Unpaid Wages in Korea: What Foreign Workers Should Do Before It Gets Worse
Foreign workers in Korea can report unpaid wages through official labor channels, but strong evidence and quick action are essential to recover salary and protect visa status.

Why Unpaid Wages Are a Serious Issue
Some foreign workers in Korea wait too long after wages are delayed. They may believe the employer will eventually pay, or they may fear that reporting the employer will affect their visa. This delay can make the case harder because documents disappear, messages are deleted, and the employer may become unreachable.
Wage issues are labor matters, but they can also affect immigration if job status changes, employment ends, or the employer refuses cooperation.
Common Unpaid Wage Situations
- Monthly salary paid late or not paid at all
- Overtime work not paid
- Final salary withheld after resignation
- Severance pay not paid
- Employer deducts money without explanation
- Employer promises payment but keeps delaying
What Evidence You Should Collect
| Evidence | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Employment contract | Shows agreed salary, working hours, and conditions |
| Bank records | Shows missing or partial payments |
| Work schedule | Helps prove actual working days and overtime |
| Messages with employer | Shows promises, delays, or refusal to pay |
| Payslips | Helps compare expected pay and actual payment |
Step-by-Step Action Plan
Step 1: Calculate the Exact Amount
Write down unpaid salary, overtime, severance, or deductions separately. Do not visit the labor office with only a general complaint. A clear amount makes your case easier to process.
Step 2: Ask the Employer in Writing
Send a clear message asking when the unpaid amount will be paid. Keep the conversation professional and avoid emotional language.
Step 3: Visit or Contact the Labor Office
If the employer continues delaying or refuses to pay, contact the local labor office. Bring your documents and explain the timeline clearly.
Step 4: Protect Your Visa Situation
If you lose your job or the employer disappears, do not wait. Check whether you must report employment changes to immigration.
Common Mistakes Foreign Workers Make
- Trusting verbal promises for too long
- Not saving work schedules or messages
- Leaving Korea before resolving the wage issue
- Assuming the employer will handle visa reporting
- Not checking whether severance pay applies
What to Say When Asking for Help
A useful explanation is: “I worked from this date to this date. My agreed salary was this amount. I received this amount. This amount is still unpaid. Here are the records.”
Related Articles
- Labor Office Guide for Foreign Workers
- Severance Pay in Korea for Foreign Employees
- Changing Jobs in Korea on a Work Visa
Official labor office: https://www.moel.go.kr
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