Visa Requirements
Before making travel arrangements, study carefully the useful general information on visa requirements in Greece in order to teach English in this country officially.
Visa Requirements
visa-requirementsSmaller amount Americans teach in Greece because of visa difficulties. Non-European teachers necessitate a teacher’s license in addition to work and residence permits. The Ministry of Education delays and frequently rejects to grant them. Americans of Greek extraction might think about maintaining citizenship. A potential teacher must get a letter of hire from the employer sent to an address outside Greece. The teacher then takes the letter to the nearest Greek consulate and applies for a work permit, a procedure that takes at least two months.

Yet numerous schools, particularly small ones in distant locations, may be ready to undertake the bureaucratic procedures. Decisions are frequently based more on whether or not you hit it off with the interviewer than on your qualifications and experience, although a good university degree is necessary.

If you are a national of the EU, US, Canada, Australia, Japan, or New Zealand, you do not need any specialist visa for entry into Greece or to do a TEFL. You just enter the country as a tourist. You will have the right to stay in the country without visa up to 90 days. If you are a national of any other country it would be harder for you to get the visa.

These days, as security arrangements change quickly, visa requirements can also change. Please confirm your needs in a straight line with the local Greek consulate in your nation of origin. If you are flying directly to Greece, your airline may also be able to tell you if a visa is required, but it is best to confirm visa requirements for Greece with the Greek embassy or consulate in your country. Anyway, it is recommended for you to check visa requirements yourself prior to making travel arrangements, as obligations for dissimilar countries are responsible to change at short notice.