Visa application support — including the D-8 investment visa and the F-1-D digital nomad (workation) visa — through our administrative-agent partnership.
Visa Support: D-8 Investor & F-1-D Digital NomadVisa filings for foreign investors and business owners in Korea depend on paperwork most applicants only deal with once — business registration, investment proof, and the underlying company documents all need to line up before immigration will approve the application.
Document preparation typically takes 3–7 business days; visa processing time depends on the immigration office's current caseload.
A separate track for remote workers: a change of status to the F-1-D digital nomad (workation) visa, for foreign nationals already in Korea who want to keep working remotely for a business based outside Korea.
Korea sets the income floor as a multiple of the Gross National Income (GNI) per capita — the average annual income figure the Bank of Korea (한국은행) publishes each year. The applicable figure is the prior year's published GNI as of your application date. The required multiple depends on your age and where in Korea you plan to stay:
| Age | Seoul / Incheon / Gyeonggi (metro area) | Non-metro & population-decline-designated regions |
|---|---|---|
| 18–34 | GNI × 1.5 | GNI × 1 |
| 35 and older | GNI × 2 | GNI × 1.5 |
You must carry private medical insurance with at least 100 million KRW (roughly USD 75,000–80,000) in coverage, covering both hospital treatment in Korea and repatriation to your home country.
A single change-of-status grant gives 1 year of stay.
We handle the certified translation and apostille of foreign documents like the criminal background check as part of the same filing.
Visa Support: D-8 Investor & F-1-D Digital Nomad
Get in touch about thisYes — the D-8 investor visa requires a registered Korean company with the qualifying foreign investment already reported. We can set both up alongside the visa filing.
Commonly a criminal background check and sometimes a diploma or marriage certificate from your home country — requirements vary by visa type and nationality.
We prepare and certify all supporting documents in-house, and coordinate the visa application itself through our administrative-agent partnership.
Foreign nationals in Korea on a short-term B-1, B-2, or C-3 status (or another status meeting the requirements) who own or remotely work for a business based outside Korea, have worked in that field for at least 1 year, and are 18 or older — plus their accompanying family.
Yes. It's set as a multiple of the Gross National Income (GNI) per capita, and the multiple is lower if you stay outside the Seoul/Incheon/Gyeonggi metro area — 1x instead of 1.5x for ages 18–34, and 1.5x instead of 2x for ages 35 and older.
Private medical insurance with at least 100 million KRW (roughly USD 75,000–80,000) in coverage, covering both hospital treatment in Korea and repatriation to your home country.
Free Consultation
Have questions about registering property in Korea as a foreign national? Send a message and their team will respond in English or Chinese.
Typically responds within 1 business day
Initial consultation is free
채지헌 (Chae Ji-heon)