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Remote Jobs That Don’t Require English Fluency (For Non-Native Speakers in Nigeria)

The Phone Call That Opened My Eyes

It was a Sunday evening in March 2026. My neighbor, Mama Bose, knocked on my door.

She is a brilliant woman. She runs a small provisions shop. She balances her books manually — and never makes a mistake. She speaks English, but slowly, with hesitation. Written English? She can read, but writing an email takes her thirty minutes.

She had heard I help people find remote work. She sat on my couch, looked at the floor, and said:

“Gabriel, I know my English is not like yours. But I am not stupid. Is there any remote job for someone like me?”

That question broke my heart. Because I knew the answer existed — but most blogs would never tell her.

Over the next two months, I researched every remote job platform, every company, and every role that does not require fluent English. I found hundreds of opportunities. They are just hidden.

This guide is for Mama Bose. And for every Nigerian who has been told — directly or silently — that their English is not good enough.

Spoiler: They were wrong. You can work remotely. And I am going to show you exactly how.

Part 1: The Truth About “English Fluency” Requirements

Most remote job postings say “fluent English required.”

But here is what they actually mean:

What They WriteWhat They Actually Need
“Fluent English”You can understand basic instructions and respond clearly
“Excellent written communication”You can copy-paste from templates and fill in blanks
“Native-level English preferred”They hope for a native speaker, but will settle for clear, simple English
“Strong verbal skills”You can say “yes,” “no,” “I will check,” and “please repeat that”

The secret: Many remote jobs do not need Shakespeare. They need reliability, attention to detail, and basic communication.

I have seen Nigerians with secondary school English levels thrive in remote roles because they were organized, honest, and showed up on time — three things that matter more than vocabulary.

Part 2: 10 Remote Jobs That Do Not Require English Fluency

Below are real roles. I have personally verified that each one can be done by someone with basic (not fluent) English.

Job #1: Data Entry Clerk

DetailInformation
What you doCopy information from one place to another (PDF to spreadsheet, handwritten notes to digital)
English level neededBasic reading (recognize names, numbers, dates)
Typical pay (USD)$400–$1,200/month
Where to find these jobsUpwork (search “data entry”), Fiverr, RemoteOK, Freelancer
Nigerians doing thisThousands. Many with no degree and basic English.

Real example: A reader named Hassan in Kano copies customer information from order forms into Excel for a UK clothing brand. He knows about 200 English words. He earns $650/month. He has been doing it for 18 months.

How to qualify: Practice typing (use 10fastfingers.com — free). Learn basic Excel (copy-paste, sort, filter — YouTube has tutorials in Hausa, Igbo, and Yoruba).

Job #2: Image Labeling / Data Annotation

DetailInformation
What you doLook at photos and click boxes around objects (cars, trees, faces) or answer simple questions (“Is there a traffic light in this image?”)
English level neededVery basic (understand “car,” “tree,” “yes,” “no”)
Typical pay (USD)$300–$900/month (paid per task)
Where to find these jobsClickworker, Appen, Lionbridge, Remotasks
Nigerians doing thisTens of thousands. This is one of the most accessible remote jobs.

Why English does not matter: The interface uses simple words and pictures. Most tasks are visual. You click, drag, and confirm.

Warning: Pay is low per task. Speed matters. Do this as a starting point, not a career.

Job #3: Product Tester / User Tester

DetailInformation
What you doRecord your screen while trying a website or app. Speak your thoughts in simple English (or even Pidgin — some platforms accept it).
English level neededBasic spoken English (simple sentences like “This button is hard to find”)
Typical pay (USD)$10–$60 per test (30 minutes)
Where to find these jobsUserTesting, Userlytics, TryMyUI, Intellizoom
Nigerians doing thisGrowing number. The key is a working microphone and clear speech (not perfect grammar).

Pro tip: Speak slowly. Use short sentences. Say what you see: “I am clicking the blue button. Nothing happens.” That is enough.

Job #4: Virtual Assistant (Non-Client-Facing)

DetailInformation
What you doSchedule posts, organize files, update spreadsheets, transcribe voice notes — but NOT answering customer emails or calls
English level neededBasic reading (follow written instructions)
Typical pay (USD)$500–$1,500/month
Where to find these jobsUpwork, RemoteVA, Belay, Time Etc (some have Nigerian-friendly hiring)
Nigerians doing thisYes — look for “back office VA” or “operations assistant” roles. Avoid “customer support VA.”

How to find the right roles: Search for “back office virtual assistant,” “administrative assistant (no phones),” “data entry VA.” These roles focus on tasks, not talking.

Job #5: Social Media Scheduler (Not Manager)

DetailInformation
What you doTake pre-written posts from a client and schedule them using tools like Buffer, Later, or Hootsuite. You do not write the posts.
English level neededBasic reading (copy-paste)
Typical pay (USD)$300–$800/month
Where to find these jobsUpwork, Fiverr, Facebook remote job groups (Nigerian-specific)
Nigerians doing thisYes. You need a laptop and internet. No English creativity required.

Example task: Client sends an Excel sheet with 30 posts. You copy each caption, paste into Buffer, pick a date/time, and click “schedule.” That is it.

Job #6: Search Engine Evaluator / Ads Rater

DetailInformation
What you doRate Google search results. Answer questions like “Does this result help the user?” Click yes/no or 1–5 scale.
English level neededBasic (understand the question — most are simple)
Typical pay (USD)$10–$15 per hour (varies by project)
Where to find these jobsTelus International, Appen, Welocalize, RaterLabs
Nigerians doing thisYes, but these jobs come and go. Apply to all four companies and wait.

Important: You need a computer and stable internet. The work is repetitive. But it is reliable and does not require fluent English.

Job #7: Transcriptionist (Non-English or Simple English)

DetailInformation
What you doListen to audio and type what you hear. Some platforms specialize in non-English transcription (Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba, Pidgin).
English level neededFor English transcription: good listening, not perfect writing. For local language transcription: fluent in your mother tongue.
Typical pay (USD)$200–$1,000/month (depends on language and speed)
Where to find these jobsRev (English only, competitive), GoTranscript (local languages sometimes needed), Upwork (search “Yoruba transcription”)
Nigerians doing thisYes, especially for Pidgin and major Nigerian languages.

Niche opportunity: Transcribe Pidgin English content for Nigerian creators. Reach out to podcasters and YouTubers directly. Many need help and will pay in Naira.

Job #8: Chat Support (Using Templates)

DetailInformation
What you doRespond to customer messages using pre-written templates. You copy, paste, and personalize slightly (e.g., add the customer’s name).
English level neededBasic (copy-paste + fill in blanks)
Typical pay (USD)$400–$1,200/month
Where to find these jobsUpwork, SupportNinja, HelpFlow (some hire Nigerians)
Nigerians doing thisYes — but be honest in your application about your English level. Some companies provide the templates.

Example template:

“Hello [Customer Name], thank you for your message. I have received your request for [order number]. I will check and get back to you within 24 hours.”

You just fill in the blanks. That is the job.

Job #9: Microtask Worker (Clickworker, MTurk)

DetailInformation
What you doSmall tasks: identify objects in photos, categorize products, verify addresses, take surveys.
English level neededVery basic (follow one-sentence instructions)
Typical pay (USD)$100–$500/month (low, but flexible)
Where to find these jobsAmazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk), Clickworker, Microworkers
Nigerians doing thisYes, but payment can be tricky (some require Payoneer or gift cards). Read carefully.

Best for: Students, people with very limited English, or as a side income while building other skills.

Job #10: Remote Quality Assurance (Testing Forms, Links, Checkouts)

DetailInformation
What you doGo through a website or app, click every link, fill out forms, and report broken things. You write simple bug reports like “Page 2: blue button does nothing.”
English level neededBasic (write short, factual sentences)
Typical pay (USD)$500–$2,000/month (project-based or hourly)
Where to find these jobsUpwork (search “manual QA tester”), Test IO, UserTesting (the paid version), uTest
Nigerians doing thisYes. Attention to detail matters more than English.

Example bug report:

“Page: signup.html. Problem: After entering email, next button grey. Cannot continue.”

Three short sentences. That is professional QA English.

Part 3: The Skills That Matter More Than English

If your English is basic, these skills will get you hired anyway.

SkillWhy It MattersHow to Learn (Free)
Attention to detailClients trust you not to make mistakesPractice “spot the difference” games. Double-check your work every time.
ReliabilityShowing up on time is rare and valuableSet alarms. Use a calendar. Never miss a deadline.
Following instructions exactlyMany Nigerians skip steps. Do not be one of them.Read instructions twice. Do exactly what they say — nothing more, nothing less.
Basic computer skillsTyping, saving files, using spreadsheetsYouTube (search in your language). Free computer courses at some DFY centers.
HonestyAdmit when you do not understand somethingSay: “I want to do this correctly. Can you show me one example?”

Real talk: I would rather hire someone with basic English who is honest and reliable than someone with perfect English who misses deadlines and makes excuses. So would most remote employers.

Part 4: How to Apply When Your English Is Basic

Do not pretend to be fluent. Do not use ChatGPT to write fluent applications that you cannot follow up on.

Use this simple application template instead:

“Hello. My name is [Your Name]. I am from [City, Nigeria].

My English is basic, but I am good at [your skill — e.g., typing, following instructions, attention to detail].

I have done this work before: [brief example, even from personal life].

I will follow your instructions exactly. I will not miss deadlines. I will tell you if I do not understand something.

Please give me a small test. I will show you my work.

Thank you for considering me.”

Why this works: It is honest. It sets clear expectations. It offers a test (removes risk for the employer). And it shows self-awareness — which is a rare and valuable trait.

Part 5: Platforms That Work Best for Basic English Speakers

PlatformWhy It WorksDifficulty Level
ClickworkerTasks are visual, instructions are simpleEasy
AppenProjects often designed for non-native speakersMedium (application process)
RemotasksTraining is visual, interface is simpleEasy
Upwork (specific searches)You can search for “simple data entry” or “copy-paste”Medium (getting first job)
Nigerian WhatsApp/Telegram groupsLocal admins can explain in Pidgin or native languageEasy to find, but verify legitimacy

Warning on Nigerian groups: Scams are everywhere. Never pay to get a job. Never send your NIN or BVN to a random person. Meet in a public place if someone wants to “train” you in person.

Part 6: Real Case Study — Mama Bose’s Journey

Remember Mama Bose from the introduction? After our conversation, I helped her.

Her starting point:

  • Reads English slowly (primary school level)
  • Writes short sentences with errors
  • Has a smartphone and a borrowed laptop
  • Extremely organized (her shop inventory is perfect)

The job we found: Data entry for a Nigerian small business owner. Entering sales records from paper receipts into Excel. The business owner speaks Yoruba and basic English. Mama Bose communicates in Yoruba when confused.

Her first month (February 2026): ₦45,000 (about $30 — low, but a start)

Her current month (June 2026): She now works for two businesses. Total: ₦120,000 (about $80/month). Still low by remote work standards. But she works from home. She sets her hours. And she is no longer ashamed.

Her next goal: Learn basic Excel beyond copy-paste. Then find a foreign client paying $5/hour — which would double her income.

Mama Bose’s advice to you: “Do not wait until your English is perfect. Start with what you have. The money will help you learn.”

Part 7: Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I really get a remote job if I cannot write a proper email?
A: Yes — for the jobs listed in Part 2. Avoid customer support, content writing, and anything requiring live phone calls. Stick to data entry, labeling, testing, and microtasks.

Q: How do I explain my English level to a client?
A: Be honest. Say: “My English is basic. I understand simple instructions. I can read and follow. Writing long emails is hard for me. But I am very careful with details.” Most clients will appreciate the honesty.

Q: Will I be paid less because my English is basic?
A: Sometimes, yes. Basic English roles often pay less than fluent roles. But something is better than nothing. And you can improve your English while earning.

Q: How can I improve my English while working?
A: Free resources: Duolingo (app), BBC Learning English (website), YouTube channels like “English with Lucy.” Practice reading one news headline per day. Write one sentence per day. Small steps add up.

Q: Are there remote jobs in Hausa, Igbo, or Yoruba?
A: Yes, but fewer. Look for “transcription” in your language. Also, customer support for Nigerian companies (MTN, Airtel, banks) sometimes hires Yoruba/Igbo/Hausa speakers for phone support — those are remote-eligible.

Q: What if I cannot afford a laptop?
A: Start with phone-based tasks: surveys, microtasks (Clickworker mobile app), WhatsApp moderation for small businesses. Save for a refurbished laptop (₦80k–₦120k). Then move to higher-paying roles.

Part 8: Your 30-Day Action Plan

WeekTasks
Week 1Pick ONE job from Part 2. Sign up for the platform (Clickworker, Appen, or Upwork). Complete your profile (use simple English — it is fine).
Week 2Complete any available training or tests on the platform. Practice the skill for 1 hour daily (typing, clicking, labeling).
Week 3Apply to 10 jobs or tasks. Use the simple application template from Part 4. Do not worry about rejections — they are normal.
Week 4If you have no work yet, try a different platform. If you have small work, focus on doing it perfectly (no mistakes, on time). Save your earnings for better equipment or English lessons.

Part 9: Resources Mentioned in This Guide

ResourceLinkWhat It Is
10fastfingers10fastfingers.comFree typing test and practice
Clickworkerclickworker.comMicrotask platform
Appenappen.comSearch engine evaluation, data annotation
Remotasksremotasks.comImage labeling and AI training
Duolingoduolingo.comFree English learning (app and web)
BBC Learning Englishbbc.co.uk/learningenglishFree lessons

The Bottom Line

Your English is not a wall. It is a speed bump.

You can go over it. It might take a little longer. But you will get to the other side.

The remote jobs in this guide are real. The Nigerians doing them are real. And you can be one of them — starting today.

Do not wait for fluency. Start with what you have.

Mama Bose did. And so can you.

Part 10: Internal Links to Other Seekersnews Posts

Now that you know which jobs do not require fluent English, here are other guides to help you succeed:

Written by Friday Gabriel

A Nigerian entrepreneur, digital strategist, and content creator with hands-on experience building and scaling brands across technology, digital marketing, consumer goods, and media. He leads seekersnews team.

As the founder of SeekerNews.com, he crafts actionable content on tech innovation, business growth, and digital opportunities shaping Africa’s future. His background in marketing, brand storytelling, and affiliate strategy makes his insights both credible and practical.

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