Langle

此文章尚未翻译。正在显示英文版本。

How to Find a Job in Korea as a Foreigner (Visa Angle)

How to find a job in Korea as a foreigner, focused on the visa side: which visa lets you work, visa-friendly employers, and turning an offer into an E-7.

The Langle Team··1 min read

Finding a job in Korea as a foreigner is really two searches at once: the job and the visa to hold it. This guide focuses on the visa angle so your search actually leads to a work permit.

Turning a search into a visa? Ask a consultant.

First, know which visa you'll need

  • Full-time work → an E-series visa (often E-7) or an F residence visa.
  • Job hunting in Korea → the D-10 job-seeking visa.
  • Students → part-time only, with a permit.

Target visa-friendly employers

Some companies routinely sponsor foreign hires. Prioritize roles that:

  • map to an approved E-7 occupation, and
  • match your credentials.

That combination makes sponsorship far easier.

From offer to visa

Once you have an offer:

  1. Confirm the occupation-code fit.
  2. Prepare employer + applicant documents.
  3. Change status (e.g., D-10 → E-7) or apply.

Practical tips

  • Learn some Korean — it widens your options and adds visa points.
  • Keep your CV and credentials documented and legalized.
  • Ask employers early whether they can sponsor.

How Langle can help

Langle's consultants tell you which roles are visa-viable and handle the switch once you're hired. Start free on our visa consulting page.


General information, not legal advice. Rules change; verify on HiKorea or with a consultant before applying.

Frequently asked questions

Which visa do I need to work in Korea?
For full-time work, an E-series visa (commonly the E-7 for skilled roles) or an F residence visa. Students can only work part-time with a permit.
Do Korean employers sponsor work visas?
Many do, especially for skilled roles that fit an E-7 occupation. Target 'visa-friendly' employers who have hired foreigners before.
Can I job-hunt from inside Korea?
Yes — the D-10 job-seeking visa lets graduates and qualified professionals stay and search, then switch to an E-7 once hired.
What makes me hireable for a visa?
A role matching an approved occupation, credentials that fit it, and a salary meeting the guideline all make sponsorship easier.