some countries (China, Middle East) require this in addition to the degree
  • Order 3–5 copies — you’ll use them across multiple applications

The Apostille and Legalization Process Explained

This is the part that trips up most first-time teachers. Many documents issued in your home country aren’t automatically recognized abroad — they need to be authenticated.

What Is an Apostille?

An apostille is a standardized international certification that verifies a document’s authenticity. It’s issued under the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention and is accepted by all member countries. If your destination is a Hague Convention member, an apostille is all you need.

Hague Convention countries that accept apostilles for ESL visas include South Korea, Japan, Spain, Italy, Mexico, and most of Europe.

What Is Legalization?

If your destination is NOT a Hague Convention member (China, Vietnam, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Thailand), you’ll need a longer process called legalization. This involves:

  1. Notarization — A local notary verifies the document.
  2. State/Provincial authentication — Your state or provincial authority verifies the notary.
  3. Home country authentication — Your federal government (e.g., US State Department, UK FCDO) verifies the state-level authentication.
  4. Embassy legalization — The destination country’s embassy places their final stamp on the document.

This 4-step process can take 4–8 weeks and costs $50–$300 per document.

Which Documents Need Authentication?

Commonly required documents needing apostille or legalization:

  • Bachelor’s degree certificate
  • Criminal background check
  • TEFL certificate (China, in particular)
  • Marriage certificate (if bringing a spouse)
  • Children’s birth certificates (if bringing dependents)

Country-Specific Document Requirements

South Korea (E-2 Visa)

  • Degree — apostilled
  • FBI background check — apostilled (issued within 6 months of visa application)
  • TEFL certificate (120 hours, with practicum preferred)
  • 2 sealed transcripts
  • 2 passport photos
  • Self-health assessment form
  • Contract and official invitation letter from school

China (Z Visa)

  • Degree — notarized + state authenticated + Chinese embassy legalization
  • TEFL certificate — notarized + legalization (if not licensed teacher)
  • Background check — notarized + authenticated + legalized (issued within 6 months)
  • Medical check form
  • 2 years of post-graduation work experience proof (letters of employment)
  • Recommendation letters

Vietnam

  • Degree — notarized + consular legalization
  • Background check — legalized
  • TEFL certificate — legalized
  • Health check (done in-country)

Middle East (UAE, Saudi Arabia)

  • Degree — attested (the UAE term for legalization)
  • TEFL/teaching license — attested
  • Marriage certificate — attested (if bringing spouse)
  • Children’s birth certificates — attested
  • Experience letters — on company letterhead, signed
  • Medical fitness test (done in-country)

Practical Tips to Avoid Disaster

  • Order multiple originals. Apostille/legalization processes consume the original document. Order 3–5 sealed transcripts and 2–3 notarized copies of your degree.
  • Start early. Apostilles take 1–4 weeks; full legalization for non-Hague countries can take 8–12 weeks.
  • Use a service if time is short. Companies like US Authentication, Vital Records, and Monarch specialize in expediting the process for a fee.
  • Keep everything organized. Use a folder (physical and digital) with labeled copies. You’ll thank yourself.
  • Scan everything. High-resolution color scans of every authenticated document are essential for online applications and emergencies.
  • Check expiration dates. Background checks must typically be issued within 6 months of visa application. Some countries require apostilles within a certain window.

What to Bring vs What to Send Ahead

Once authenticated, your documents fall into two categories:

  • Bring in person: Passport, original degree, original TEFL, reference letters, multiple passport photos, printed copies of apostilled documents.
  • Already submitted: Most authenticated documents will be sent directly to your school or immigration authority as part of visa processing.

Common Document Mistakes

  • Using outdated background checks — They expire. Get yours as close to your visa application as possible.
  • Forgetting dependents’ documents — If bringing a family, they each need their own set of authenticated documents.
  • Skipping transcripts — Even when a country says it just needs the degree, the school may request transcripts separately.
  • Not getting references on letterhead — Email references look unprofessional; always request formal letters.

Final Checklist Before You Apply

  • [ ] Bachelor’s degree — original + apostilled/legalized copies
  • [ ] TEFL certificate — physical + digital
  • [ ] Criminal background check — initiated, apostille/legalization in progress
  • [ ] Passport — 18+ months validity, blank pages
  • [ ] 2–3 reference letters on letterhead
  • [ ] 3–5 sealed transcripts
  • [ ] 6+ passport photos (multiple sizes)
  • [ ] Scanned PDF copies of everything

Once these are in order, you’re ready to start applying. Read our guide on creating an ESL-specific resume next.

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