TEFL vs TESOL vs CELTA: What’s the Difference?
The alphabet soup of English teaching qualifications confuses many aspiring teachers. TEFL, TESOL, CELTA, CertTESOL, DELTA β what do they mean, and which do you need? This guide clarifies the terminology, explains the practical differences, and helps you choose the right qualification for your Middle East teaching goals.
Qualification Comparison
| Qualification | Full Name | Level | Provider | Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TEFL | Teaching English as a Foreign Language | Entry (varies) | Multiple providers | Varies by provider/accreditation |
| TESOL | Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages | Entry (varies) | Multiple providers | Equivalent to TEFL |
| CELTA | Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages | Level 5 | Cambridge only | Gold standard globally |
| CertTESOL | Certificate in TESOL | Level 5 | Trinity College London only | Equivalent to CELTA |
| DELTA | Diploma in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages | Level 7 | Cambridge only | Advanced/senior level |
The Key Distinction
TEFL and TESOL are generic terms β they describe any course in teaching English, offered by hundreds of providers at wildly varying quality levels. CELTA and CertTESOL are specific branded qualifications from Cambridge and Trinity respectively β standardised, moderated, and internationally benchmarked. Saying “I have a TEFL” is like saying “I have a degree” β the value depends entirely on where it is from. Saying “I have CELTA” specifies exactly what you have.
For Middle East employers, the hierarchy is: CELTA/CertTESOL > accredited 120-hour TEFL/TESOL > unaccredited or short courses. See our CELTA guide and accreditation guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which should I get?
If you can afford it and have time: CELTA or CertTESOL. If budget or time is limited: an accredited 120-hour TEFL from a reputable provider. The “TEFL vs TESOL” question is irrelevant β they mean the same thing. Focus on provider quality and accreditation, not the label.