Online Jobs for Teachers UK: 15 Best Remote Teaching Roles (2026)
Quick answer: The best online jobs for teachers UK in 2026 are private tutoring (MyTutor, Tutorful, Superprof — £30–£70/hour), EAL/TEFL teaching, GCSE/A-Level exam marking for AQA and Pearson, curriculum writing for publishers, virtual school teaching, 11+ entrance exam tutoring, and educational content creation. UK QTS adds significant earning power.
Introduction
The online teaching market has transformed in the last few years. UK-qualified teachers are in high demand on global platforms, and many are now building careers that combine classroom teaching with well-paid online work — or leaving the classroom altogether for fully remote teaching roles.
This guide lists the 15 best online jobs for teachers in the UK in 2026, with honest rates, the platforms that actually pay well, and what you need to get hired.
Why Online Teaching Is Booming
- Global demand — UK QTS is highly respected in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.
- Flexibility — pick your hours, work from anywhere with good broadband.
- Higher effective hourly rates — many online teachers earn £25–£60/hour, well above most classroom equivalents.
- Supplementary income — evenings and weekends fit around school commitments.
- Career pivot — leave the classroom without leaving the profession.
1. Online English Tutor (ESL / EAL)
What it involves: Teaching English as a foreign or additional language to learners overseas, usually children in China, Japan, Turkey, Spain, Saudi Arabia, and Brazil.
Typical rate: £10–£25/hour (platform), £25–£50/hour (direct/self-employed)
Key platforms:
- Preply — competitive, student-led booking
- Cambly — US-focused, pays weekly in USD
- italki — great for building a personal brand
- Lingoda — group lessons, flexible schedule
- Novakid — children aged 4–12
What you need: Native English, TEFL certificate (120 hours minimum), a quiet space, good broadband. QTS is a bonus that lets you charge more.
See our related guide on teaching English online for deeper detail.
2. Online Subject Tutor (GCSE / A-Level)
What it involves: One-to-one or small-group tutoring in a school subject for UK students. Huge demand in Maths, Science, English, MFL, and Computer Science.
Typical rate: £30–£70/hour (agency), £40–£100/hour (private)
Key platforms:
- MyTutor — UK-focused, pays £22–£30/hour
- TutorHouse — premium rates for experienced teachers
- Tutor Doctor — franchise model
- Bramble — SEN-friendly
- Lanterna Education — premium IB/A-Level
- Lingo Tutor — MFL focus
What you need: UK teaching experience, subject expertise, enhanced DBS check, strong references.
3. Online SEN / SEND Tutor
What it involves: Supporting pupils with dyslexia, ASD, ADHD, or specific learning difficulties through tailored online sessions.
Typical rate: £35–£80/hour
Key platforms:
- Bramble Education
- Targeted Provision
- Fleet Tutors
- First Tutors (SEND section)
What you need: SEND experience, ideally SENCO qualification or PGCE with SEND specialism, strong patience and adaptability. Read our special educational needs teaching guide for context.
4. Online Exam Marker / Examiner
What it involves: Marking GCSE, A-Level, Functional Skills, or international papers remotely for exam boards.
Typical rate: £3–£8 per script (mark-heavy subjects), £200–£800 per series
Key exam boards:
- AQA
- Pearson Edexcel
- OCR
- Cambridge International
- NCFE / CACHE
What you need: QTS, at least 2–3 years' teaching experience in the subject, and passing the board's standardisation training.
5. Curriculum Writer / Resource Author
What it involves: Writing lesson plans, resource packs, schemes of work, or textbook chapters for publishers, ed-tech platforms, and charities.
Typical rate: £20–£45/hour (freelance), £200–£800 per resource pack
Where to find work:
- Oak National Academy
- Tes Marketplace / Resources
- Twinkl (in-house or freelance)
- Hodder Education
- Pearson Schools
- BBC Bitesize (freelance briefs)
What you need: QTS, strong subject knowledge, a portfolio of sample resources (or a TPT/Twinkl account showing traction).
6. Online Reception / Primary Intervention Teacher
What it involves: Small-group or one-to-one intervention for younger pupils — phonics, early reading, numeracy catch-up — delivered remotely to UK schools.
Typical rate: £25–£45/hour
Key platforms:
- Third Space Learning (primary maths)
- Tute (whole-school intervention)
- Reading Eggs / MyON tutoring
- Tutor Doctor
What you need: Primary QTS, strong early reading or maths knowledge, experience with catch-up interventions.
7. Content Creator for Ed-Tech
What it involves: Writing or reviewing content for educational apps, learning management systems, and AI-powered learning tools.
Typical rate: £25–£60/hour
Who hires:
- Seneca Learning
- Sparx
- SchoolHub (AI lesson content)
- Kahoot!
- Quizlet
What you need: QTS or similar experience, familiarity with ed-tech, strong writing and digital skills.
8. Online University Lecturer / Adjunct
What it involves: Teaching on online undergraduate, PGCE, or CPD programmes as an associate lecturer.
Typical rate: £35–£65/hour plus prep
Who hires:
- Open University
- University of Buckingham (online PGCE)
- Teach First (adjunct)
- BPP University
- Various online MBAs teaching education modules
What you need: Postgraduate qualification (typically Masters), teaching experience, and a research or practitioner specialism.
9. Virtual School / Online Schools
What it involves: Working full-time or part-time as a teacher for a fully online school serving UK and international pupils.
Typical rate: Salaried, often on STPCD-equivalent scales (£30,000–£55,000)
Who hires:
- King's InterHigh
- Minerva Virtual Academy
- SchoolHub Virtual School — see our SchoolHub virtual school overview
- Nisai Virtual Academy
- Wolsey Hall Oxford
What you need: QTS, adaptability to remote platforms, strong behaviour management for virtual classrooms.
10. EAL Online Teacher
What it involves: Teaching English to speakers of other languages already living in the UK, often refugees or migrant workers.
Typical rate: £25–£45/hour
Who hires:
- Refugee Action
- The Bell Foundation
- Local authority ESOL provision
- Adult education colleges
What you need: DELTA or equivalent EAL qualification, sensitivity to learners' backgrounds.
11. Educational Copywriter / Blogger
What it involves: Writing blog posts, website copy, and marketing content for education brands, independent schools, or ed-tech companies.
Typical rate: £30–£100 per 1,000 words
Where to find work:
- Direct pitching to ed-tech companies
- ProBlogger Jobs
- PeoplePerHour
- Contena
- LinkedIn posts from education marketing directors
What you need: Strong writing, SEO basics, an understanding of the UK education system.
12. Online Music / Arts Teacher
What it involves: Teaching instruments, singing, drama, or visual art one-to-one online.
Typical rate: £30–£60/hour
Key platforms:
- Lessonface
- Muzeek
- Superprof UK
- Direct via social media
What you need: Performance or creative subject expertise, DBS, good audio/video setup.
13. Homeschool / Home Education Tutor
What it involves: Supporting UK home-educated pupils (over 100,000 children) with full or partial curriculum delivery.
Typical rate: £30–£80/hour
Where to find clients:
- Home Education Advisory Service (HEAS)
- Facebook home-education groups
- Wolsey Hall Oxford
- Direct marketing to home-ed parents
What you need: QTS advantageous, broad curriculum knowledge, patience with flexible schedules.
14. Online SAT / 11+ / Entrance Exam Tutor
What it involves: Preparing pupils for the 11+ selective school entrance exams, Common Entrance, and scholarship papers.
Typical rate: £35–£90/hour
Key platforms:
- Bonas MacFarlane
- Keystone Tutors
- Enjoy Education
- Eleven Plus Tutors Ireland / UK
What you need: Subject expertise (VR, NVR, English, Maths), experience of the specific entrance exam syllabus, ability to teach exam technique.
15. Teacher Coach / Mentor
What it involves: Coaching early career teachers, leaders, or trainee teachers through 1-to-1 online sessions.
Typical rate: £40–£120/hour
Who hires:
- Teach First (associate coaches)
- Ambition Institute
- National Professional Qualification providers
- Private practice
What you need: Significant classroom and leadership experience, coaching qualification (ILM, EMCC), strong track record.
How Much Can a UK Teacher Earn Online?
Earnings vary wildly. Realistic monthly income ranges:
- Evening and weekend side hustle (10 hours/week): £400–£1,500
- Part-time online teaching (20 hours/week): £1,500–£3,500
- Full-time online teaching: £2,500–£6,000
Compare these against the main UK teachers' pay scales to see whether online earnings can match or exceed classroom salary.
Setting Yourself Up for Online Teaching
Essentials
- Reliable broadband (minimum 25 Mbps upload)
- HD webcam and a quality USB microphone
- Neutral, quiet background — a bookshelf or fabric backdrop works
- Proper lighting — a soft ring light or window light
- Enhanced DBS check — required for tutoring UK pupils
Legal and Tax
- Register as self-employed with HMRC if earning over £1,000/year outside PAYE
- Keep records of income and expenses — laptop, webcam, subscriptions, home office proportion
- Consider professional indemnity insurance if working direct rather than through a platform
Professional Presence
- A simple personal website is far more effective than a generic tutor profile
- LinkedIn and a teacher Instagram or TikTok can drive private enquiries
- Gather early-stage reviews — even £15/hour intro lessons pay back in testimonials
Red Flags to Avoid
- Platforms asking for upfront fees from teachers
- Companies demanding unpaid trial lessons
- Websites with no clear policy on how students are screened
- Rates below £10/hour after all fees — you can do better
FAQ: Online Jobs for Teachers UK
What is the best online job for a UK teacher?
For most UK teachers, the best-paying option is private subject tutoring via an established platform (MyTutor, Tutor Doctor, TutorHouse) or building a direct client base through recommendations. Rates of £40–£70/hour are realistic for experienced teachers.
Can I do online tutoring alongside my regular teaching job?
Yes. Check your contract for any restriction on outside work, declare the income to HMRC, and avoid tutoring pupils from your own school. Most teachers start with 2–4 hours per week and scale up.
Do I need a TEFL to teach English online?
Most international platforms require at least a 120-hour TEFL certificate. QTS without TEFL is accepted by some premium platforms (Lingoda, Lanterna) but not most. A TEFL is a one-off investment of £200–£350.
Are online teaching jobs taxed differently?
Self-employed earnings are taxed through the annual Self Assessment tax return. Platform-employed roles may put you on PAYE. Keep records of all income and expenses — allowable expenses can significantly reduce the tax bill.
Can I earn a full-time living from online teaching?
Yes — experienced UK teachers with a strong brand or a steady platform presence can earn £40,000–£70,000/year from full-time online teaching. The top end usually requires combining tutoring with resource creation or running a small tutoring agency.
Do I need a DBS for online tutoring?
An enhanced DBS check is standard for tutoring UK pupils, whether through a platform or privately. Most agencies require it; parents increasingly expect it for private work too.
Related Reading
- Teachers' Salary UK: Full Pay Scales Guide
- Teachers' Pension Scheme UK Guide
- Teaching English Online: Complete Guide
- Online Teaching Career Guide
- Virtual School SchoolHub Overview
Last Updated: April 2026 Written by the SchoolHub Team
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