Visa Guides
D-1

Culture and Arts

문화예술 — Long-term stay (D series) / non-profit cultural and artistic activity

● Active Category D

Last updated 2026-07-04 · Official Korean government sources

Note: This is general information, not legal advice. Rules change — always confirm on the official sources for your country.

At a glance

Who it's for

Foreigners who come to Korea for non-profit academic or artistic activities.

Length of stay

Up to 2 years per grant (maximum stay per grant 2 years (1회 부여 체류기간 상한 2년), per Enforcement Rules of the Immigration Act, attached Table 1) (unverified — re-confirm…

Can you work?

Non-profit status — gainful employment is not permitted.

Who can apply

Foreigners who come to Korea for non-profit academic or artistic activities. This covers: (1) people invited by the Korea Foundation or the Arts Council Korea to carry out cultural or artistic activities; (2) academic or artistic activities not aimed at profit, such as writing papers or creative work; (3) people engaged in academic or pure-art activities at the invitation of a non-profit academic or artistic organization; (4) people who wish to professionally research Korea’s traditional culture or arts, or receive instruction from a master/expert (for example: Taekwondo and other traditional martial arts, Korean dance, calligraphy, court music (gugak), Seon/Zen meditation, and nongak farmers’ music).

Documents you'll need

  • Common documents (visa application form, passport, standard photo, fee)
  • invitation letter (초청장)
  • document proving the inviting body is a cultural/arts organization (문화예술단체임을 입증하는 서류)
  • when receiving instruction from an expert, that expert’s certificate of career/experience (경력증명서)
  • the applicant’s resume (이력서) or certificate of career
  • document proving ability to cover all living costs during the stay (체류 중 일체의 경비 지불능력 입증 서류)

How to apply

  • Overseas embassy visa (사증); for stays over 90 days normally issued via a Certificate of Visa Issuance (사증발급인정서) obtained through a Korean immigration office by the inviting body.
  • Domestic change-of-status is also possible.
  • For a stay longer than 90 days the visa is normally issued as a single-entry visa via a Certificate of Visa Issuance (사증발급인정서) obtained through an immigration office in Korea.
  • If the intended activity is 90 days or less it falls under Short-Term Visit (C-3-1) instead of D-1.

Stay & extension

How long you can stay

Up to 2 years per grant (maximum stay per grant 2 years (1회 부여 체류기간 상한 2년), per Enforcement Rules of the Immigration Act, attached Table 1) (unverified — re-confirm current table)

Extending your stay

Extension of stay (체류기간 연장허가) can be applied for at an immigration office. Applications are generally accepted from up to 4 months before the current stay expiry, no later than the expiry date.

Change/extension is possible while the qualifying non-profit cultural or artistic activity continues.

Working on this visa

Non-profit status — gainful employment is not permitted. Any activity outside the granted status requires prior ‘permission for activities outside status’ (체류자격 외 활동허가) from the immigration office.

D-1 is one of the statuses eligible to apply for such permission.

Requirements in detail

Money to show

No fixed KRW threshold; applicant must submit proof of ability to cover all living costs during the stay (체류 중 일체의 경비 지불능력 입증 서류).

Sub-types

No official numbered sub-codes; single D-1 status covering (a) invited/organization-based non-profit academic or artistic activity and (b) individuals researching Korean traditional culture/arts or studying under a Korean master.

Family

Spouse and minor children may accompany on F-3(동반) status; F-3 dependents cannot engage in paid work.

Mobile ARC

A D-1 holder who completes foreigner registration (외국인등록) and holds an ARC can issue a mobile ARC (모바일 외국인등록증) via HiKorea, available nationwide since 2025 (IC-chip ARC linkage); it carries the same legal effect as the physical card.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming D-1 allows paid work — it does not; it is strictly non-profit.
  • Confusing short cultural visits (90 days or less, which are C-3-1) with D-1.
  • Doing any activity outside the granted non-profit purpose without getting activity-outside-status permission first.

Where this leads

Long-term D-1 holders may become eligible for a Residence (F-2) status after continuous qualifying residence and meeting character/livelihood requirements (immigration cites around 5 years of D-1 residence) (unverified — re-confirm).

Official source ↗

If you break the rules: Overstay leads to an administrative fine (과태료)/a penalty fine (범칙금) plus a departure order (출국명령)·forced deportation (강제퇴거) with a re-entry ban; because D-1 is strictly non-profit, paid work or activity outside the granted status without permission for activity outside one’s status (체류자격 외 활동허가) is penalized (a penalty fine·cancellation of status (자격취소)).

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