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Short Description: A complete, practical guide to South Korea’s D-8-1 Treaty/Incorporated Enterprise Investment Visa, including eligibility, documents, process, family, renewal, and risks.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country South Korea
Visa name Treaty / Incorporated Enterprise Investment Visa
Visa short name D-8-1
Category Long-stay investment / business residence status
Main purpose To let qualifying foreign investors establish or participate in an eligible enterprise in South Korea
Typical applicant Foreign founder, investor, corporate transferee-investor, or treaty-based/incorporated enterprise investor
Validity Varies by visa issuance and immigration decision
Stay duration Commonly tied to the granted period of stay/status; exact duration varies by case
Entries allowed Visa sticker may be single or multiple entry depending on issuance; residence status holders should verify re-entry conditions/current rules
Extension possible? Yes, often possible if investment/business conditions continue to be met
Work allowed? Yes, but limited to the authorized investment/business activity under the granted status
Study allowed? Limited; incidental study may be possible, but this is not a student visa
Family allowed? Yes, typically via dependent/family status if requirements are met
PR path? Possible, indirect; may contribute to long-term stay/PR eligibility depending on later status history and immigration rules
Citizenship path? Indirect; potential only through later long-term lawful residence and naturalization requirements

South Korea’s D-8 series is the broad family of “Corporate/Foreign Investment” stay statuses. The D-8-1 category is commonly referred to in English as the Treaty / Incorporated Enterprise Investment Visa. It is used by certain foreign nationals who make a qualifying investment into a Korean business structure and then stay in Korea to manage or operate that business under immigration rules.

In plain English, this is not a tourist visa and not a simple business visitor visa. It is a long-stay residence status for foreign investors/business operators.

Why it exists:

  • To support foreign direct investment in South Korea
  • To let eligible foreign investors reside in Korea while managing the investment enterprise
  • To distinguish genuine business establishment/investment activity from short-term meetings or informal commercial visits

How it fits into Korea’s immigration system:

  • It is part of the sojourn status system administered by the Korea Immigration Service / Ministry of Justice
  • It is usually applied for as:
  • an overseas visa issuance at a Korean embassy/consulate, or
  • in some cases, a status change / status grant / extension inside Korea if legally eligible
  • After arrival for long-term stay, holders generally need to complete foreign resident registration and obtain a Residence Card if staying over the registration threshold

What it officially is:

  • A visa/status category, not merely a travel authorization
  • In practical terms, it functions as both:
  • an entry visa for initial entry, and
  • a residence/sojourn status once admitted and registered in Korea

Alternate names and labels:

  • D-8
  • D-8-1
  • Corporate Investment visa family
  • Foreign Investment status
  • In Korean, categories are commonly listed under the foreign investment/corporate investment stay status naming used by immigration and visa portals
  • Some official materials group D-8 subtypes together, while others separate them by subcategory

Warning: Public English-language official sources do not always explain D-8-1 in the same level of detail as Korean-language immigration guidance. Where a rule is not clearly published in English, applicants should verify directly with Korean Immigration or the relevant Korean embassy/consulate.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Founders and entrepreneurs

This visa is often suitable for foreign nationals who:

  • incorporate or participate in a Korean company
  • make a qualifying foreign investment
  • need to live in Korea to direct or manage the enterprise

Investors

Suitable for applicants who are making a real, documented business investment under Korean foreign investment rules.

Existing foreign business owners expanding into Korea

If a foreign company or investor is creating or investing in a Korean incorporated entity and a foreign national needs to stay in Korea to run it, D-8-1 may be the relevant route.

Some family-based business operators

If one spouse is the principal D-8-1 applicant and the business is genuine, the principal may qualify and dependents may later follow under a family/dependent route.

Who should usually not use this visa

Tourists

Do not use D-8-1 for tourism. Use:

  • visa waiver/visa-free entry if eligible, or
  • a visitor visa such as C-3 where required

Business visitors attending meetings only

If you are only coming for:

  • meetings
  • market research
  • contract discussions
  • conference attendance
  • short business trips without running a local invested entity

then a short-term business/visitor route may be more appropriate than D-8-1.

Employees with a Korean job offer

If you are being hired by a Korean employer as an employee rather than investing in/operating a business, another work status such as:

  • E-7 (specialized work), or
  • other relevant E-series status

may be more suitable.

Students

If your main purpose is education, apply for:

  • D-2 (degree study), or
  • D-4 (language/training), if applicable

Job seekers

D-8-1 is not a general job-seeker visa.

Digital nomads

Do not assume D-8-1 is the right route for remote work. Korea has separate frameworks and changing policy discussions around remote work and digital nomads. D-8-1 is for qualifying investment/business operation, not simply living in Korea while working online for a foreign employer.

Retirees

There is no general retirement purpose in D-8-1.

Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists, diplomats

These categories have separate statuses.

Quick fit table

Applicant type D-8-1 suitable? Better alternative if not
Tourist No Visa waiver / C-3-type visitor route
Meeting attendee Usually no Short-term business visitor
Founder investing in Korea Yes, often Possibly D-8 other subtype depending on structure
Passive investor only Sometimes not Check investment-specific or F-category options if applicable
Employee of Korean company Usually no E-series work status
Student No D-2 / D-4
Spouse/child of D-8-1 holder No as principal Dependent/family status
Remote worker for foreign company Usually no Check current remote work/digital nomad options

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

The D-8-1 route is generally used for:

  • establishing a qualifying business in Korea
  • participating in a Korean incorporated enterprise through qualifying foreign investment
  • residing in Korea to manage, direct, or operate that investment enterprise
  • carrying out authorized business activity connected to the approved investment

Usually not permitted as the main purpose

Tourism

Not the intended purpose.

Short-term meetings only

Not necessary if no long-stay investment activity is involved.

General employment

This is not a substitute for ordinary employment authorization.

Remote work unrelated to the investment business

This is a grey area and not clearly authorized by D-8-1 as a general right. If your income activity is unrelated to the approved enterprise, get case-specific advice from immigration.

Internship

Not the intended category.

Full-time study

Not the intended category.

Volunteering

Only if incidental and lawful; not the main purpose of this status.

Paid performance / entertainment

Not covered.

Journalism

Not covered.

Medical treatment

Not the purpose, though holders can of course access healthcare lawfully.

Transit

Not applicable.

Marriage

Marriage itself is not the basis for D-8-1. If family life is the main purpose, a family status may be more appropriate.

Religious activity

Not covered unless separately authorized.

Grey areas and misunderstandings

“I have a company in Korea, so I can do any work.”

Not necessarily. The D-8-1 status is tied to the approved investment/business purpose. Activities outside that scope may require separate authorization.

“I can use D-8-1 instead of a visitor visa just because I plan to maybe invest later.”

No. Immigration usually expects a concrete, documented investment/business basis.

“I can be a passive shareholder and get D-8-1 automatically.”

Not always. Immigration often looks for actual investment, role, and business legitimacy.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official classification

The D-8 family is generally referred to in official immigration/visa systems as a corporate investment / foreign investment status.

Code

  • D-8-1

Long name

Commonly rendered in English as:

  • Treaty / Incorporated Enterprise Investment
  • Incorporated Enterprise Investment
  • Foreign-Invested Company / Corporate Investment subtype

Exact English wording can differ across official portals and embassy summaries.

Related internal streams

The D-8 category has multiple subtypes. Depending on the official source/version, related subcategories may include streams for:

  • incorporated enterprise investment
  • venture investment
  • private business investment
  • technology/start-up related investment

The precise Korean administrative labeling can change over time.

Commonly confused categories

Category What it is How it differs from D-8-1
C-3 business visitor Short-term visitor No long-term residence to run an invested enterprise
D-7 Intra-company transfer / stationed employee For foreign company dispatch situations, not necessarily personal investment
D-8-2 / other D-8 subtypes Other investment streams Different business form, investment mode, or qualification basis
E-7 Skilled employee Based on employment, not investor control
F-2 / F-5 Resident/permanent routes Usually later-stage or separate eligibility categories

5. Eligibility criteria

Warning: D-8-1 eligibility is heavily document-driven and may depend on both immigration law and foreign investment registration rules. Some details are published more clearly in Korean than in English.

Core eligibility themes

A typical applicant must show:

  • a genuine foreign investment connected to a Korean enterprise
  • compliance with Korean foreign investment law/procedures
  • a real need to stay in Korea to manage or operate the business
  • lawful entry/status if applying from inside Korea
  • valid identity and travel documents
  • no disqualifying immigration/security issues

Nationality rules

No universal public rule says D-8-1 is open identically to all nationalities in exactly the same way. Nationality can affect:

  • embassy-specific application method
  • visa issuance procedure
  • additional document legalization
  • interview/security screening
  • reciprocity or fee differences

If “treaty” wording is used at a specific post, confirm whether any nationality-specific treaty treatment applies in your case.

Passport validity

You need a valid passport. Exact minimum validity is often not stated uniformly on every page, but practically a passport should remain valid well beyond the intended stay.

Age

There is no widely advertised general age minimum specific to D-8-1 beyond legal capacity to invest/manage, but minors are not typical principal applicants.

Education / language / experience

There is generally no universal published degree or Korean-language requirement for D-8-1 itself. However:

  • business viability documents may matter
  • other linked corporate or startup programs may require additional review
  • inability to explain the business can hurt the application in practice

Sponsorship / invitation / job offer

A job offer is not the main basis. Instead, you usually need:

  • corporate documents
  • foreign investment registration evidence
  • business registration/incorporation evidence
  • proof of your role in the company

Points requirement

No general points test is publicly associated with D-8-1.

Relationship proof

Only relevant for dependents.

Admission letter

Not applicable unless a family member is studying under a different category.

Business/investment thresholds

This is one of the most important areas.

Official Korean immigration and business guidance often ties D-8 eligibility to the Foreign Investment Promotion Act framework and a qualifying investment amount. Public guidance commonly references a threshold of KRW 100 million for foreign investment-related residence categories, but applicants must verify the current exact threshold and structure for D-8-1 with official immigration/FDI authorities before applying because:

  • subtypes differ
  • shareholding/ownership and executive role rules may apply
  • practical implementation can vary by case
  • updates may occur

Maintenance funds

There is no universally published standalone “personal maintenance funds” formula for D-8-1 like in some student visas. Instead, officials often assess the applicant’s:

  • investment evidence
  • operating funds/business capacity
  • ability to support stay
  • sometimes bank statements and business financial materials

Accommodation proof

May be requested depending on where you apply and at what stage.

Onward travel

Less central than for visitor visas, but initial visa application or border checks may still involve itinerary questions.

Health / character

Applicants can be refused for:

  • public safety concerns
  • serious criminal issues
  • immigration law violations
  • document fraud

Medical or TB-screening requirements may vary by nationality and post.

Insurance

No universal D-8-1 pre-issuance insurance rule is consistently published across all official sources. After residence in Korea, health insurance obligations may arise under Korean law depending on residence and enrollment status.

Biometrics

May be required depending on application location and process.

Intent requirements

You must show genuine intent to conduct the approved investment/business activity.

Residency outside Korea / applying from third country

Some embassies accept only residents of their consular jurisdiction. This is post-specific.

Local registration rules

Long-term foreign residents generally must complete Residence Card registration within the required period after arrival.

Quotas/caps/ballots

No general lottery or cap is publicly associated with D-8-1.

Embassy-specific rules

Very important. Embassies/consulates may ask for:

  • local residence proof
  • additional forms
  • translated/apostilled documents
  • original corporate filings
  • local interview attendance

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Common ineligibility factors

  • no genuine qualifying investment
  • failure to meet current foreign investment requirements
  • no real operating role in the enterprise
  • sham company or shell-company indicators
  • wrong visa category selection
  • unlawful status history
  • incomplete business registration chain

Frequent refusal triggers

Mismatch between visa purpose and documents

Example: you claim you will run a Korean company, but documents show no active business registration, no investment registration, or no executive connection.

Insufficient or unclear funds

If investment money cannot be traced lawfully, refusal risk rises.

Weak corporate documentation

Missing:

  • certificate of incorporation
  • business registration certificate
  • shareholder registry
  • foreign investment registration
  • office lease
  • tax or operating documents

Prior overstays or immigration violations

Past Korean or foreign immigration violations can hurt credibility.

Criminal or security issues

Serious records can lead to refusal.

Unverifiable documents

If a bank statement, business license, or investment transfer cannot be authenticated, expect problems.

Translation and notarization errors

A frequent practical problem.

Interview mistakes

Inconsistent answers about:

  • source of funds
  • company purpose
  • staffing
  • office location
  • expected revenue
  • your ownership percentage
  • whether you will actually work as an employee instead of investor-manager

Common Mistake: Applying before the investment/corporate paperwork chain is fully in place, assuming the embassy “will understand.” This category usually rewards complete, structured filings.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lawful long-term residence for eligible foreign investors
  • ability to manage/operate the approved invested enterprise
  • potential to bring eligible family members
  • potential extensions if the business continues to qualify
  • possible pathway toward longer-term residence categories later

Family benefits

In many cases, spouse and minor children may apply for dependent/family stay status if the principal status is granted and maintained.

Travel flexibility

May allow multiple entry depending on the visa/status arrangement and current re-entry rules. Always verify current re-entry requirements with immigration.

Work/study benefits

  • principal can conduct authorized business activity
  • incidental study may be possible
  • dependents’ work rights are separate and should never be assumed

Business benefits

If properly structured, D-8-1 can align immigration status with:

  • company formation
  • foreign investment registration
  • executive residence in Korea

Long-term residence potential

This visa can sometimes form part of a longer immigration strategy, but it is not permanent residence by itself.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Scope restriction

You are authorized for the approved investment/business purpose, not unlimited labor market access.

Reporting and registration

You may need to:

  • obtain a Residence Card
  • report address changes
  • maintain valid passport/status
  • update immigration if the business structure materially changes

No automatic rights for dependents

Dependents need their own status.

Business maintenance expectations

If the company becomes inactive or no longer satisfies requirements, extension may be refused.

Re-entry and status maintenance

Do not assume that time spent outside Korea has no effect. Long absences or business inactivity can create renewal issues.

No guaranteed switching

Not every status can be switched freely inside Korea.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity vs stay period

In Korea, two separate concepts matter:

  • visa validity: the period during which you can use the visa to seek entry
  • period of stay: how long immigration allows you to remain after entry/status grant

These are not always the same.

Typical grant pattern

For D-8-1, the granted stay period often depends on:

  • your investment documentation
  • company status
  • immigration discretion
  • whether it is an initial grant or extension

Entries

Initial entry may be single or multiple depending on the visa issued. After long-stay registration, confirm current re-entry treatment with immigration.

When the clock starts

The stay period usually starts on lawful admission or on grant/change of status, not on the visa issuance date.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • fines
  • future visa refusal
  • difficulty extending or changing status
  • removal/deportation risks in serious cases

Renewal timing

Apply for extension before expiry. Do not wait until the last minute.

Grace periods

Do not assume there is a grace period. Verify current law and filing windows with immigration.

10. Complete document checklist

Warning: Exact document lists vary by embassy, nationality, and whether you apply overseas, by visa issuance number, or by in-country change/extension.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official application form Starts the case Old form version, missing signature
Passport Valid travel document Identity and travel authorization Low validity, damaged passport
Passport photo Official visa photo Identification Wrong size/background
Fee payment proof Receipt/payment Required for processing Wrong fee amount

B. Identity/travel documents

  • passport biodata page
  • previous Korean visas/status records if relevant
  • legal residence proof in the country of application, if applying outside your home country

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements
  • source-of-funds proof
  • remittance records
  • investment transfer records
  • capital payment evidence

Why needed:

  • to show genuine, traceable funds
  • to support the foreign investment claim

Common mistakes:

  • unexplained large deposits
  • statements not covering enough period
  • screenshots instead of formal bank documents

D. Employment/business documents

This is the heart of the application. It may include:

  • foreign investment 신고/registration documents
  • certificate of incorporation of the Korean entity
  • business registration certificate
  • corporate register
  • shareholder registry
  • articles of incorporation
  • office lease
  • tax-related filings if already operating
  • proof of your executive/director role
  • business plan
  • evidence of actual business activity

E. Education documents

Usually not core for D-8-1 unless specifically requested.

F. Relationship/family documents

For dependents:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • family register documents where applicable
  • custody/consent papers for minors

G. Accommodation/travel documents

May include:

  • office address proof
  • residential lease
  • hotel booking for initial arrival if not yet settled

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

If the Korean entity or partner company is supporting the filing, possible documents include:

  • invitation letter
  • company introduction
  • business registration
  • representative’s ID copy where permitted

I. Health/insurance documents

Only if specifically requested by the embassy/post or immigration office.

J. Country-specific extras

These can include:

  • criminal record certificate
  • TB certificate
  • apostille/legalization
  • local residence card copy

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • notarized parental consent
  • custody judgment
  • school records if applicable

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Documents not in Korean or sometimes English may need:

  • Korean translation
  • notarization
  • apostille or consular legalization

This is highly location-specific.

M. Photo specifications

Check the exact embassy or visa portal instructions. Do not guess.

Pro Tip: Ask the embassy or visa center whether they want investment/company documents in Korean only, Korean or English, or translated into Korean by a certified translator.

11. Financial requirements

Investment amount

This is the critical requirement area.

Official Korean foreign investment guidance commonly links investor stay status to a minimum foreign investment threshold, often cited as KRW 100 million. However:

  • confirm the current amount
  • confirm that your D-8 subtype uses that threshold
  • confirm whether ownership ratio, executive role, and business form requirements also apply

Who can fund the investment

Typically the investment should be the applicant’s or the qualifying foreign investor’s funds and must be traceable. If a corporate investor is involved, ownership and dispatch structure may matter.

Acceptable proof of funds

  • formal bank statements
  • remittance receipts
  • wire transfer evidence
  • foreign investment registration documents
  • capital deposit evidence
  • accounting or tax documents where relevant

Seasoning rules

No single universal published seasoning rule is clearly stated for D-8-1 in all official sources, but recent unexplained deposits are a practical concern.

Hidden costs

Beyond the investment itself, expect:

  • incorporation expenses
  • office lease
  • tax/accounting setup
  • translations
  • notarization/apostille
  • visa fees
  • residence registration costs if any
  • living costs before the business generates revenue

12. Fees and total cost

Warning: Korean visa fees vary by nationality, reciprocity, entry type, and consular post. Always check the latest official fee page of the embassy/consulate or visa portal.

Typical cost components

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Varies by nationality and single/multiple entry structure
Issuance number or in-country filing fees May apply depending on process route
Residence Card / immigration filing fees Check current Hi Korea fee schedule
Translation costs Vary by language and country
Notary/apostille/legalization Often significant
Police certificate cost If required
Medical/TB certificate If required
Courier costs If the post uses mail return
Corporate setup costs Often substantial
Office lease/deposit Often substantial
Tax/accounting fees Common for company maintenance
Optional legal/consultant fees Not required, but some applicants use them

Because exact numbers change often and are post-specific, check the latest official fee page.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa

Check whether your case is truly D-8-1 and not another D-8 subtype, D-7, or E-series route.

2. Complete the investment/company setup steps

Usually this means assembling:

  • foreign investment registration
  • capital transfer and proof
  • Korean incorporation/business registration
  • proof of your role

3. Gather documents

Collect identity, corporate, investment, and any family documents.

4. Confirm where to apply

Possible routes:

  • overseas via Korean embassy/consulate
  • via visa issuance confirmation/number process
  • in-country status grant/change if eligible

5. Complete the official application form

Use the current form only.

6. Pay fees

Pay as instructed by the relevant office.

7. Book appointment / biometrics / interview if required

Post-specific.

8. Submit application

Submit all supporting documents in the required order.

9. Respond to requests for more evidence

This is common in investment cases.

10. Receive decision

If approved, you may receive:

  • visa in passport, or
  • visa issuance confirmation to finalize at post, depending on route

11. Travel to Korea

Carry copies of key business documents.

12. Complete post-arrival registration

Long-stay residents generally must apply for a Residence Card within the required period after entry.

13. Maintain status

Keep the company compliant and extend on time.

14. Processing time

There is no single publicly guaranteed D-8-1 processing time across all embassies and in-country offices.

What affects timing

  • embassy workload
  • whether documents are complete
  • whether extra checks are needed
  • nationality/security screening
  • whether the business structure is straightforward
  • whether Korean-language review of corporate documents is required
  • whether an issuance number or in-country review is involved

Practical expectation

Investment cases often take longer than simple visitor visas because officers may examine:

  • source of funds
  • business authenticity
  • company records
  • immigration purpose

Pro Tip: Build in extra time for corrections, apostilles, and corporate document updates. Many delays happen before the file is even “decision-ready.”

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

May be required depending on location and process.

Interview

Some applicants are interviewed, especially if:

  • the business purpose is unclear
  • the source of funds needs explanation
  • the post treats investor categories cautiously

Typical questions:

  • What does the company do?
  • How much did you invest?
  • Where did the funds come from?
  • What is your exact role?
  • Why do you need to live in Korea?
  • How many employees do you have?
  • Where is your office located?

Medical

Not universally required for all D-8-1 applicants, but country-specific health checks can apply.

Police checks

Not always required, but some posts may request them.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official public approval-rate data for D-8-1 is not readily published in a simple applicant-facing format.

Practical refusal patterns

Based on official document expectations, common refusal patterns include:

  • unclear or insufficient investment proof
  • weak business substance
  • poor document organization
  • missing registration chain
  • mismatch between applicant story and company documents
  • doubts about lawful source of funds
  • applying under the wrong category

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Official-rule compliant strategies

Present a complete document chain

Do not just submit a business registration certificate. Include the full logic:

  1. source of funds
  2. remittance/investment proof
  3. foreign investment registration
  4. incorporation/business registration
  5. proof of your role
  6. business activity evidence

Use a short cover letter

Explain:

  • business model
  • investment amount
  • current status of incorporation
  • your role
  • why physical presence in Korea is necessary

Explain unusual transactions

If there was a large transfer, loan repayment, asset sale, or family transfer, document it.

Keep names consistent

Your passport name, bank name, and company records must align exactly.

Translate professionally

Poor translation causes avoidable delays.

Apply only when the file is mature

Incomplete incorporation/investment stages can hurt credibility.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Pro Tip: Create one master PDF index and separate annexes. Investment cases are easier to approve when officers can follow the money and corporate structure in minutes.

Best timing windows

  • Avoid filing right before major holidays
  • Leave time for document legalization and embassy appointment delays
  • Start extensions well before expiry

Organize money evidence clearly

Include a one-page funds summary showing:

  • account holder
  • bank
  • date of transfer
  • amount
  • exchange if relevant
  • destination account
  • related corporate filing

Handle large deposits transparently

Attach:

  • sale contract
  • dividend statement
  • loan agreement
  • tax filing
  • inheritance document

Whatever legitimately explains the deposit.

Families should stage applications carefully

Often the principal applies first or secures status first, then dependents follow with stronger evidence.

Contact the embassy only when necessary

Good reasons:

  • unclear jurisdiction
  • translation/legalization rule question
  • whether third-country residents can apply there

Poor reasons:

  • asking for status updates too early
  • asking questions already answered on the official page

Old refusals

Disclose them honestly if asked and explain what changed.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Not always mandatory, but highly recommended for D-8-1.

What to include

  1. Your identity and nationality
  2. The exact visa requested: D-8-1
  3. Company name and registration details
  4. Investment amount and date
  5. Source of funds summary
  6. Your ownership/management role
  7. Why you must stay in Korea
  8. Brief business activity plan
  9. List of attached supporting documents

What not to say

  • vague statements like “I want to explore opportunities”
  • claims inconsistent with your documents
  • promises of employment outside the authorized scope

Tone

Professional, factual, short.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor or support

In practice, the Korean company, partner entity, or inviting business may provide supporting documents, but the principal basis is still your qualifying investment/business role.

Useful sponsor documents

  • invitation letter
  • business registration certificate
  • corporate seal documents if required
  • representative’s confirmation letter
  • office lease
  • company profile

Sponsor mistakes

  • generic invitation letter
  • no explanation of why the investor must be present in Korea
  • inconsistent company data
  • missing contact information

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Generally yes, through the appropriate family/dependent stay status, not automatically under D-8-1 itself.

Who usually qualifies

  • legal spouse
  • minor unmarried children

Exact definitions should be verified with immigration.

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • passport copies
  • principal applicant’s status proof
  • evidence of financial support and housing if requested

Work/study rights of dependents

Do not assume dependents can work freely. Their status may restrict employment unless separately authorized.

Unmarried partners

Recognition is limited and may not match some countries’ partner definitions. Verify directly with immigration/consulate.

Same-sex spouses

Recognition can be complex and may depend on current Korean immigration practice and documentary acceptability. This area should be verified case by case.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Principal applicant

Activity Allowed? Notes
Manage approved invested enterprise Yes Core purpose
Work as general employee outside approved scope Not automatically May need separate status/permission
Self-employment in unrelated business Usually no Not without proper authorization
Remote work for foreign employer unrelated to investment Unclear/risky Verify directly with immigration
Short study/course Usually limited/possible If incidental, not main purpose
Full-time study as main activity No Use student route

Dependents

Activity Allowed? Notes
Attend school Usually yes, subject to status rules
Work Limited or separate authorization may be needed
Run business Not by default

Warning: Immigration status and tax treatment are not the same thing. Even if an activity seems technically possible, it may create tax or compliance consequences.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance is not final admission

Even with an approved visa, border officers can ask questions.

Carry these on arrival

  • passport with visa
  • company registration documents
  • foreign investment proof
  • address in Korea
  • contact number for the company or representative
  • copy of approval/issuance documents

Re-entry

If you travel after obtaining residence status, verify current re-entry rules and ensure your status remains valid.

New passport

If your passport expires, carry both old and new passports as needed and update immigration records.

Dual nationals

Use consistent identity information. Confusion between passports can cause delays.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, commonly, if:

  • the business remains active
  • investment requirements remain satisfied
  • status conditions are maintained

Extension evidence may include

  • updated business registration
  • tax filings
  • company financials
  • office lease
  • proof of continued role
  • proof of lawful stay
  • passport and Residence Card

Inside-country renewal

Usually handled in Korea through immigration if you are lawfully present.

Switching to another visa

Possible in some cases, but not automatic. It depends on the target category and your current circumstances.

Changing sponsor/company

If the business entity materially changes, immigration may require updated review. Do not assume you can simply “move” the status to a new company without formal steps.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does D-8-1 lead directly to PR?

No, not directly by itself.

Can it help indirectly?

Yes. Lawful long-term residence and business activity can be part of a later path to:

  • long-term resident categories
  • permanent residence (F-5), if all requirements are met
  • eventual naturalization, if eligible

Important caveats

PR and citizenship depend on:

  • years of lawful residence
  • income/assets
  • tax compliance
  • integration/language requirements where applicable
  • good conduct
  • current law at the time of application

Do not assume all time on D-8-1 automatically counts equally for every future route.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Immigration compliance

You may need to:

  • register as a foreign resident
  • report address changes
  • renew before expiry
  • maintain valid passport
  • keep business documents current

Tax compliance

Business investors may face:

  • corporate tax issues
  • personal income tax residence questions
  • VAT and payroll obligations if operating a company
  • withholding/reporting obligations

Immigration approval does not replace tax compliance. Use a licensed Korean tax/accounting professional if operating a real business.

Health insurance

Long-term foreign residents may become subject to Korean health insurance rules depending on residence and enrollment conditions.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Nationality can affect:

  • whether you need a visa to enter in other categories
  • where you can apply
  • fees
  • document legalization
  • interview/security review
  • possible health certificate requirements

For D-8-1 specifically, any “treaty” wording may suggest treaty-linked treatment in some contexts, but public English guidance is not always explicit. Verify with the relevant Korean mission and immigration office.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not typical principal applicants.

Divorced/separated parents

Dependent child applications may require custody proof and consent.

Adopted children

Provide formal adoption documents recognized for immigration purposes.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Case-specific; verify current practice directly.

Stateless persons / refugees

Complex and highly case-specific.

Prior refusals

Disclose where requested and address the reason clearly.

Overstays / previous deportation

Expect higher scrutiny and possible ineligibility.

Applying from a third country

Allowed only if that embassy accepts applicants residing in its jurisdiction.

Name changes / gender marker mismatch

Provide legal change documents and ensure translations match.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“If I register a company, I automatically get D-8-1.” No. Immigration reviews investment, role, and genuineness.
“D-8-1 lets me do any work in Korea.” No. It is tied to the approved business/investment purpose.
“A passive investment is enough.” Not always. Management role and business substance may matter.
“I can submit partial documents and explain later.” Risky. Incomplete filings often fail or stall.
“Dependents can always work.” No. Their work rights depend on their own status rules.
“Visitor entry is fine while I figure out the business.” Not for unauthorized work or residence. Status must match activity.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You should receive a refusal decision or explanation, though detail level varies.

Appeal or review

Formal appeal/reconsideration options depend on:

  • where the refusal occurred
  • whether it was visa issuance abroad or status decision in Korea
  • current administrative procedures

These are not always presented in a simple applicant-facing format.

Reapplication

Often possible, especially if you can fix the refusal reason.

No refund?

Visa fees are often non-refundable once processing starts. Verify with the relevant post.

Best reapplication strategy

  • identify the exact refusal issue
  • correct it with new evidence
  • do not simply resubmit the same weak file

31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?

At immigration control

Expect questions about:

  • business purpose
  • company name
  • address in Korea
  • length of stay

Soon after arrival

If your stay is long-term, you typically must apply for a Residence Card within the required timeframe.

Early post-arrival tasks

Within the first weeks, many D-8-1 holders need to handle:

  • residence registration
  • address registration
  • company banking/admin tasks
  • tax/accounting setup
  • telecom and housing arrangements
  • health insurance/tax compliance checks

32. Real-world timeline examples

Entrepreneur/investor example

  • Weeks 1–4: prepare business and source-of-funds documents
  • Weeks 3–8: foreign investment and incorporation steps
  • Weeks 6–10: gather translations/legalizations
  • Weeks 8–12: file visa application
  • Weeks 10–16+: decision period
  • After arrival: residence registration and business operations

Spouse/dependent example

  • Principal secures D-8-1 first
  • Family gathers marriage/birth records
  • Dependent applications follow with principal’s status proof

Worker example

Not applicable as principal for D-8-1 unless they are actually an investor-manager rather than a standard employee.

Student example

Not applicable as principal use case; student should use D-2/D-4.

Solo tourist example

Not applicable for this visa.

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Cover letter / index
  2. Visa form and fee proof
  3. Passport and ID documents
  4. Investment summary sheet
  5. Source-of-funds evidence
  6. Transfer/remittance evidence
  7. Foreign investment registration documents
  8. Corporate incorporation/business registration documents
  9. Proof of role in company
  10. Office lease and company profile
  11. Tax/operational evidence if available
  12. Family documents if applicable
  13. Translations and apostilles paired behind originals

Naming convention

Use clear file names such as:

  • 01_Passport.pdf
  • 02_Visa_Form.pdf
  • 03_Cover_Letter.pdf
  • 04_Fund_Source_Bank_Statements.pdf
  • 05_Remittance_Proof.pdf
  • 06_Foreign_Investment_Registration.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • complete edges visible
  • no cut-off stamps
  • legible file size
  • one PDF per section unless instructed otherwise

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm D-8-1 is the right category
  • Confirm current investment threshold
  • Confirm embassy jurisdiction
  • Collect source-of-funds proof
  • Complete company/investment documentation chain
  • Check translation/apostille needs
  • Prepare cover letter and index
  • Verify latest fee and form

Submission-day checklist

  • Signed application form
  • Passport
  • Photos
  • Fee
  • Full document pack
  • Copies and originals as required
  • Appointment confirmation if applicable

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • appointment proof
  • copy of full application
  • key business figures memorized
  • source-of-funds explanation ready

Arrival checklist

  • Carry business documents
  • Have Korean address/contact
  • Apply for Residence Card on time
  • Set up tax/accounting and compliance tracking

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Apply before expiry
  • Updated tax/business documents
  • proof company remains active
  • updated passport and Residence Card
  • current address proof

Refusal recovery checklist

  • read refusal reason carefully
  • identify missing/weak evidence
  • obtain corrected documents
  • write concise explanation of what changed
  • reapply only when file is stronger

35. FAQs

1. Is D-8-1 the same as a startup visa?

Not exactly. It is an investment/corporate category. Some startup founders may qualify, but separate startup-related routes may also exist.

2. What is the minimum investment for D-8-1?

Official guidance commonly references KRW 100 million, but verify the current exact threshold and subtype rules before applying.

3. Can I apply with less than the threshold if I have a great business plan?

Usually no, unless another category/subtype applies.

4. Do I need a Korean partner?

Not necessarily, depending on company structure and legal setup.

5. Must the company already be incorporated before I apply?

Often yes or at least the file must show the legal investment/incorporation chain. Exact sequencing varies.

6. Can I use borrowed money?

Possibly, but it must be lawful, documented, and acceptable under the relevant investment rules. Hidden or unexplained borrowing is risky.

7. Can my family send me the investment funds?

Only if fully documented and legally traceable. Source-of-funds scrutiny remains important.

8. Can I buy property and get D-8-1?

Not automatically. This is not simply a property-investment visa.

9. Can I work for another company on D-8-1?

Not automatically.

10. Can I study Korean language while on D-8-1?

Incidental study may be possible, but this is not a student visa.

11. Can my spouse work?

Not automatically. Check the spouse’s own status rights.

12. How long is D-8-1 issued for?

Varies by case and immigration decision.

13. Is D-8-1 multiple entry?

It can vary. Verify the visa and current re-entry rules.

14. Do I need a physical office?

Often some proof of business premises is expected. Virtual arrangements may draw more scrutiny.

15. Is an interview always required?

No, but it may be required.

16. Do I need police clearance?

Not always, but some posts may ask.

17. Can I apply inside Korea as a visitor?

Sometimes status changes are possible, but not in all cases or from all statuses. Verify before relying on this.

18. What if my company has not started earning revenue yet?

Early-stage businesses can still qualify, but you need strong formation and operating evidence.

19. What if my investment came in several transfers?

That is fine if clearly documented and consistent with the filings.

20. Can I include my child who is over 18?

Possibly not as a dependent if they no longer meet the dependent definition. Verify age-out rules.

21. Does D-8-1 count toward permanent residence?

It may contribute indirectly, but does not guarantee PR.

22. What happens if the business fails?

Your extension may be at risk and you may need to change status or depart.

23. Can I switch from D-8-1 to another visa later?

Sometimes yes, depending on eligibility.

24. Are apostilles always required?

No. It depends on the document and where it was issued.

25. Can I apply through any Korean embassy?

No. Many posts require you to reside in their jurisdiction.

26. Is the visa label enough after arrival?

No. Long-term residents usually need Residence Card registration.

27. Can two foreign founders both get D-8-1 from the same company?

Possibly, but each person’s role, investment, and eligibility must satisfy the rules. Verify case specifics.

28. What if my passport expires after visa issuance?

Renew it and carry both passports if needed; update immigration records.

29. Will weak travel history cause refusal?

For D-8-1, business and funds evidence matters more than tourist travel history, but overall credibility still matters.

30. Can I reapply after refusal?

Usually yes, if you fix the refusal grounds.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources to verify rules, forms, fees, and procedures. Because Korean immigration pages are updated periodically, use the latest version available at the time of filing.

  • Korea Visa Portal: https://www.visa.go.kr/
  • Hi Korea (official immigration information): https://www.hikorea.go.kr/
  • Ministry of Justice, Republic of Korea: https://www.moj.go.kr/
  • Korea Immigration Service / Hi Korea e-government services: https://www.hikorea.go.kr/Main.pt
  • Ministry of Government Legislation, Korean law database: https://www.law.go.kr/
  • Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy / Invest Korea foreign investment guidance: https://www.investkorea.org/
  • Embassy of the Republic of Korea in the United States (visa information example): https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/us-en/index.do
  • Embassy of the Republic of Korea in the United Kingdom: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/gb-en/index.do
  • Embassy of the Republic of Korea in India: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/in-en/index.do
  • Embassy of the Republic of Korea in the Philippines: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/ph-en/index.do

Warning: Embassy pages differ by country. Always use the mission responsible for your place of residence.

37. Final verdict

The D-8-1 Treaty / Incorporated Enterprise Investment Visa is best for a genuine foreign investor or founder who has already structured a real Korean business investment and needs to live in Korea to manage it.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful long-term stay tied to investment activity
  • ability to operate the approved enterprise
  • possible family accompaniment
  • extension potential
  • possible longer-term residence strategy

Biggest risks

  • incomplete or weak investment documentation
  • poor source-of-funds evidence
  • using the wrong visa class
  • assuming any company registration automatically qualifies
  • failing post-arrival compliance

Top preparation advice

  • verify the exact D-8 subtype before filing
  • confirm the current investment threshold with official sources
  • present a complete money-to-company document chain
  • use professional translations where needed
  • prepare a short, factual cover letter

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your real purpose is:

  • tourism
  • short meetings only
  • ordinary employment
  • full-time study
  • accompanying family without being the principal investor

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • The current exact minimum investment threshold for D-8-1 and whether it has changed
  • Whether your case fits D-8-1 or another D-8 subtype
  • Whether your nationality has any special treaty, reciprocity, fee, or document rules
  • Whether your Korean embassy/consulate accepts applications from third-country residents
  • Whether a police certificate, TB certificate, or medical exam is required in your jurisdiction
  • Whether apostille, notarization, or Korean translation is required for each foreign document
  • Whether current visa issuance is single or multiple entry in your case
  • Current in-country extension fees and Residence Card procedures on Hi Korea
  • Current recognition practice for unmarried partners or same-sex spouses/dependents
  • Whether your planned side activities, remote work, or secondary income are compatible with D-8-1
  • Whether changes in company ownership, office, or business model must be reported before extension
  • The latest processing times at your specific embassy or immigration office

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