Korea F-5 Permanent Residency Visa Guide (2026)
The F-5 is the closest thing to staying in Korea for good. Once you hold it, you generally no longer renew a visa, you can work freely, and you keep most of the rights of residents. But it is also one of the hardest statuses to qualify for — it usually asks for years of lawful residence, a solid income, Korean language, and a clean record. This page explains the building blocks honestly, and points you to the official sources that decide each case.
Who the F-5 visa is for
The F-5 (permanent residency) is for foreigners who have built a stable, long-term life in Korea and want a status that no longer requires renewing a visa. There are many sub-categories — by years of residence, by income, by advanced degree, by investment, by marriage, by being an overseas Korean, and more. The list below covers the building blocks most people meet; treat it as orientation, not a guaranteed checklist.
1. Years of lawful residence
2. Income at or above the GNI standard
3. Korean language & social integration
4. Clean criminal & immigration record
The income (GNI) standard for 2026
The F-5 income test is tied to Korea's per-capita Gross National Income (GNI), which the government revises each year, so the exact won amount changes annually. The required multiple depends on which F-5 category you apply under.
| Element | How it works |
|---|---|
| Benchmark | Korea's per-capita GNI, revised yearly |
| General category (e.g. F-5-1) | Reported as around 2x the GNI |
| Advanced-degree / F-2-7 routes | Reported as around 1x the GNI |
The exact GNI figure and the multiple for each category are set officially and change every year. Confirm the current won amount on HiKorea or by calling 1345 — do not rely on a remembered number.
F-2-7 first, then F-5
One of the most common paths is to secure the F-2-7 points-based residency visa first, build a track record on it, then apply for F-5. F-2-7 is a renewable long-term status; F-5 is permanent. If you are still on a working visa, you may instead qualify directly after enough years — confirm which route fits your case.
What F-5 does and doesn't give you
F-5 generally lets you live and work in Korea without renewing a visa, and it removes most employer-tied restrictions. It is not citizenship — you keep your nationality and cannot vote in most elections. The status can still be lost in some situations, such as a long absence from Korea without a re-entry permit, or certain legal violations. The physical residence card is typically reissued every ten years. Confirm the current re-entry and reissue rules on HiKorea.
After approval: your Residence Card
F-5 holders carry a Residence Card like other long-term residents. If you are newly registering or replacing a card, see our Residence Card (ARC) registration guide. If you are not yet eligible for F-5, the F-2-7 and visa extension guides may be your next step.
Frequently asked questions
How many years must I live in Korea for F-5?
The general route is usually 5+ years of continuous lawful residence; some categories (from F-2-7 or certain working visas) report around 3 years. Verify your category on HiKorea.
What income do I need in 2026?
Most categories require income at roughly 1x to 2x Korea's per-capita GNI, depending on the category. The GNI figure changes yearly — confirm the current won amount officially.
Do I need Korean language?
Generally yes — commonly KIIP Level 5 or an equivalent test, though some categories have exemptions. Confirm for your category.
How is F-5 different from F-2-7?
F-2-7 is a renewable long-term residency; F-5 is permanent and generally doesn't require visa renewal. F-2-7 is a common stepping stone to F-5.
Does F-5 ever expire?
The status is generally permanent, but the card is reissued (commonly every 10 years), and the status can be lost through long absences without a re-entry permit or certain violations. Confirm on HiKorea.