We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.
Short Description: A complete guide to South Korea’s D-8-2 Business Venture Visa for startup founders, covering eligibility, documents, process, extensions, family, and PR options.
Last Verified On: April 7, 2026
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | South Korea |
| Visa name | Business Venture Visa |
| Visa short name | D-8-2 |
| Category | Long-stay business/investment/startup residence status |
| Main purpose | To establish and operate a qualifying venture business in South Korea |
| Typical applicant | Foreign startup founder, entrepreneur, or venture business operator making a qualifying investment and running a Korea-based business |
| Validity | Varies by issuance and immigration decision |
| Stay duration | Commonly granted in line with status approval period; exact period varies |
| Entries allowed | Can vary by visa issuance and status; check the visa sticker/confirmation and local immigration rules |
| Extension possible? | Yes, if ongoing eligibility and business requirements continue to be met |
| Work allowed? | Yes, but only within the authorized business/investment activity tied to the status |
| Study allowed? | Limited; incidental study may be possible, but this is not a student status |
| Family allowed? | Yes, in many cases eligible dependents may apply under family/dependent status, subject to proof and approval |
| PR path? | Possible indirectly; may contribute to later long-term residence or permanent residence depending on broader eligibility |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect; possible only through later long-term lawful residence and naturalization requirements |
1. What is the Business Venture Visa?
The D-8-2 Business Venture Visa is a South Korean long-stay status for certain foreign nationals who want to establish and operate a venture business in Korea.
In practical terms, this route is aimed at foreign startup founders and entrepreneur-investors whose business fits Korea’s legal framework for a venture business rather than ordinary passive investment.
It exists because South Korea wants to attract:
- innovative businesses
- technology-driven startups
- foreign founders
- investment tied to actual business operation
- businesses that support jobs, R&D, or industrial growth
Within Korea’s immigration system, D-8 categories generally relate to corporate investment. The D-8-2 stream is specifically associated with venture business activity rather than general foreign-invested company activity.
What this route is, legally
This is not just a tourist visa or simple entry permit. It is best understood as:
- a long-term visa/status category
- used for entry and residence for approved business activity
- usually followed by or linked to domestic immigration registration
- tied to ongoing compliance with Korean immigration and business rules
Alternate names and labels
You may see this route referred to as:
- D-8-2
- Business Venture
- Business Venture Visa
- in Korean administrative usage under the broader Corporate Investment (D-8) family
Some official sources group D-8 subclasses together. Some embassy pages also simplify the label. If a post or embassy checklist mentions only “D-8 Corporate Investment,” confirm the exact subtype being requested.
Warning: South Korea’s visa naming on embassy pages, Hi Korea pages, and law/regulation references is not always presented in one perfectly unified public format. Always verify the exact subclass with the consulate or immigration office handling your case.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Best suited for
Founders and entrepreneurs
This is the core target group. You may be a good fit if you:
- are forming a startup in Korea
- are investing into your own Korea-based venture company
- will actively manage the company
- can document the business, funding, and venture qualification
Investors who are also operators
This route is more suitable for active business operators than passive investors.
Former students or workers in Korea launching a startup
In some cases, a person already in Korea may seek a status change if they satisfy all D-8-2 conditions and immigration permits a change.
Tech or innovation-driven applicants
This route is often associated with startups that can show:
- innovation
- technology
- business growth potential
- legal venture business recognition or equivalent qualifying basis
Usually not suitable for
Tourists
If you only want to visit Korea briefly, do not use D-8-2. Use:
- visa waiver entry if eligible
- short-term visitor/business visitor visa if required
Business visitors attending meetings only
If you are only attending:
- meetings
- negotiations
- conferences
- short scouting trips
then D-8-2 is usually the wrong route. A short-term business status may be more appropriate.
Employees hired by a Korean company
If you are being employed by a Korean company rather than founding or investing in your own venture business, you likely need a work category such as:
- E-series work status
- another employment-linked status
Students
If your main purpose is full-time study, use a student visa, not D-8-2.
Digital nomads without a Korea-based venture setup
If your plan is simply to live in Korea while working remotely for a foreign employer, D-8-2 is generally not the correct route unless you truly qualify under the venture business rules.
Retirees
There is no general retirement function in this status.
Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists
These groups usually have separate visa categories if their main purpose is professional activity in those fields.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
The D-8-2 visa is used for:
- establishing a qualifying venture business in South Korea
- making and maintaining the required business investment
- managing and operating the Korean business
- residing in Korea for that business purpose
- carrying out business activities directly connected to the approved company
Depending on your specific approval and supporting business records, this can include:
- company formation steps
- office setup
- hiring staff
- product development
- business operations
- fundraising activities consistent with law
- corporate administration
- market development
Prohibited or not-primary uses
This visa is not designed primarily for:
- tourism
- casual long-term living without business activity
- employment for an unrelated employer
- full-time degree study as the main purpose
- undeclared side work
- passive residence without running the business
- sham company setup only to obtain residence
Grey areas and misunderstandings
Remote work
A common misunderstanding is that any entrepreneur can use D-8-2 as a digital nomad route. That is not the official purpose. The route is for a qualifying Korea-based venture business, not merely remote overseas work.
Meetings and short visits
You do not need D-8-2 just to attend startup meetings or explore the market for a week. D-8-2 is for actual establishment and operation.
Internships and volunteering
This status is not meant for internships or general volunteer activity as the main purpose.
Marriage or family reunion
If your main reason for being in Korea is marriage to a Korean national or family reunion, another family-based status may be more appropriate.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
Common English label: Business Venture Visa
Code / subclass
- D-8-2
Broader family
- D-8 Corporate Investment
Long name
Public-facing descriptions vary, but D-8-2 is generally the venture business / business venture subclass under the D-8 corporate investment framework.
Related categories people confuse it with
| Visa/Status | How it differs from D-8-2 |
|---|---|
| D-8-1 | Usually used for foreign-invested company activity under different corporate investment conditions |
| D-8-4 | Often associated with technology and business startup categories, including points- or startup-support related pathways in some policy materials |
| D-9 | Trade/management route, not the same as venture startup classification |
| C-3 business visitor | Short-term visits only, not residence for company operation |
| E-series work visas | For employment by an employer, not founding/operating your own venture business |
| D-10 | Job seeker / startup preparation in some cases, but not the same as approved venture operation |
Common Mistake: Applicants often confuse D-8-2 with D-8-4. They are not interchangeable. The exact corporate structure, investment basis, and business recognition route matter.
5. Eligibility criteria
Because South Korea’s public guidance can be spread across immigration pages, embassy pages, and investment/business rules, you should treat the following as the core framework and verify exact local documentary requirements before applying.
Core eligibility
A typical D-8-2 applicant must show:
- a valid passport
- a genuine plan to establish and operate a business in Korea
- a qualifying business that fits the venture/business-investment framework
- required investment into the Korean entity
- lawful company registration and related corporate records
- proof that the applicant is involved in management/operation
- compliance with Korean immigration and commercial rules
Nationality rules
There is no general public rule showing D-8-2 is limited to only certain nationalities. However:
- document requirements can vary by consulate
- some nationalities may face extra scrutiny or additional checks
- some applicants may have different police certificate or apostille requirements
Passport validity
Your passport should be valid for the intended visa issuance and travel period. Many consulates expect substantial remaining validity.
Age
No universal public age minimum unique to D-8-2 is prominently stated beyond normal legal capacity requirements. Minors are generally not typical principal applicants.
Education
There is no universally published education minimum specifically for all D-8-2 cases, but your business plan, founder credibility, and sector may make educational evidence useful or indirectly important.
Language
No general Korean language requirement is publicly stated as a standard precondition for D-8-2 issuance. However:
- Korean ability can help in business setup and immigration interaction
- some startup support pathways outside D-8-2 may involve English/Korean review processes
Work experience
No single public rule says all D-8-2 applicants must meet a specific number of years of work experience, but business background can strengthen the case.
Sponsorship / invitation
A separate sponsor is not always required in the way a work visa needs an employer sponsor. However, you may need:
- Korean company documents
- corporate registration
- proof of foreign investment
- records showing your role in the business
Job offer
Not applicable as a standard rule for this visa.
Points requirement
A general points threshold is not the standard headline rule for D-8-2 itself. Be careful not to mix this up with other startup visa pathways.
Relationship proof
Only relevant if applying with dependents.
Admission letter
Not applicable unless some study component is involved separately.
Business/investment thresholds
This is one of the most important parts.
For D-8 corporate investment categories, South Korea commonly requires foreign investment into a Korean company meeting legal minimums under foreign investment rules. Public official guidance often references a minimum investment benchmark of KRW 100 million for corporate-investment-type statuses, but applicants must verify the exact D-8-2 requirements and whether any additional venture-business conditions apply in their case.
For D-8-2 specifically, the business also generally needs to qualify as a venture business under Korean rules or satisfy the corresponding immigration-recognized venture criteria.
Warning: The exact interaction between immigration status rules, foreign investment law, company registration, and venture business recognition can be technical. Do not assume that incorporating a company alone is enough.
Maintenance funds
There is no single public “personal maintenance fund” figure consistently published for D-8-2 like some student visas. Still, you should expect to prove:
- sufficient business capital
- ability to support yourself
- ability to support dependents if included
Accommodation proof
May be requested depending on post and stage.
Onward travel
Not typically the central issue for a long-stay business visa, but some consulates may still want travel details.
Health
Medical screening may be required in some cases, especially for long-term residence steps.
Character / criminal record
A criminal record can affect approval. Some posts may require police certificates.
Insurance
Not always a uniform pre-visa requirement publicly stated for every D-8-2 filing, but health insurance and later Korean national insurance obligations can become important after arrival.
Biometrics
This depends on the place of application and local consular process.
Intent requirements
You must show genuine intent to:
- establish and run the business
- comply with Korean law
- use the status for the stated purpose
Return intent vs dual intent
Unlike a short tourist visa, this is a long-stay residence-oriented category, so strict “temporary visitor” intent is not the central issue in the same way. But you still must show genuine lawful purpose.
Residency outside Korea
Applicants applying abroad usually apply through the Korean diplomatic post with jurisdiction over their place of residence, unless another arrangement is allowed.
Local registration rules
Long-stay foreign residents in Korea commonly must obtain a Residence Card/foreign registration after arrival if staying long term.
Quotas/caps
No general public quota or lottery for D-8-2 is commonly published.
Embassy-specific rules
This is very important. Korean embassies and consulates may differ on:
- whether originals are required
- whether apostilles are required
- whether local bank records are acceptable in a certain form
- whether the business documentation must be pre-reviewed
- whether an interview is required
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Likely ineligibility factors
- no real venture business
- no qualifying investment
- inability to prove ownership or management role
- failure to meet foreign investment/company registration conditions
- sham or dormant company
- business plan that is vague or inconsistent
- prior immigration violations
- criminal/security concerns
- fraudulent or unverifiable documents
Common refusal triggers
| Refusal Trigger | Why it causes problems |
|---|---|
| Wrong visa class | Applicant is really a worker, visitor, or student rather than founder/operator |
| Weak business substance | Company exists on paper only |
| Investment evidence missing | Required funds not clearly transferred or documented |
| Funds source unclear | Large deposits without explanation raise concern |
| Venture qualification not proven | D-8-2 needs more than simple company registration |
| Inconsistent documents | Names, dates, ownership percentages, or business activity do not match |
| Incomplete file | Missing registration, tax, or corporate documents |
| Unverifiable records | Bank, corporate, or academic records cannot be confirmed |
| Prior overstay or removal | Immigration compliance history matters |
| Passport/document issue | Damaged, soon-expiring, or mismatched passport details |
Interview mistakes
- saying you “just want to stay in Korea” without business detail
- not understanding your own business model
- giving revenue, ownership, or funding numbers that conflict with documents
- saying you might work another job unrelated to the company
7. Benefits of this visa
Main benefits
- legal residence in Korea for business venture activity
- ability to operate your approved startup/company
- ability to extend if the business remains compliant and viable
- potential to bring eligible family members
- possible pathway toward long-term residence options later
Business benefits
- lawful in-country management of your Korean company
- greater credibility than trying to run the business through repeated short visits
- ability to complete resident formalities and local operations more smoothly
Family benefits
Subject to approval, family members may be able to join you under dependent/family status.
Travel flexibility
This depends on the visa issued and your immigration status record. Re-entry rules should always be checked, especially if your card, extension, or status is pending.
Long-term immigration value
This visa may support future immigration goals if you:
- maintain lawful residence
- keep the business active
- pay taxes properly
- later qualify for long-term residence or permanent residence under Korean law
8. Limitations and restrictions
Key restrictions
- you must maintain the approved business basis
- work rights are tied to the authorized business activity
- this is not open permission to work any job in Korea
- immigration can review actual business activity, not just incorporation
- reporting and registration obligations apply
Not a free-form residence permit
You cannot usually treat D-8-2 as a general live-in-Korea status without running the business.
No sham arrangements
If the business is not real, not active, or not compliant, extension may fail and status may be canceled.
Address and registration duties
Long-stay residents generally must:
- register residence
- report address changes
- maintain valid passport and status documents
Public funds
This visa is not designed as a route to public financial support rights.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Visa validity vs stay period
For Korea, it is important to distinguish:
- visa validity: the period during which you can use the visa to enter
- period of stay/status period: the time you are allowed to remain after entry or as approved by immigration
These are not always the same.
Typical duration
D-8-2 grants vary. Initial approvals may be shorter while the business is being established; later extensions may depend on:
- active operations
- investment maintenance
- tax records
- revenue/employment evidence
- compliance history
Entries
Single or multiple entry treatment may vary by issuance and current policy. Check:
- visa label
- visa grant notice
- your residence card status
- immigration guidance before travel
When the clock starts
The stay period generally starts from entry or from the effective date of domestic status approval, depending on the route used.
Grace periods
Do not assume a grace period exists after expiry. Overstay can lead to:
- fines
- status problems
- extension refusal
- removal issues
- future visa difficulty
Renewal timing
Apply for extension before expiry. In practice, do not wait until the last few days if documents are complex.
10. Complete document checklist
Document rules can vary by embassy, place of application, and whether you apply abroad or change status in Korea.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa application form | Official application form | Basic identity and purpose | Inconsistent names/dates |
| Passport | Valid travel document | Identity and travel authorization | Short validity, damage |
| Passport photo | Recent visa photo | Identification | Wrong size/background |
| Business plan | Structured plan for the venture | Proves purpose and viability | Too vague, no financials |
| Corporate/investment documents | Company setup and investment records | Proves qualifying basis | Missing official registration extracts |
B. Identity/travel documents
- passport biodata page
- copies of prior Korean visas/statuses if any
- national ID where requested
- residence permit for country of application if applying outside your home country
C. Financial documents
- bank statements
- remittance records
- foreign investment transfer proof
- source of funds records
- tax documents where relevant
D. Employment/business documents
- certificate of business registration
- certificate of incorporation/corporate registration
- shareholder register or equity records
- foreign investment 신고/registration-related records where applicable
- office lease
- tax registration documents
- proof of venture business confirmation if applicable
- proof of actual operation, such as contracts, invoices, payroll, website, product records
E. Education documents
Not always mandatory, but useful if relevant to the startup sector:
- degree certificates
- transcripts
- technical qualifications
F. Relationship/family documents
For dependents:
- marriage certificate
- birth certificates
- family register documents if applicable
- custody/consent records for children
G. Accommodation/travel documents
- Korean address or office address
- housing lease if available
- flight details if requested by post
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
Not always applicable in the classic sense, but some cases may include:
- invitation or explanatory letter from Korean company
- founder appointment documents
- board resolutions
- representative director documentation
I. Health/insurance documents
- medical certificate if requested
- TB or health screening in some contexts
- insurance documents if required by the post or later by local registration systems
J. Country-specific extras
Depending on nationality or application post:
- police certificate
- apostilled civil documents
- notarized translations
- local residence proof
- additional financial explanations
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- consent letter from non-accompanying parent
- custody order
- school records if relevant
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
This varies heavily. Some documents may need:
- Korean translation
- English translation
- notarization
- apostille
- consular legalization
Warning: Never assume English documents are automatically accepted everywhere. Check the exact consulate or immigration office rule.
M. Photo specifications
Use the official mission or application instructions. Common mistakes include:
- old photo
- edited image
- wrong dimensions
- shadows/background issues
11. Financial requirements
Investment amount
This is the central financial requirement area.
Official Korean guidance for D-8 corporate investment categories commonly refers to minimum foreign investment thresholds, often KRW 100 million. For D-8-2, applicants should verify:
- whether the exact minimum applies in their case
- whether all funds must be fully transferred before filing
- whether the company structure and ownership meet immigration expectations
- whether venture confirmation or equivalent proof is additionally required
What counts as proof
Strong financial evidence usually includes:
- bank statements showing available funds
- remittance records into Korea
- foreign investment registration records
- capital payment records
- shareholder/equity documents
- source-of-funds explanation for large or recent deposits
Personal maintenance
Even when the main threshold is investment-based, applicants should also be ready to show:
- personal living funds
- office operating funds
- ability to support family members
Hidden costs
Expect additional costs beyond investment capital:
- incorporation expenses
- lease deposit and rent
- accounting and tax filing fees
- translation and notarization costs
- residence registration fees
- health checks if needed
- family application costs
Currency issues
Use clear conversion evidence if funds are held outside KRW. If exchange rates matter, use bank-issued or official conversion references.
12. Fees and total cost
Fees vary by:
- nationality
- embassy/consulate
- single vs multiple entry issuance
- domestic extension vs overseas visa issuance
- document legalization needs
Fee table
| Cost Item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Varies by consulate and visa type; check the latest official fee page |
| Status change/extension fee | Paid in Korea if applying at immigration; check current Hi Korea fees |
| Residence card/registration-related fee | May apply for long-term residents |
| Biometrics fee | May be built into local process or not separately charged |
| Health exam fee | If required |
| Police certificate cost | Depends on issuing country |
| Translation/notary/apostille | Varies widely |
| Courier/postage | If passport return by mail is used |
| Insurance | Varies |
| Business setup costs | Separate from immigration fees; can be significant |
| Dependent fees | Usually separate application fees per family member |
Pro Tip: Check both the relevant embassy fee page and the domestic Hi Korea fee information. Overseas issuance and in-country immigration fees are often listed separately.
13. Step-by-step application process
The exact route depends on whether you apply:
- abroad through a Korean embassy/consulate, or
- in Korea through status change/extension procedures, if eligible
1. Confirm the correct visa
Make sure D-8-2 is the right subclass and not D-8-1, D-8-4, D-9, E, or D-10.
2. Gather corporate and immigration documents
Prepare:
- incorporation records
- investment proof
- venture qualification records
- passport/civil documents
- business plan
- address and operating records
3. Complete the application form
Use the official Korean visa application form or in-country immigration form as directed.
4. Pay the fee
Pay according to the post or immigration office instructions.
5. Book biometrics/interview if needed
Some posts require appointments.
6. Submit the application
Submit at:
- Korean embassy/consulate abroad, or
- immigration office in Korea if changing/extending status is permitted
7. Upload/send supporting documents
Some posts use paper files; some may require digital pre-submission.
8. Medicals/police checks if requested
These are case-specific.
9. Track the application
Use official channels where available.
10. Respond to additional document requests
This is common for business visas. Respond quickly and clearly.
11. Decision
If approved, you receive visa issuance or status approval.
12. Visa issuance / collection
Follow the post’s process for passport submission, sticker issuance, or visa grant confirmation.
13. Travel to Korea
Carry core supporting documents in hand luggage.
14. Post-arrival registration
Long-term residents generally must complete residence registration within the required period.
15. Maintain compliance
Open the business properly, file taxes, and keep records for extension.
14. Processing time
There is no single universal processing time published for all D-8-2 cases across all posts.
What affects timing
- consulate workload
- document completeness
- nationality/security checks
- complexity of corporate structure
- need to verify venture qualification
- source-of-funds review
- local holidays and peak seasons
Practical expectation
Business/investor categories often take longer than simple visitor visas because officers may review:
- company registration
- ownership
- remittance evidence
- actual business purpose
Warning: Do not book irreversible travel or office commitments until the visa/status is approved.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
May be required depending on place of filing and local process.
Interview
An interview is not guaranteed in every case, but some applicants may be interviewed about:
- business purpose
- ownership
- source of funds
- Korean business plan
- expected activity and revenue model
Typical questions
- What does your company do?
- Why is the business in Korea?
- How much did you invest?
- What is your ownership share?
- Are you the representative/director?
- How will the business make revenue?
- Why is D-8-2 the correct status for you?
Medical
A health check may arise at immigration or registration stages depending on the case.
Police checks
Some posts may request a criminal record certificate, especially for long-term stays.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official public approval-rate statistics specifically for D-8-2 are not readily published in a clear applicant-facing format.
So the safest approach is to rely on known refusal patterns rather than invented percentages.
Common practical refusal patterns
- business not convincingly real
- investment threshold not clearly met
- missing venture-business qualification evidence
- poor explanation of founder role
- insufficient source-of-funds clarity
- inconsistent ownership documents
- applying under D-8-2 when another D-8 subtype fits better
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Build a coherent file
Your application should tell one story:
- who you are
- what the company does
- why Korea
- how much you invested
- what legal documents prove it
- how the business will operate
Use a strong business summary
Prepare a 1–2 page executive summary that matches the full business plan.
Explain fund flows
If money moved across multiple accounts, include a simple source-of-funds note with dates and amounts.
Index every document
Create a cover index with:
- identity
- company formation
- investment
- venture qualification
- business plan
- financial capacity
- residence/address
- dependent documents if any
Translate properly
If translations are needed, keep:
- original document
- translation
- notarization/apostille where required
Resolve inconsistencies before submission
Check:
- passport spelling
- dates
- ownership percentages
- company names in English/Korean
- address formatting
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
These are legal and commonly used strategies.
Apply with business substance, not only incorporation
A file is stronger if it includes evidence of actual operations, such as:
- lease
- invoices
- client letters
- product screenshots
- hiring plan
- website
- tax registration
Explain large deposits proactively
If your bank statement shows a recent large deposit:
- identify the source
- attach sale agreement, dividend record, salary records, or loan document if lawful
- make it easy for the officer to follow
Keep one ownership chart
For startups with multiple shareholders, provide one simple chart showing:
- founders
- percentages
- capital contributions
- who is applying for D-8-2
Do not overload with irrelevant papers
A concise, structured file is better than 300 pages of random documents.
Time extension applications early
If your extension depends on tax filings or annual accounts, prepare months ahead.
Use the embassy checklist, then add a custom founder index
Embassy checklists can miss business-specific explanation. Add your own document map.
Be honest about old refusals
If you had a prior visa refusal anywhere, disclose it if asked and explain briefly.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
When needed
Even if not mandatory, a cover letter is highly useful for D-8-2.
What to include
- Your identity and nationality
- The company name and registration details
- The visa sought: D-8-2
- What the business does
- Why the business qualifies as a venture business
- Your ownership and management role
- Investment amount and proof references
- Why your presence in Korea is necessary
- Any dependents applying
- A short document index
What not to say
- “I just want to live in Korea”
- “I might also look for another job”
- vague or exaggerated claims
- unsupported revenue promises
Sample outline
- Introduction
- Business overview
- Investment details
- Venture qualification details
- Role in company
- Compliance and future plan
- List of attached evidence
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
This visa usually does not rely on a traditional personal sponsor the way family visas do. Instead, the “sponsoring basis” is often your own Korean company and corporate records.
Useful supporting documents from the Korean company
- business registration certificate
- corporation register
- shareholder list
- office lease
- representative appointment record
- tax registration proof
- invitation/explanatory letter on company letterhead
Common company-side mistakes
- no consistent company seal/signature practice
- company records showing a different director than the applicant
- registered address that cannot be explained
- no evidence the business is active
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, in many cases spouses and minor children may be eligible to accompany or join the principal applicant, subject to approval.
Who usually qualifies
- legally married spouse
- minor unmarried children
Unmarried partner recognition is not generally as straightforward as a legal spouse category unless explicitly accepted under current Korean rules for the specific status.
Typical proof required
- marriage certificate
- birth certificates
- passport copies
- proof of principal applicant’s status
- proof of financial support
- proof of cohabitation/relationship if requested
- custody/consent documents for children
Work/study rights of dependents
Dependent rights vary by dependent status and may require separate permission for employment. Do not assume spouses can freely work without checking the exact status rules.
Family timeline strategies
- file together if all documents are ready and funds clearly support the family
- or let the principal applicant secure status first, then apply for dependents
Both approaches are used lawfully depending on case strength.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
Yes, but limited to the approved business/investment activity.
You should assume:
- you may run and manage the authorized company
- you may not freely take unrelated employment
- separate permission may be required for activities outside the approved scope
Self-employment
This status is specifically tied to self-directed business/founder activity within the approved company structure.
Remote work
Remote work for unrelated foreign clients or employers is not the official purpose of this visa. This area can be risky if it is not part of the approved Korean business structure.
Internships and volunteering
Not the main purpose of this status.
Passive income
Passive investment income from outside Korea is a separate tax/legal question, not an immigration permission issue by itself.
Study rights
Incidental study or language classes may be possible, but this is not a student status for full-time study as the main purpose.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Visa is not a guarantee of admission
Even with a valid visa, final entry is decided at the border.
Carry these documents
Bring copies of:
- passport
- visa or visa grant record
- business registration certificate
- company address
- invitation or cover letter
- proof of funds if recent
- dependent relationship documents if traveling as a family
Border questions may cover
- purpose of stay
- business name
- Korean address
- how long you intend to stay
- what work you will do
Re-entry
Check re-entry implications if:
- your residence card is pending
- your extension is pending
- your passport has changed
- your status period is close to expiry
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Yes, generally if the business remains compliant and you continue to qualify.
What is often reviewed at extension
- continued company existence
- tax compliance
- revenue/activity
- employment data if relevant
- maintained investment basis
- immigration compliance
- residence registration compliance
Inside-country renewal
Usually handled in Korea through immigration if you hold valid status and apply on time.
Switching to another visa
Possible in some cases, depending on your circumstances and immigration rules, but not automatic.
Risks
If the company is inactive, undercapitalized, non-compliant, or clearly not genuine, renewal or status change can fail.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does D-8-2 lead directly to PR?
Not automatically.
Can it help toward PR?
Yes, potentially. Lawful long-term residence under qualifying statuses may contribute toward later:
- long-term residence
- permanent residence
- naturalization
But later eligibility depends on much more than just holding D-8-2, including:
- years of residence
- income and tax record
- compliance
- integration or language where relevant
- current immigration policy
Citizenship
Naturalization is indirect and requires separate eligibility. D-8-2 itself is not a citizenship visa.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax compliance
If you live and operate a business in Korea, tax obligations can arise for:
- the company
- you personally
- payroll if you hire staff
- VAT or other business taxes where applicable
Get professional tax advice. Immigration and tax status are related but not identical.
Registration obligations
Long-term residents typically must:
- register residence
- keep passport valid
- report address changes
- maintain lawful status
- renew on time
Health insurance
Health insurance obligations may arise after residence registration, depending on current Korean rules.
Overstays and violations
Do not:
- overstay
- work outside status scope
- use a sham business structure
- ignore tax filing duties
These can damage future extensions and PR prospects.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Visa waiver issue
Visa waiver rules for short visits do not replace the need for D-8-2 if your purpose is long-term venture operation.
Nationality-specific documentation
Some nationalities may face:
- added background checks
- extra financial scrutiny
- local civil document legalization requirements
Applying from a third country
Some Korean posts only accept applications from:
- nationals of that country, or
- legal residents there
Check the specific embassy website.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
A minor principal applicant is unusual and may face capacity and business-ownership complications.
Divorced/separated parents
For dependent children, expect custody and consent documentation.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Recognition can be legally sensitive and may not mirror all countries’ family-visa practice. Verify current Korean policy and the specific dependent status rules before relying on this route.
Stateless persons and refugees
Rules are highly case-specific.
Prior refusals
Prior refusals do not always bar approval, but nondisclosure can hurt credibility.
Criminal records
Not all records lead to refusal automatically, but serious or relevant offenses can.
Expired passport with valid visa
Transfer/travel handling depends on current Korean practice. Usually travel with both passports may be possible in some systems, but verify before travel.
Name change or gender-marker mismatch
Provide clear legal linkage documents to avoid identity mismatch problems.
Previous deportation/removal
This is a major red flag and requires specialist review.
29. Common myths and mistakes
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “If I register a company, I automatically get D-8-2.” | False. Company registration alone is usually not enough. |
| “Any foreign entrepreneur can use D-8-2 as a digital nomad visa.” | False. The route is for qualifying Korea-based venture business activity. |
| “I can take any side job once I get D-8-2.” | False. Work is tied to the approved business scope. |
| “A visa sticker guarantees entry.” | False. Border officers make final admission decisions. |
| “Dependents always get work rights.” | False. Dependents often need separate authorization or a different status. |
| “Extension is automatic if the company still exists.” | False. Immigration may review actual activity and compliance. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
You should receive a refusal outcome through the relevant post or immigration channel.
Is there an appeal?
Formal appeal/reconsideration options may depend on:
- whether the decision was made overseas or in Korea
- the legal basis of refusal
- local administrative procedures
Public guidance is not always uniform or detailed on embassy pages for every refusal scenario.
Reapplication
Often possible if you fix the problem.
Best reapplication approach
- identify the exact refusal issue
- do not submit the same weak file again
- add missing corporate, investment, and explanation documents
- correct inconsistencies
- explain changes clearly
Refund
Visa fees are usually non-refundable once processing begins, but check the exact official fee policy.
31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?
At immigration
You may be asked about:
- business purpose
- Korean address
- company name
- duration of stay
Soon after arrival
Long-term residents typically need to handle:
- residence registration / foreign registration
- residence card issuance
- address registration
- possibly health insurance enrollment under applicable rules
- bank account setup
- mobile number
- tax/accounting setup for the company
First 90 days
Many long-term statuses require registration within a statutory timeframe. Check your exact requirement immediately after arrival.
Pro Tip: Book your immigration appointment early if your local office uses reservation systems.
32. Real-world timeline examples
Entrepreneur founder abroad
- Weeks 1–4: incorporate, prepare investment and venture records
- Weeks 5–8: compile visa file, translations, company documents
- Weeks 9–12+: visa processing
- After approval: travel, register residence, begin operations
Existing student in Korea converting
- Month 1: confirm conversion eligibility
- Month 2: complete investment/company setup
- Month 3: file status change
- Month 4+: respond to requests, receive decision
Family case
- Principal applicant prepares and applies first
- Dependents apply after principal status approval, or together if finances and civil documents are ready
33. Ideal document pack structure
Suggested PDF/file order
- Cover letter
- Document index
- Passport and ID
- Visa form and photo
- Company registration records
- Foreign investment proof
- Venture qualification proof
- Business plan
- Financial/source-of-funds documents
- Office/address proof
- Tax/compliance documents
- Dependent documents
- Translations and certifications
File naming convention
01_Passport_Name.pdf02_Visa_Form_Name.pdf03_Business_Registration.pdf04_Investment_Proof_Bank_Remittance.pdf
Scan quality tips
- color scans
- full-page edges visible
- no shadows
- readable stamps and seals
- merge multipage documents correctly
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- Confirm D-8-2 is the right subclass
- Confirm investment threshold and venture qualification
- Prepare company registration records
- Prepare investment/source-of-funds evidence
- Prepare business plan
- Check embassy-specific legalization rules
- Check passport validity
Submission-day checklist
- Form signed
- Fee ready
- Photo compliant
- All originals/copies prepared
- Translations attached
- Cover letter included
- Dependent documents complete if applying together
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- Passport
- Appointment confirmation
- Business summary sheet
- Key financial figures memorized
- Copies of core company documents
Arrival checklist
- Carry business documents
- Know Korean address
- Know company registration details
- Book residence registration if needed
- Set up tax/accounting support
Extension/renewal checklist
- Apply before expiry
- Latest tax filings
- Active business proof
- Lease/address proof
- Corporate records updated
- Passport still valid
- Family documents updated if dependents renew too
Refusal recovery checklist
- Read refusal reason carefully
- Identify missing evidence
- Correct document inconsistencies
- Add clearer source-of-funds explanation
- Recheck subclass choice
- Reapply only when the weakness is fixed
35. FAQs
1. Is D-8-2 the main startup visa for South Korea?
It is one of the key entrepreneur/business-investment routes, specifically for venture business activity. But some startup founders may fit D-8-4 or another route better.
2. Do I need to invest KRW 100 million?
Often D-8 corporate investment guidance points to that benchmark, but you must verify the exact current requirement for D-8-2 and your structure.
3. Is company registration alone enough?
No.
4. Do I need official venture business confirmation?
Often that is highly important for D-8-2, but exact documentary form should be checked for your case.
5. Can I apply from inside Korea?
Sometimes yes, if status change is permitted and you meet conditions.
6. Can I use D-8-2 to freelance?
Not as a general freelance visa.
7. Can I work for another Korean company on D-8-2?
Usually not without separate permission or status change.
8. Can my spouse come with me?
Often yes, if approved as a dependent.
9. Can my spouse work in Korea automatically?
Do not assume so. Check the dependent status rules.
10. Are children allowed?
Usually minor children may qualify as dependents.
11. Is there an age limit?
No general public age limit is commonly stated, but minors are unusual as principal founders.
12. Is Korean language required?
Not generally as a baseline visa condition.
13. How long is the visa valid?
It varies by decision.
14. How long can I stay?
According to the approved period of stay/status; this varies.
15. Is there a quota?
No general public quota is commonly listed.
16. Do I need a police certificate?
Sometimes, depending on the consulate or case.
17. Do I need apostilles?
Often for foreign civil or corporate documents, depending on the office.
18. Can I bring my parents?
Not usually as standard dependents under this route.
19. What if my business has no revenue yet?
Early-stage startups can still qualify if the legal and investment framework is met, but renewals often require stronger operating evidence.
20. Can I switch from D-10 to D-8-2?
Potentially, if you qualify and immigration allows the change.
21. What if I changed my passport after visa issuance?
Check current entry and transfer rules before travel.
22. Can I leave Korea while an extension is pending?
This can be risky. Check with immigration before travel.
23. Will this visa lead to permanent residence?
Indirectly possible, not automatic.
24. What if my company fails?
Your immigration status may be at risk if you no longer meet D-8-2 conditions.
25. Can I apply through any embassy?
Usually you should apply through the embassy/consulate with jurisdiction over your residence, unless another post accepts your case.
26. Can I include co-founders?
Possibly, but each person’s immigration basis must be documented carefully.
27. Can I use nominee ownership?
Do not use opaque or misleading ownership structures. Immigration will want the real picture.
28. Is an office lease required?
Often very helpful and sometimes practically necessary to show real operations.
29. Do I need to show source of funds?
Yes, especially for large or recent deposits.
30. Can I study Korean while on D-8-2?
Incidental study may be possible, but this is not a study visa.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to South Korea visas, immigration, foreign investment, and business setup. Because embassy pages can vary by jurisdiction, always check the page for the embassy or consulate serving your place of residence.
Primary official sources
-
South Korea Visa Portal
https://www.visa.go.kr/ -
Hi Korea e-Government for Foreigners
https://www.hikorea.go.kr/ -
Ministry of Justice, Republic of Korea
https://www.moj.go.kr/ -
KOTRA Invest Korea
https://www.investkorea.org/ -
Ministry of SMEs and Startups
https://www.mss.go.kr/
Additional official pages
-
Korean Immigration Service information via Hi Korea
https://www.hikorea.go.kr/Main.pt -
South Korea Visa Navigator / Visa information search
https://www.visa.go.kr/openPage.do?MENU_ID=10101 -
Ministry of Government Legislation, Korea Law translation/search
https://www.law.go.kr/ -
Overseas Mission Finder, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
https://www.mofa.go.kr/eng/wpge/m_4906/contents.do -
Example Korean embassy/consulate network entry point
https://www.mofa.go.kr/eng/index.do
Warning: Embassy-specific document lists and fees may differ. Use the Ministry of Foreign Affairs mission finder to locate the exact embassy/consulate responsible for your residence and verify its visa page.
37. Final verdict
The South Korea D-8-2 Business Venture Visa is best for serious foreign startup founders and entrepreneur-investors who are ready to establish and actively operate a real venture business in Korea.
Biggest benefits
- lawful long-term residence
- ability to run your startup in Korea
- possible family accompaniment
- possible long-term immigration value if the business succeeds and you remain compliant
Biggest risks
- choosing the wrong D-8 subtype
- assuming incorporation alone is enough
- weak investment evidence
- unclear source of funds
- failure to show true venture business substance
- poor renewal preparation
Top preparation advice
- confirm the exact D-8 subtype before filing
- build a clean, indexed corporate and financial evidence pack
- explain your fund flows clearly
- show that the business is real, active, and Korea-based
- verify embassy-specific legalization and fee rules
When to consider another visa
Consider another route if you are:
- only visiting for meetings
- looking for regular employment
- mainly studying
- just wanting to live in Korea while working remotely for a foreign employer
- using a startup preparatory route rather than an already qualified venture operation
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- The exact current minimum investment requirement applicable to your D-8-2 structure
- Whether your business must hold formal venture business confirmation at filing or only by a later stage
- Whether your case fits D-8-2 or another subtype such as D-8-1 or D-8-4
- The latest embassy-specific visa fee
- Whether the embassy serving your residence requires apostilles, notarization, or Korean translations
- Whether a police certificate is required for your nationality and place of application
- Whether biometrics or interview are mandatory at your consulate
- Current residence card/foreign registration timelines after arrival
- Whether dependents may apply together or only after principal approval at your post
- Current work rights for dependents
- Any re-entry restrictions if an extension or status change is pending
- Any recent changes to foreign investment law, venture business recognition, or immigration enforcement
- Whether your local Korean embassy/consulate accepts applications from third-country residents
- Whether same-sex spouse/partner recognition is accepted in your exact family-status scenario
- Current tax and national health insurance enrollment obligations for new long-term residents and company directors