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Short Description: Complete guide to South Korea’s D-10-2 Business Startup Preparation Visa: eligibility, documents, process, work limits, switching, family, and risks.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country South Korea
Visa name Business Startup Preparation Visa
Visa short name D-10-2
Category Long-stay stay status / visa for startup preparation
Main purpose Preparing to establish a business or startup in South Korea
Typical applicant Foreign entrepreneur or founder planning to launch a business in Korea
Validity Commonly issued as a single-entry visa for entry, with stay managed by status/period granted; exact issuance format can vary by consulate
Stay duration Typically time-limited and subject to immigration approval; exact initial period can vary and must be checked on current official notice/decision
Entries allowed Often single entry at visa issuance; re-entry conditions after registration can depend on status and re-entry rules
Extension possible? Yes, possible in some cases if eligibility continues and immigration approves
Work allowed? Limited; this route is for startup preparation, not general employment
Study allowed? Limited; not the main purpose of this status
Family allowed? Not usually the primary route for immediate dependent sponsorship at the preparation stage; depends on later status and immigration approval
PR path? Possible indirectly, usually after switching to a business/investment-related long-term status and meeting later residence requirements
Citizenship path? Indirect only, through later long-term lawful residence and naturalization rules

The D-10-2 Business Startup Preparation Visa is a South Korean immigration route for foreigners who want to prepare to start a business in Korea.

It exists to let a prospective founder stay in Korea lawfully while they:

  • develop a startup plan,
  • prepare incorporation or registration,
  • seek investment,
  • complete startup incubation or entrepreneurship programs,
  • and work toward moving into a business-operating status such as D-8 where eligible.

In South Korea’s immigration system, D-10 is broadly associated with a job-seeking / training / startup-preparation category. The D-10-2 subcategory is specifically tied to business startup preparation.

This route is best understood as a long-stay status category that is usually connected to a visa issuance process for entry and then immigration management inside Korea. In practice, applicants may encounter it as:

  • a consular visa application abroad,
  • a status change inside Korea if eligible,
  • or an extension of stay through Korean immigration.

Official and commonly used names

You may see it described as:

  • D-10-2
  • Business Startup Preparation
  • Startup Preparation Visa
  • Korean-language references under the broader 구직 (D-10) framework, with startup-preparation sub-classification

How it fits into Korea’s visa system

It sits between short-term business travel and full business operation:

  • It is not a tourist visa.
  • It is not the main visa for running an already established company.
  • It is usually a pre-launch or pre-incorporation/pre-operation route.

Warning: South Korea’s immigration system uses both visa labels and stay-status labels. The exact way the D-10-2 route is described can differ between a consulate abroad and immigration inside Korea. Always verify the current official classification at the consulate or immigration office handling your case.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Founders and entrepreneurs

This is the main target group.

You may be a good fit if you:

  • plan to create a startup in Korea,
  • want time in Korea to prepare launch documents,
  • are joining a recognized startup support or incubation framework,
  • or intend to transition to an entrepreneur/business-investment route later.

Investors with an active startup role

If you are not just passively investing but are preparing to personally establish and operate a startup, this route may be relevant.

Students in Korea planning a startup

Some graduates or current foreign residents in Korea may explore D-10-2 if they are moving from study toward startup preparation, subject to immigration rules on change of status.

Researchers or technical founders

Researchers commercializing technology in Korea may use this route if they are building a startup rather than taking employment.

Usually not the right visa for these groups

Tourists

If your purpose is sightseeing, use the relevant visitor route, not D-10-2.

Ordinary business visitors

If you only need to attend meetings, conferences, negotiations, or short market research visits, a short-term business/visitor route may be more appropriate.

Employees with a job offer

If a Korean company wants to hire you, you usually need the proper work visa/status such as an E-series category, not D-10-2.

General job seekers

South Korea also has broader D-10 job-seeking use cases, but D-10-2 is specifically about startup preparation, not ordinary employment search.

Digital nomads

If your plan is simply to live in Korea while working remotely for a foreign company, D-10-2 is generally the wrong category.

Full-time students

If your main purpose is study, use the correct student route.

Spouses and children

This is generally not the main first-choice route for dependents. Family options usually become clearer after the principal applicant moves to a more stable long-term status.

Retirees

This is not a retirement route.

Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists

These groups usually have other specific categories.

Transit passengers

Not applicable.

Medical travelers

Use the appropriate medical or visitor route if that is the real purpose.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Use diplomatic/official visa channels.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

Officially and practically, D-10-2 is for preparing to start a business in South Korea. This can include:

  • drafting and refining a business plan,
  • meeting startup support institutions,
  • market and feasibility preparation connected to actual business setup,
  • preparing incorporation or business registration,
  • seeking startup investment,
  • participating in startup incubators or entrepreneurship support programs,
  • preparing for transition to a business operation status.

Activities that may be allowed only if incidental

These areas are often misunderstood:

  • attending startup-related meetings,
  • networking,
  • taking limited entrepreneurship training,
  • participating in lawful incubator activities,
  • performing preparatory tasks before launch.

These are generally acceptable if they are tied to startup preparation and not disguised employment.

Prohibited or risky uses

General employment

This visa is not for ordinary salaried work.

Working for a Korean employer

Usually not permitted unless separately authorized under applicable immigration rules.

Freelancing or side gigs

Not the intended purpose. This is risky unless clearly permitted by immigration.

Remote work

Korean rules are not always publicly detailed on every remote-work scenario. If your main purpose is startup preparation but you continue foreign remote work, this can be a grey area and should be checked directly with immigration.

Full-time study

Not the main use.

Paid performances, journalism, religious activity

Generally not covered.

Volunteering

Only if truly incidental and lawful. Structured or labor-like volunteering can be problematic if it resembles unauthorized work.

Marriage/family reunion

Not the primary purpose.

Medical treatment

Not the intended purpose.

Long-term residence without startup preparation

Not allowed.

Common misunderstandings

Myth: “I can use D-10-2 to run any business immediately.” Fact: This is a preparation route. Operating an established business may require a different status, often in the D-8 family.

Myth: “I can work part-time for expenses.” Fact: Do not assume this. Employment rules are restricted and should be confirmed with immigration.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Core classification

Item Description
Main code D-10
Relevant sub-type D-10-2
Common English label Business Startup Preparation
Broad category Job-seeking / training / startup-preparation status
Related future category Often D-8 business/investment routes

Related and easily confused categories

D-10-1

Often associated with general job-seeking or training-related use under the D-10 framework.

D-8

Business investment / company management routes for foreigners operating qualifying businesses in Korea.

C-3 short-term business/visitor

For short visits, meetings, conferences, and limited business visitor purposes, not long-term startup preparation.

E-series work statuses

For employment, not startup preparation.

Warning: Naming conventions in English summaries can vary slightly between official pages. The code D-10-2 is the most important identifier.

5. Eligibility criteria

Official rules can be spread across immigration notices, Hi Korea guidance, consular instructions, and K-point/startup program materials. Some details are not always published on one single page in English. Where exact current thresholds are not publicly consolidated, this guide flags that clearly.

Core eligibility idea

You generally need to show that you are a genuine startup applicant with a plausible plan to prepare and launch a business in Korea.

Typical eligibility factors

Nationality

No universal public rule suggests D-10-2 is restricted to only a few nationalities, but:

  • visa issuance procedures can vary by nationality,
  • some nationalities may face more document scrutiny,
  • some applicants may need additional verification based on local consular practice.

Passport validity

You need a valid passport. Many consulates expect sufficient remaining validity, often at least 6 months, but always follow the current mission-specific rule.

Age

Public guidance may sometimes refer to startup or points-based youth/graduate profiles, but a universal age ceiling is not clearly stated on every official page for all D-10-2 applicants. Check current immigration guidance.

Education

Education may be relevant, especially where startup capacity, innovation credentials, or points-based review is involved.

Language

Korean language ability may strengthen the application, but it is not always publicly stated as a universal mandatory requirement for every D-10-2 case.

Work experience

Useful, especially if tied to the proposed business field.

Sponsorship or invitation

Not always mandatory in the same way as work visas, but support from:

  • a startup incubator,
  • university startup center,
  • government-recognized startup body,
  • accelerator,
  • or relevant institutional partner

can be very important where applicable.

Job offer

Not required. This is not an employment visa.

Points requirement

Some startup-preparation pathways in Korea have historically interacted with points systems, entrepreneurship programs, or OASIS-type support structures. However, the exact currently applicable point or program requirement must be checked on official immigration/startup pages because these rules can change.

Business plan

This is usually central. You may need to present:

  • proposed business model,
  • market need,
  • implementation plan,
  • expected funding,
  • founder qualifications,
  • Korean market relevance.

Financial capacity

You usually must show you can support yourself during the preparation period.

Accommodation proof

Often required or helpful, especially when applying abroad or after arrival.

Onward/return planning

Consular officers may want to understand your legal status path if the startup does not proceed.

Health / medical

A medical certificate may or may not be required depending on nationality, duration, or consular instructions. Check the specific mission.

Character / criminal record

A criminal record certificate is not always listed as universal for every visa filing, but can be requested in some cases or during later status processes.

Insurance

Not always listed as a universal pre-issuance rule for every D-10-2 filing, but having private insurance is prudent and may be requested in some situations.

Biometrics

Depends on application route and location.

Intent requirement

You must show genuine intent to prepare a business startup in Korea, not use the route as a workaround for tourism or unauthorized work.

Local registration

After arrival, long-stay foreign nationals generally need to register and obtain an Alien Registration Card / Residence Card equivalent process under current Korean rules.

Embassy-specific rules

Very important. South Korean embassies and consulates often publish their own document checklists and local procedures. Always review the mission handling your case.

Eligibility matrix

Factor Usually relevant? Notes
Genuine startup plan Yes Core requirement
Business plan Yes Usually essential
Sufficient funds Yes Strongly expected
Academic background Often Can support credibility
Work/industry experience Often Helpful, sometimes important
Korean language Sometimes Helpful but not always mandatory
Incubator/accelerator support Sometimes to often Can materially strengthen file
Points/program participation Possible Verify current official route
Job offer No Not required
Family relationship proof Only if applying with family later Not usually primary filing item
Medical/police documents Variable Mission- and case-specific

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be refused if:

  • your purpose is actually tourism or employment,
  • your business plan is vague, generic, or not credible,
  • you lack enough funds to support the preparation stage,
  • your documents conflict with each other,
  • your startup field appears unrealistic or unresearched,
  • you cannot explain why Korea is the right place for the business,
  • you have prior overstays or immigration violations,
  • your passport or civil documents are defective,
  • you file under the wrong category.

Common red flags

  • “I want to live in Korea and maybe start something later.”
  • no clear business model,
  • no evidence of relevant skills,
  • copied or template business plan,
  • no explanation of expected customers,
  • suspicious bank deposits,
  • inability to explain source of funds,
  • fake or unverifiable incubator letters,
  • claiming startup preparation while also presenting an employment plan.

Interview and submission mistakes

  • contradicting your own application,
  • not understanding your startup idea,
  • confusing D-10-2 with D-8,
  • saying you will “work while figuring things out,”
  • submitting poor translations,
  • leaving unexplained gaps in education or employment history.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • Lets you stay in Korea for startup preparation lawfully.
  • Creates a bridge from concept stage to possible business-operation status.
  • Useful for founders who need to be in Korea to network, incorporate, and prepare launch.
  • Can support participation in Korea’s startup ecosystem.
  • May allow later transition to another long-stay business status if requirements are met.

Strategic benefits

  • better access to local investors, accelerators, and partners,
  • easier in-country preparation than repeated short business trips,
  • legal residence while preparing registration and commercialization.

Family and long-term benefits

Direct family benefits at the D-10-2 stage are limited compared with more established long-term statuses, but successful transition to a stronger status later may improve:

  • dependent options,
  • residence continuity,
  • long-term settlement prospects.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Main restrictions

  • Not a general work visa.
  • Not intended for unrestricted freelancing.
  • Not meant for indefinite residence without progress.
  • Usually requires proof of continuing startup-preparation purpose for extension.
  • Subject to address and registration obligations after arrival.

Compliance limits

You may need to report:

  • address changes,
  • passport changes,
  • status-related changes,
  • and extension applications before expiry.

Family limitations

Family sponsorship may be limited or impractical at the early preparation stage unless and until you move to a more stable long-term status.

Public-benefit restrictions

This is not a route designed around public benefits access.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

General rule

For Korean visas, the visa validity period and the period of stay are not always the same thing.

  • The visa lets you seek entry.
  • The immigration officer and/or issued status controls the lawful stay period.

D-10-2 practical pattern

Exact validity and stay duration can vary depending on:

  • whether you apply abroad or change status in Korea,
  • your nationality,
  • consular issuance practice,
  • current immigration policy,
  • your supporting startup documents.

Historically, D-10-related statuses are often granted for a limited period with possible extension if the applicant remains eligible. However, because exact initial grant periods can change, verify the current official rule before applying.

Entry type

  • Often issued for single entry abroad.
  • After residence registration, re-entry rules may differ under current immigration practice.

Stay calculation

Your lawful stay is based on:

  • the stay period stamped or recorded at entry, or
  • the period granted by immigration on change/extension.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • fines,
  • refusal of future visas,
  • departure orders,
  • removal or re-entry restrictions.

Renewal timing

Apply for extension before expiry, ideally with enough lead time to resolve document issues.

10. Complete document checklist

Because embassy and immigration office requirements vary, use this as a master checklist and then confirm your specific official mission list.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official visa form Starts the case Old version, unsigned form
Passport Valid travel document Identity and nationality Insufficient validity, damage
Passport photo Recent photo Identity verification Wrong size/background
Statement of purpose / cover letter Your explanation Clarifies startup plan Too vague, too long, inconsistent
Business plan Detailed startup proposal Core proof of purpose Generic plan, no Korea-specific logic

B. Identity/travel documents

  • passport bio page copy,
  • prior Korean visa/status records if any,
  • national ID copy where requested,
  • proof of legal residence in country of application if applying from a third country.

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements,
  • savings proof,
  • source of funds explanation,
  • scholarship/support evidence if relevant,
  • sponsor support documents if accepted in your case.

D. Employment/business documents

  • CV or resume,
  • prior employment certificates,
  • professional licenses if relevant,
  • startup/incubator invitation or support letter,
  • corporate planning documents if already drafted,
  • intellectual property evidence if relevant.

E. Education documents

  • degree certificates,
  • transcripts,
  • student/graduation certificates if relevant,
  • startup training completion certificates where applicable.

F. Relationship/family documents

Only if applying with or later for family:

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificates,
  • custody documents,
  • parental consent documents for minors.

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • temporary accommodation booking or lease,
  • address in Korea if known,
  • possible travel itinerary if requested.

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Where applicable:

  • incubator acceptance letter,
  • accelerator invitation,
  • university startup center confirmation,
  • support letter from Korean institution,
  • business cooperation documents.

I. Health/insurance documents

  • insurance proof if requested,
  • health certificate where mission-specific,
  • TB or other medical paperwork if required by specific post.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or consulate:

  • criminal record certificate,
  • apostilled degree,
  • certified translations,
  • local residence permit copy,
  • proof of legal stay in country of application.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

Not usually central for an initial D-10-2 filing, but if relevant:

  • birth certificate,
  • parental consent,
  • custody orders,
  • school records.

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Documents not in Korean or English may need translation. Some civil or academic documents may need:

  • notarization,
  • apostille,
  • or consular legalization.

Warning: Requirements vary widely by document type and by mission. Do not assume a simple translation is enough.

M. Photo specifications

Use the current mission’s official photo rules. Typical issues include:

  • incorrect size,
  • old photo,
  • shadows,
  • glasses glare,
  • non-white background.

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

A single universally published English-language amount for all D-10-2 applicants is not always clearly presented across official sources. In practice, applicants should expect to prove they can support themselves during the startup preparation stage.

What immigration wants to see

  • enough money for living costs,
  • enough money to realistically prepare the business,
  • lawful source of funds,
  • financial stability consistent with your plan.

Acceptable proof

  • personal bank statements,
  • savings certificates,
  • deposit balance certificates,
  • funding letters,
  • investment commitments where genuine and documented,
  • sponsor support evidence if accepted.

Source of funds

Be ready to explain:

  • salary savings,
  • business income,
  • sale of assets,
  • family support,
  • grants or startup funding.

Large deposits

If there are recent large deposits, include explanation and evidence.

Pro Tip: A clean 3–6 month bank history with stable balances is usually stronger than a last-minute lump sum with no explanation.

Dependents

If bringing family later, expect higher proof-of-support demands, even if no fixed public amount is listed.

Hidden costs

Budget for:

  • translations,
  • apostilles,
  • relocation,
  • housing deposits in Korea,
  • business registration costs,
  • immigration renewal fees.

12. Fees and total cost

Exact fees can change and consulates may update local fee schedules. Always check the latest official fee page.

Typical cost categories

Cost item Official status
Visa application fee Varies by nationality, reciprocity, visa validity, and mission
Processing/service fee May apply depending on submission channel
Biometrics fee If applicable by location/process
Health exam fee If required
Police certificate cost Paid to issuing authority if required
Translation/notary/apostille Variable, often significant
Courier fee If passport return uses courier
Insurance cost If purchased privately
Renewal/change-of-status fee Payable in Korea if extending/changing status
Residence card/registration-related fee May apply under current rules

Warning: South Korean consular fees often follow reciprocity schedules and can differ by nationality and visa type. Do not rely on unofficial fee tables.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa

Check whether your purpose is truly startup preparation rather than tourism, short business, or direct business operation.

2. Gather official checklist

Use:

  • the Korean embassy/consulate handling your case,
  • Hi Korea,
  • and where relevant, immigration or startup program guidance.

3. Prepare core file

Build:

  • application form,
  • passport,
  • photo,
  • business plan,
  • financial evidence,
  • supporting credentials,
  • support/invitation letters.

4. Complete form

This may be paper-based or mission-specific.

5. Pay fees

Follow the consulate’s accepted payment method.

6. Book appointment if required

Some missions require appointments; some accept walk-ins; some use visa portals.

7. Submit application

Submit in person or through the permitted channel.

8. Provide biometrics/interview if required

Follow local instructions.

9. Track application

If the mission offers tracking, use it. Otherwise wait for contact.

10. Respond to additional document requests

Do this quickly and completely.

11. Receive decision

If approved, check:

  • visa label,
  • category,
  • validity,
  • number of entries,
  • passport details.

12. Travel to Korea

Carry supporting documents in hand luggage.

13. Post-arrival registration

Long-stay foreign nationals generally need foreigner registration within the legal deadline.

14. Apply for extension or change later if needed

Before expiry, if moving to incorporation/operation stage or continuing preparation.

14. Processing time

There is no single globally fixed processing time for D-10-2 published for all applicants.

What affects timing

  • embassy workload,
  • nationality screening,
  • completeness of documents,
  • verification of startup support letters,
  • interview requirement,
  • background/security checks,
  • seasonal peaks.

Practical expectation

Some cases may be processed in a few working days or weeks; others take longer if additional review is needed.

Warning: Do not book non-refundable travel until your visa is issued, unless the embassy explicitly advises otherwise.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

May be required depending on location and process.

Interview

Not every applicant is interviewed, but interviews are possible.

Typical interview questions

  • What business do you plan to start?
  • Why in Korea?
  • How will you fund it?
  • What is your timeline?
  • What relevant experience do you have?
  • Why are you applying for D-10-2 rather than another visa?

Medical

Mission-specific. Not universally published as mandatory for every case.

Police clearance

Can be requested in some circumstances or by some posts.

Exemptions

These depend on local procedure and nationality; confirm with your mission.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval-rate statistics for D-10-2 are not readily published in a single public source.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals appear linked to:

  • weak business plan,
  • insufficient financial credibility,
  • wrong visa category,
  • inconsistent documents,
  • inability to prove genuine startup preparation,
  • poor explanation of why Korea is central to the venture.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Build a credible business narrative

Your file should answer:

  • What is the product or service?
  • Why Korea?
  • Why you?
  • Why now?
  • How will the business be funded?
  • What is the timeline from preparation to launch?

Use a sharp cover letter

Include:

  • your background,
  • the business concept,
  • the Korean market rationale,
  • current stage of preparation,
  • expected next immigration step.

Show funds clearly

Use organized statements and explain unusual deposits.

Add proof of traction if available

Helpful items include:

  • prototype,
  • pitch deck,
  • patents,
  • prior revenue,
  • founder team profiles,
  • incubator acceptance,
  • letters of interest from partners or customers.

Keep translations professional

Poor translations create unnecessary doubt.

Be consistent

Your form, business plan, CV, and interview answers should align.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Organize the file like an investor pack

Officers reviewing startup files respond better to clear structure.

Suggested order:

  1. cover letter,
  2. application form,
  3. passport and ID,
  4. business plan,
  5. founder CV,
  6. financial proof,
  7. incubator/support documents,
  8. education/employment proof,
  9. accommodation and other supporting evidence.

Explain large deposits upfront

Do not wait for the consulate to ask.

Make Korea-specific arguments

A generic “Asia expansion” story is weaker than a concrete reason such as:

  • Korean supply chain access,
  • R&D ecosystem,
  • target customer base,
  • startup support linkage,
  • university/accelerator ties.

Use a short executive summary

Put a 1-page business summary before the full plan.

Apply with enough runway

Do not apply right before intended travel if your documents are complex.

If you had a prior refusal

Disclose it honestly where required and show what changed.

Contact the embassy only for real ambiguities

Do not send repeated status-check emails too early.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When it is needed

Even if not explicitly mandatory, it is highly recommended.

What to include

Suggested structure

  1. who you are,
  2. what business you plan to prepare,
  3. why Korea,
  4. current stage of development,
  5. proof of qualifications,
  6. proof of funds,
  7. intended next steps,
  8. compliance statement.

What not to say

  • “I will look for work if the startup does not work out.”
  • “I mainly want to live in Korea.”
  • vague lifestyle motivations without business substance.

Tone

Professional, factual, concise.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Is a sponsor required?

Not always in the strict legal sense, but a Korean institutional supporter can significantly help.

Useful inviters/supporters

  • startup incubators,
  • accelerators,
  • university entrepreneurship centers,
  • government-backed startup programs,
  • Korean business partners.

What their letter should include

  • organization details,
  • contact person,
  • relationship to applicant,
  • nature of support,
  • expected startup/preparation activities,
  • timeline,
  • confirmation that the applicant is participating in or connected to a real startup-support arrangement.

Sponsor mistakes

  • vague one-line invitations,
  • no signature or contact details,
  • no explanation of the program,
  • using a commercial intermediary instead of a genuine institution.

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Not usually the strongest or simplest feature of the D-10-2 stage. Family accompaniment may be limited in practice until the principal applicant holds a more stable long-term status.

Spouses and children

Possible options depend on:

  • current immigration policy,
  • principal applicant’s granted stay period,
  • proof of support,
  • and the specific family visa route available.

Proof required

If family applications are pursued later, expect:

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificate,
  • proof of relationship genuineness,
  • proof of funds,
  • housing evidence.

Unmarried partners

South Korea’s formal immigration recognition of unmarried partners is limited compared with marriage-based cases. Same-sex or unmarried partnership treatment can be difficult and highly case-specific.

Children

Minor children usually need:

  • birth certificate,
  • passport,
  • parental consent if only one parent is involved,
  • custody documentation where applicable.

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

Work rights

Activity Usually allowed? Notes
Startup preparation Yes Core purpose
General employment No / highly restricted Not the intended use
Part-time work Not assumed Must not be assumed lawful
Self-employment unrelated to approved startup purpose Risky / generally not intended Could breach status
Paid local services Usually not appropriate Check immigration rules

Study rights

  • Short entrepreneurship-related learning connected to the startup may be acceptable.
  • Full academic study is not the main purpose.

Business activity rules

Usually acceptable:

  • planning,
  • research,
  • incorporation preparation,
  • investor meetings,
  • startup program participation.

Usually not safe to assume acceptable:

  • open-ended revenue-generating activity before proper status,
  • disguised labor,
  • taking paid local assignments.

Remote work

This is a grey area unless specifically authorized under current Korean policy. Do not assume D-10-2 permits ongoing foreign remote employment.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Visa is not a guarantee of admission

Even with a visa, final admission is decided at the border.

Carry these documents

Bring hard copies of:

  • passport,
  • visa,
  • business plan summary,
  • accommodation details,
  • financial proof,
  • inviter/support letter,
  • return or onward planning if available.

Border questions may include

  • What is the purpose of your stay?
  • Where will you stay?
  • Who are you meeting?
  • How will you support yourself?

Re-entry

Check current re-entry rules after registration, especially if you plan international trips during your stay.

New passport issue

If your passport changes, immigration records may need updating.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, potentially, if you still qualify and can show genuine progress in startup preparation.

What may help extension

  • updated business plan,
  • proof of startup program participation,
  • incorporation progress,
  • investor meetings,
  • product development evidence,
  • continued financial sufficiency.

Switching to another visa

A major goal is often to switch from D-10-2 to a more appropriate business-operation category, commonly in the D-8 family, if eligibility is met.

Inside-country changes

South Korea permits certain status changes and extensions through immigration, but eligibility depends on current status, lawful stay, and supporting documents.

Risks

Do not wait until the last minute. Falling out of status can harm future applications.

Extension/switching options table

Situation Possible? Notes
Extend D-10-2 Yes, potentially Must show continued qualification
Switch to D-8 Often the intended progression Must meet D-8 criteria
Switch to work visa Possible in some cases Need separate qualifying job and employer
Convert to tourist Usually not a strategic route Check current rules
Stay without action after expiry No Overstay risk

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does D-10-2 itself lead directly to PR?

Usually not directly.

Indirect pathway

It may help indirectly if you later move to a qualifying long-term status and build lawful residence.

Likely pathway structure

D-10-2 -> qualifying business/other long-term status -> residence accumulation -> possible permanent residence/naturalization if all criteria are later met.

Important caveat

Whether time on D-10-2 counts fully toward permanent residence or naturalization can depend on the specific later category and current nationality law/immigration rules. Verify before planning long-term settlement around it.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Immigration compliance

You must:

  • maintain valid status,
  • comply with activity limits,
  • register as required,
  • update address changes,
  • avoid unauthorized work.

Tax issues

If you spend substantial time in Korea or generate income connected to Korea, tax questions may arise.

Warning: Immigration permission and tax treatment are separate. A person can be compliant on one and not the other.

Registration obligations

Long-stay foreign nationals generally need foreigner registration within the official deadline after arrival.

Insurance and social systems

National health insurance or other obligations may apply depending on residence duration and status. Check current post-arrival rules.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waiver

Visa waiver rules for tourists do not replace the need for the proper long-stay D-10-2 route.

Nationality differences

Rules may vary by:

  • consular jurisdiction,
  • reciprocity fee schedules,
  • document legalization requirements,
  • local residence proof rules for third-country applicants,
  • extra scrutiny for certain passports.

Special passports

Diplomatic/official passports follow different procedures.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not a typical visa for minors unless part of a family scenario and very unusual startup context.

Divorced or separated parents

If a child is involved later, custody and consent documents are essential.

Same-sex spouses/partners

This remains a sensitive and evolving area in Korean immigration practice. Formal marriage recognition and dependent treatment may be limited depending on legal recognition and the exact facts.

Stateless persons or refugees

Possible only on a highly case-specific basis with additional identity/legal stay documentation.

Prior refusals

Must be handled honestly. A prior refusal does not automatically bar approval if the issue is fixed.

Overstays and removals

Past Korean or foreign immigration violations can seriously affect the case.

Applying from a third country

Often possible only if you can prove lawful residence there; some consulates restrict non-residents.

Name/gender marker mismatch

Provide legal change documents and consistent translated records.

Military service records

May matter if requested by your home-country documentation process or by the consulate.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
D-10-2 is just a long tourist visa No. It is for startup preparation
I can work any part-time job on D-10-2 Do not assume this; general work is restricted
A basic startup idea is enough You usually need a credible, documented plan
Once approved, I can stay indefinitely No. Stay is time-limited and must be extended or changed
Any investor can sponsor me Only genuine, documented support helps; immigration decides
Family can always join immediately Not guaranteed and often not straightforward at this stage
A visa label guarantees entry Border officers still make final admission decisions

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

If refused

You should receive a refusal outcome, though the level of detail can vary.

Is there an appeal?

Formal appeal or reconsideration options can be limited and case-specific in visa matters. In many cases, applicants instead reapply with stronger evidence.

When to reapply

Reapply only after fixing the refusal reason:

  • stronger business plan,
  • clearer funds,
  • better support letters,
  • corrected translations,
  • proper category selection.

Fees

Visa fees are often non-refundable after processing begins.

Practical approach

If the refusal reason is unclear, request clarification where the mission allows and review all submitted materials before reapplying.

31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?

At the airport

Expect immigration inspection. Be ready to explain your startup plan briefly.

After entry

For long stays, you generally need to:

  • secure an address,
  • complete foreigner registration within the legal deadline,
  • obtain your residence card/registration record,
  • keep immigration updated on changes.

Early post-arrival tasks

Within the first weeks, many applicants also:

  • open a bank account,
  • get a SIM card,
  • arrange housing,
  • connect with startup support organizations,
  • begin incorporation or business preparation steps.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Entrepreneur abroad applying for D-10-2

  • Weeks 1–3: Develop business plan, collect education and financial records
  • Week 4: Get incubator/support letter
  • Week 5: Submit visa application
  • Weeks 6–9: Processing and possible additional document request
  • Week 10: Visa issued
  • Week 11: Enter Korea
  • First 90 days or applicable deadline: Registration and startup preparation milestones

Student in Korea changing pathway

  • Month 1: Graduation or end of current program
  • Month 1–2: Prepare startup documents
  • Month 2: Apply for status change if eligible
  • Month 2–3: Immigration review
  • After approval: Continue startup preparation lawfully

Founder aiming to switch to D-8 later

  • D-10-2 approval
  • 3–6 months of preparation
  • company setup / investment structuring
  • D-8 application once criteria are met

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. document index,
  2. cover letter,
  3. application form,
  4. passport copy,
  5. photo,
  6. CV,
  7. business plan,
  8. business summary,
  9. financial documents,
  10. incubator/invitation/support letters,
  11. education documents,
  12. employment/history documents,
  13. accommodation proof,
  14. translations and certifications.

Naming convention

Use clear filenames such as:

  • 01_Passport.pdf
  • 02_Application_Form.pdf
  • 03_Cover_Letter.pdf
  • 04_Business_Plan.pdf
  • 05_Bank_Statements_Jan-Mar_2026.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • full color,
  • readable edges,
  • no cut-off pages,
  • one PDF per category unless instructed otherwise.

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm D-10-2 is the correct route
  • Check embassy-specific checklist
  • Draft a Korea-specific business plan
  • Gather proof of funds
  • Prepare passport-validity margin
  • Check translation/apostille needs
  • Prepare cover letter

Submission-day checklist

  • Correct application form
  • Passport
  • Photo
  • Fee payment method
  • Originals and copies
  • Appointment confirmation if needed
  • Organized document pack

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment notice
  • Copy of application
  • Business plan summary
  • Support letter
  • Financial summary
  • Honest, consistent answers

Arrival checklist

  • Carry key documents in hand luggage
  • Confirm address
  • Understand registration deadline
  • Keep visa copy and support documents
  • Start compliance calendar

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Apply before expiry
  • Show startup progress
  • Updated funds proof
  • Updated housing proof
  • Updated business documents
  • Registration card/passport details ready

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal carefully
  • Identify exact weak points
  • Fix category mismatch
  • Upgrade business evidence
  • Explain prior issues honestly
  • Reapply only when materially stronger

35. FAQs

1. Is D-10-2 the same as a tourist visa?

No. It is a long-stay startup-preparation route.

2. Can I use D-10-2 to look for any job in Korea?

Not as a general rule. This subcategory is for startup preparation.

3. Can I launch a company immediately after arrival?

You may begin lawful preparation, but full operating activity may require another status depending on the business stage.

4. Is a business plan mandatory?

In practice, usually yes or very close to essential.

5. Do I need an incubator or accelerator letter?

Not always, but it can greatly strengthen the case.

6. Is there an official minimum bank balance?

A single universally published amount is not always clearly available; check current official guidance.

7. Can I apply from a country where I am not a citizen?

Sometimes, if you are legally resident there. Some consulates limit non-resident applications.

8. Can I bring my spouse immediately?

Not automatically. Family options can be limited at the D-10-2 stage.

9. Can my spouse work if they join me?

That depends on the family status granted, if any. Do not assume work rights.

10. How long is D-10-2 granted for?

The exact period can vary and must be confirmed from current official guidance.

11. Can I extend D-10-2?

Often yes, if you still qualify and show progress.

12. Can I switch from D-10-2 to D-8?

Often that is the intended next step, if you meet D-8 rules.

13. Can I work remotely for my foreign company on D-10-2?

This is a grey area unless clearly authorized. Get official confirmation before relying on it.

14. Can I do paid consulting on the side?

Do not assume this is allowed. It may be unauthorized work.

15. Do I need Korean language ability?

Not always as a strict public rule, but it can help.

16. Will prior visa refusals hurt me?

They can, but they are not always fatal if disclosed properly and resolved.

17. What if I had a previous overstay in Korea?

That can significantly affect approval and should be addressed honestly.

18. Is an interview always required?

No, but it may be requested.

19. Do I need health insurance before applying?

Not always officially required for all cases, but it is wise and may be requested.

20. Can I study Korean language while on D-10-2?

Limited study incidental to your stay may be possible, but full-time study is not the main purpose.

21. What if my startup idea changes after arrival?

Minor evolution may be normal, but a complete change in purpose can raise issues. Keep immigration implications in mind.

22. Can I leave Korea and re-enter on D-10-2?

Possibly, but check your entry/re-entry conditions and registration status.

23. What happens if my passport expires?

Renew it and update immigration records as required.

24. Do I need apostilles on all documents?

No. It depends on the document type and consular requirements.

25. Can I submit photocopies only?

Usually you need originals for inspection plus copies, but requirements vary by mission.

26. Can I use this route for a restaurant or retail business?

Possibly, but you still need a credible plan and later compliance with the proper business-operation status rules.

27. Is this visa good for passive investors?

Usually no. It is more suited to active founders preparing a business.

28. Does time on D-10-2 count toward permanent residence?

Not necessarily in a straightforward way; verify how later status and residence counting rules apply.

29. Can I apply if I just graduated in Korea?

Possibly, especially if moving into startup preparation, but verify current change-of-status rules.

30. Can I stay in Korea while a late extension is pending?

Do not rely on this without confirming current immigration filing rules and deadlines.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to Korean visas, immigration status management, startup visa policy context, and overseas mission procedures.

Primary official sources

  • Korea Visa Portal: official visa information and application guidance
    https://www.visa.go.kr/

  • Hi Korea: official immigration portal for stay, extension, change of status, and foreigner registration
    https://www.hikorea.go.kr/

  • Ministry of Justice, Republic of Korea: immigration policy and notices
    https://www.moj.go.kr/

  • Overseas Koreans Agency / Korean diplomatic missions portal via Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    https://www.mofa.go.kr/

  • KOTRA Invest KOREA: official government investment/startup support context
    https://www.investkorea.org/

  • Seoul Global Center / Seoul Metropolitan Government foreign resident support
    https://global.seoul.go.kr/

  • K-Startup: official Korean startup support portal backed by government institutions
    https://www.k-startup.go.kr/

What to verify on these sources

  • current D-10-2 eligibility wording,
  • mission-specific document lists,
  • current fee schedules,
  • status extension/change procedures,
  • foreigner registration deadlines,
  • startup program or points-based support updates.

37. Final verdict

The D-10-2 Business Startup Preparation Visa is best for genuine founders who need to be in South Korea to prepare a startup before moving to a fuller business-operating status.

Biggest benefits

  • legal stay for startup preparation,
  • access to Korea’s startup ecosystem,
  • possible bridge to D-8 or another long-term status.

Biggest risks

  • weak or generic business plans,
  • assuming work rights that do not exist,
  • poor financial evidence,
  • applying under the wrong category,
  • relying on outdated consular checklists.

Top preparation advice

  • make your business plan Korea-specific,
  • explain your funding clearly,
  • organize documents professionally,
  • use mission-specific official instructions,
  • and be realistic about work and family limitations.

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your real purpose is:

  • tourism,
  • general employment,
  • short business meetings,
  • full-time study,
  • or running an already established business that fits a D-8 route better.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact current initial stay period granted for D-10-2
  • Whether your nationality or embassy requires additional documents
  • Current consular fee for your passport nationality and place of application
  • Whether your local mission requires interview, biometrics, medical, or police clearance
  • Whether a points-based startup requirement or specific startup-program linkage currently applies
  • Whether your case can be filed abroad only or also by change of status in Korea
  • Current rules on dependents for D-10-2 holders
  • Current rules on remote work and any incidental work authorization
  • Current foreigner registration deadline and post-arrival procedures
  • Whether time on D-10-2 helps toward permanent residence under current interpretation
  • Current re-entry rules after registration
  • Whether the consulate accepts applications from third-country residents
  • Whether your civil/academic documents need apostille, notarization, or certified translation
  • Any recent changes to startup support program recognition affecting D-10-2 eligibility

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