Students always make teaching fun...but it's hard to smile when the company treats you so badly. - Online English Teacher EF Education First Employee Review

1.0
Jan 4, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working at home. Setting own hours. Quality teaching materials available to use.

Cons

Where do I start! I worked for English Town when I was in Brazil and was well paid and had a very good experience. In Brazil, I worked one evening a month as a "host" for an English-speaking social event. It was fun and well paid. So, when I returned to the States, EF was the only online company I applied to because they are the market leader and I had such a good experience with them. However, my experience teaching with them has been awful. I have only worked here 2 months and already EF has found many reasons not to pay me for classes worked. The "hub" in China calls all the shots and if they say you won't be paid, they don't pay. When I have had problems entering classes or especially having a class created, the "hub" has declared the incidences, "teacher technical problem". Which means I don't get paid. I have seen no "technical problem" on my side, but apparently, EF can see that my internet connection has gone done, except that there is no notice or clue on my side. Also, if I haven't reported these incidences, which, "Why would I? on my end I can't see a problem." then I have been fined $12, the equivalent of one class. So, I don't get paid AND I am penalized $12. For one class, that I knew I had problems with, I created a "hub" case because I couldn't teach the class. When creating a "hub" case you have to input a lot of information, including the class number, the class date and time. I made a type-o on the class number and not only wasn't paid for the class, but also was penalized for the class. The office in China would not budge on this. Supposedly, the Boston office will pay me for this and perhaps they will. I'll find out when they finish the invoicing this month. The Americans in the Boston office have been helpful and friendly, mostly, but they don't have any control over what China does. However, the Boston office was very difficult to communicate with in trying to get my first months pay worked out. The emails were condescending and did not explain or address my questions. Almost 20 emails went back and forth to get my questions answered. I didn't like any of the answers either because they were, "We won't pay you for this and this and this and we will deduct for this and this and this." It is difficult to stay positive when teaching students after receiving emails that are condescending or that communicate that I won't be paid, or are form emails that say thank you for whatever, and I know that that is not the actual sentiment. I feel less than unappreciated. I feel disrespected and taken advantage of. I've been taking lots of screenshots and doing a lot of documentation. I plan on leaving the company as soon as I have another job. And I am also thinking about taking them to court to get the money they haven't paid me. I was thinking of just taking them to small claims court, but then I think that even if I got a judgment in my favor which I am sure will happen, that the company will ignore it and not pay me. I've also thought that it would be a good idea for EF teachers to band together somehow. Seems to me if we could organize, a class action suit would be possible, but I don't even know how to find other EF online teachers. If you have a choice, choose another company to work for.

Explore other reviews about EF Education First

5.0
Apr 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good training, good communication especially for a remote position, flexible, great management

Cons

Scheduling and staffing effectively could be challenging due to unpredictable nature of emergency response, which caused both understaffed shifts and overstaffed shifts. In addition, phone-based customer service can be emotionally challenging - customers in stressful situations can often be difficult to deal with.

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EF Education First Response
1mo
Hearing that the training, communication, and management stood out, especially in a remote setting, is really meaningful. Thank you for sharing! As you mentioned, the nature of emergency response is inherently unpredictable. Our phone-based support in high stress situations can be central to defining the experience for travelers, and the people who handle it are a big part of that. We’re proud of the team you were part of and hope the skills you built here continue to serve you well.
4.0
Jun 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get to choose your tour and recruit the students you want to bring. The paid chaperone ratio is 6:1, so it is very manageable. The tours are great and the local experts are wonderful.

Cons

Company support is variable. There is high turnover and new consultants are very sales motivated and don't always get the nuances of your school or community group. I have had some WONDERFUL concusltants, but they have always been promoted before I get to work with them again.

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