Visa Guides
F-1-D

Workation (Digital Nomad) Visa

워케이션(디지털노마드) 비자 — Long-term stay (F-1 Visiting/Joining Family category, D subtype) issued under a Ministry of Justice pilot program for remote workers employed by overseas companies.

◔ Pilot program — check current status Category F

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 aged 18 or older who own an overseas business or are employed by an overseas company, can perform their work remotely, and have at least 1 year of…

Length of stay

1 year from date of entry (granted at alien registration), extendable once for 1 additional year — maximum total stay of 2 years.

Can you work?

Remote work for an overseas employer or one’s own overseas business only.

Fee & time

Fee: Varies by nationality and reciprocity; single-entry long-stay visa is roughly USD 45 (about 60,000 KRW) at many missions. Extension of stay is processed via HiKorea/local immigration office. (unverified — exact KRW amount not confirmed on an official Korean-government fee schedule during this research)

Who can apply

  • Foreign nationals aged 18 or older who own an overseas business or are employed by an overseas company, can perform their work remotely, and have at least 1 year of continuous experience in the same industry.
  • Must prove annual income of at least 2x the prior year’s per-capita GNI (Bank of Korea standard) and hold private medical insurance covering at least 100 million KRW.
  • Accompanying family (spouse and unmarried children under 18) may receive F-1-D as dependents.

Documents you'll need

  • Visa application form
  • passport
  • standard photo
  • application fee
  • proof of overseas employment or business ownership showing 1+ year in the same industry (employment verification / employment contract)
  • income proof such as salary statements (급여명세서), bank statements and transaction records demonstrating the required income
  • criminal record certificate (background check) from the home country issued within the last 6 months, apostilled or consular-authenticated
  • proof of private medical insurance covering at least 100 million KRW for hospital treatment and repatriation valid for the stay
  • family relationship documents (marriage/birth certificates) if bringing dependents.

How to apply

  • Overseas embassy visa(사증) applied at a Korean embassy/consulate abroad; ALSO domestic change-of-status from short-term stay (B-1, B-2, C-3) where requirements are met.
  • Pilot program running from 2024-01-01 until an (as-yet undetermined) termination date.
  • Applied for at a Korean embassy/consulate abroad; short-term stayers already in Korea on B-1, B-2 or C-3 who meet the requirements may apply for a status change to F-1-D at a local immigration office.
  • Document requirements (especially income proof and criminal record certificate) vary slightly by mission — confirm with the specific consulate before applying.

Stay & extension

How long you can stay

1 year from date of entry (granted at alien registration), extendable once for 1 additional year — maximum total stay of 2 years.

Extending your stay

One extension of up to 1 year is permitted at a local immigration office, for a maximum combined stay of 2 years. Applicant must continue to meet the eligibility conditions (ongoing overseas employment/income and valid medical insurance).

Working on this visa

Remote work for an overseas employer or one’s own overseas business only. Employment with a Korean company or any income-generating/profit-making activity inside Korea is strictly prohibited; violations are subject to penalties under the Immigration Act.

Working for a Korean employer requires a proper work visa (e.g., E-7).

Requirements in detail

Money to show

Annual income at least 2x the prior year’s per-capita GNI announced by the Bank of Korea — 2025 basis ≈ 104.83M KRW (KRW 52,416,000 × 2). PLUS mandatory personal medical insurance of 100M KRW or more covering hospital treatment and repatriation during the stay.

Sub-types

F-1-D is itself the digital-nomad/workation subtype of the F-1 (거주 방문·동거) visa family; no further sub-classifications. Dependents receive F-1-D as accompanying family.

Family

Dependents allowed. The visa is issued to the qualifying remote worker ‘and their family(그 가족)’; family members may apply together with the principal.

Mobile ARC

Applicable to those who complete foreigner registration (외국인등록) (stay of 1 year, extendable +1 year = max 2 years); eligible for the mobile Alien Registration Card (모바일 외국인등록증, 2025) as any registered foreigner 14+ with own smartphone.

2025–2026 policy updates

  • Pilot launched 2024-01-01 (Ministry of Justice).
  • Originally scheduled to run through 2025-12-31, the pilot has been EXTENDED — the Korean government (MOFA embassy notices) now states the pilot operates from 2024-01-01 through 2026-12-31 (시범운영 기한 연장).
  • Income threshold tracks 2x prior-year per-capita GNI and has risen over time: reported as approx. 84.96 million KRW/year at 2024 launch (2022 GNI basis) and approx. 90 million KRW/year under the 2025-04-01 to 2026-03-31 standard.
  • Not yet made permanent — still a pilot (시범운영) as of mid-2026.
  • Korean press (Jan 2026) reported very low uptake, with several regional pilot areas (Jeju, Sejong, Ulsan, Chungbuk, Jeonbuk) recording zero applications, which may influence a future decision on whether to make the program permanent.
  • (pilot)
Heads-up: this is a pilot program — details can change. Check the official link before planning around it.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming F-1-D allows any work in Korea — it only permits remote work for an overseas employer; taking local Korean employment is prohibited.
  • Underestimating the income bar (2x per-capita GNI, roughly 85-90 million KRW/year, which rises annually).
  • Forgetting the mandatory private medical insurance of at least 100 million KRW coverage.
  • Submitting a criminal record certificate older than 6 months or without apostille/authentication.
  • Assuming the program is permanent — it is a time-limited pilot currently authorized through 2026-12-31.

Official source ↗  Official manual ↗

If you break the rules: Overstay → forced deportation (강제퇴거) + a penalty fine (범칙금; up to KRW 30 million, scaled by overstay period) + re-entry ban. Working locally for a Korean employer outside the permitted remote-work scope, or work without permission → Immigration Control Act Article 94 (출입국관리법 제94조; up to 3 years’ imprisonment or a fine of up to KRW 30 million) and deportation.

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