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The Complete China Expat Teacher Guide

Everything you need to know before accepting an international teaching position in China — from competitive salaries and Z-visa requirements to cost of living, life in Shanghai and Beijing, and navigating the world's fastest-changing education market.

Spill.org Insights
Global Expat Intelligence
March 12, 2026
14 min survival guide

Why China Remains a Major International Teaching Destination

China hosts the largest international school market in the world by number of schools — over 1,000 institutions serving international and Chinese national students. Shanghai and Beijing are the primary hubs, but significant international school communities also exist in Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Tianjin, and Hangzhou.

Salaries are competitive, the cost of living outside of top-tier housing is remarkably low, and the cultural experience is genuinely unique. For teachers with an adventurous streak and a desire to live in one of the world's most dynamic economies, China delivers.

Key Insight: Tier 1 international schools in Shanghai (like Dulwich, Wellington, YCIS) offer packages comparable to Dubai. Don't assume China means lower pay — it depends entirely on the school tier.


Salary & Compensation Packages

Base Salary Ranges — Shanghai/Beijing (2025-26)

RoleMonthly (RMB)Annual (GBP equiv.)
NQT / Early Career22,000 – 30,000£23,000 – £32,000
Established Teacher30,000 – 42,000£32,000 – £45,000
Senior Teacher / TLR38,000 – 52,000£40,000 – £55,000
Head of Department45,000 – 65,000£48,000 – £69,000
SLT / Deputy Head55,000 – 80,000£58,000 – £85,000
Principal75,000 – 130,000+£80,000 – £138,000+

China levies progressive income tax (3-45%), but most international school packages are structured to minimise tax burden. Effective rates for teachers typically fall between 10-20%.

Package Components

  • Housing: Furnished apartment or housing allowance (RMB 8,000-20,000/month in Shanghai). Quality varies hugely — always negotiate.
  • Flights: Annual return flights (1-2 per year) for teacher and sometimes dependants.
  • Medical Insurance: Comprehensive international coverage. China's public healthcare is functional but language barriers exist.
  • Tuition Fee Remission: 50-100% at your school for 1-2 children.
  • Settling-in Allowance: RMB 5,000-15,000 for relocation costs.
  • Mandarin Lessons: Some schools fund language classes — a huge benefit.

Top Schools

  • Dulwich College Shanghai — Two campuses (Pudong & Puxi). Premium British education.
  • Wellington College International Shanghai — HMC school, exceptional facilities.
  • Yew Chung International School (YCIS) — Multi-campus group across China.
  • Shanghai American School (SAS) — Two campuses, outstanding American curriculum.
  • Western Academy of Beijing (WAB) — Leading IB school in the capital.
  • British School of Beijing — Nord Anglia group, multiple campuses.
  • Harrow International School Beijing — Prestigious HMC member.

Cost of Living

Outside of rent, China is extraordinarily affordable.

Monthly Budget — Shanghai (Single Teacher, Housing Provided)

CategoryMonthly (RMB)Monthly (GBP)
Local dining (daily)2,000 – 4,000£213 – £425
Groceries (local markets + imports)2,000 – 4,000£213 – £425
Metro / DiDi transport500 – 1,000£53 – £106
Mobile & Internet200 – 400£21 – £43
VPN subscription50 – 100£5 – £11
Gym300 – 800£32 – £85
Entertainment & Social2,000 – 5,000£213 – £530
Total (housing provided)7,050 – 15,300£750 – £1,625

What's Cheap

  • Local food: A bowl of noodles or dumplings for RMB 15-30 (£1.60-£3.20).
  • Transport: Metro costs RMB 3-9 per journey. DiDi (Chinese Uber) is very affordable.
  • Tailored clothing: Custom suits and dresses for a fraction of UK prices.
  • Domestic travel: High-speed rail to Hangzhou (45 min from Shanghai) for RMB 73 (£7.80).

What's Expensive

  • Imported Western goods: Cheese, wine, cereals, and branded cosmetics carry heavy premiums.
  • Rent (without allowance): A decent 2-bed in central Shanghai: RMB 12,000-20,000/month.
  • International healthcare: Without insurance, private hospitals are expensive.

Monthly Budget (Couple, Housing Provided)

CategoryMonthly (RMB)Monthly (GBP)
Local dining + groceries5,000 – 9,000£532 – £957
Transport (2 x Metro/DiDi)800 – 1,600£85 – £170
Mobile & Internet350 – 700£37 – £74
VPN (2 licenses)80 – 160£9 – £17
Gym (2 memberships)500 – 1,400£53 – £149
Entertainment & Social3,000 – 7,000£319 – £745
Total (housing provided)9,730 – 19,860£1,035 – £2,112

Couple savings: Dual-income teaching couples in Shanghai save RMB 30,000-55,000/month (£3,190-£5,850) — exceptional given the lifestyle quality.

Monthly Budget (Couple + 1 Child, Housing Provided)

CategoryMonthly (RMB)Monthly (GBP)
Groceries (family)4,000 – 7,000£425 – £745
Dining (family)3,000 – 6,000£319 – £638
Transport1,000 – 1,800£106 – £191
Mobile & Internet350 – 700£37 – £74
Ayi (nanny/housekeeper)5,000 – 8,000£532 – £851
School fees (if not covered)0* – 15,0000* – £1,596
Activities & Enrichment (child)2,000 – 5,000£213 – £532
Entertainment & Family2,000 – 5,000£213 – £532
Total (fees covered)17,350 – 33,500£1,845 – £3,563
Total (fees NOT covered)17,350 – 48,500£1,845 – £5,159

*Tier 1 international schools in China charge RMB 150,000-300,000/year. Tuition remission is a non-negotiable benefit for families.

Monthly Budget (Couple + 2 Children, Housing Provided)

CategoryMonthly (RMB)Monthly (GBP)
Groceries (family of 4)5,000 – 9,000£532 – £957
Dining (family)3,500 – 7,000£372 – £745
Transport1,200 – 2,000£128 – £213
Mobile & Internet350 – 700£37 – £74
Ayi (full-time)6,000 – 10,000£638 – £1,064
School fees (2 children, if not covered)0* – 30,0000* – £3,191
Activities & Enrichment (2 children)4,000 – 10,000£425 – £1,064
Entertainment & Family3,000 – 6,000£319 – £638
Total (fees covered)23,050 – 44,700£2,451 – £4,755
Total (fees NOT covered)23,050 – 74,700£2,451 – £7,946

Family reality: China's "ayi" (domestic helper) culture is a huge advantage for teaching families. A full-time live-out ayi costs RMB 5,000-10,000/month — she'll cook, clean, do school runs, and manage the household. Combined with tuition remission, family life in China is very manageable financially.


Visa & Work Permit (Z-Visa)

China's visa process is the most bureaucratic of any major teaching destination:

  1. PU Letter / Work Notification: Your school applies through the local education bureau.
  2. Z-Visa: Applied for at a Chinese embassy in your home country.
  3. Arrival Registration: Register at local police station within 24 hours.
  4. Work Permit: Converted from Z-visa within 30 days of arrival.
  5. Residence Permit: Final step — allows you to stay and work legally.

Requirements

  • Bachelor's degree (minimum) — must be from a recognised university
  • Teaching qualification (PGCE, B.Ed, or equivalent)
  • 2+ years post-qualification experience (strict requirement in most cities)
  • Clean criminal record check (DBS) — apostilled
  • Health check (done in China on arrival)
  • TEFL certificate (helpful for non-specialist roles but not required for international schools)

Important: Document Authentication

All documents must be apostilled by the UK Foreign Office, then legalised at the Chinese Embassy. Start this 8-10 weeks before your intended departure.


Life as a Teacher in China

The Great Firewall

Google, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, and most Western social media are blocked in China. You will need a VPN (Virtual Private Network) to access them. Good VPNs cost £3-8/month and are essential.

Culture & Daily Life

  • WeChat: Download it before you arrive. It's used for everything — messaging, payments, food delivery, transit, utilities.
  • Cashless society: China is almost entirely cashless. WeChat Pay and Alipay handle nearly all transactions.
  • Language: Mandarin is essential for navigating daily life. Your school community will be English-speaking, but taxis, shops, and restaurants outside expat areas require basic Mandarin.
  • Food: Chinese regional cuisine is extraordinary. Shanghai's xiaolongbao, Beijing's Peking duck, Sichuan's mala hotpot.
  • Safety: China is extremely safe. Petty crime is rare and violent crime is almost unheard of.

Climate (Shanghai)

  • Spring (March-May): 10-25°C. Mild and pleasant.
  • Summer (June-September): 28-38°C. Hot, humid, with a monsoon season in June-July.
  • Autumn (October-November): 15-25°C. Beautiful clear skies.
  • Winter (December-February): 2-10°C. Cold and damp. No central heating in Shanghai (a shock for many Brits).

Next Steps

  1. Browse live China roles on Spill.org
  2. Start document apostille/legalisation immediately — it's a 2-month process
  3. Download WeChat and set up an account before arrival
  4. Purchase a reliable VPN (ExpressVPN or Astrill are popular choices)