Reverse Emigration Surge: TEFL Academy Study Reveals More South Africans Returning Home with Improved Life Satisfaction

South Africans Returning: Insights from the Latest Research

  • research-publication-news
  • reverse-emigration-south-africa
  • tefl-academy-study
  • south-africans-returning-home
  • brain-drain-reversal

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

A close up of a wooden block with letters spelling the word migration
Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

Promote Your Research… Share it Worldwide

Have a story or a research paper to share? Become a contributor and publish your work on AcademicJobs.com.

Submit your Research - Make it Global News

The TEFL Academy's Groundbreaking Study on Reverse Emigration

A recent research publication by The TEFL Academy has shed new light on a significant demographic shift in South Africa: the surge in reverse emigration. Titled Reverse Emigration Among South Africans, the report details findings from a survey of 173 individuals who have lived and worked abroad, with 121 completed responses analyzed. These respondents, primarily Gen Z and young Millennials aged 20 to 39, represent a cohort that ventured to destinations like the UK, Australia, USA, New Zealand, Canada, and the UAE before choosing or planning to return home.104103

This study arrives at a pivotal moment. While South Africa has long grappled with brain drain, where over one million nationals reside abroad, recent trends indicate a reversal. Official data from Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) recorded 27,983 returns in 2022 alone, marking the first substantial wave of homecomings. Recruitment firms, such as DNA Employer of Record, report a 70% increase in return-migration inquiries by 2025, particularly from young professionals.104

What drives this movement? The report emphasizes not failure abroad, but strategic life choices prioritizing family, lifestyle, and cultural reconnection over perpetual exile.

Methodology Behind the Insights

The TEFL Academy's approach was rigorous and targeted. Researchers anonymously surveyed South Africans with direct experience abroad, focusing on those who had returned or were actively planning repatriation. Data was cross-referenced with authoritative sources including UN DESA International Migrant Stock, Stats SA's Migration Profile Report, Afrobarometer surveys, and media outlets like BusinessTech and News24.

Quantitative metrics included Likert-scale ratings (1-5) on aspects like confidence gained abroad, life satisfaction post-return, and emotional well-being. Qualitative responses captured personal stories, ensuring a balanced view of benefits and challenges. This blend provides a comprehensive snapshot of circular migration—where movement abroad enhances skills before repatriation enriches the home economy.104

Scale of the Reverse Emigration Phenomenon

South Africa's diaspora exceeds one million, with major hubs in the UK (around 245,000), Australia (213,000), and the USA (161,000). Yet, return interest is rising: 34% expressed desire to repatriate as early as 2019, accelerating post-pandemic.

  • 2022 Stats SA figure: 27,983 official returnees—the inaugural measurable surge.
  • Recruitment enquiries up 70% by 2025, driven by under-40s from UK, Australia, Canada.
  • 53.05% of survey respondents already back home; others in planning stages.

This shift from linear brain drain to brain circulation could inject global expertise into key sectors like education, tech, and finance.104103

Graph showing rise in South African return migration from abroad

Primary Motivations for Returning Home

Family emerges as the top driver at 40%, followed by lifestyle at 30%. Survey data reveals nuanced preferences:

  • 77.46% missed family and lifelong friends.
  • 66.9% yearned for South African humour, warmth, and social culture.
  • 55.63% valued the outdoor lifestyle and climate.
  • 50% sought cultural belonging.

Financial savvy plays a role too: favourable exchange rates amplify savings from abroad, enabling property purchases in coastal or urban areas. Respondents described returning not as retreat, but readiness after gaining formative experiences.104

For more on the full report, see the detailed TEFL Academy press release.

Gains from Time Abroad: Confidence and Global Perspective

Universally, respondents (100%) affirmed positive outcomes from international stints. Average scores highlight transformative effects:

AttributeAverage Score (/5)
Confidence and adaptability4.41
Global perspective as professional asset4.19

Abroad valued safety, high earnings, efficient systems, and professional growth. These intangibles now fuel contributions back home, positioning returnees as bridges for investment and innovation.

text

Photo by Hennie Stander on Unsplash

Life Satisfaction Post-Return: A Nuanced Picture

Returnees report improved quality of life, though not without caveats. Key metrics:

  • Mental/emotional health improvement: 3.62/5
  • Social connectedness (home vs. abroad): 3.56/5
  • Comfortable lifestyle despite salary shifts: 3.42/5
  • Overall life satisfaction in South Africa: 3.41/5

100% viewed repatriation positively, citing rediscovered community and purpose. Yet, challenges like infrastructure gaps temper enthusiasm. This 3.41 score underscores lifestyle's weight beyond income.103

BusinessTech's coverage provides further context on these ratings: read the article here.

Demographics: Young Professionals Leading the Charge

Gen Z (20-29) and young Millennials (30-39) dominate, often in finance, hospitality, tech, and startups. Examples:

  • Thandi M., 28, finance from London—now remote.
  • James v.d. Berg, 32, from Sydney—family-focused.
  • Naledi K., 26, hospitality from Dubai.
  • Pieter & Anel S., couple from Toronto—culture pull.

This youthful vanguard brings hybrid skills, amplified by remote work.

Young South African professionals returning from abroad

Economic Implications: From Drain to Circulation

Reverse emigration fosters brain circulation, where skills flow back enriched. Remote/hybrid roles allow foreign salaries with local costs, boosting purchasing power. Stats SA notes immigration offsets outflows, but returns could revitalize sectors.

Policy-wise, enhancing reintegration—via skills recognition and incentives—maximizes gains. UCT's 2026 Diaspora Report complements, surveying 1,500 across 73 countries, revealing 43% permanence abroad but frequent visits.75

Challenges and Readjustments

Not all smooth: load-shedding, inefficiencies, and profession-specific finances (e.g., teaching salaries) pose hurdles. Respondents note readjustment to time zones/infrastructure, though fibre and GMT+2 mitigate.

  • Skills underutilization persists.
  • Financial strain in low-pay fields.

Solutions include EOR services for remote foreign employment.

The Role of Remote Work in Enabling Returns

Post-pandemic shifts are pivotal. Fibre expansion, co-working spaces, and timezone alignment empower 'geographic arbitrage'. Many retain overseas employers, blending global pay with local life.

a field of yellow flowers

Photo by Joshua Kettle on Unsplash

Real Voices: Quotes from Returnees

"What makes me want to stay... is the incredible sense of community." — Survey respondent.

"There is nothing quite like landing... South Africa has so much soul." — Another voice.

Rhyan O’Sullivan, TEFL MD: "They came back because they were ready."104

Future Outlook and Policy Recommendations

Trends suggest acceleration among youth. To harness, government/recruiters should streamline skills validation, tax incentives for returnees, and diaspora networks. TEFL certification exemplifies upskilling pathways.

Stats SA's ongoing monitoring will track if 2022's 27k+ becomes norm. Ultimately, this could pivot South Africa from talent loss to gain, enhancing competitiveness.

Portrait of Prof. Isabella Crowe

Prof. Isabella CroweView full profile

Contributing Writer

Advancing interdisciplinary research and policy in global higher education.

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Frequently Asked Questions

🔄What is reverse emigration in South Africa?

Reverse emigration refers to skilled South Africans returning home after working abroad, shifting from brain drain to brain circulation as per the TEFL Academy study.

📊Key findings from TEFL Academy's report?

Survey of 173 returnees/planners: 40% family-driven, 30% lifestyle; life satisfaction 3.41/5; 70% rise in return enquiries.

📈How many South Africans returned in 2022?

Stats SA recorded 27,983 official returns, the first major wave amid over 1M diaspora. Stats SA data.

🏡Reasons South Africans are returning home?

Top: family ties (77%), culture/humour (67%), outdoor life/climate (56%), cultural belonging (50%).

😊Life satisfaction scores for returnees?

Overall 3.41/5; mental health improvement 3.62/5; social connectedness 3.56/5. 100% view return positively.

💻Role of remote work in returns?

Enables foreign salaries with SA costs; fibre, co-working, GMT+2 support hybrid models.

⚠️Challenges for returning South Africans?

Infrastructure (load-shedding), skills underuse, low local salaries in some fields like teaching.

👥Demographics of reverse emigrants?

Primarily Gen Z/young Millennials (20-39) from UK, Aus, Canada, USA in finance, tech, hospitality.

💼Economic impact of returns?

Brain circulation brings skills, networks, investment; potential for sectors like education via TEFL paths.

🔮Future trends in SA migration?

Rising youth returns; policy needs: skills recognition, incentives. Complements UCT Diaspora Report findings.

📚How does TEFL Academy relate?

As TEFL provider, highlights education's role in global mobility and returns with certified skills.