Frustrated public school teacher rants about wildly low salary: âI donât do it for the moneyâ
- - Frustrated public school teacher rants about wildly low salary: âI donât do it for the moneyâ
Allison LaxJanuary 2, 2026 at 2:19 AM
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Teacher rants about low pay.
Itâs no secret that being a public school teacher isnât exactly known for being the most lucrative profession, so much so that itâs preventing many from buying houses and simply keeping up with rising costs.
Perhaps no one knows this better than Kristen, a Florida middle school teacher who recently ranted about the topic in a TikTok video: âMy small rant about teacherâs pay,â in which she details how her salary has not caught up to her homeâs increasing value,â overlay text on the video read.
âMy home was purchased in 2016 for around $160,000,â said Kristen (@kristen_fl). âMy income as a teacher at that time was about $40,000. Today, in 2025, my home is worth about $350 to $360,000. My income as a teacher â with a mastersâ â is about $54,000.â
Kristen took to social media to go off on how low teachersâ pay is. kristen_fl/tiktok
âHow are people buying homes?â she continued. âHow are people purchasing homes at these prices?â
This frustrated teacher seems to have a point. While some states have given teachers a generous bump in their pay, the average national teacherâs salary in the U.S., $72,030, has struggled to keep up with inflation, according to the National Education Association.
Only Oklahoma (10.5%), Idaho (9.1%) and Utah (8.9%) had the largest one-year increases, according to NEA.
And according to their data, teachers are making 5% less in pay than they were a decade ago.
Several commenters on the viral vid, which has received over 20,000 views to date, agreed with Kristenâs self-described ârant,â with some presumed teachers sharing that they arenât purchasing homes right now either.
âWe canât afford the houses, so we are having to work two jobs just to pay for apartment rent. Iâm tired,â commented a fellow teacher.
âI havenât had a raise in 9 years,â added another. âOur step raises in Georgia stop after year 19. We built our house in 2002, and couldnât afford to build/buy the exact same house (today). Itâs become our forever home.â
Many teachers agreed with Kristenâs rant, complaining about their low pay, too. WavebreakMediaMicro â stock.adobe.com
Other commenters, however, disagreed with or mocked Kristenâs assessment that teacher pay does not adequately keep up with home values.
âSurrounded by teachers. All own their own homes,â said @gendron123. âTwo are my single sisters. Embarrassing a teacher has to ask how to do it.â
âDidnât you know the pay before you went to school to become a teacher,â asked @tonyskiski.
Kristen then emphasized that while no one should go into teaching for the money (or lack thereof), itâs a great career for those who want to enrich their studentsâ lives.
âIf you want to become a teacher, do it because you want to make a difference in a childâs life,â said Kristen. âDo it because you want to enhance, quite literally, the future of the United States. Donât do it for the money. There is no money in this profession.â
Source: âAOL Breakingâ