Korea tax guide
Korea Tax Residency 183-Day Rule for Foreigners
Visa & Tax
Who this guide is for
- Foreigners staying in Korea for long periods
- Remote workers and cross-border employees
- Foreigners with Korean and overseas income
- People comparing residency and treaty questions
Quick Answer
The 183-day rule is often discussed in Korean tax residency questions, but tax residency should not be decided by a single shortcut. Your stay period, living base, income source, family ties, work arrangement, and tax treaty position may all matter. If residency affects your filing or overseas income, verify official rules or ask a qualified professional.
Key points
- The 183-day idea is not the only residency factor.
- Visa status and tax residency are not identical.
- Overseas income can make the issue more complex.
- Treaty questions require careful document review.
Step-by-step explanation
Why the 183-day rule is only a starting point
Many foreigners search for a simple answer: “If I stay 183 days, am I a Korean tax resident?” The problem is that tax residency is usually more fact-based than a single number. Stay period can be important, but it should be reviewed together with where you live, where you work, what income you receive, and whether a tax treaty may apply.
This matters because residency can affect the scope of income reviewed for tax purposes. If your only income is simple Korean salary, the practical issue may be smaller. If you have overseas salary, remote work, investments, business income, or treaty claims, the issue can become much more important.
What facts should you collect?
Create a basic timeline of your stay in Korea and another list of income by country. Keep entry and exit records, lease records, employment contracts, and any foreign tax documents. Do not wait until filing season to reconstruct the facts.
| Fact | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Days in Korea | Helps evaluate physical presence |
| Housing and family base | May show where your life is centered |
| Income source | Determines what needs review |
| Treaty country | Treaty tie-breaker rules may differ |
What should you do next?
Read the broader Korean tax residency guide and, if filing may be relevant, the global income tax guide. For complex cases, ask a qualified professional who can review your actual records.
Documents you may need
- Entry and exit records
- Housing and work records
- Income records by country
- Tax residency documents from another country if relevant
- Treaty-related documents
Common mistakes
- Assuming one date count decides everything
- Ignoring overseas income
- Treating visa status as tax residency
- Using another foreigner's answer as your own
When should you ask a tax professional?
Ask a qualified tax professional if you have income from several countries, business income, unclear tax residency, treaty questions, missing documents, late filing concerns, or a visa situation that depends on tax records. This site explains general patterns only and cannot review your personal facts.
FAQ
Does staying 183 days automatically make me a Korean tax resident?
Not automatically in every case. Stay period can be important, but tax residency may depend on broader facts and current rules.
Is tax residency the same as visa status?
No. Visa status can be relevant context, but tax residency is a tax concept.
Can a tax treaty affect residency?
A treaty may matter in some cross-border cases, but application depends on facts and documents.
Should I get professional help?
Yes, if you have overseas income, remote work, business income, or treaty questions.
Official Sources to Verify
Tax rules and filing procedures in Korea may change depending on your visa status, income type, tax residency, and the tax year. Before making a tax decision, always verify your situation with official sources or a qualified professional.