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Short Description: Complete guide to South Korea’s F-5-5 permanent residence route for major investors, including eligibility, documents, family rules, process, and risks.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country South Korea
Visa name Permanent Residence for Big Investor
Visa short name F-5-5
Category Permanent residence status
Main purpose Long-term/permanent residence for qualifying high-value foreign investors
Typical applicant A foreign national who has made and maintained a qualifying large investment in South Korea under official immigration rules
Validity F-5 is a permanent residence status, but the residence card and reporting obligations still require maintenance and updates
Stay duration Indefinite, unless status is lost, cancelled, or the holder becomes subject to disqualification
Entries allowed Typically multiple re-entry while status remains valid, but re-entry and residence card/passport validity should always be checked before travel
Extension possible? Permanent status itself is not a typical “renew-and-extend” temporary visa, but card renewal/reissuance and status maintenance obligations apply
Work allowed? Yes, generally broad work rights as a permanent resident, subject to Korean law and regulated professions
Study allowed? Yes
Family allowed? Yes, but family members usually need their own qualifying status; family sponsorship options depend on relationship and immigration rules
PR path? This is itself a permanent residence category
Citizenship path? Indirect; permanent residence can support later naturalization if nationality law requirements are met

South Korea’s F-5-5 is an F-5 permanent residence status for certain major foreign investors. It is designed to attract substantial foreign capital and encourage long-term economic contribution to Korea.

In plain English, this is not a tourist visa, business visitor visa, or startup visa. It is a permanent residence route for people who qualify under Korea’s investor-based immigration rules at a high investment level.

It sits within Korea’s broader immigration system as one of several F-5 permanent residence subcategories. The F-5 category is Korea’s permanent residence status. The “F-5-5” label refers to the specific investor-based stream commonly described in English as Permanent Residence for Big Investor.

What it is legally

This is best understood as:

  • a residence status
  • granted under Korea’s immigration control framework
  • usually evidenced through an approved status decision and an Alien Registration Card / Residence Card
  • not merely an entry visa sticker by itself

A person outside Korea may still need an entry visa or consular process depending on their situation, nationality, and where they are applying from. But the core legal benefit is the F-5 permanent resident status.

Why it exists

South Korea uses investor-linked residence options to:

  • attract major foreign investment
  • support domestic business and economic development
  • encourage stable long-term settlement by high-value investors
  • offer a stronger immigration incentive than temporary investment stay categories

Who it is meant for

This route is for:

  • foreign nationals making a large qualifying investment
  • applicants who meet immigration, investment, and character requirements
  • people seeking permanent residence rather than a short-term business visit

Korean naming and classification

Official Korean immigration materials often describe this under the F-5 (Permanent Residence) family and identify subcategories by code. The Korean-language label may appear in immigration systems and guidance as a permanent residence category for investors, but English naming can vary by source.

Warning: Different official pages sometimes summarize F-5 subcategories differently, and embassies do not always publish the full subcategory detail online. Where the exact wording is not publicly standardized in English, rely on Hi Korea, the Korea Immigration Service, and the Immigration Control Act / Enforcement Decree / official visa navigator tools.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Investors

This visa is primarily for:

  • high-net-worth individuals
  • strategic investors
  • owners/shareholders who have already made a qualifying large investment in Korea
  • people who want permanent residence linked to that investment basis

Founders/entrepreneurs

Possibly suitable only if the founder’s structure and investment actually meets the F-5-5 big-investor rules. Many founders are better matched to:

  • D-8 corporate investment categories first
  • then a later F-5 pathway if eligible

Spouses/partners and children

They do not usually apply as the principal F-5-5 applicant unless they independently qualify. They may instead seek related family status or later dependent/family residence options.

Who should usually not use this visa?

Tourists

Not suitable. Use a short-stay visitor route instead.

Business visitors attending meetings only

Not suitable. Use a business visitor/short-stay status if you are only:

  • attending meetings
  • negotiating contracts
  • visiting a Korean company
  • exploring investment without yet making the qualifying investment

Job seekers

Not suitable. This is not a job-seeking route.

Employees

Not suitable unless they independently qualify as major investors. Workers usually need an employment-based status.

Students

Not suitable. Students should use the appropriate study status.

Digital nomads / remote workers

Not suitable unless they qualify independently as major investors. Korea has separate frameworks for temporary remote work in some contexts; those are different from F-5-5.

Retirees

Not suitable unless they meet the investor criteria.

Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists, medical travelers, transit passengers, diplomats

Not suitable unless they separately qualify as investors. They should use their corresponding visa/status categories.

Practical fit test

Apply for F-5-5 if all of these are true:

  • your main basis is a major qualifying investment
  • you want permanent residence
  • you can prove lawful source of funds and compliance
  • you meet Korean immigration and registration rules

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

As an F-5 permanent resident, the holder generally may live in South Korea long term and, subject to Korean law, engage in a broad range of ordinary resident activities, including:

  • long-term residence
  • business ownership and business management
  • investment-related residence
  • employment or self-employment, generally without the narrow sponsor-lock restrictions typical of temporary work statuses
  • study
  • family life in Korea
  • ordinary travel in and out of Korea while status remains valid

Activities commonly allowed

Activity Usually allowed? Notes
Long-term residence Yes Core purpose
Employment Yes Subject to general labor and licensing laws
Self-employment/business operation Yes Subject to business registration and sector rules
Study Yes No separate student status normally needed for ordinary study
Tourism inside Korea Yes As a resident
Family life Yes Family members need their own lawful status
Medical treatment Yes As a resident or visitor to providers
Meetings and business visits Yes Broadly yes

Prohibited or risky activities

Even permanent residents are not exempt from all rules. Problems can arise if the holder:

  • violates Korean criminal law
  • breaches immigration reporting requirements
  • uses false documents
  • fails to maintain the legal basis where maintenance is required under the specific investor route
  • enters regulated sectors without required licenses
  • assumes family members can live/work automatically without their own status

Grey areas and misunderstandings

Remote work

A permanent resident generally has broader work freedom than a visitor or temporary status holder. But tax, labor, and business registration rules may still apply if:

  • you work for an overseas company while physically in Korea
  • you invoice clients
  • you run a sole proprietorship

Volunteering

Usually not an immigration issue in the same way it is for visitor visas, but work, tax, and organizational compliance may still matter.

Journalism / political activity / regulated professions

These may be affected by sector-specific rules even if immigration status itself is broad.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official classification

  • Category family: F-5
  • Subcategory: F-5-5
  • General family name: Permanent Residence
  • Common English label: Permanent Residence for Big Investor

How people confuse it

This visa is often confused with:

  • D-8 investor/corporate investment status
  • other F-5 permanent residence subcategories
  • residence-through-real-estate or public fund investment programs
  • residence routes for technology/startup founders

Old vs current naming

Official English wording is not always uniform across all government pages. Some pages list only the F-5 code, some use a short English label, and some summarize by broader permanent residence category. The code F-5-5 is the most reliable identifier for this specific investor route.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

The central official idea is that the applicant must be a major investor meeting the F-5-5 threshold and conditions set by Korea’s immigration authorities.

Investment threshold

Official Korean immigration guidance has historically tied this route to a high-value investment amount. However, exact thresholds and whether they must be maintained, invested through a specific business type, or linked to local hiring should always be checked on current official guidance because subcategory rules can change.

Important: Because English-language public pages do not always provide the full current threshold details in one place, applicants should verify the latest rule directly with:

  • Hi Korea
  • the Korea Immigration Service
  • the competent immigration office
  • the relevant Korean embassy/consulate

Common eligibility factors likely considered

Although exact subcategory wording may vary, applicants should expect review of:

  • valid passport
  • lawful immigration status if applying in Korea
  • qualifying large investment
  • evidence the investment is real, lawful, and documented
  • business registration/corporate documents where relevant
  • source of funds
  • compliance with Korean laws
  • no serious immigration violations
  • no disqualifying criminal/security issues
  • resident registration and address reporting compliance if already in Korea

Nationality rules

There is no widely published general public rule suggesting F-5-5 is limited to only certain nationalities. But:

  • consular processing may vary by country
  • document legalization rules vary by issuing country
  • criminal record certificate formats vary by nationality/place of residence
  • sanctions, security review, and reciprocity issues may affect processing

Passport validity

A valid passport is required. In practice, it is wise to have substantial remaining validity when applying and entering Korea.

Age

No general public rule suggests a special age band for principal investor eligibility, but minors generally would not be the practical principal applicant in this category.

Education, language, work experience

For F-5-5 specifically, public sources do not consistently indicate a mandatory degree, work experience, or Korean language requirement as the defining criterion. That said:

  • some other F-5 categories do include integration or income requirements
  • local officers may still review overall circumstances and compliance
  • if there has been a rule change, verify the current position before filing

Sponsorship / invitation / job offer

Not generally the core requirement for F-5-5. This is not primarily an employer-sponsored route.

Points requirement

No broadly published points test is commonly associated with F-5-5 itself. Do not confuse it with points-based residence paths.

Maintenance funds and accommodation proof

These may not be framed the same way as visitor visa requirements, but applicants should still be ready to show:

  • financial standing
  • address in Korea
  • capacity to reside lawfully and support themselves/family

Health, character, biometrics

Expect possible requirements relating to:

  • criminal history review
  • identity verification
  • biometrics/photo
  • medical checks if specifically requested or required under local office procedure

Intent requirements

This category is for permanent residence, so it is not a “temporary intent only” route.

Local registration rules

If in Korea, applicants should be prepared for:

  • alien registration/residence card compliance
  • address update obligations
  • possible jurisdiction-based filing at the competent immigration office

Embassy-specific rules

If applying through a consulate abroad, exact submission practice can vary:

  • appointment systems
  • local forms
  • copies vs originals
  • translation requirements
  • whether the applicant first needs a visa issuance confirmation or local immigration approval

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Likely ineligibility factors

  • investment does not meet the required threshold
  • investment type is not qualifying
  • funds cannot be traced to a lawful source
  • investment is nominal, temporary, or not actually completed
  • applicant is using the wrong visa category
  • unresolved immigration violations in Korea
  • serious criminal record or security concerns
  • false statements or forged documents
  • passport problems
  • missing local registration compliance

Common refusal triggers

Refusal trigger Why it matters
Incomplete evidence of investment Officers must confirm the exact F-5-5 basis
Unclear source of funds Anti-money laundering and credibility issue
Mismatch between company records and application Suggests inauthentic or non-qualifying investment
Wrong category selection Applicant may qualify for D-8, not F-5-5
Failure to maintain prior status properly Can hurt in-country applications
Poor translations/legalization Documents may be unusable
Prior overstay or immigration breach Can affect discretion and eligibility
Unverifiable foreign documents Authenticity problem

Common Mistake: Assuming that “having a business in Korea” automatically qualifies you for F-5-5. It does not. The investment must meet the specific official criteria for this permanent residence subcategory.

7. Benefits of this visa

Major benefits

  • Permanent residence status in South Korea
  • no need for frequent temporary visa renewals typical of D/E category stays
  • broad right to reside in Korea
  • generally broad right to work or do business
  • ability to study without changing to a student visa in many ordinary cases
  • easier long-term life planning in Korea
  • possible support for later naturalization, if nationality law requirements are met

Family-related benefits

  • easier long-term family settlement planning
  • principal resident may later support family immigration options depending on relationship and current rules

Travel flexibility

F-5 status is generally more flexible than temporary visas for travel and re-entry, but:

  • keep residence card valid
  • keep passport valid
  • check whether prolonged absence can affect status in practice or trigger review

Administrative stability

Compared with temporary visa routes, F-5 generally offers:

  • fewer sponsor-dependence issues
  • less employer lock-in
  • better continuity if changing jobs or business activities

8. Limitations and restrictions

Permanent residence is powerful, but it is not unlimited.

Restrictions and obligations

  • must comply with Korean immigration law
  • must update address and registration details as required
  • card validity/reissuance still matters even if status is permanent
  • some professions require separate licensing
  • criminal convictions or serious non-compliance can affect status
  • family members do not automatically inherit the same status
  • long absences may raise practical issues; verify before extended stays abroad

Business restrictions

You may still need:

  • business registration
  • tax registration
  • sector licenses
  • labor law compliance if hiring staff

Public benefits

Eligibility for specific public benefits is outside visa law and depends on separate Korean laws and systems. Do not assume automatic entitlement.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Duration

F-5 is a permanent residence status, so there is no fixed short stay period like 30, 90, or 2 years in the ordinary sense.

Residence card validity

Even permanent residents usually must:

  • maintain an up-to-date residence card
  • renew/reissue the physical card as required
  • report changes such as address, passport, and personal details

Entries

Typically, permanent residents can travel in and out of Korea more freely than temporary visa holders, but border admission is never purely automatic. Carry your:

  • passport
  • residence card
  • supporting evidence if there is any unusual travel or status issue

When status starts

This can depend on the route:

  • from approval/change of status inside Korea, or
  • from entry using the issued visa/approval and then completing registration requirements

Overstay consequences

If someone’s prior temporary status expires before they secure F-5 approval, overstay can create serious problems. Never assume a pending application gives automatic protection unless official rules explicitly say so.

Grace periods / bridging status

South Korea does not publicly frame this the same way some countries use “bridging visas.” If you are near expiry of a current stay, confirm your lawful stay position directly with immigration.

10. Complete document checklist

Because F-5-5 is a specialized category, exact document lists may vary by office and case structure. Below is the most practical full checklist framework.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Application form Official immigration application form Starts the case Old form version, unsigned form
Passport Valid travel document Identity and nationality Expired passport, damaged passport
Residence card (if in Korea) Current foreign resident ID Confirms current status Not copying both sides
Recent photo Official photo Card/record production Wrong size/background

B. Identity/travel documents

  • passport biodata page
  • copies of prior Korean visas/status pages if relevant
  • entry record or immigration status proof if requested
  • old passports if identity/travel history needs clarification

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements
  • proof of source of funds
  • remittance records
  • tax records if relevant
  • investment transfer evidence
  • asset documents if requested

Why needed: to prove the investment is genuine, lawful, and traceable.

D. Employment/business documents

  • business registration certificate
  • corporation register
  • shareholder register/cap table
  • foreign-invested company registration records if applicable
  • proof of paid-in capital
  • audit/accounting records if requested
  • tax filings
  • office lease or place of business evidence
  • employment records if hiring is relevant to eligibility

E. Education documents

Usually not central for F-5-5 unless specifically requested or relevant to another linked status history.

F. Relationship/family documents

For accompanying or later family applications:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates for children
  • family relation documents
  • custody documents where relevant
  • consent letter from non-traveling parent for minors where applicable

G. Accommodation/travel documents

For resident applications, these may include:

  • proof of Korean address
  • lease agreement
  • proof of occupancy or host confirmation

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Not usually the core of F-5-5, but if a corporate entity or local representative is involved, officers may ask for:

  • company support letter
  • explanation of investment structure
  • local contact details

I. Health/insurance documents

Health insurance may become relevant after residence, but a specific pre-approval insurance document is not clearly published as a universal F-5-5 rule. Verify case-by-case.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on where your documents come from, you may need:

  • apostille
  • consular legalization
  • certified translation
  • notarization

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate
  • parental passports
  • custody judgment
  • consent to travel/reside
  • school records if requested

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Foreign civil and legal documents often need:

  • Korean translation
  • notarized translation in some cases
  • apostille or consular authentication depending on the issuing country and document type

Warning: These requirements vary a lot by country and office. Always check with the filing office or consulate.

M. Photo specifications

Use the latest official Korean immigration photo standard. If not clearly published on the exact visa page, follow the current immigration/consular passport-style photo guidance.

11. Financial requirements

Main financial requirement: investment amount

The key financial requirement is the qualifying major investment amount under the F-5-5 rules.

However, public English-language official pages do not always present the current amount and sub-conditions clearly in one place. Therefore:

  • confirm the current threshold on Hi Korea or with the competent immigration office
  • verify whether the amount must be:
  • fully invested
  • maintained for a period
  • invested in a qualifying company/business type
  • accompanied by hiring or operating requirements

Proof of funds

Expect to show:

  • bank statements
  • remittance records into Korea
  • corporate capital records
  • share subscription/payment evidence
  • tax and accounting records
  • source-of-funds explanation for large transfers

Source of funds

This is critical. Strong evidence can include:

  • salary accumulation records
  • sale of property
  • dividend records
  • business profit history
  • inheritance documents
  • gift documents with lawful evidence
  • tax filings

Dependents and maintenance

There is no clearly published universal per-dependent maintenance figure specific to F-5-5 in the public material commonly available in English. But family applications may still require proof that the household can be supported.

Hidden costs

  • document legalization
  • translation
  • accounting support
  • company record issuance fees
  • travel to immigration office/consulate
  • card issuance/reissuance fees
  • tax and compliance costs

12. Fees and total cost

Exact fees can change. Always check the latest official fee page or immigration filing notice.

Typical cost components

Cost item Notes
Application/filing fee Payable to immigration or consulate depending on route
Residence card issuance/reissuance fee Usually separate in many Korean immigration procedures
Visa issuance fee abroad, if applicable Depends on consulate and route
Document issuance fees Corporate registry, civil certificates, tax certificates
Translation/notarization/apostille Often a major cost for foreign documents
Police certificate cost Varies by country
Medical exam cost Only if required
Courier/postage If consulate uses mail return
Professional legal/accounting fees Optional, not government-mandated
Travel/relocation costs Flights, housing deposit, setup

Warning: Because F-5-5 is specialized, many applicants spend more on document preparation and corporate/legal records than on the immigration fee itself.

13. Step-by-step application process

The exact route varies depending on whether you are applying inside Korea or through a Korean consulate abroad.

1. Confirm the correct category

Make sure you qualify for F-5-5 specifically, not just:

  • D-8 investor
  • F-2 long-term resident
  • another F-5 subcategory

2. Gather eligibility evidence

Collect:

  • investment records
  • company records
  • source-of-funds proof
  • identity documents
  • immigration compliance records
  • family records if needed

3. Check filing location

Determine whether you must apply:

  • at a local immigration office in Korea, or
  • through a consulate using a visa issuance/confirmation procedure

4. Complete the official form

Use the current application form from official immigration sources.

5. Prepare translations and legalizations

Do this early. It often causes the biggest delays.

6. Book appointment if required

Some immigration offices and consulates require advance booking.

7. Submit the application

Submit:

  • form
  • photos
  • passport
  • fee
  • all supporting documents

8. Biometrics / identity check

Provide fingerprints/photo if requested under current procedures.

9. Respond to document requests

Officers may ask for:

  • updated financial records
  • clarification on investment structure
  • additional source-of-funds evidence
  • corrected translations

10. Wait for decision

Track status if a tracking function is available.

11. Decision and issuance

If approved:

  • you receive status approval in Korea, or
  • an overseas visa issuance/entry approval to travel

12. Enter Korea if applying from abroad

Carry key supporting records on entry.

13. Post-arrival registration

If required, complete residence registration/card issuance within the legal deadline.

14. Processing time

There is no single universally published processing time for F-5-5 across all channels.

What affects timing

  • filing location
  • completeness of investment records
  • source-of-funds scrutiny
  • need for criminal/background checks
  • document legalization issues
  • whether the business structure is simple or complex
  • workload at the specific immigration office

Practical expectation

Specialized permanent residence applications often take longer than straightforward visitor or worker visas.

Pro Tip: Build in extra time if your investment came through multiple jurisdictions, holding companies, family funds, or large cross-border transfers.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

May be required as part of registration or immigration processing.

Interview

Not all applicants are interviewed, but an officer may ask for clarification, especially where:

  • source of funds is complex
  • the business structure is unusual
  • documents are inconsistent

Typical interview topics

  • when and how you invested
  • your role in the company
  • origin of funds
  • residence plans in Korea
  • family composition
  • prior visa/status history

Medical

No publicly prominent universal F-5-5 medical exam rule is consistently stated in English sources. But local office practice can differ.

Police checks

A criminal record certificate may be requested depending on the route, office, nationality, and recent rule changes. Verify directly before filing.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

Public official approval-rate statistics specifically for F-5-5 are not readily available in a clear public format.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals or delays in this type of category tend to involve:

  • failure to prove the precise qualifying investment
  • source-of-funds gaps
  • company records that do not match immigration claims
  • misunderstanding of the F-5-5 threshold
  • missing authentication/translation
  • prior immigration non-compliance

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Practical, ethical ways to improve the case

  • prepare a document index
  • include a short explanatory cover letter
  • map each document to each eligibility element
  • provide a source-of-funds timeline
  • explain any large deposits clearly
  • ensure names match across passport, company records, bank records, and civil documents
  • submit up-to-date corporate registry records
  • use professional translations where needed
  • separate principal applicant documents from dependent documents
  • flag any prior refusal or overstay honestly and explain it with evidence

Strong evidence strategy

A good F-5-5 file usually shows, in order:

  1. who you are
  2. your lawful current status
  3. what you invested
  4. when you invested
  5. where the money came from
  6. how the investment qualifies under F-5-5
  7. that all supporting business/corporate records match

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Build a one-page eligibility summary

At the front of the file, include:

  • your name
  • passport number
  • current status
  • F-5-5 category claimed
  • investment amount
  • investment date
  • company name and registration number
  • list of attached proof

This makes officer review easier.

2. Explain large transfers before being asked

If your bank statements show large incoming amounts, add:

  • sale contract
  • dividend statement
  • inheritance record
  • gift deed
  • tax evidence

3. Keep corporate records current

Immigration officers often compare:

  • business registration
  • shareholder records
  • capital payment records
  • tax filings

Outdated corporate documents can cause delays.

4. Use consistent translations

Do not mix different transliterations of the same name across documents.

5. Do not over-submit random documents

Submit relevant evidence, well indexed. Too much unstructured paper can slow review.

6. Separate “official rule proof” from “supporting explanation”

Put mandatory legal documents first. Put helpful narrative exhibits second.

7. Contact the office only when necessary

Good reasons to contact immigration/consulate:

  • unclear filing jurisdiction
  • unclear legalization rule
  • unclear need for police certificate
  • change in passport or civil status

Bad reasons:

  • daily status chasing
  • asking questions already answered on the official site

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

Is it required?

Often not strictly mandatory, but highly recommended in investor permanent residence cases.

What it should do

Your cover letter should:

  • identify the visa/status sought: F-5-5
  • summarize how you meet the criteria
  • explain the investment structure
  • explain source of funds
  • list attached evidence
  • address any unusual facts

Suggested structure

  1. Introduction
  2. Immigration category requested
  3. Investment summary
  4. Source of funds summary
  5. Residence and compliance summary
  6. Family details if relevant
  7. List of annexes

What not to say

  • vague claims like “I am rich enough”
  • unsupported statements
  • inconsistent timelines
  • emotional arguments not tied to eligibility
  • anything untrue or exaggerated

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Is a sponsor relevant?

Usually not in the same way as work or visitor visas. F-5-5 is not primarily sponsorship-driven.

Corporate support letters

A Korean company connected to the investment may still provide:

  • confirmation of the investment
  • shareholder status
  • management role
  • business registration information

Common mistakes

  • company letter contradicts share records
  • unsigned support letter
  • generic invitation letter with no legal detail
  • no contact person listed

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, family immigration options may exist, but family members generally need their own lawful status rather than automatically receiving F-5-5.

Who may qualify

Usually:

  • spouse
  • minor children

Possibly other family members in limited circumstances under separate rules, but not automatically.

Documents typically needed

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificate
  • proof the relationship is genuine and legally recognized
  • passport copies
  • proof of the principal applicant’s status
  • custody/consent documents for children where needed

Work/study rights of dependents

This depends on the dependent’s own status category, not simply on the principal’s F-5-5.

Same-sex partners

South Korean immigration treatment of same-sex spouses/partners is not universally equivalent to opposite-sex marriage across all visa categories. Outcomes can be highly fact-specific and may depend on current policy and court developments. Verify directly before applying.

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

Work rights

F-5 permanent residents generally have broad work rights in Korea.

Usually allowed

  • employment
  • self-employment
  • company directorship/management
  • investment activity
  • freelance work, subject to tax and licensing rules

Still restricted by non-immigration law

  • regulated professions
  • licensing
  • labor law
  • tax reporting
  • industry-specific restrictions

Study rights

Usually allowed without needing a separate student visa for ordinary study activity.

Internships and volunteering

Generally less restricted than for visitors, but:

  • employment law
  • tax rules
  • institutional policies may still apply.

Remote work

Generally more feasible than under visitor status, but check:

  • tax residence impact
  • employer compliance
  • business registration issues

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

Even if you hold the proper visa or status documentation, border officers still make the final admission decision.

Carry these on arrival

  • valid passport
  • residence card or visa issuance confirmation
  • copy of approval notice if applicable
  • Korean address
  • company/investment summary documents
  • contact details of your company or representative

Re-entry after travel

Usually permitted, but check before long absences and ensure:

  • passport remains valid
  • residence card is valid/current
  • no unresolved immigration issues exist

Passport transfer to new passport

If you renew your passport, update immigration records and carry both old and new documents where needed.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Extension

Not applicable in the normal temporary-visa sense because F-5 is permanent residence.

What still must be renewed or updated

  • residence card
  • passport details
  • address
  • name/civil status changes

Switching and conversion

If you do not yet qualify for F-5-5, you may need another route first, commonly an investment-related temporary status. Whether you can switch inside Korea depends on current immigration rules and your lawful status at the time.

Restoration / reinstatement

If status is lost or a filing is mishandled, options are highly case-specific. Seek official guidance immediately.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

PR pathway

This visa is itself permanent residence.

Citizenship pathway

It may support later naturalization, but naturalization is separate and governed by nationality law. Requirements may include:

  • residence period
  • good conduct
  • livelihood stability
  • integration/language factors
  • other nationality-law conditions

Do not assume F-5 means automatic citizenship.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax

Living in Korea under F-5 can create Korean tax residence consequences depending on:

  • days present
  • center of life
  • Korean-source and foreign-source income
  • treaty position

Get tax advice if your affairs are international.

Registration obligations

You may need to:

  • register address
  • update address changes
  • update passport changes
  • carry/maintain valid residence card

Health insurance

Eligibility and compulsory enrollment questions may arise under Korea’s national systems depending on residence and other factors.

Overstays and violations

Serious immigration or criminal violations can threaten even a strong status.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Nationality-specific issues that may matter

  • document legalization method
  • criminal certificate format
  • sanctions/export-control or security review
  • consulate-specific submission route
  • language of documents
  • whether local Korean mission accepts applications from non-residents

There is no general public rule showing F-5-5 is nationality-restricted, but implementation details can vary.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Usually not practical as principal big-investor applicants. For dependent children, provide full custody documents.

Divorced/separated parents

You may need:

  • custody order
  • notarized consent
  • proof of legal authority for the child’s residence abroad

Stateless persons/refugees

Possible only on a highly case-specific basis. Verify directly with immigration.

Dual nationals

Use the passport consistent with your application and ensure all records match.

Prior refusals

Disclose them honestly and explain what changed.

Overstays / deportation history

These can be serious barriers. Professional legal help may be wise.

Name or gender marker mismatch

Provide legal change documents and consistent translations.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“Any foreign business owner in Korea can get F-5-5.” False. The applicant must meet the specific major-investor criteria.
“F-5-5 is just a long business visa.” False. It is a permanent residence status.
“My spouse and kids automatically become permanent residents too.” False. They usually need their own status process.
“If I invested money once, I automatically qualify forever.” Not necessarily. Exact maintenance and compliance rules should be verified.
“No document legalization is needed if documents are in English.” False. Legalization and Korean translation rules may still apply.
“Having F-5 means automatic citizenship.” False. Naturalization is separate.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After a refusal

You should receive a reason or decision notice. Review:

  • exact legal basis for refusal
  • whether the problem is evidentiary or substantive
  • whether reapplication is allowed/realistic
  • whether an objection or administrative process exists under current Korean procedures

Appeal / review

Public guidance on appeal pathways for each immigration decision is not always centralized in easy English. Some outcomes may be challengeable through:

  • administrative complaint/reconsideration channels
  • administrative litigation
  • fresh reapplication with corrected evidence

This is highly case-specific.

Reapplication

Often possible if you can fix the real problem, such as:

  • adding source-of-funds evidence
  • correcting corporate records
  • submitting proper legalization
  • applying in the correct category

31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?

At immigration control

Bring:

  • passport
  • visa/approval documents
  • residence-related evidence
  • company and address details

After arrival

Depending on the route, you may need to:

  • complete or update foreigner registration
  • obtain or reissue a residence card
  • register your address
  • update passport information
  • enroll in health insurance if applicable
  • complete tax/business registration if you will work or operate a business

First 90 days

For many foreign residents in Korea, registration within the legal deadline is critical. Check your exact deadline based on your route and approval method.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Investor applying from inside Korea

  • Weeks 1–4: collect company, banking, and source-of-funds records
  • Weeks 3–6: translations and legalization
  • Week 6: submit at immigration office
  • Weeks 6–14+: respond to additional requests
  • Approval: status granted, card issuance/update follows

Investor applying from abroad

  • Weeks 1–4: gather civil, financial, and corporate documents
  • Weeks 4–8: legalization and translation
  • Week 8: consular filing or visa issuance process
  • Weeks 8–16+: decision pending
  • After approval: travel to Korea, then complete registration steps

Family follow-on case

  • Principal gets F-5-5 first
  • Family documents gathered after principal approval
  • Separate family status applications filed
  • Additional time for civil documents and custody evidence

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Cover sheet / index
  2. Application form
  3. Passport and ID documents
  4. Current Korean status documents
  5. Investment summary
  6. Corporate records
  7. Source-of-funds records
  8. Banking/remittance evidence
  9. Tax/accounting evidence
  10. Address records
  11. Family documents
  12. Translations and legalization certificates
  13. Explanation notes

File naming convention

Use simple names like:

  • 01_Application_Form.pdf
  • 02_Passport_Biodata.pdf
  • 03_ARC_Front_Back.pdf
  • 04_Investment_Summary.pdf
  • 05_Business_Registration.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • upright orientation
  • all edges visible
  • one PDF per section unless instructed otherwise
  • avoid blurry phone photos

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • [ ] Confirm F-5-5 is the correct subcategory
  • [ ] Confirm current official investment threshold
  • [ ] Check filing office/jurisdiction
  • [ ] Gather passport and status documents
  • [ ] Gather company and investment records
  • [ ] Gather source-of-funds records
  • [ ] Order civil documents for family if needed
  • [ ] Arrange translations/legalization
  • [ ] Prepare photo
  • [ ] Prepare cover letter and document index

Submission-day checklist

  • [ ] Correct form version
  • [ ] Signature completed
  • [ ] Original passport
  • [ ] Photos
  • [ ] Fee method confirmed
  • [ ] Full document set and copies
  • [ ] Appointment confirmation if required

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • [ ] Passport
  • [ ] Appointment notice
  • [ ] Residence card if applicable
  • [ ] Originals of key financial and corporate documents
  • [ ] Clear explanation of source of funds

Arrival checklist

  • [ ] Passport valid
  • [ ] Approval/visa documents in hand
  • [ ] Korean address available
  • [ ] Local contact number if possible
  • [ ] Registration deadline known

Extension/renewal checklist

  • [ ] Not applicable for normal visa extension
  • [ ] Check residence card expiry/reissue date
  • [ ] Update address/passport changes
  • [ ] Check compliance before long travel

Refusal recovery checklist

  • [ ] Read refusal reason carefully
  • [ ] Identify whether evidence or eligibility failed
  • [ ] Gather missing evidence
  • [ ] Correct translations/legalization
  • [ ] Confirm correct visa category
  • [ ] Consider legal advice for serious refusals

35. FAQs

1. Is F-5-5 a visa or permanent residence?

It is best understood as an F-5 permanent residence status, though consular visa steps may still be involved for entry.

2. Does F-5-5 require a very large investment?

Yes. It is specifically for big investors. Verify the latest threshold with official immigration sources.

3. Can I apply if I only plan to invest later?

Usually no. You normally need to show the qualifying investment has already been made under the rules.

4. Is this the same as a D-8 investor visa?

No. D-8 is generally a temporary investment/business status. F-5-5 is permanent residence.

5. Can I work for any employer on F-5-5?

Generally, F-5 gives broad work rights, subject to Korean law and regulated professions.

6. Can I run my own company?

Generally yes, subject to business registration, tax, and licensing requirements.

7. Can I study on F-5-5?

Yes, generally.

8. Do I need Korean language test results?

Not clearly published as a universal F-5-5 requirement, but verify current rules.

9. Do I need a police certificate?

Possibly, depending on route and office. Verify before applying.

10. Do I need a medical exam?

Possibly, but no universally clear public English rule is consistently published for all F-5-5 cases.

11. Can my spouse be included in my application?

Usually family members need separate status processing, even if linked to the principal applicant.

12. Do my children get permanent residence automatically?

No.

13. Can I apply from outside Korea?

Possibly yes, depending on procedure and consular handling.

14. Can I switch from D-8 to F-5-5 in Korea?

Potentially, if you meet the criteria and immigration allows in-country change.

15. What if my investment came from selling property abroad?

That can be acceptable if fully documented with sale contracts, bank records, and tax evidence.

16. Are gifts from parents acceptable as source of funds?

Sometimes, if lawful and fully documented. Expect extra scrutiny.

17. Do documents in English need Korean translation?

Often yes, or at least verification of local office requirements. Do not assume English alone is enough.

18. Does apostille always apply?

Not always. It depends on the document type and issuing country.

19. How long does F-5-5 processing take?

There is no single public standard time for all offices. Complex investor files often take longer.

20. Can prior overstay in Korea hurt my application?

Yes.

21. What if my company records are outdated?

Update them before applying. Outdated records commonly cause delays.

22. Can I leave Korea while the application is pending?

Possibly, but it may create risks depending on your current status and filing route. Confirm before travel.

23. Is there a minimum stay requirement in Korea after approval?

This should be verified directly, especially if you plan long absences.

24. Can same-sex spouses qualify as dependents?

This remains a sensitive, evolving area and may depend on current Korean policy and case law. Verify directly.

25. If refused, can I reapply?

Usually yes, if you fix the real problem and remain otherwise eligible.

26. Is there a quota or lottery?

No commonly published lottery system is associated with F-5-5.

27. Can I use borrowed funds for the investment?

That may create source-of-funds and genuineness issues. Check current rules and disclose financing honestly.

28. Is real estate investment alone enough?

Do not assume so. Korea has had distinct investment-linked programs over time. Confirm whether your structure matches F-5-5 specifically.

29. Do I need to hire Korean staff?

Possibly under some investor routes or practical review standards, but this must be verified against the current official criteria for F-5-5.

30. Is there a residence card even if I have permanent residence?

Yes, typically you still need and must maintain a valid foreign resident card.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources to verify current rules, forms, and procedures.

Primary official sources

  • Hi Korea e-Government for Foreigners
    https://www.hikorea.go.kr/

  • Korea Immigration Service (Ministry of Justice)
    https://www.immigration.go.kr/

  • Korea Visa Portal
    https://www.visa.go.kr/

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea
    https://www.mofa.go.kr/

  • Overseas Korean Missions directory / embassy contacts via MOFA
    https://www.mofa.go.kr/eng/wpge/m_4908/contents.do

Laws and policy references

  • Korean Law Information Center – Immigration Control Act
    https://www.law.go.kr/

  • Korean Law Information Center – Immigration Control Act Enforcement Decree
    https://www.law.go.kr/

Practical official verification pages

  • Hi Korea 민원/체류자격 and application guidance sections
    https://www.hikorea.go.kr/Main.pt

  • Korea Visa Portal Visa Navigator
    https://www.visa.go.kr/openPage.do?MENU_ID=10101

  • Korea Immigration Contact Center information (via official immigration resources)
    https://www.immigration.go.kr/immigration_eng/index.do

Warning: Some official Korean systems update page addresses or require Korean-language navigation. If a page path changes, start from the main official portal and search for F-5, permanent residence, or investor.

37. Final verdict

The F-5-5 Permanent Residence for Big Investor is best for foreign nationals who have already made a genuinely qualifying large investment in South Korea and want a stable, long-term residence status with broad work and business freedom.

Biggest benefits

  • permanent residence
  • broad work and study flexibility
  • stronger long-term settlement rights than temporary investor categories
  • possible platform for later naturalization

Biggest risks

  • misunderstanding the exact investment threshold
  • weak source-of-funds evidence
  • using the wrong subcategory
  • poor document legalization/translation
  • assuming family members are automatically covered

Best preparation advice

  • verify the current F-5-5 criteria directly with official immigration sources
  • prepare a tight, well-indexed evidence pack
  • prove both the investment and the lawful source of funds
  • resolve any status, registration, or document inconsistencies before filing

When to consider another visa

Consider another route if:

  • your investment does not yet meet F-5-5 level
  • you are only exploring business opportunities
  • you are still setting up the company
  • you need a temporary investor/business status first, such as a D-8 pathway

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Because this is a specialized category and public English summaries are not always complete, verify the following before filing:

  • the current minimum investment threshold for F-5-5
  • whether the investment must be maintained for a minimum period
  • whether the investment must be in a specific type of company or approved structure
  • whether there is any local hiring or operating requirement
  • whether a criminal record certificate is required in your case
  • whether a medical exam is required in your case
  • exact filing location: local immigration office vs consulate
  • exact fee amounts
  • whether your foreign documents need apostille or consular legalization
  • whether English documents must still be translated into Korean
  • whether your embassy/consulate accepts applications from non-residents
  • travel risks if you leave Korea while an application is pending
  • long-absence rules affecting permanent residents in practice
  • dependent/spouse options for your exact family structure
  • current treatment of same-sex spouses/partners
  • whether recent immigration rule changes have altered the F-5-5 subcategory conditions

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