Filipinos in Korea: A Major Community
The Philippines is one of Korea's most significant migration partners. With over 65,000 registered Filipino residents — plus a substantial undocumented population — Filipinos form one of the largest foreign communities in Korea. The Philippine-Korean relationship is deepened by thousands of Filipino-Korean marriages, strong business ties, and the long-running Employment Permit System (EPS) that has brought hundreds of thousands of Filipino workers to Korea over two decades.
This guide covers every realistic visa pathway for Filipino nationals — from factory work to professional careers to permanent residency.
Visiting Korea: Visa Required
Philippine passport holders require a visa to visit Korea. There is no visa-free entry and no K-ETA option for Filipinos. Apply at:
- Korean Embassy in Manila
- Korean Consulate in Cebu
C-3 (Short-Term Tourist) visa: typically 3–5 business days processing. Requirements: passport, bank statement (minimum ~PHP 50,000 recommended), travel itinerary, hotel booking, employment certificate or proof of ties to the Philippines. Fee: approximately PHP 600–900.
The E-9 EPS: The Primary Work Route for Most Filipinos
The Employment Permit System (EPS) is the main pathway for Filipino workers seeking manufacturing, construction, agriculture, and service sector employment in Korea. Managed through POEA (Philippines Overseas Employment Administration) and HRD Korea, the EPS has been operating since 2004 and has sent hundreds of thousands of Filipino workers to Korea.
How the EPS Works
- Register with POEA — Filipino workers register their interest in Korean employment through POEA's official channels
- Pass EPS-TOPIK — the Korean language proficiency test for EPS applicants, administered in the Philippines. Basic Level test for most sectors; Special Level test for higher-skilled positions
- Get included on the HRD Korea roster — your score and profile are shared with Korean employers
- Employer match — a Korean employer selects you from the roster
- Standard Employment Contract — signed before departure, registered with POEA
- E-9 visa issued at the Korean Embassy in Manila
E-9 contract terms: 3-year initial contract, renewable to 4 years 10 months. After the maximum stay, workers must return to the Philippines before the next cycle. Wage: minimum wage (₩2,060,740/month in 2025) or above, depending on sector and employer.
E-9 Sectors
- Manufacturing (largest category — factories, assembly, production)
- Construction
- Agriculture and livestock
- Fishing and aquaculture
- Service industries (food production, etc.)
G-2-8: Domestic Worker Visa
The G-2-8 (Domestic Service Visa) allows Filipino nationals to work as live-in domestic helpers (household assistants, nannies, caregivers for children) for Korean families. This is a separate program from EPS — it targets the childcare gap created by Korea's dual-income households.
Requirements:
- At least 2 years of relevant experience (documented)
- EPS-TOPIK or equivalent Korean language ability
- Registered through POEA-approved recruitment agencies
- Korean employer (household) must register with the relevant government body
The G-2-8 has expanded significantly since 2024, particularly in Seoul and Gyeonggi for dual-income Korean families.
H-1 Working Holiday (Ages 18–30)
Filipino nationals aged 18–30 can apply for Korea's working holiday visa through the Korean Embassy in Manila. The Philippines-Korea working holiday agreement has a quota of approximately 3,000 per year. Requirements: passport, proof of funds (~PHP 300,000), return ticket or proof of funds to purchase one. No job offer needed — you can work in almost any sector for one year.
E-7: Skilled Worker (For Professionals)
Filipino professionals — nurses, engineers, IT specialists, English teachers (E-2), and hospitality professionals — increasingly use the E-7 pathway to work in Korea at a professional level. Filipinos are also one of the nationalities eligible for E-2 English teaching, as English is an official language of the Philippines.
In-demand E-7 occupations for Filipinos in Korea:
- Registered nurses (E-7-31 healthcare category — specific quota for Filipino nurses)
- IT engineers (software, web development, data)
- Hospitality and food service management
- English education (E-2 or E-7)
Filipino-Korean Marriages: F-6 Visa
With thousands of Filipino-Korean couples, the F-6 marriage visa is a major pathway. Filipino spouses of Korean nationals apply through the Korean Embassy in Manila. Requirements are the same as for other nationalities — genuine marriage documentation, relationship evidence, Korean sponsor's financial proof. See our full F-6 Marriage Visa Guide for complete details.
Long-Term Residency for Filipino Workers
The path to long-term residency in Korea is possible for Filipino workers, though it requires deliberate planning:
- E-9 → E-7-4 (Skilled Transition): After 1+ year of strong E-9 performance and passing language requirements, workers can transition to E-7-4 — a skilled worker visa with a clearer path to F-2-7 and eventually F-5.
- F-2-7 (Points-Based): Achievable for Filipino professionals on E-7 who accumulate 80+ K-Points. TOPIK Level 4 is key — it earns 16 points and is achievable for Filipino workers who take language study seriously.
- F-5 via F-6: Filipino spouses of Korean citizens can apply for F-5-2 PR after 2 years of marriage + 1 year of Korea residence — one of the fastest PR routes available.
POEA Requirements: Going Through Official Channels
Filipino workers going to Korea through EPS or any other employer-sponsored route must process through POEA-approved agencies. Working through unlicensed recruiters or paying placement fees above the legal maximum (PHP 10,000 for EPS processing costs) is both illegal and risky. Verify any recruiter at POEA's official portal before paying any fees.
Source: Korea Immigration Service, POEA, HRD Korea EPS Portal, Korean Embassy Manila | Last verified: March 2026
This article is for informational purposes only. Consult a verified immigration specialist for guidance specific to your situation.
