Korea Student to Work Visa Guide (2026)
Graduating from a Korean university and want to stay and work? Your student visa expires soon after you finish, so the key is to change status in time — usually to a D-10 job-seeker visa while you look for work, or straight to an E-7 professional visa if you already have a qualifying offer. This page explains the routes honestly, including the 2026 TOPIK-based fast track being reported for D-10, and points you to the official sources that decide each case.
Who this guide is for
This is for students in Korea on a D-2 degree visa (or a D-4 language visa moving toward study and work) who want to switch to a work-eligible status after graduating. The routes below are the most common; treat them as orientation, not a guaranteed checklist, and confirm your exact options officially.
Your three main routes after graduation
1. D-2 → D-10 (job-seeker visa)
2. D-2 → E-7 (professional work visa) directly
3. The 2026 TOPIK-4 fast track to D-10
The D-10 points and the new language fast track
Historically, D-10 used a points-based screening (education, age, Korean ability, and more). The change reported for 2026 is a simpler language-based path for recent graduates of Korean universities with strong Korean (TOPIK Level 4+), letting them skip the complex points review.
| Element | How it works |
|---|---|
| Standard D-10 | Points-based screening (education, age, language, etc.) |
| 2026 fast track (reported) | Recent Korean-university graduates with TOPIK Level 4+ may skip the points review |
| Initial period | Commonly about 6 months, extendable with proof of job-hunting |
The exact TOPIK level, graduation window, and whether the fast track applies to you are set officially and can change. Confirm the current D-10 rules on HiKorea or by calling 1345 before relying on any fast track.
If you go to E-7: employer sponsorship
The E-7 professional visa requires a Korean employer to sponsor you, the role must be on the E-7 eligible-occupation list, and you must meet that year's salary standard. See our E-7 work visa guide and our visa sponsorship guide for how the employer side works. The exact E-7 salary threshold is set yearly — confirm the current figure officially.
Timing is everything
Your student status ends soon after graduation, so apply to change status before it expires — do not let it lapse and risk an overstay. Use HiKorea to file the change of status; see our change of visa status guide for the general steps and fee.
Frequently asked questions
Can I switch from student to work status inside Korea?
Often yes — to D-10 (job-seeker) if you have no offer yet, or directly to E-7 if you have a qualifying offer. Do it through HiKorea before your stay expires.
Is there a faster D-10 in 2026?
Reports indicate recent Korean-university graduates with TOPIK Level 4+ can move to D-10 without the full points screening. Confirm the current eligibility officially.
How long does D-10 last?
Commonly about 6 months initially, extendable with proof of job-hunting up to a reported maximum of around 2 years. Confirm on HiKorea.
Can I go straight to E-7?
Yes, if you have a job offer in an E-7-eligible role matching your major, with employer sponsorship and meeting that year's salary standard.
Does my GPA matter?
It can — keeping at least a 2.0 (about a C average) helps keep your student status in good standing and avoids complications with extensions and status changes.