The American Advantage in Korea
American citizens enjoy some of the most favourable Korean immigration arrangements of any nationality. The US-Korea bilateral relationship means Americans get:
- 90-day visa-free entry — no visa, no pre-travel application needed
- K-ETA suspended through December 31, 2026 — Americans can enter Korea without even applying for K-ETA during this period
- E-2 treaty status — Americans are one of only 7 nationalities eligible for the E-2 English teacher visa
- Large working holiday quota — Americans aged 18–30 can apply for Korea's H-1 working holiday visa
Visiting Korea as an American (No Visa)
US passport holders can visit Korea for up to 90 days without a visa or K-ETA (through end of 2026). You can:
- Arrive at any Korean international airport or seaport
- Stay for tourism, visiting friends/family, or short-term business meetings
- The 90-day period cannot be extended from inside Korea (you must exit and re-enter)
You cannot: work, study in a degree program, or provide paid services to Korean clients while on visa-exempt entry.
Working in Korea as an American
E-2: English Teacher (Most Accessible)
The E-2 is the fastest, most accessible work visa for Americans without specialized skills. Requirements: bachelor's degree from a US university, clean criminal background check (FBI apostille), health check. No Korean language required. Schools provide housing, flights, and insurance as part of most packages. Salary: ₩2.0M–₩3.5M/month.
E-7: Skilled Professional (Highest Demand)
Americans are highly sought after in Korea's technology, finance, marketing, and consulting sectors. The E-7 requires a Korean employer sponsor and a qualification match to one of 67 approved occupation codes. In-demand roles for Americans: software engineers, data scientists, financial analysts, marketing managers, UI/UX designers, and corporate English trainers.
US degrees from top universities receive additional consideration under the E-7 points system.
H-1: Working Holiday (Ages 18–30)
Americans aged 18–30 can apply for Korea's working holiday visa through the Korean Embassy in Washington DC (or consulates in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Honolulu, or Seattle). The US has a large annual quota. Requirements: valid US passport, ~$3,000 in savings, return flight or proof of funds. No job offer needed.
F-1-D: Digital Nomad / Workation
Americans working remotely for US companies can legally live in Korea for up to 1 year on the F-1-D visa. Requires: income of at least ~$84,600/year from non-Korean employment, health insurance, and clean background check. Applied for at a Korean consulate before entering.
D-8-4: Startup Founder
Americans founding tech companies in Korea can use the D-8-4 startup visa. K-Startup Grand Challenge, run annually by the Korean government, specifically recruits American (and other foreign) startup founders — selections are exempt from the points test.
Studying in Korea as an American
Korean universities are growing rapidly in global rankings and are substantially cheaper than equivalent US universities. Tuition at top Korean universities (SNU, Yonsei, Korea University) typically runs ₩3M–₩8M/semester (~$2,250–$6,000) for international students.
The GKS (Global Korea Scholarship) offers full funding — tuition, living stipend (₩900,000–₩1,000,000/month), airfare, and Korean language training — for American graduate students. Apply through the Korean Embassy in Washington DC.
American students use the D-2 visa for degree programs, or D-4 for Korean language study.
Living in Korea Long-Term as an American
Americans who build careers in Korea follow the standard long-term residency pathway:
- E-7 (skilled worker) or other long-term visa
- F-2-7 (points-based residency) after 1+ year, if you earn 80+ K-Points
- F-5-11 or F-5-7 (permanent residency) after 4–5 years
Americans with Korean spouses use the F-6 → F-5-2 pathway for faster PR (as little as 3 years total).
US-Korea Tax Considerations for Americans
Americans working in Korea face a unique tax situation: the US taxes its citizens on worldwide income regardless of residency. Most Americans in Korea file both a Korean tax return and a US federal return. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) lets you exclude up to ~$126,500 of foreign-earned income from US taxes (2025 figure). The Foreign Tax Credit prevents double-taxation on amounts above the exclusion. The US-Korea tax treaty provides additional protections. Consider hiring a tax professional with both Korean and US expertise.
Apostille for Korea: What Americans Need to Know
Many Korean visa applications require apostilled documents — primarily your FBI criminal background check and your university degree. For Americans:
- FBI background check: Request from the FBI's Identity History Summary Check program, then apostille through the US Department of State (or your state's Secretary of State for state-issued documents)
- University degree: Contact your state's Secretary of State to apostille your official degree certificate
- Processing time: FBI + apostille typically takes 3–8 weeks total — plan ahead
Source: Korea Immigration Service, Korean Embassy in Washington DC, US-ROK Status of Forces Agreement | Last verified: March 2026
This article is for informational purposes only. Consult a verified immigration specialist for your specific situation.
