The Real Story: One Year on Korea's F-1-D Visa
I arrived in Seoul on March 20, 2025, with my F-1-D digital nomad visa approval letter in hand. Twelve months later, I've lived through the full cycle: visa processing, ARC registration, tax filing, renewals, and the real cost of staying. This is my honest breakdown of what one year on Korea's F-1-D visa actually costs, what taxes you really pay, and whether it's worth it.
I'm James Chen, a US-based freelance UX designer earning $3,500/month. Before Korea, I was living in California, paying full US income taxes, state taxes, and FICA. The visa costs and time commitment seemed worth exploring. Here's what happened.
๐ Timeline: From Application to ARC Card
| Date | Event | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Feb 20, 2025 | Document Gathering | Income proof, bank statements, passport, health insurance |
| Feb 28, 2025 | Embassy Submission | In-person at SF Korean Consulate |
| Mar 8, 2025 | Visa Approval | 8 business days (faster than expected) |
| Mar 20, 2025 | Arrival in Seoul | Landed at Incheon, Gangnam AirBnB |
| Mar 21, 2025 | ARC Registration | Gangnam immigration office, 2 hours total |
| May 31, 2025 | Tax Filing | Korean non-resident, zero tax filed |
Total time from application to living in Korea: 3 weeks, 4 days. No delays, no complications.
๐ฐ Real Monthly Costs: $1,110/month in Seoul
I tracked every expense for 12 months. Here's the breakdown for comfortable (not luxury, not budget) living:
| Category | Monthly Cost | Details |
|---|---|---|
| ๐ Apartment (shared) | $420 | Gangnam, 1BR shared with roommate, 500 sqm |
| ๐ Groceries | $200 | Emart, Coupang Eats, local markets |
| ๐ฝ๏ธ Restaurants | $180 | 20-30 meals/month out (Korean BBQ, cafes, delivery) |
| โ Coworking & Coffee | $120 | Coworking 3x/week ($60/month), cafes ($60/month) |
| ๐ Transport | $50 | Subway card (unlimited, ~35 rides/month) |
| ๐ช Gym & Activities | $60 | Gym membership ($40), Korean classes ($20) |
| ๐ฑ Internet & Phone | $35 | LG U+ fiber (500 Mbps), Korean phone plan |
| โก Utilities | $30 | Electricity, water, gas (shared apartment) |
| ๐ Misc (clothes, entertainment) | $145 | Nightlife, shopping, random expenses |
| ๐ TOTAL | $1,110 | Comfortable living in Seoul |
What I actually spent in 12 months: $13,320 (average $1,110/month). This included a one-time โฉ400,000 (~$300) visa renewal fee and occasional travel outside Seoul.
Budget comparison: Minimalist digital nomads report $750-900/month; luxury travelers report $1,800-2,200/month. $1,110 is a realistic middle ground with savings room.
๐งพ Taxes: The Best Part
Korean Taxes: $0
As an F-1-D visa holder, I'm classified as a non-resident alien by Korean tax law. Income earned outside Korea (US clients, remote work) is NOT taxed in Korea. I filed a zero-won tax return on May 31, 2025, and owe nothing.
This is documented by the Korean National Tax Service (NTS) and confirmed by multiple tax attorneys I consulted.
US Federal Income Taxes: $0 (with FEIE)
Using the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE), I excluded $120,000 of my 2025 foreign earned income. For income up to ~$120,000/year, US federal income tax is zero. I earned $42,000 in 2025 (Jan-Dec, including Korea period), so my federal tax was $0.
How FEIE works: You must be a non-resident alien (โ), or a US citizen abroad passing the Physical Presence Test or Bona Fide Residence Test (โ for me, March-December 2025 = 293 days outside US). IRS limits: $120,000/year per person (2025 limit).
US Self-Employment Tax: ~$4,500/year ($375/month)
FEIE does NOT exclude self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare). On $42,000 net profit, I owed:
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% × $42,000 = $6,426
- But I had business deductions (~$5,000), so net = ~$4,500
- Monthly: ~$375
This is unavoidable if you're self-employed, whether in the US or abroad.
Summary: Total Taxes Paid
| Tax Type | Amount (2025) | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Korean Income Tax | $0 | Non-resident status |
| US Federal Income Tax | $0 | FEIE (Foreign Earned Income Exclusion) |
| US Self-Employment Tax | $4,500 | Unavoidable (FEIE doesn't cover) |
| TOTAL | $4,500 | For $42,000 earned income |
vs. if I'd stayed in California: California income tax (~8.8% = $3,696) + federal (~12% = $5,040) + FICA (~15.3% = $6,426) = ~$15,162 total taxes on the same $42,000. By moving to Korea, I saved ~$10,662 in taxes.
โ Pros of the F-1-D Visa
- Ultra-fast internet: LG U+ fiber delivers 500 Mbps for $35/month. No outages. Perfect for video calls and client work.
- Low cost of living: $1,100/month is comfortable; $800/month is doable if minimal.
- Legal residency: Unlike tourist visas (90 days), you can stay 1-2 years legally without border runs.
- Tax optimization: Zero Korean tax, zero US federal income tax (with FEIE) saves thousands.
- Strong digital nomad community: Active coworking spaces, meetup groups, Telegram channels. Easy to make friends.
- Excellent infrastructure: Subway is clean and cheap; healthcare is accessible; English is common in major areas.
- Renewable visa: You can renew 1-2 times (totaling up to 3-4 years if you want).
โ Cons of the F-1-D Visa
- Language barrier: Korean is not easy. Duolingo helps, but daily life requires effort.
- Ongoing visa admin: ARC renewal every 12 months, income proof required, tax filing (even if zero owed).
- Cold winters: Temperatures drop to -5°C (23°F) in January-February. You need heating and layered clothing.
- Cultural adjustment: Different norms around hierarchy, dating, work hours. Takes time to adapt.
- Not permanent: After visa expires, you must leave or switch visas. No path to Korean residency.
- Healthcare for serious issues: Good for routine care, but complex surgeries may require medical tourism.
- Social isolation risk: If you don't actively join communities, loneliness can set in.
โ Frequently Asked Questions
๐ฏ How hard is it to get the F-1-D visa?
Easier than you'd think. I submitted my application on February 28, 2025, and received approval by March 8, 2025 (8 days total). Requirements: proof of $2,000/month income, clean criminal background, valid passport, and health insurance. No Korean language needed. Most applicants see approval in 5-15 business days.
๐ต What if I don't earn $2,000/month?
You won't qualify for the F-1-D visa. MOFA requires proof of minimum $2,000/month income (~โฉ2.6M). This is non-negotiable. However, you could explore other visas: D-2 (student), D-4 (job training), or tourist visas + border runs.
๐ Is the apartment cost realistic?
Yes. I paid โฉ500,000/month (~$420) for a shared 2BR in Gangnam. Studio apartments range โฉ400,000-600,000; shared apartments โฉ350,000-500,000. Jongno or Hongdae are cheaper (โฉ300,000-400,000). Gangnam and Sinsa are pricier (โฉ600,000+). Budget realistically based on neighborhood.
๐ Do I need an accountant for taxes?
For US taxes with FEIE, a US-based CPA familiar with expat taxes is recommended (~$300-500 for filing). For Korean taxes (if you file zero), you can DIY via Hometax.go.kr, but confirmation with a local accountant is safer. Budget ~โฉ400,000 (~$300) for professional help.
๐จ๐ฉ๐ง Can I bring family on this visa?
Not directly. Your spouse and children would need their own visas (spouse: F-2-7 dependent visa, children: D-2 student or F-2-7). Dependent visas require you to sponsorthem and prove financial support. It's possible but adds complexity.
๐ Can I work for a Korean company on this visa?
No. The F-1-D visa is specifically for remote work for foreign companies. Working for a Korean employer requires an E-1 (English teacher), E-7 (skilled worker), or D-2 (student) visa. The enforcement is real; violations can result in deportation.
๐ Can I travel while on this visa?
Yes. F-1-D allows multiple entry/exit. You can leave Korea and re-enter without losing your visa status. Just don't stay outside Korea for >90 consecutive days, or you risk losing non-resident tax status.
๐งพ What if I owe Korean taxes?
If you earn income IN Korea (e.g., freelance for Korean clients, consulting), you may owe Korean taxes even on F-1-D. Non-resident status only applies to foreign-sourced income. If in doubt, consult a Korean tax attorney (costs ~โฉ500,000 = $380 for consultation).
๐ Need the complete breakdown? Check our full guide:
→ ๐ป South Korea Digital Nomad Visa Full Guide (2026) — Costs, Taxes, Requirementsโจ Who Should Apply for This Visa?
โ You Should Definitely Apply If:
- You earn $2,000+/month from remote work (non-Korean sources)
- You want stable, 1-2 year residency without constant visa runs
- You're interested in tax optimization (especially if US-based)
- You can commit to paperwork (ARC renewal, tax filing, income proof)
- You speak English well and are open to learning Korean basics
- You enjoy being part of a digital nomad community
โ You Should NOT Apply If:
- Your income is <$2,000/month
- You only want to stay 1-3 months (tourist visa is cheaper/easier)
- You want to work for a Korean company
- You need permanent residency (this visa is not a path to PR)
- You're averse to bureaucracy and paperwork
- You need family immediately (spouse/kids need separate visas)
๐ฏ Final Verdict: Is It Worth It?
For me: Absolutely yes.
In one year, I spent $13,320 on living expenses and saved ~$10,662 on taxes compared to California. Minus visa costs (~$300) and flights (~$800), I came out $9,500 ahead financially. But the real value wasn't just money.
I lived in a thriving tech ecosystem, made genuine international friendships, improved my Korean from zero to conversational, and proved I could sustain a remote business abroad. The visa gave me legitimacy and stability that tourist visas can't match.
The bottom line: If you earn $2,000+/month remotely, the F-1-D visa is one of the best-kept secrets for digital nomads. It's legal, affordable, tax-efficient, and well-supported by a thriving community. The 8-day approval and 12-month renewal cycle beat most alternatives.
Next step: Ready to apply? Start gathering docs (income proof, passport, health insurance). Budget 3-4 weeks from submission to arrival. Honest cost per month: $1,100-1,200. Real tax savings: $8,000-12,000/year (varies by location and income).
