🇺🇸 → 🇰🇷
Moving from United States to South Korea as a digital nomad
Here's what it takes on the Workation Visa (F-1-D) — the income bar, how tax compares with staying in United States, and what a typical remote salary actually leaves you each month.
Sample: a solo remote worker on $6,000/month
Qualifies — the bar is $5,500/mo.
Tax in South Korea
0.0%
vs 22.8% at home
Take-home / mo
$6,000
after tax & contributions
Left after costs
$3,687
$2,313 living costs
Your money goes about 1.7× further in Seoul than in New York (PPP-adjusted).
Updated June 2026 · sample figures in USD for a solo employee.
Tax here vs. United States, by income
All-in effective rate for a solo employee who is tax-resident in each place.
| Monthly income | 🇰🇷 South Korea | 🇺🇸 United States | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| $3,000/mo | 0.0% | 19.0% | +$570/mo |
| $6,000/mo | 0.0% | 22.8% | +$1,367/mo |
| $12,000/mo | 0.0% | 26.8% | +$3,218/mo |
What United States nomads should know
For those who thrive on speed: Seoul and Busan offer hyper-connected, ultra-safe city living, with up to two years for high earners.
For tax, what matters is where you're resident, not your passport: stay under 183 days and most United States nomads avoid South Korea tax residency; a longer move brings South Korea's rules into play. Check for a tax treaty or totalization agreement between United States and South Korea first, and remember US citizens are taxed on worldwide income wherever they live.
- Blazing connectivity and hyper-modern cities.
- Very safe with superb healthcare.
- High income bar (~$66k).
- Language barrier; intense pace of life.
Model your move to South Korea
Your income, household and costs — compared against United States.
Optional — unlocks age- and savings-gated visas (retirement, youth-mobility, golden visas).
Staying more than ~183 days?
Affects tax residency for territorial & exempt regimes.
Your monthly life in South Korea
Pre-filled with typical costs in Seoul. Drag or type to match your life.
A nice place in a popular area
Power, water, gas
Home fibre + data
Food at home
Transit, rideshare, fuel
Private cover nomads usually need
Eating out, coffee, going out
Shopping, gym, subscriptions, misc.
You meet the income requirement
Needs $5,500/mo.
Your qualifying income
$6,000
$6,000
$2,313
$3,687
Tax in South Korea
Effective rate
0.0%
- Income tax / mo
- $0
- Social security / mo
- Not charged
- Total deductions / mo
- $0
- Take-home / mo
- $6,000
Under 183 days you stay outside the local system; your home country keeps covering you.
Private health insurance isn't required for this visa, but most nomads carry it — it's already counted in your living costs above.
Stay under 183 days to remain outside Korean tax residency.
vs. United States
Tax
22.8% at home → 0.0% here
Same lifestyle costs
$3,855 at home → $2,313 here
Money left over
$778 at home → $3,687 here
Estimates for planning only — actual tax depends on treaties, your residency and personal circumstances. Confirm with official sources and a qualified advisor before you move.
FAQ
Can United States citizens get South Korea's Workation Visa (F-1-D)?
Yes — it's open to remote workers regardless of nationality (subject to the usual checks). A single applicant needs about $5,500/month.
Will I pay tax in South Korea or United States?
Stay under 183 days to remain outside Korean tax residency. On a sample $6,000/month, that's an effective 0.0% in South Korea vs roughly 22.8% at home.
Does this visa lead to citizenship?
Not a residency track in itself.
Full requirements, citizenship timeline and cost breakdown for South Korea.
South Korea guideIllustrative 2026 estimates in USD; your result depends on treaties, residency and circumstances — confirm with official sources before applying.