Korea tax guide
Global Income Tax Filing in Korea for Foreigners
Income Tax
Who this guide is for
- Foreign freelancers and contractors
- Employees with side income
- Foreigners with multiple Korean payers
- People checking May filing questions
Quick Answer
Global Income Tax filing in Korea may be relevant for foreigners with freelance income, business income, multiple payers, or income not fully handled by employer year-end settlement. Filing requirements depend on income type, residency, withholding, and records. Use Hometax and official NTS guidance to verify your own situation.
Key points
- Global Income Tax is broader than employer year-end settlement.
- 3.3% withholding may still need filing review.
- Residency can affect complex cases.
- A refund is possible in some cases but not guaranteed.
Step-by-step explanation
What Global Income Tax means
Global Income Tax filing is the annual filing concept many foreigners encounter when employer year-end settlement is not enough. It can matter for freelancers, business operators, people with multiple payers, or people with mixed salary and freelance income.
The word “global” can be confusing. It does not mean every foreigner automatically reports every worldwide item in every case. Residency and income type matter, and complex cross-border situations should be reviewed carefully.
What should you prepare?
Prepare a full list of income sources and withholding records. Compare your own list with Hometax records. If something is missing, ask the payer for documentation before submitting.
| Income type | What to check |
|---|---|
| Salary | Was year-end settlement completed? |
| Freelance | Was 3.3% or other withholding applied? |
| Business income | Are records and expenses supportable? |
| Overseas income | Does residency or treaty analysis matter? |
Where should you start?
Read the income tax filing guide and use the Hometax filing procedure as a navigation checklist.
Documents you may need
- Income and withholding records
- Hometax reported income
- Employer settlement documents
- Client payment records
- Bank account information
Common mistakes
- Assuming withholding completes all filing
- Forgetting small income sources
- Ignoring residency issues
- Submitting before checking records
When should you ask a tax professional?
Ask a qualified tax professional if you have income from several countries, business income, unclear tax residency, treaty questions, missing documents, late filing concerns, or a visa situation that depends on tax records. This site explains general patterns only and cannot review your personal facts.
FAQ
Who may need Global Income Tax filing in Korea?
People with freelance, business, mixed, or multiple income sources may need to review filing, depending on their records and situation.
Does 3.3% withholding mean filing is done?
No. Withholding may affect the final calculation, but it does not automatically finish annual filing review.
Can filing lead to a refund?
A refund may happen in some cases, but it depends on the final calculation and is not guaranteed.
Official Sources to Verify
Tax rules and filing procedures in Korea may change depending on your visa status, income type, tax residency, and the tax year. Before making a tax decision, always verify your situation with official sources or a qualified professional.