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Earning and saving money in China
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buffalobill12323



Joined: 18 Sep 2013
Posts: 115
Location: China

PostPosted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 3:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

muffintop wrote:
buffalobill12323 wrote:


Total 291 K / 24 K a month - yes, I know, many don't believe this.


Why not? It's certainly doable if you want to put in the hours. A couple guys I know break 30k a month with one full time job with low hours and a boatload of privates. The full time gig feeds their private lessons with new faces. They both have been at it for years.

They both teach kids though which I simply could not do for the number of hours they put in. I'd lose my mind...or what's left of it anyway.

I really hope new folks here are not put off by all this garbage about low salaries. There is money to be made here if that's what's important. If free time is more important then you can also find plenty of jobs with very low hours. If you are like me and try to strike a balance between free time and income....you can do that too. It's all up to the individual.


On these kind of boards there are always those who doubt biggish numbers. Honestly I know plenty of guys doing a lot better. Teachers. I personally do about 40 classes or 30 hours a week. Its not hard work, its not as if we are cracking rocks or crab fishing - 30 hours a week in mostly air conditioned rooms, talking to mostly motivated kids, using mostly well established lesson plans - with the exception of exam time, its a doddle
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ecubyrd



Joined: 09 May 2009
Posts: 172

PostPosted: Sat Sep 21, 2013 12:25 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The thing about China it seems to me is one's earnings is only as low as he/she is comfortable with it being. There's nothing wrong with taking the job with the fewest hours possible making not so much, but I personally am not a fan of a low salary, and am therefore comfortable working a 40 hour work week that has 14 teaching hours. If I wanted to bump my earnings, I could easily do so. I prefer my free time as just that however, and don't.

On that note, I'm looking at saving 15k rmb per month this year.
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Leungyujo



Joined: 23 Sep 2013
Posts: 2
Location: Guangdong

PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 8:52 am    Post subject: saving money Reply with quote

There are parents in China who want to compete with others on the amount the spend on a private foreign teacher for their child or children. If you are lucky enough to fall into one of those jobs, then saving money can be quite easy. Teach at least five, 1.5 hour private lessons at 300 yuan each for 1500 a week or 6000 a month. Get a full time job for 10,000 or more + housing (2000) for 12000 and you're at 18. Teach a few more privates or get a super high paying private and you're at or over 20 even 30. Granted, making 30 as a teacher won't last long, but if you can do it for a year or two you could save good money.
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choudoufu



Joined: 25 May 2010
Posts: 3325
Location: Mao-berry, PRC

PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 9:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

buffalobill12323 wrote:
.... in mostly air conditioned rooms, talking to mostly motivated kids, using mostly well established lesson plans - with the exception of exam time, its a doddle



sounds great! sign me up!

ooh, uh, i'm gonna need a visa, right?.....so which country would this be?
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buffalobill12323



Joined: 18 Sep 2013
Posts: 115
Location: China

PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 9:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

choudoufu wrote:
buffalobill12323 wrote:
.... in mostly air conditioned rooms, talking to mostly motivated kids, using mostly well established lesson plans - with the exception of exam time, its a doddle



sounds great! sign me up!

ooh, uh, i'm gonna need a visa, right?.....so which country would this be?


there are approximately 45 foreigners here where I work, some doing better some doing worse. I work more hours than most, but many others are on overseas contracts, so financially the are better off. These conditions exist in China. I understand the incredulity, if you have been working for peanuts for the last ten years, but, that is your choice, and hardly my fault, still be bitter if it helps.

Dear boy, why on earth would I want to sign you up?
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teachingld2004



Joined: 17 Feb 2012
Posts: 389

PostPosted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 1:23 am    Post subject: Saving money Reply with quote

hi BizLiz

I also am pleased to meet you.

My university job is 8 hours a week. I also teach 2 hours in a middle school, and 9 hours of privates. The total of this is 19 hours.

Yes, the extra work gives me no pay on holidays, but I still am able to save just under $ 1.000.00 per month,

I go on two vacations a year, each for one month.

I have been
Asked to do another two hours of privates, but I refused. 19 hours per week suits me just fine.

My university never asks me to do extra work, but last semester the English Corner asked me to help judge a contest. I did. No one told me, I was asked.

So you see Liz, some of us love what we do, are happy, and can save money.

My question to you is this: How much money do YOU save a month?
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El Macho



Joined: 30 Jan 2006
Posts: 200

PostPosted: Mon Sep 30, 2013 11:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

There is some good information in this thread. Here's mine, for what it's worth:

2011-2012 school year:
Employer: Chinese university
Salary: RMB 5,000/month + airfare (buy an expensive ticket or get a fake fapiao).
Housing included, 9 hours/week.
Extra work:
Ten mandatory extra classes at 1,000 RMB each added another 10,000 RMB (total) to the salary.
9-15 hours/week (all through the university's training center), billed at 1,000 RMB per three hours block.
In total, I earned between 5,000 RMB (summer months) and 23,000 RMB/month. Earn as much as you work. It wasn't bad, but I didn't like the variable schedule and earnings, and wanted to get a job with a higher salary.

Saved: ~US$10,000.

2012-2013 school year:
Employer: Joint-venture high school program.
Salary: 260,000 RMB/year. After tax this was 18k and change each month.
Housing included, long work day (Mon-Friday 8-5), ten weeks of vacation per year.
Extra work: IELTS.

Saved: ~US$25,000. This meant saving ~13,000/month, so that left 5,000/month from my salary and whatever I earned from IELTS to play with. Having a decent life in Beijing isn't cheap, but 5,000 was OK. My wife and I usually spent between 5 and 6k.

The contract my school offered me for 2013-2014 was for 280,000 for the year, but I didn't take it; working seven days/week isn't worth the money to me.

Saving isn't hard. Log in to online banking on payday (or the day you're paid…TIFC after all) and put a predetermined amount of money into a CD. CDs in Chinese banks pay more interest than CDs in the west, so it's not a total waste.

We are moving back to the US in the next month or so with an OK amount in savings. Not $100,000 as mentioned in the first post, but since we have no debt we're in a good position.

Now that that's been said said:

Check out the website, Foreign Teacher Pay that collects and publishes foreign teacher salaries in China. The website is still pretty basic (there's just a searchable, sortable data table), but it has some interesting information.


Last edited by El Macho on Sun Nov 09, 2014 2:17 am; edited 3 times in total
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Denim-Maniac



Joined: 31 Jan 2012
Posts: 1238

PostPosted: Fri Oct 04, 2013 9:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

This thread deserves to be kept near the top of the page I think. Some useful data for all of us.
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weigookin74



Joined: 30 Mar 2010
Posts: 265

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 2:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

But, I heard there were restrictions on sending money out of China to pay your debts. What good is it to make money and not be able to send it out? Kind of defeats the purpose doesn't it?
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Non Sequitur



Joined: 23 May 2010
Posts: 4724
Location: China

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 3:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

weigookin74 wrote:
But, I heard there were restrictions on sending money out of China to pay your debts. What good is it to make money and not be able to send it out? Kind of defeats the purpose doesn't it?


If a Chinese friend uses their ID there is no limit, or more particularly, no limit that would affect what a teacher could make.
Putting aside the security aspect you can carry substantial sums of RMB out and then there's Western Union.
You should check the other charges that will accrue at both ends over and above the hiding you'll get on the exchange rate.
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Banner41



Joined: 04 Jan 2011
Posts: 656
Location: Shanghai

PostPosted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 6:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You can Western Union all the money you want out of China. I send all kinds of money home. Can also use China Construction bank card to just pull it from Chase ATMs in the US. Things are not that difficult here.
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The_Big_White_Elephant



Joined: 12 Mar 2014
Posts: 56

PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2014 5:11 pm    Post subject: Great thread! Reply with quote

This is a great thread! I would be interested in hearing from more people about how much they earn/save.
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Minnehaha1512



Joined: 26 Jan 2014
Posts: 19
Location: Oregon

PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2014 1:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Banner41 wrote:
You can Western Union all the money you want out of China. I send all kinds of money home. Can also use China Construction bank card to just pull it from Chase ATMs in the US. Things are not that difficult here.


So upon exiting China when you decide it's time to go home (for good), you just send a Western Union money order for the amount in your Chinese bank account to yourself? Or how does this work?

Isn't there some maximum limit of like USD10,000 that you can normally take out of the country? If for some reason the Western Union thing doesn't work, does China just keep whatever amount you have in your Chinese bank account if it is over the max amount allowed?
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LPKSA



Joined: 02 Mar 2014
Posts: 211

PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2014 7:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I loved my time in China, when other foreigners would rub it in my face how amazing their lives were because they were making so and so amount, and how much better they had it than me because they were from so and so and their part time employers preferred them over me because they were from so and so country and I was not.

These kinds of people are SHALLOW, especially in places such as Shanghai. No matter how much money they make (or wish they made), the Chinese will look down on them, fact. I remember it like this: my first week on the job, in in China, and the other teachers in my department are planning on going out to lunch.

Waiguoren A: Ahh, mates, where we going for lunch?
Waiguoren B: How about that Dongbei restaurant up the street.
Waiguoren A: Solid. Hey Waiguoren C, you want to join us?
Me: Okay sure, how much will it cost? I only have 15 yuan.
Waiguorens A and B: (looking at each other), THAT's not enough, maybe next time. Why don't you get a private or two? We work for XYZ corporation. We make a lot of money, 500 yuan per hour.
Waiguoren B: Oh they won't hire you because they don't like to hire Americans.
Me: As if I give a ****.

Another situation:

Waiguoren A: Let's go down to Xijahui to that uber trendy restaurant for dinner and drinks.
Waiguoren B: XYZ Corporation just paid me today, let's go.
Waiguoren A: It's on me.
Waiguoren A: Hey waiguoren C, you want to join us?
Me: I don't know, I'm not into trendy boutiqey places in Xijahui, maybe, but I don't know.
Waiguoren B: You probably couldn't afford it anyway. Let's go Waiguoren A.

Seriously.

Nobody cares about how much money you make. When you go back to your home country, you're not going to make that much anyway, so enjoy your life at the bottom of the corporate ladder forever in China..
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fat_chris



Joined: 10 Sep 2003
Posts: 3198
Location: Beijing

PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2014 8:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

LPKSA wrote:
I only have 15 yuan.


You only had 15 kuai?

Warm regards,
fat_chris
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