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Korea F-1 Visiting & Family Visa Guide (2026)

General information for family visitors · Last reviewed: June 2026

The F-1 is Korea's "visiting / joining family" visa — the status used when the reason you want to stay is a person, not a job or a course. It covers cases like living with relatives, parents supporting a child, family of a marriage migrant helping with childcare, and (in narrow, strictly-gated cases) foreign domestic helpers. The single most misunderstood point: F-1 does not let you work by default. This page explains who can invite you, the work rule, dependents, and the F-1-22 helper route — honestly, with the official sources that decide each case.

⚠️ Visa rules change often and the F-1 has many sub-categories that depend on your exact relationship and situation. This is general information, not legal or immigration advice. Always verify the current requirements for your case on the official Korea Immigration Service site hikorea.go.kr (or via the 1345 immigration helpline) and with your nearest Korean embassy before applying.

Who the F-1 visa is for

The F-1 (visiting / joining family) is for people whose reason to stay in Korea is family or humanitarian rather than work or study. It is a broad category split into many sub-codes, so the gates depend on your exact situation. The common cases below are widely reported, but immigration sets the exact rules.

1. A qualifying relationship or purpose

Common F-1 cases include joining or living with relatives, parents supporting a child in Korea, or family of a marriage migrant helping with childcare. Eligible relationships are set officially and have been updated recently.
Eligible relationship required

2. An inviter / sponsor who meets the conditions

The person inviting you usually must meet income/asset, insurance, and residence conditions (these vary by sub-category). The exact sponsor requirements are set officially.
Qualifying inviter required

3. Proof of the relationship and support

Documents proving the family relationship (e.g. birth/marriage records) and that you will be supported are commonly required, often translated and authenticated. Confirm the current document list.
Relationship documents required

4. No work by default

F-1 does not authorize employment on its own. Any paid work requires a separate permit, and approval is not guaranteed. Working without permission can jeopardize your status.
Separate work permit needed

The work rule, dependents & the F-1-22 helper route

Three points trip people up most often. The table summarizes them — all set officially and subject to change.

TopicWhat to know (verify officially)
WorkingNot allowed by default. You must apply separately for a part-time / activity-outside-status permit, with no guarantee of approval.
DependentsIn some cases a child or family member can be registered as a dependent if the inviter meets insurance/income/residence conditions. Rules vary by sub-category.
F-1-22 (domestic helper)Only sponsors meeting strict conditions (e.g. certain high-income professionals or qualifying investors, often with a young child and a high income threshold) may sponsor a foreign helper. Thresholds are set officially.

The eligible relationships, sponsor conditions, work-permit rules, and F-1-22 thresholds are set officially and change. Confirm the current rules for your exact case on HiKorea, via 1345, and with your Korean embassy before relying on them.

Registration, duration & extending

If you stay over 90 days on an F-1, you generally must register and obtain a Residence Card (ARC) through HiKorea. The period of stay depends on your sub-category and the inviter's situation, and can usually be extended through HiKorea if the conditions still hold — see our visa extension guide. If your situation changes (for example you take a job), you may need a change of visa status. Confirm the current steps officially.

Travel tip, not visa advice: families arriving to live together often keep a local eSIM active so relatives and immigration can reach them and they can receive verification texts and book HiKorea appointments.
Compare Korea travel eSIMs
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Frequently asked questions

What is the F-1 visa for?

A "visiting / joining family" status for staying in Korea for family or humanitarian reasons — living with relatives, supporting family, or (in narrow cases) acting as a domestic helper. Sub-categories are set officially.

Can I work on an F-1?

Not by default. You must apply separately for a part-time / activity-outside-status permit, with no guarantee of approval. Working without it can jeopardize your status. Confirm the rules on HiKorea.

Who can invite or sponsor me?

Common cases include relatives of certain visa holders, subject to relationship, income/asset, and insurance conditions. The exact eligible relationships and sponsor rules are set officially — verify your case.

What is the F-1-22 domestic helper route?

The sub-code for foreign domestic helpers. Only sponsors meeting strict conditions (e.g. certain high-income professionals or qualifying investors with a young child) may sponsor one. Thresholds are set officially.

How long can I stay?

It depends on your sub-category and the inviter's situation, and can usually be extended through HiKorea if conditions continue. There's no single fixed duration. Confirm your period of stay officially.

⚠️ Reminder: F-1 sub-categories, sponsor conditions, work rules, and helper thresholds change. Do not rely on this page as your final source. Confirm everything on hikorea.go.kr (or call 1345) and with your Korean embassy before acting. This is not legal advice.