How to Teach Languages on Preply and Earn $25+/Hour

Why Teach Languages on Preply?
Preply is one of the largest online tutoring marketplaces, connecting language tutors with students across more than 180 countries. Unlike platforms where you teach English exclusively, Preply supports 50+ languages — from Spanish, French, and Mandarin to less commonly taught languages like Ukrainian, Tagalog, and Swahili.
For anyone who speaks a second language well enough to teach it, Preply offers a legitimate path to earning $25 or more per hour with full control over your schedule, rates, and teaching style. Here's how to make it work.
How Much Can You Actually Earn?
Preply tutors set their own hourly rates. What you can charge depends on the language you teach, your experience, and your student reviews. Here's a realistic breakdown:
- New tutors (0–20 lessons): $10–$18/hour — starting lower helps you attract initial students and build reviews
- Established tutors (50–200 lessons): $18–$30/hour — with positive reviews, you can raise rates gradually
- Expert tutors (500+ lessons): $30–$60+/hour — tutors with specialized skills (IELTS prep, business language, academic writing) command premium rates
Preply takes a commission on your first lesson with each new student (typically 33%), but only 18% on subsequent lessons with that same student. The commission structure rewards you for building long-term relationships with students — which is also better for learning outcomes.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, self-enrichment education teachers (including language tutors) earn a median of $22/hour in the US. Top Preply tutors teaching high-demand languages earn well above that, especially those who teach business professionals.
Getting Started: Setting Up Your Profile
Your Profile Video
Your profile video is the single most important factor in converting profile visitors into students. Preply's own data shows that tutors with professional-quality videos get significantly more bookings. Keep it under 2 minutes and cover:
- A warm introduction in the language you teach (and in English, since many students browse in English)
- Your teaching background and qualifications
- What students can expect from your lessons
- Your personality — students choose tutors they feel comfortable with
Film in a quiet, well-lit space. A ring light and a clean background go a long way. You don't need professional equipment — a modern smartphone camera is sufficient.
Writing Your Bio
Your written profile should answer three questions: Who are you? What do you teach? Why should someone choose you? Be specific. "I help Korean professionals prepare for English-language business presentations" is far more compelling than "I teach English to all levels."
If you have certifications — CELTA, TEFL, a university degree in education or linguistics — mention them prominently. Students increasingly prioritize tutor credentials when choosing online language instruction.
Finding Your Niche
The tutors who earn the most on Preply aren't generalists — they specialize. Here are the most profitable niches:
Business Language Coaching
Professionals who need language skills for work — negotiating contracts, giving presentations, writing emails — are willing to pay premium rates. They're also the most consistent students, often booking weekly sessions for months. If you have experience working in a corporate environment, this is your biggest advantage.
Exam Preparation
Tutors who specialize in IELTS, TOEFL, DELF/DALF (French), DELE (Spanish), or HSK (Chinese) exam prep can charge higher rates because the stakes are high for students. University admissions, immigration applications, and job requirements all depend on these scores. If you're familiar with the exam formats, this is a lucrative specialization.
Conversational Practice for Travelers
Many Preply students are planning trips and want functional conversation skills — ordering food, asking for directions, making small talk. These lessons are fun to teach and easy to prepare for. They're also a gateway: travel students often continue lessons after their trip when they realize how much they enjoy learning.
Academic and Literary Language
University students studying foreign literature, preparing for study abroad, or writing academic papers in a second language need specialized help that apps can't provide. If you have an academic background, this niche has less competition and loyal students.
Strategies to Grow Your Student Base
Start With Competitive Pricing
Your first 20–30 lessons should be priced to attract students, not maximize income. A new tutor charging $40/hour with zero reviews will get no bookings. A new tutor at $12/hour with a great video will quickly accumulate the reviews needed to raise rates. Think of early lessons as an investment.
Respond Quickly to Inquiries
Preply's algorithm favors tutors who respond to student messages within an hour. Fast response times push your profile higher in search results and signal to students that you're reliable and engaged. Turn on mobile notifications so you don't miss messages.
Build Long-Term Relationships
Recurring students are the foundation of a sustainable Preply income. After a first lesson, send a follow-up message summarizing what you covered and suggesting next steps. Create a personalized learning plan. Students who feel their tutor is invested in their progress are far more likely to continue booking.
Ask for Reviews
Don't be shy about asking satisfied students to leave a review. Reviews are the social proof that converts profile visitors into paying students. The difference between a tutor with 5 reviews and one with 50 is enormous in terms of booking volume.
Tools and Resources for Better Lessons
Preply provides a built-in virtual classroom with video chat, a shared whiteboard, screen sharing, and a text chat for sharing links and notes. Beyond the platform, free tools like Quizlet (custom vocabulary flashcards), Canva (visual lesson materials), Google Docs (real-time writing exercises), and Language Reactor (YouTube/Netflix clips as conversation starters) can elevate your lessons.
Investing time in quality materials sets you apart from tutors who wing every session. Students notice — and it shows up in your reviews.
What Qualifications Do You Need?
Preply doesn't require formal teaching certifications, but having them significantly boosts your profile. The most recognized credentials include:
- CELTA (Cambridge) — the gold standard for English teaching
- TEFL/TESOL (various providers) — widely accepted, especially the 120+ hour courses
- University degree in education, linguistics, or the language you teach
- Native speaker status — not a formal credential but an advantage, especially for conversation practice
Even without certifications, strong language skills combined with a well-crafted profile and competitive initial pricing can get you started. Many successful Preply tutors started as conversation partners and built their credentials over time.
Getting Started
Ready to start teaching? Sign up as a Preply tutor here. The application process involves creating your profile, recording a video introduction, and setting your availability and rates. Most applications are reviewed within a few days.
If you're looking to sharpen your own language skills before teaching, explore our discounts on Korean classes, Japanese classes, and Mandarin classes through LTL Flexi. And if teaching online appeals to you but you'd prefer a different platform, read our guides to teaching on Cambly and teaching English in Malaysia for more options.
