Native English Teacher
The American English Language School (A.E.)
Pathum Thani, Thailand•Full-Time•Up To 60,000 THB per month
Posted 13 days ago
The American English Language School (A.E.) in Pathum Thani is seeking a Native English Teacher to join our team. The position offers a starting salary ranging from ฿50,000 to ฿60,000 per month, depending on qualifications and experience, with a teaching load of 16 periods per week and an additional four hours of non-teaching duties, totaling 20 contact hours per week. The contract is set to begin on December 22nd and will conclude on April 30th, 2026, with the entire month of April off as paid leave.
Preference will be given to applicants with a degree in Education and those with experience teaching in Thai government schools. We will handle all necessary Non-Immigrant B Visa, Work Permit, and Teacher License documentation to ensure legal employment.
Interested candidates should email their CV, including a recent color photo and a contact phone number if residing in Thailand, to americanenglishthailand@gmail.com. Please note that only shortlisted candidates will be contacted due to the high volume of applications.
Thank you.
Preference will be given to applicants with a degree in Education and those with experience teaching in Thai government schools. We will handle all necessary Non-Immigrant B Visa, Work Permit, and Teacher License documentation to ensure legal employment.
Interested candidates should email their CV, including a recent color photo and a contact phone number if residing in Thailand, to americanenglishthailand@gmail.com. Please note that only shortlisted candidates will be contacted due to the high volume of applications.
Thank you.
Please mention that you found the job on Teast for the school's reference.
Please review the requirements to teach English in Thailand before applying. If a post says “NES” or “Native English Speaker”, it usually means applicants must be from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa (sometimes it’s a preference, not a hard rule).
Schools receive many applications and may not reply to everyone. If you don’t hear back within a week, move on to the next job.
Watch out for agencies that charge fees or take a cut of your salary. Good agencies are paid by the schools—not by you. If you’re unsure how they make money, ask. If they say they take a percentage, that’s a red flag. Avoid them and let us know so we can ban them.
Never pay to apply. Never pay to “buy something now and get reimbursed later.” Always verify you’re speaking with the actual school (not an impostor). Scams do exist—be careful.