Does South Korea have a digital nomad visa?
Yes. South Korea offers a dedicated digital-nomad or remote-work visa for people earning from outside the country, with a monthly income floor of roughly $5,100. Getting it is a moderate lift.
In practice: F-1-D nomad visa ~$66k/yr. Worldwide tax only after 5/10yr residence; top 45% +10% local surtax (~49.5%). PR F-5 5yr.
Tax for foreign residents in South Korea
For a foreign earner, South Korea's income is taxed heavily. The country taxes residents on worldwide income once you cross the residency threshold, with a headline top personal rate around 45%. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm your own situation with a cross-border professional before you move.
From visa to permanent residency
If you're thinking past a year or two, check whether the stay builds toward settlement: in South Korea, permanent residency is reachable after about 5 years of residence. Naturalization typically comes after roughly 5 years. Immigration rules change often, so treat these as directional and verify the current policy with official sources.
Healthcare and insurance
Healthcare access for a foreigner in South Korea is easy to access. A mid-tier private health plan runs roughly $200 a month — most long-stay visas require proof of cover.