Visa Guides
E-5

Professional Employment

전문직업 — E-5 Professional Employment Visa (licensed professionals)

● Active Category E

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

Foreign nationals who hold a professional qualification that is recognized under Korean law and who will work in a regulated profession they are legally allowed to…

Length of stay

Up to 5 years per grant is the legal maximum (Enforcement Rules of the Immigration Act, attached Table 1, 별표1).

Can you work?

Yes — but employment is limited to the licensed professional activity and the workplace tied to the E-5 status.

Korean needed?

No Korean-language test (TOPIK/KIIP) is required by law for the E-5 status itself; eligibility is based on the recognized professional license.

Fee & time

Fee: Certificate of Visa Issuance itself: no separate issuance fee; the visa fee is paid at the embassy abroad (single-entry visa is commonly about US$60 equivalent, verify per country). Inside Korea: change of status 100,000 KRW; extension of stay 60,000 KRW. (Fees per official HiKorea fee schedule; confirm current amounts.)

Who can apply

  • Foreign nationals who hold a professional qualification that is recognized under Korean law and who will work in a regulated profession they are legally allowed to perform in Korea.
  • The Enforcement Decree of the Immigration Act (attached Table 1-2, 별표1의2) names foreign lawyers, certified public accountants (CPAs), and medical doctors, plus other people with a nationally certified qualification, engaging in professional work in fields such as law, accounting, and medicine that Korean law allows them to do.
  • People who fall under E-1 (Professor) through E-7 (Special Occupation) are excluded from E-5.
  • A Korea-recognized national/professional license is required.

Documents you'll need

  • Passport and Alien Registration Card (if in Korea)
  • visa/status application form
  • color photo
  • copy of the professional license or qualification certificate recognized under Korean law (e.g. medical license, CPA, foreign legal consultant registration)
  • employment contract or appointment letter
  • employer’s business registration certificate
  • where the relevant profession requires it, an employment recommendation or endorsement from the competent ministry (for example the Ministry of Health and Welfare reviews recommendations for medical professionals)
  • resume/career documents
  • for the pre-approval route, a Certificate of Visa Issuance application (사증발급인정신청서). (Exact list is set per profession and per office — confirm on HiKorea / with 1345.) (unverified for some professions)

How to apply

Overseas embassy visa (사증) or domestic change-of-status; E-5 commonly uses a Certificate of Visa Issuance (사증발급인정서) filed in Korea by the employing firm/organization. Two main routes.

  1. Certificate of Visa Issuance (사증발급인정서): the Korean employer/inviter applies at the local immigration office in Korea; once issued, the applicant gets the visa at a Korean embassy/consulate abroad — E-5 is one of the categories that normally uses this pre-approval route.
  2. Change of status inside Korea at an immigration office / HiKorea, if the person already holds another eligible status.
    • Some professions require an employment recommendation from the competent government ministry before the visa is granted (e.g.
    • Ministry of Health and Welfare for doctors).

Stay & extension

How long you can stay

Up to 5 years per grant is the legal maximum (Enforcement Rules of the Immigration Act, attached Table 1, 별표1). The actual period given on each visa/extension is decided case by case and is often shorter.

Extending your stay

Can be extended at the local immigration office before the current period expires, as long as the qualifying employment and the Korea-recognized license remain valid. Apply through HiKorea or in person.

Extension fee is 60,000 KRW.

Working on this visa

Yes — but employment is limited to the licensed professional activity and the workplace tied to the E-5 status. Doing work outside that professional scope requires separate permission for activities outside status (체류자격 외 활동허가) or a change of status.

Requirements in detail

Korean language

No Korean-language test (TOPIK/KIIP) is required by law for the E-5 status itself; eligibility is based on the recognized professional license. (Korean-ability requirements do apply later for F-2/F-5 permanent-track visas.)

Money to show

GNI-linked wage floor for professional E-visas; 2024 per-capita GNI ₩49,955,000 applied 2025-04-01~2026-03-31. Exact E-5 multiplier per MOJ manual (unverified).

Ministry endorsement

Requires a Korea-recognized national professional license and competent-ministry review of that license: e.g. physicians/medical professionals → Ministry of Health and Welfare (보건복지부); lawyers → Ministry of Justice; other credentials verified by the issuing authority.

Waivers / special

Must hold a Korea-recognized national professional license (physician, lawyer, CPA, etc.) and be legally permitted to practice that profession in Korea; the license itself is the qualifying condition.

Sub-types

Profession-based; no published numeric subtypes verified (unverified).

Family

Spouse and unmarried minor children accompany on F-3 (동반).

Mobile ARC

Applies. Since 2025-01-10 registered foreigners aged 14+ with their own smartphone can issue a mobile ARC (모바일 외국인등록증; same legal effect); E-5 holders eligible after alien registration.

2025–2026 policy updates

  • No E-5-specific rule change confirmed from official sources for 2025-2026.
  • E-5 stayed a narrow, licensed-professional category.
  • (unverified whether any 2025-2026 change applies specifically to E-5 — re-check the latest Foreigner Residence Guide Manual, 외국인체류 안내매뉴얼.)

Common mistakes

  • Confusing E-5 with E-7 (Special Occupation).
  • E-5 is only for professions where the foreigner holds a qualification recognized under Korean law that legally lets them practice a regulated profession in Korea (doctor, CPA, lawyer, etc.).
  • If a foreign professional does not hold such a Korea-recognized statutory license, the correct category is usually E-7 (employer-sponsored designated occupation), not E-5.
  • Another mistake: assuming a foreign license alone is enough — the qualification must be recognized/authorized under Korean law to work here.

Where this leads

F-5-1 (general permanent residence) generally requires 5+ years of stay in Korea on statuses such as E-1 through E-7 or F-2, plus basic Korean ability (e.
g.
KIIP completion or exam) and other conditions.

Official source ↗  Official manual ↗

If you break the rules: Overstay/illegal work → deportation (강제퇴거), entry ban and penalties; illegal employment up to 3 yrs imprisonment or ₩30M fine (Immigration Control Act Article 94, 출입국관리법 §94); overstay penalty fine (범칙금) and re-entry restriction.

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