Hosting a Foreign Exchange Student
NOTE: BPN doesn't accept posts seeking a host family for a foreign student except for authorized organizations that subscribe to BPN. Foreign exchange students are regulated by the US State Department and must meet certain legal requirements such as age, interviews and medical history, sponsorship, visa type, length of stay, and the type of school they are attending. Host families are also required to be screened. For these reasons, most foreign exchange students make arrangements through a sponsoring organization such as AFS. For more info see Secondary School Student Program on the US State Dept. website.
Parent Q&A
Archived Q&A and Reviews
Host an exchange student with stipend?
April 2015
Potential host family
Host foreign student for money?
July 2014
Does anyone have any thoughts on hosting a foreign exchange student through a service for a little extra income? We have some private, extra space in our house and are looking for short-term ways to bring in a little more $$. Are there any services that are better or worse than others? Or is the whole idea overall too sketchy for a family with small children? Host Family?
We rented out a room to foreign students for many years, and it was a fabulous experience. I now have wonderful friends all over the world. And my children grew up learning about other cultures. They both wound up majoring in foreign languages. We had students from an ESL school, so most of them were college-age. With that program, I could have a student for a week, or for many months. I highly recommend it! Katherine
We hosted students for about 3 years through Language Studies International (LSI). I didn't compare schools when I signed up, so I can't say if other schools are different. The experience was great. Some students stayed for 2 weeks, one student was with us for 5 months - but usually a student was with us for a couple of months. We were able to refuse placements and reserve times to not host students. It was a way to make money doing what I already did (cooking and cleaning)- and have the world come to us since we couldn't afford to travel. We provided breakfast and dinner, but breakfast was usually self-serve due to our family's habits. There was only one negative experience - and that wasn't really bad -- just a girl who didn't really want to be here. Since the school pays you - not the students - there is no fear of getting shorted. Some students joined the family more than others - some kept in their room except for meals. I don't know what may seem 'sketchy' to you about hosting, but it is opening your home to a stranger. My youngest was 6 when we started hosting students and they loved him. Most of the male students were roped into daily basketball games with my sons, and twice we shared Christmas with students. We only stopped hosting because my older son is now 13 and needs the space of his own room. We are in touch through facebook with most of our former students -- my sons will have places to stay in France, Italy, Japan, Brazil if they want to travel after high school. Overall I recommend it if you think you can share your space. miss my students
Our family over the years has hosted over 20 students over the years and never did it for money. If you are doing it for the money, forget it. These programs require a fair amount of time and there are hidden costs which aren't apparent and you will not be reimbursed for them.
The reason we did it was for the cultural exchange. This also gave us an excuse to travel and visit the family of the exchange student. I am so glad we did it. My children have been to more countries than states. ANON
It's probably best if the go through an organization that arranges exchange pfrograms It's not just the visa. They will either need to attend private school (and pay tuition) or pay for attending public school as they can't just attend public school for free. It's extremely difficult to arrange that on your own.
I second the previous responder's comments. It's best to go through a program to do an exchange that would involve a visa and attending school. Established programs would offer things like medical insurance and would have more resources and potentially social meetups for him to meet other young people in similar situations.
I hosted an exchange student last year through AFS . She attended Berkeley high for free. (I live in Berkeley). I believe BHS has a limit on the number of exchange students they accept each year, but in recent years they haven't been near the limit.