Korea tax guide
Korea Year-End Settlement Documents for Foreign Workers
Year-End Settlement
Who this guide is for
- Foreign salary employees in Korea
- Workers who changed employers during the year
- E-2 teachers and E-7 employees preparing year-end documents
- Foreign workers keeping tax records for visa or banking needs
Quick Answer
Foreign workers usually need employer-provided salary records and any documents requested for year-end settlement. The exact documents can depend on your employer, income type, deduction eligibility, job changes, and the tax year. Ask your employer for the required list and verify current rules with official NTS or Hometax information.
Key points
- Your employer normally guides the year-end settlement document process.
- Previous employer records may matter if you changed jobs.
- Not every foreign worker will use the same deduction documents.
- Keep final withholding receipts for future certificates and filing checks.
Step-by-step explanation
Why year-end settlement documents matter
Year-end settlement is usually handled through the employer, but the employee still needs to provide correct records and respond to requests. For foreign workers, the process can be confusing because Korean tax terms, document names, and employer instructions may not be fully translated. A simple document checklist helps you avoid missing deadlines and losing records you may need later.
The exact list is not the same for every person. A salary-only employee who worked for one employer all year may need fewer documents than a worker who changed jobs, claimed eligible deductions, or also received freelance income.
Which records should you collect?
Ask your employer what they need and when they need it. Keep a personal folder with monthly payslips, final withholding receipts, and any year-end settlement results. If you leave a job, ask for records before your access to internal systems or HR contacts becomes harder.
| Document | Why it may matter |
|---|---|
| Current employer withholding receipt | Shows salary and tax withheld |
| Previous employer records | Helps combine salary if you changed jobs |
| Employer forms | Used for payroll adjustment workflow |
| Final settlement result | Useful for later tax or document checks |
What if you also have other income?
Employer year-end settlement may not cover every income source. If you received freelance income, business income, or payments from more than one payer, read the income tax filing guide and consider whether a separate filing review is needed.
Do not submit documents you do not understand just because another coworker used them. Tax treatment can depend on your facts and the current tax year.
Documents you may need
- Salary withholding receipt
- Previous employer withholding receipt if applicable
- Employer year-end settlement forms
- Identification and registration details
- Eligible deduction documents if your employer requests them
- Final settlement result
Common mistakes
- Missing the employer's document deadline
- Assuming a payslip replaces the final withholding receipt
- Forgetting previous employer income
- Submitting deduction documents without checking eligibility
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
What documents do foreign workers need for year-end settlement?
Common records include salary and withholding documents, employer forms, and any eligible deduction documents requested by the employer.
Do I need documents from a previous employer?
If you changed jobs, previous employer salary and withholding records may be needed so the current employer can review the year correctly.
Can my employer decide which deductions apply?
Employers can guide the payroll process, but eligibility depends on current rules and documents. Verify uncertain items with official sources.
Should I keep the final settlement record?
Yes. It can be useful for later filing checks, visa documents, banking, or employment proof.
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.