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Teaching English in Hong Kong: Salaries, NET Scheme & What to Expect in 2025

JRJobRovers Team9 min read

At a glance

Employer TypeMonthly Salary (USD)ContractBenefits
Government NET Scheme (Secondary)$3,800–$6,5001–2 years, renewableHousing allowance, annual leave, MPF pension contribution
Government PNET Scheme (Primary)$3,200–$5,5001–2 years, renewableHousing allowance, medical, MPF contribution
International School$4,000–$7,500+2 yearsHousing, flights, medical, tuition for dependants
Private Language Centre$1,800–$3,0001 year or reduced-hoursMinimal — some offer MPF contribution
University / Tertiary$3,500–$6,0001–3 yearsHousing, research budget, medical

Teaching English in Hong Kong: Where Ambition Meets Opportunity

Hong Kong occupies a unique position in the ESL world. It is simultaneously one of Asia's most demanding job markets and one of its most rewarding — offering salaries that top most of the continent, a genuinely bilingual professional environment, and a city so energetic it tends to either captivate teachers for decades or exhaust them within a year. If you come prepared and secure the right position, Hong Kong can be a defining chapter in a teaching career.

This guide covers everything from the prestigious government NET Scheme to international school packages, the realities of cost of living, and exactly what you need to land a job here.


Why Teach English in Hong Kong?

Hong Kong's demand for English education runs deep. English is a co-official language alongside Cantonese, and Mandarin is increasingly prominent in business contexts. This creates a layered linguistic environment where strong English instruction carries genuine social and economic weight — parents, schools, and employers all take it seriously.

For teachers, that translates into:

  • Among the highest ESL salaries in Asia, particularly at international schools and through the government NET Scheme
  • A structured, well-resourced school system — Hong Kong's Education Bureau maintains clear standards and provides strong institutional support for NET teachers
  • World-class urban infrastructure — the MTR metro system, Octopus card, world-class healthcare, and extraordinary food culture
  • Proximity to the rest of Asia — short flights to Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and mainland China make regional travel straightforward
  • A genuine English-language professional environment — unlike some ESL markets where foreign teachers exist in a bubble, Hong Kong integrates them into real, functioning bilingual institutions

The city is not for everyone. The pace is relentless, apartments are famously small, and the cost of living is among the highest in the world. But for teachers who want to earn well, work in a rigorous environment, and experience one of Asia's great metropolitan cultures, Hong Kong delivers.


Who Can Teach English in Hong Kong?

Minimum Requirements

The baseline for most English teaching positions in Hong Kong is:

  • A Bachelor's degree in any discipline
  • A TEFL/CELTA certificate (minimum 120 hours, ideally in-person)
  • Native or near-native English proficiency

For an overview of how these requirements compare across Asia, see our guide on ESL teacher requirements by country.

The NET Scheme (Government Schools)

The government's Native-speaking English Teacher (NET) Scheme has two tracks:

  • HKNET — secondary schools, administered by the Education Bureau
  • PNET — primary schools, same administrative body

NET Scheme positions are highly sought after and correspondingly competitive. Requirements are stricter:

  • A degree in Education, English, or a related subject is strongly preferred
  • A recognised teaching qualification (PGDE, BEd, Postgraduate Certificate in Education, or equivalent)
  • Typically two or more years of classroom teaching experience
  • Citizenship of a recognised native English-speaking country

Successful applicants receive a government employment contract, a housing allowance, access to the Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF) pension scheme, and generous annual leave. The application cycle opens annually — check the Hong Kong Education Bureau website for current recruitment windows.

International Schools

International schools in Hong Kong generally require:

  • A Bachelor's degree (ideally in Education or the subject taught)
  • A teaching licence from your home country or an equivalent recognised qualification
  • Two or more years of classroom experience
  • For curriculum-specific schools (IB, British, American), subject specialisation

International school packages are typically the most comprehensive — housing, annual flights, medical insurance, and sometimes school-fee waivers for children.

Private Language Centres

Language centres have the lowest barriers to entry. A Bachelor's degree plus a TEFL certificate is usually sufficient. Salaries are lower and benefits are minimal, but these positions can serve as an entry point to the Hong Kong market before moving into higher-paying roles.


Salaries: What Do English Teachers Earn in Hong Kong?

Hong Kong teacher salaries are quoted in Hong Kong Dollars (HKD). At current exchange rates, one USD is roughly 7.8 HKD — though this should be verified against live rates when planning.

  • Government NET Scheme (secondary): typically HKD $30,000–$50,000/month (around $3,800–$6,500 USD), plus housing allowance of roughly HKD $15,000–$22,000
  • Government PNET Scheme (primary): typically HKD $25,000–$43,000/month ($3,200–$5,500 USD) with housing allowance
  • International schools: most teachers earn HKD $31,000–$58,000/month ($4,000–$7,500 USD), sometimes higher for senior or specialist roles; packages nearly always include accommodation or a substantial housing allowance
  • Private language centres: typically HKD $14,000–$23,000/month ($1,800–$3,000 USD), with few additional benefits
  • Universities and tertiary institutions: typically HKD $27,000–$47,000/month ($3,500–$6,000 USD) with research support and accommodation assistance

Hong Kong has no personal income tax equivalent to mainland rates — a progressive Salaries Tax applies, with effective rates for most teachers falling between 7% and 15%, well below many Western countries.

For a global benchmark, see our breakdown of ESL salaries around the world.


Cost of Living: The Reality Check

Hong Kong consistently ranks among the world's three most expensive cities. The numbers below reflect 2024–2025 conditions and should be treated as general guidance.

Accommodation is the dominant expense:

  • A studio or one-bedroom flat in a central or mid-range area typically costs HKD $8,000–$15,000/month ($1,025–$1,925 USD) — and it will likely be small by international standards. Flat sizes in Hong Kong are infamously compact: 300–450 square feet (28–42 square metres) is common for a mid-range solo rental
  • More affordable options exist in the New Territories (Tuen Mun, Yuen Long, Sha Tin) where rents can be HKD $6,000–$9,000/month, but commuting times are longer
  • Teachers with housing provided or a substantial housing allowance from their employer sidestep this issue entirely — which is why employer-provided accommodation is far more valuable in Hong Kong than in cheaper ESL markets

Food is manageable if you eat locally:

  • A meal at a cha chaan teng (traditional Hong Kong café) costs around HKD $40–$80 ($5–$10 USD)
  • Western restaurant meals typically run HKD $120–$300+ per person
  • Supermarket groceries are reasonably priced for Asian produce; imported Western goods carry a premium

Transport is excellent value — the MTR is reliable, extensive, and cheap (typically HKD $4–$50 per journey depending on distance).

Utilities for a small flat run around HKD $500–$1,000/month including electricity and internet.


Savings Potential

This is where Hong Kong diverges sharply from elsewhere in Asia. In South Korea or Japan, a teacher on a standard package might save $700–$1,200/month relatively easily. Hong Kong's cost of living compresses that margin dramatically.

With housing provided or a full housing allowance (NET Scheme or international school): most teachers can save around $800–$1,800/month depending on lifestyle.

Without housing support (language centre, or if renting independently): saving more than $200–$400/month requires a very disciplined approach. Some teachers in this situation break even.

The key takeaway: Hong Kong rewards teachers who secure package-level roles with accommodation included. Those who arrive without such a role and rent independently will find the maths challenging.


Visa Process

Most foreign English teachers in Hong Kong apply for a General Employment Policy (GEP) work visa. The process is employer-sponsored:

  1. Accept a job offer and sign an employment contract
  2. Your employer submits the visa application to the Hong Kong Immigration Department on your behalf
  3. You provide supporting documents: degree certificate, proof of professional qualifications, reference letters, passport copy
  4. Processing typically takes six to eight weeks
  5. You may enter on a visitor permit and await approval, or await clearance before travelling — confirm your employer's preferred approach
  6. Visa is initially granted for up to two years, renewable with continued employment

The process is well-established and relatively straightforward for qualified teachers. Your school's HR department will typically guide you through the documentation requirements.

More general context on work visa procedures is available in our work permits and visas guide.


Best Areas to Live in Hong Kong

Hong Kong Island — Mid-Levels and Wan Chai: The traditional expat heartland. Mid-Levels offers leafy streets, excellent restaurants, and the famous outdoor escalator connecting it to Central. Pricey, but the convenience and community feel justify it for many teachers.

Kowloon — Sham Shui Po and Mong Kok: More affordable, deeply local, and culturally rich. Less polished than Hong Kong Island but gives a more authentic feel of the city. Sham Shui Po in particular has become popular with younger expats.

New Territories — Tuen Mun, Sha Tin, Tai Po: Significantly cheaper rents, quieter pace, and more space. The tradeoff is commuting time — allow 45–75 minutes to reach Central or major school hubs on Hong Kong Island. Well served by MTR and buses.

Lantau Island: Home to the international airport and Discovery Bay — a semi-suburban expat enclave popular with families. Quieter and more spacious than urban Hong Kong, with ferry access to Central.


How to Get Hired

Apply directly to the Education Bureau for NET Scheme positions. The annual recruitment exercise typically opens in late autumn (November–January) for positions starting the following September. Competition is high — tailor your application to emphasise teaching qualification, classroom experience, and any previous work in East Asian educational contexts.

Approach international schools directly. Most Hong Kong international schools advertise on their own websites and via specialist recruitment agencies. The main hiring season is October–March for September starts, though mid-year vacancies do arise.

Use specialist ESL recruitment platforms. JobRovers connects qualified teachers with verified international schools and language institutions across Asia — create a free JobRovers profile and let schools browse your qualifications directly.

Network on arrival. The expat teaching community in Hong Kong is active and reasonably well connected. Teachers who arrive with a short-term position at a language centre often use it to build local contacts and transition into higher-paying roles within one to two years.


Common Mistakes Teachers Make

Expecting Japan-level savings. Hong Kong salaries are high, but so is the cost of living. Teachers who hear "up to $6,000/month" and assume they'll bank $3,000 are in for a surprise if they haven't secured housing support. Do the maths on your specific package before committing.

Underestimating NET Scheme competition. It is not a fallback option or an easy government job. The scheme attracts experienced, qualified applicants from across the English-speaking world. Apply with a polished, complete application — not a speculative one.

Not accounting for flat size. Hong Kong real estate is legitimately among the most expensive per square foot on earth. A HKD $12,000/month flat that sounds reasonable may be 280 square feet (26 square metres). Research neighbourhood-specific sizes and prices before you commit.

Arriving without a job offer. Unlike some ESL markets where walking in and visiting schools in person is viable, Hong Kong's structured hiring processes generally favour candidates who have secured offers remotely before arriving. Short tourist-visa job hunts are possible but inefficient.

Not researching the current environment. Since 2019, Hong Kong's social and political landscape has shifted. Some expat teachers have relocated; others have stayed and report a stable professional life. Make an informed personal decision based on current, reliable sources before committing to a move.


Is Hong Kong Right for You?

Hong Kong suits teachers who want to earn well, work in a structured and academically serious environment, and live in one of Asia's great cities — and who have the qualifications and experience to access its best positions. It is not the place for a first teaching stint abroad, a gap-year adventure, or a low-cost lifestyle experiment. But for experienced educators who meet the bar, it can be professionally and financially exceptional.

Create a free JobRovers profile and let schools find you — or start exploring what the right Hong Kong role could look like for your career.

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Frequently asked

Do I need Cantonese to teach English in Hong Kong?

No. English is an official language and most international schools and government NET Scheme positions operate entirely in English. Some knowledge of Cantonese is socially helpful but professionally unnecessary for English teaching roles.

What is the NET Scheme and how competitive is it?

The Native-speaking English Teacher (NET) Scheme is a government programme placing qualified teachers in public primary (PNET) and secondary (HKNET) schools. It is genuinely competitive — positions attract hundreds of applicants from English-speaking countries. A recognised teaching qualification (PGDE, BEd, or equivalent) and at least two years of classroom experience significantly strengthen your application.

Can non-native English speakers teach in Hong Kong?

The government NET Scheme explicitly targets native English speakers from recognised countries. International schools vary — some prioritise native speakers, others assess qualifications and classroom experience first. Private language centres are generally the most open to qualified non-native teachers. See our guide on [native vs. non-native ESL teachers](/blog/native-vs-non-native-esl-teachers) for a broader breakdown.

Is it possible to save money in Hong Kong on a teacher's salary?

It depends heavily on your role and lifestyle. Teachers in the NET Scheme or at international schools who receive a housing allowance or provided accommodation can typically save around $800–$1,500 per month. Teachers renting independently on a language-centre salary will find it very difficult to save anything meaningful given Hong Kong's rental market.

How has the political situation affected expat teachers?

Since 2019, some expatriates have left Hong Kong, and the city's international school landscape has seen some consolidation. That said, thousands of foreign teachers continue to live and work there without issue. Most report that day-to-day professional life remains stable. It is worth researching the current environment independently and making an informed personal decision.

How do I get a work visa for Hong Kong?

Most teachers apply for a General Employment Policy (GEP) work visa, sponsored by their employer. Your school handles the application to the Immigration Department. Processing typically takes six to eight weeks. You'll need your degree certificate, proof of professional qualifications, a signed employment contract, and a valid passport.