Korea tax guide

Korea Tax Residency Rules for Foreigners

By Korea Tax Guide Editorial Team | Last reviewed: July 5, 2026 | Last updated: July 4, 2026

Visa & Tax Intermediate

Summary: A cautious overview of Korean tax residency for foreigners, including stay period, living base, income source, and treaty questions.

Who this guide is for

Quick Answer

Korean tax residency for foreigners can depend on facts such as stay period, living base, work, family, income source, and possible tax treaty rules. You should not assume you are or are not a Korean tax resident based only on visa type. If residency affects your income scope or treaty position, check official guidance or consult a qualified professional.

Key points

Step-by-step explanation

Why tax residency matters

Tax residency is one of the most important and most misunderstood topics for foreigners in Korea. It can affect what income is considered, how treaty rules are reviewed, and what documents may be needed. It is not the same as immigration status, although your stay pattern, work, housing, and personal ties can be relevant.

Because residency can change the tax analysis, this is a topic where simple internet answers are risky. A person on the same visa as you may have a different answer because they stayed for a different period, worked for a different payer, or kept a living base in another country.

What facts should you collect?

Collect entry and exit dates, work contracts, housing records, income records by country, and any documents showing tax residency in another country. If a tax treaty may apply, you may need official documents rather than informal explanations.

FactWhy it may matter
Stay periodHelps evaluate connection to Korea
Living baseHousing and family can be relevant facts
Income sourceKorean-source and foreign-source income may be treated differently
Treaty countryTreaty provisions can vary by country
Work arrangementRemote work and business income can be complex

What should you do if you are not sure?

Do not make a filing decision based only on a checklist. Use this guide to identify the issue, then check the National Tax Service or consult a qualified professional. This is especially important if you have overseas investment income, foreign salary, remote work, business income, or a tax treaty claim.

For broader filing context, read the income tax filing guide. If your question relates to special foreign worker taxation, read the flat tax rate guide.

Documents you may need

Common mistakes

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 my visa decide tax residency?

Not by itself. Visa status can be relevant context, but tax residency depends on tax rules and facts.

Does overseas income matter?

It may matter depending on residency and treaty issues. Get advice before ignoring it.

Can a tax treaty change the result?

A treaty may affect certain cases, but application depends on facts and documents.

Should remote workers be careful?

Yes. Cross-border work and payment sources can create complex 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.