Work & Business
Work culture, job hunting, and navigating Korean business.
Korea's Startup Scene (스타트업): Opportunities for Foreigners
Korea's startup ecosystem is the largest in Northeast Asia outside China — with significant government backing, growing VC investment, and a cluster of unicorns that have become global companies. Here's what it looks like from the inside, and where foreigners fit.
Freelancer (프리랜서) and Self-Employment
Korea's gig economy is real and growing. But the legal and tax framework for freelancers — especially foreign ones — has specific requirements that most people discover after they've already started working.
Business Etiquette (비즈니스 에티켓): Cards, Bowing & Meetings
Korean business protocol has specific conventions — and violating them doesn't end meetings, but it does register. Getting them right signals cultural awareness that Koreans notice and appreciate.
Work Culture (직장 문화): Overtime, Dinner Gathering & What's Changing
Korean work culture has a reputation for intensity — and that reputation is earned. It also has a generation gap, a legal reform, and a genuine tension between what was and what is becoming.
Company Structure (회사 구조): Hierarchy, Titles & How Decisions Get Made
Korean companies have a specific organizational logic — one that shapes how work gets assigned, how decisions get made, and what your actual role is regardless of your job title.
Labor Law (노동법) for Foreigners: Your Rights as a Worker
Korean labor law gives workers significant protections — but those protections only work if you know they exist. Most foreigners don't.
Salary Expectations (급여) by Industry & Experience
What does Korea actually pay? The answer depends heavily on which sector, which company size, and — for foreigners — what you bring that Korean candidates don't.
English Teacher (영어 강사): The Complete Guide
Teaching English is how most foreigners first come to work in Korea. The pay is stable, housing is often included, and the experience is real. So is the variation in quality between employers.
Resume & Interview Culture (이력서·면접): How to Get Hired
Korean job applications follow specific conventions that most foreigners don't know exist. Understanding them doesn't just help you apply — it tells you a lot about Korean workplace culture.

Work Visa Types (취업비자): E-1 to E-9
Korea has a specific visa for almost every type of foreign worker. Knowing which one applies to you — and what it allows — is the first practical step.
How to Get a Job (취업) as a Foreigner
The Korean job market is competitive and credential-heavy. But foreigners who know where to look — and what employers actually want — find real opportunities.