Employment

Employment in Korea: The Complete Guide for Foreign Workers (2025)

Quick links: HiKorea visa portal · KOWORK job platform · Ministry of Employment & Labor · Labor Rights Hotline: 1350 (multilingual) · Immigration: 1345

Table of Contents

  1. Can You Work in Korea? The Visa-First Rule
  2. Work Visa Types — Full Overview
  3. How to Get a Work Visa: The Step-by-Step Process
  4. Teaching English in Korea: EPIK, GEPIK & Hagwons
  5. Finding a Job: Platforms & Job Fairs
  6. Korean Resumes (이력서) & Self-Introduction (자기소개서)
  7. Korean Labor Law: Your Rights as a Foreign Worker
  8. Minimum Wage, Overtime & Pay
  9. Severance Pay (퇴직금)
  10. Social Insurance: The Four Mandatory Programmes
  11. Changing Jobs on an E-Series Visa
  12. Freelancing & Self-Employment in Korea
  13. Workplace Culture in Korea
  14. If Things Go Wrong: Filing a Labor Complaint
  15. Glossary of Korean Employment Terms

1. Can You Work in Korea? The Visa-First Rule

Korea strictly ties the right to work to your visa status. You may only perform employment activities explicitly permitted by your current visa category. There is no "grace period" for starting work while waiting for paperwork, and working outside the scope of your visa — even briefly — is an immigration violation that can result in deportation and re-entry bans.

Key principle: Your visa comes first. Every other step — job offer, contract, salary — follows from having the correct visa category.

Who Can Work Without a Separate Work Visa?

Some visa holders already have broad employment rights:

Visa Employment Rights
F-2 (Long-term resident) Any legal job, any employer
F-4 (Overseas Korean) Any legal job except certain restricted occupations
F-5 (Permanent resident) Any legal job
F-6 (Marriage migrant) Any legal job
H-1 (Working holiday) Part-time work up to 25 hours/week in permitted industries

If you hold an E-series work visa, you may only work for the employer and in the job category listed on your visa. Changing employers requires immigration approval.


2. Work Visa Types — Full Overview

E-Series: Professional Work Visas

These are the primary work visas for professionals. All require employer sponsorship.

Visa Name Who It's For Key Requirements
E-1 Professor University-level teaching and research Contract with an accredited higher education institution
E-2 Foreign Language Instructor Native English (and other language) teachers at schools, hagwons, universities Bachelor's degree; clean criminal record; health check; contract with licensed institution
E-3 Researcher Scientists and researchers at government or private research institutes Employment contract with a qualifying research institution
E-4 Technical Instructor Foreign technicians transferring skills to Korean workers Technical expertise; employer sponsorship
E-5 Professional Licensed professionals (lawyers, engineers, accountants, doctors with Korean recognition) Relevant professional licence or degree
E-6 Arts & Entertainment Performers, athletes, artists engaged commercially (concerts, sports, etc.) Contract with a Korean organiser or sponsor
E-7 Special Ability (Designated Activities) Skilled professionals in roles designated by the Ministry of Justice — 67 professional, 10 semi-professional, 10 skilled labour, and 3 tradesperson occupations Relevant degree or experience; employer sponsorship; role must be on the approved occupation list
E-9 Non-professional Employment Manufacturing, agriculture, fisheries, construction under the Employment Permit System (EPS) Only available through the EPS programme from designated countries

E-7 Visa — The Most Important for Skilled Professionals

The E-7 is the broadest professional work visa and the most commonly used by foreigners working in Korean companies outside of teaching. It covers four sub-categories:

General requirements for E-7-1:

Tip: If your annual remuneration exceeds 3x Korea's GNI per capita (approximately ₩135M+), most education and experience requirements can be waived.

D-10: Job Seeker Visa

For graduates of Korean universities (or eligible overseas universities) searching for employment in Korea. Valid for 6 months; can be used to stay legally while job hunting. D-10 holders cannot work freely but may do approved internships during the search period. Once you secure an offer, you convert to the appropriate E-series visa.


3. How to Get a Work Visa: The Step-by-Step Process

Most E-series work visas follow this process. It is largely employer-driven — your Korean employer initiates the process.

Step 1: Secure a Job Offer

Your Korean employer (or an authorized immigration agent) must be willing to sponsor your visa. Confirm your offer letter before beginning any immigration steps.

Step 2: Employer Applies for a CCVI

The employer applies for a Certificate of Confirmation of Visa Issuance (CCVI) at the local Korea Immigration Service office. They submit:

This takes approximately 2–4 weeks.

Step 3: You Apply for the Visa Abroad

Once the CCVI is approved, the employer sends you the confirmation number. You then apply for the actual visa at the Korean embassy or consulate in your home country with:

Processing time: 5–10 business days at the embassy, after CCVI approval.

Step 4: Arrive and Register

After arriving in Korea, you must:

  1. Apply for your ARC (Residence Card) within 90 days at the immigration office
  2. E-2 holders must complete a medical exam (HIV, tuberculosis) at a designated hospital within 90 days
  3. Register your address with immigration within 14 days of moving in

Total Timeline

From job offer to legal work authorization: typically 5–10 weeks, depending on the visa type, documentation completeness, and immigration office caseload.


4. Teaching English in Korea: EPIK, GEPIK & Hagwons

Teaching English is the most common path for native English speakers to work in Korea. There are two main sectors: government programmes and private academies.

Government Programmes

EPIK (English Programme in Korea)
Run by the Ministry of Education. Places approximately 3,000 teachers in public schools across Korea annually.

GEPIK (Gyeonggi English Programme in Korea)
Covers public schools in Gyeonggi Province (surrounding Seoul). Similar benefits to EPIK; approximately 1,000 teachers placed annually.

SMOE (Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education)
The Seoul-specific equivalent of EPIK, for public schools within Seoul. Often more competitive due to location.

TaLK (Teach and Learn in Korea)
For recent graduates (not yet completed a 4-year degree or within 2 years of graduation) to teach in rural elementary schools. 15 hours/week teaching; lighter workload; includes housing and stipend.

Private Academies (Hagwons, 학원)

Hagwons are private education institutes (language, math, art, etc.). They employ the largest number of foreign English teachers in Korea.

Pros of hagwons:

Cons of hagwons:

Before signing a hagwon contract:

E-2 Visa Requirements

For all English teaching positions:


5. Finding a Job: Platforms & Job Fairs

Foreigner-Focused Job Platforms

Platform URL Best For
KOWORK kowork.kr/en E-7 professional roles; visa-sponsored positions
KLiK App (multilingual, 28 languages) AI-matched jobs by visa type; marks E-7-friendly employers
XpatJobs xpatjobs.com English-language listings; teaching, remote, contract
LinkedIn linkedin.com Global companies in Korea; English-heavy roles
Craigslist Seoul seoul.craigslist.org Private tutoring, freelance, community roles
Dave's ESL Cafe eslcafe.com/jobs/korea Teaching positions; employer reviews
Gone2Korea gone2korea.com Teaching recruitment agency

Korean Job Platforms (Korean-Language)

Platform Notes
Saramin (사람인) saramin.co.kr — Korea's largest job portal; mostly Korean
JobKorea (잡코리아) jobkorea.co.kr — another major Korean platform
Incruit incruit.com
Worknet work.go.kr — run by MOEL; includes public sector roles
Wanted wanted.co.kr — startup and tech-heavy listings
Albamon / Alba Heaven Part-time and hourly work; Korean-only

Tip: Even if a platform is primarily Korean, many international companies post English-language listings on Korean platforms. Use Google Translate or Papago to navigate if needed.

Government Job Fairs

The Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL) regularly holds foreign worker job fairs in Seoul and other cities. These bring together Korean companies actively seeking foreign employees — particularly for E-7 roles. Check work.go.kr or the Seoul Global Center for upcoming fair schedules.

Networking

Korean hiring culture places significant weight on personal introductions (인맥). Being introduced to a company through a mutual contact carries more weight than a cold application. Join expat professional networks, industry meetups (Meetup.com, Internations), and LinkedIn groups for your sector in Korea.


6. Korean Resumes (이력서) & Self-Introduction (자기소개서)

The Korean Resume (이력서)

The Korean resume format differs from Western CVs in several key ways.

Standard sections:

  1. Personal information (인적사항): Full name, date of birth, nationality, contact number, email, current address. Including a professional photo is standard practice for Korean companies (not required for international companies in Korea).
  2. Education (학력): Listed chronologically from earliest to most recent. Include elementary, middle, and high school as well as university. State degree, institution name, graduation year, and GPA if strong.
  3. Work experience (경력): Job title and employer only (brief). Reverse chronological order for most formats; chronological for the traditional Korean style.
  4. Language skills (어학): List any language certifications (TOPIK score, TOEIC score, IELTS, etc.) along with self-assessed level (native / advanced / intermediate / beginner).
  5. Certificates & licences (자격증): Any professional certifications, including the issuing body.
  6. Military service (병역): Required for Korean men; foreigners write N/A or leave blank.

For Korean companies (대기업, 중견기업): Submit in Korean where possible. Have a native Korean speaker proofread — machine translation reads as unprofessional. Many large Korean companies use a standardized online application system rather than a PDF resume.

For international companies and startups in Korea: English is generally accepted. A bilingual version (English section headings with some Korean content) can demonstrate cultural awareness.

The Self-Introduction Letter (자기소개서)

Most Korean companies — particularly large conglomerates and public institutions — require a 자기소개서 alongside the resume. This is not a Western-style cover letter. It is a structured personal essay, typically divided into 4 sections:

  1. Growth background (성장 과정): Your upbringing and formative experiences
  2. Personality strengths and weaknesses (성격의 장단점): Self-aware, specific examples
  3. Reason for applying (지원 동기): Why this company and this role specifically
  4. Future goals (입사 후 포부): What you plan to contribute

Format: Use formal Korean (격식체, ending in -습니다, never -요). Quantify achievements ("increased sales by 15%," not "worked on sales"). Length: 400–800 characters per section, depending on company guidelines.

For international companies, a standard English cover letter is usually appropriate.

What Korean Recruiters Look For

According to a 2025 KOWORK survey, 7 out of 10 Korean companies are currently hiring or planning to hire foreign employees. When evaluating foreign candidates, Korean companies commonly prioritize:


7. Korean Labor Law: Your Rights as a Foreign Worker

Korea's Labor Standards Act (근로기준법) applies to all workers in Korea regardless of nationality, visa type, or immigration status. Foreign workers have the same statutory protections as Korean employees. Even undocumented workers are entitled to certain basic labour rights including severance pay.

Written Employment Contract — Mandatory

All employers must provide a written employment contract before work begins. The contract must clearly state:

If your employer refuses to provide a written contract, this is a violation of the Labor Standards Act. You can file a complaint with the Ministry of Employment and Labor (see Section 14).

Working Hours

Category Legal Standard
Standard workweek 40 hours (8 hours/day, 5 days/week)
Maximum overtime per week 12 additional hours
Maximum workweek 52 hours total
Rest between shifts Minimum 11 consecutive hours
Break (4-hour shift) Minimum 30 minutes
Break (8-hour shift) Minimum 1 hour

Night work (10 PM–6 AM) and holiday work require additional compensation.

Annual Leave (연차)

Service Duration Annual Leave Entitlement
Less than 1 year 1 day per month worked (maximum 11 days)
1 year 15 days
3 years+ 16 days (increases by 1 day every 2 additional years)
Maximum 25 days

Unused annual leave can generally be carried over or must be compensated in cash upon termination.

Other Leave


8. Minimum Wage, Overtime & Pay

Minimum Wage 2025

₩10,030 per hour — applicable to all workers regardless of nationality, employment type, or industry.

This translates to approximately:

The minimum wage is reviewed annually by the Minimum Wage Commission and typically takes effect from January 1st. Check the current rate before any contract negotiation.

Overtime Pay

Overtime is any work beyond 40 hours per week (with employee consent, up to 12 additional hours).

Type of Work Rate
Overtime (beyond 40 hrs/week) 150% of regular hourly wage
Night work (10 PM – 6 AM) 150% of regular hourly wage
Holiday/rest day work 150% of regular hourly wage (+ additional if over 8 hours)

Night work and overtime rates can stack. An employee working overtime at night is entitled to 200% of their regular wage.

Reading Your Payslip

Korean payslips (급여명세서) are legally required to be issued to all employees. They are typically in Korean. Key line items:

Korean English
기본급 Base salary
시간외수당 Overtime pay
식대 Meal allowance
교통비 Transportation allowance
국민연금 National Pension deduction
건강보험 Health Insurance deduction
고용보험 Employment Insurance deduction
소득세 Income tax
지방소득세 Local income tax
실수령액 Net take-home pay

Request a bilingual payslip from your employer if you cannot read Korean — some larger and international companies provide these.


9. Severance Pay (퇴직금)

Korea's severance pay system is one of the most employee-friendly in Asia and often surprises new arrivals.

All employees who have worked for 1 year or more are entitled to severance pay, regardless of whether they resigned, were laid off, or were dismissed for cause. This applies to foreign workers on all visa types.

How Severance is Calculated

Severance = (Average daily wage) x 30 days x (years of service)

Where average daily wage = total wages earned in the last 3 months / 90 days.

Critically, "total wages" includes not just base salary but also all regular overtime pay, fixed allowances, and regular bonuses paid during those 3 months. Employers cannot calculate severance using base salary alone.

Example: An employee worked for 2 years with an average monthly income (base + overtime + fixed allowances) of ₩3,000,000.

Payment Timeline

Severance must be paid within 14 days of termination. Late payment without a legitimate reason is a violation; from October 2025, employees can claim up to triple damages for deliberate wage delays.

DC Pension System

Some employers use the Defined Contribution (DC) pension system instead of accruing severance internally. Under this system, the employer deposits 1/12 of annual income (8.33%) into an individual pension account each year. At termination, the employee withdraws the total balance. Check your contract to understand which system your employer uses.


10. Social Insurance: The Four Mandatory Programmes

All employees working in Korea — including foreigners — must be enrolled in Korea's four major social insurance programmes. Both you and your employer pay contributions.

Insurance Korean Purpose Employee Rate (2025) Employer Rate
National Pension (NP) 국민연금 Retirement benefits 4.5% of gross salary 4.5%
National Health Insurance (NHI) 건강보험 Medical coverage ~3.545% of gross salary ~3.545%
Employment Insurance (EI) 고용보험 Unemployment benefits, parental leave 0.9% 0.9–1.85%
Workers' Compensation 산재보험 Work injury coverage 0% (employee-free) Varies by industry

Notes for foreigners:


11. Changing Jobs on an E-Series Visa

E-series visas (E-1 through E-7) are employer-specific. Your visa lists your employer and job category. You cannot simply start working for a different employer without immigration approval.

Process for Changing Employers

  1. Secure a new job offer with a new employer
  2. Your new employer applies for a new CCVI at the immigration office
  3. Once approved, you apply for a change of visa status (체류 자격 변경) at the immigration office
  4. Your new employer registers as your visa sponsor
  5. You receive an updated ARC with the new employer's details

Important: You must continue working for your original employer during this process, or legally cease work until the new status is approved. Working for the new employer before immigration approval is an immigration violation.

Report Address and Employer Changes Within 14 Days

Any change in your employment (new employer, new workplace address) must be reported to immigration within 14 days via HiKorea or in person. Failure to report results in fines and deductions on the F-2 points system.

From E-Series to F-2 (Freedom from Employer Sponsorship)

After 3 years of continuous legal residence on qualifying E-series visas, you may be eligible for the F-2-7 points-based resident visa, which frees you from employer sponsorship entirely. See the Visa & Immigration guide for full details on the F-2-7 scoring system.


12. Freelancing & Self-Employment in Korea

Korea's standard work visa system is employer-centric — most work visas require an employer sponsor. Freelancing and self-employment are more complex but not impossible.

Options for Freelancers

F-2, F-4, F-5, F-6 visa holders can freelance and self-employ freely without any additional approval.

E-7 Business Investor (D-8) visa: For foreigners who want to register and operate their own business in Korea. Requires establishing a Korean legal entity, minimum capital investment (commonly ₩100M+ for certain categories), and demonstrated business viability.

Digital Nomad / Workation Visa (F-1-D): Allows remote freelancers employed by overseas clients to live and work in Korea legally — but only with foreign-source income. You cannot take Korean clients or local employment. See the Visa & Immigration guide for F-1-D details.

H-1 (Working Holiday): Limited freelance-style work is permitted within the allowed hour limits and job categories.

Business Registration as a Foreigner

Foreign nationals on eligible visas can register a business in Korea (사업자등록). The process involves:

  1. Applying at the local tax office (세무서) with your ARC, passport, and business plan
  2. Paying applicable taxes on Korean-sourced income
  3. Potentially enrolling in National Health Insurance as a self-employed individual

Consult a Korean accountant (공인회계사) or tax agent (세무사) familiar with foreign business registration before proceeding.


13. Workplace Culture in Korea

Understanding Korean workplace culture significantly improves your experience as a foreign employee. Korea's work environment reflects deeply Confucian values around hierarchy, group harmony, and long-term relationships.

Hierarchy and Titles

Korean workplaces are strongly hierarchical. Titles matter:

Korean English Equivalent
대표 / 사장 CEO / President
이사 Director
부장 General Manager / Department Head
차장 Deputy Manager
과장 Manager
대리 Assistant Manager
주임 Senior Staff
사원 Staff / Junior

Address colleagues by their title + 님 (e.g., 김부장님 = Manager Kim), not by first name, unless explicitly invited to do otherwise. Using someone's first name without permission can be seen as disrespectful.

Work Hours Reality

Despite the 52-hour legal cap, workplace culture in some companies (particularly chaebols and traditional Korean companies) still involves long hours and an expectation of visible presence. Leaving before your boss can be uncomfortable in some environments. International companies and startups in Korea tend to have more flexible cultures.

Decision-Making and Approval Chains

Korea uses a 품의서 (pum-i-seo) system — a formal approval document that must travel up the chain before decisions are made. Be patient with decision timelines. Trying to bypass the approval chain, even with good intentions, can cause friction.

Communication Style

Drinking Culture

Work dinners (회식, hoesik) are common and often include drinking. While you are never legally obligated to drink, declining entirely can sometimes be socially awkward. It is generally acceptable to say you are driving, have health reasons, or simply nurse one drink. Foreign colleagues are usually given more latitude on this than Korean employees.

Gift-Giving

Small gifts for colleagues during major holidays (Chuseok, Lunar New Year) are common and appreciated. Practical gifts (gift sets of food, household items) are standard. Avoid giving four of anything — the number 4 (사) sounds like "death" in Korean.


14. If Things Go Wrong: Filing a Labor Complaint

Korea has robust enforcement mechanisms for labour violations. You have the right to file complaints even if you are a foreigner, and even if your visa status is complicated.

Common Violations

How to File a Complaint

Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL):

Korea Legal Aid Corporation (법률구조공단):

Labor Relations Commission (노동위원회):

Employer Cannot Retaliate

Retaliation against an employee for filing a labour complaint is illegal. If your employer threatens you with visa cancellation or termination for filing a complaint, document everything and contact the Labour Rights Hotline (1350) and your country's embassy.


15. Glossary of Korean Employment Terms

Korean Pronunciation English Meaning
이력서 ireokseo Resume / CV
자기소개서 jagi sogaeseo Personal statement / cover letter
취업비자 chwieop bija Work visa
고용허가서 goyong heogas-eo Employment permit
근로계약서 geullo gyeyakseo Employment contract
급여 geubyeo Salary / wages
최저임금 choejeok imgeum Minimum wage
시간외수당 sigangoe sudang Overtime pay
퇴직금 toejik-geum Severance pay
연차 yeoncha Annual leave
국민연금 gukmin yeon-geum National Pension
건강보험 geongang boheom National Health Insurance
고용보험 goyong boheom Employment Insurance
산재보험 sanjae boheom Workers' Compensation Insurance
4대보험 4-dae boheom The four mandatory social insurance programmes
회식 hoesik Work dinner / team meal (often social obligation)
품의서 pumiseo Internal approval document / workflow
부장 bujang Department head / general manager
과장 gwajang Section manager
대리 daeri Assistant manager / junior officer
인사팀 insa-tim HR department
노동부 nodong-bu Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL)
노동위원회 nodong wi-wonhoe Labor Relations Commission
법률구조공단 beopnyul gujogongdan Korea Legal Aid Corporation
사업자등록 sa-eobja deungnok Business registration
연말정산 yeonmal jeongsan Year-end tax settlement
원천징수 woncheon jingsu Tax withholding at source

Disclaimer: Korean labour law and immigration regulations are updated regularly. Information on this page reflects the best available data as of mid-2025. Always verify current minimum wage rates, insurance contribution rates, and visa requirements with official sources: Ministry of Employment and Labor (moel.go.kr/english), Korea Immigration Service (1345), or a qualified labour attorney or immigration consultant.


Last updated: 2025 | livinginkorea.org — Employment