🏢 Korea Real Estate

How to Get a Korean Visa Through Real Estate Investment (F-2 to F-5 Guide)

📅 July 11, 2026 ✍️ AINBlogger Korea RE Desk ⏱ 9 min read 🔄 Updated July 2026
How to Get a Korean Visa Through Real Estate Investment (F-2 to F-5 Guide)

Korea quietly offers one of the most accessible investment visa pathways in Asia — but it's almost exclusively marketed to Korean-speaking investors. For foreigners, this represents a genuine opportunity: invest in designated resort properties, receive long-term residency, and access a pathway to permanent residency. Here's the complete guide.

The Basic Pathway

Korea's Real Estate Investment Migration Program works as follows: Invest ₩500M–₩1B (approximately $370,000–$740,000 USD) in a designated tourism/resort facility in one of the approved zones. Receive an F-2 (Long-term Residence) visa for yourself and qualifying family members. Maintain the investment for 5 continuous years. Apply to upgrade to F-5 (Permanent Residency).

Approved Investment Zones

Jeju Island — The most popular zone. Minimum investment: ₩500M. Jeju's unique status as a visa-free international zone (most nationalities enter without visa) makes it particularly accessible. Growing tourism infrastructure and natural beauty drive rental demand. Chinese investment historically dominant but now diversifying.

Incheon Free Economic Zone — Located near Seoul and Incheon International Airport. Minimum: ₩500M. The Songdo district is Korea's ambitious smart city development with modern infrastructure. Good connectivity to central Seoul (30 min by metro).

Busan (Haeundae Resort Zone) — Korea's second city. Minimum: ₩500M. Beach location with growing international profile. Busan aims to become a major MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions) hub.

Pyeongchang (Alpensia Resort) — Mountain resort zone. Post-Winter Olympics infrastructure. Minimum: ₩500M. Niche choice but appeals to skiing/outdoor recreation investors.

What You're Actually Buying

The investment must be in designated "tourism accommodation facilities" — typically hotel condominiums or resort units within approved developments. You are buying a unit within a hotel or resort complex, not a standard residential apartment. Key characteristics: managed by a hotel operator (you earn rental income but don't manage it yourself), governed by tourism accommodation regulations rather than residential laws, and exempt from the residential foreign buyer permit system.

The F-2 Visa: What It Gives You

The F-2 Long-term Residence Visa is one of Korea's most permissive visa categories. Benefits: right to live in Korea indefinitely (renewable annually as long as investment maintained), right to work in any field (no employer sponsorship required), family members (spouse and minor children) receive the same status, access to Korean national health insurance, and ability to open businesses and sign contracts freely.

Path to F-5 Permanent Residency

After maintaining the qualifying investment for 5 consecutive years with F-2 status: submit F-5 application to Korea Immigration Service, demonstrate maintained investment, pass basic Korean language test (TOPIK Level 1 — very basic), and provide evidence of stable livelihood. F-5 permanent residency requires no sponsorship, never expires (annual reporting only), and gives nearly identical rights to Korean citizenship without requiring renunciation of your original nationality.

Tax Considerations

Investment property rental income is taxed in Korea at 14–45% depending on annual amount. The investment property is not subject to the punishing Capital Gains Tax rates on short-term residential property sales — it's treated as commercial property with more favorable rates. Consult a Korean tax specialist before investing, particularly regarding your home country's tax treaty provisions with Korea.

Tags: Korea real estateForeign investment KoreaSeoul property 2026

⚖️ For informational purposes only. Always consult a licensed Korean attorney before making investment decisions.