Part-Time Work in Korea for International Students: Permission, Job Changes, and Visa Risks
International students in Korea generally need advance permission for part-time work, and unauthorized jobs can affect visa extensions and future status.

Can International Students Work in Korea?
International students may be allowed to work part-time, but a student visa does not provide unlimited employment rights. The primary purpose of the visa remains education.
Students generally need permission before starting the job. Eligibility, allowed working time, and permitted activities can depend on visa type, academic status, Korean-language ability, school rules, and current immigration policy.
Do not start first and apply later. Permission should be confirmed before performing paid work.
Who Should Check the Rules Carefully?
- D-2 university and graduate students
- D-4 language or training students
- Students changing from one workplace to another
- Students taking a leave of absence
- Students close to graduation or visa expiration
- Students offered freelance, online, internship, or commission-based work
What Immigration and Schools May Review
| Factor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Visa type | Different student statuses may have different employment conditions |
| Enrollment status | The student must continue meeting the purpose of study |
| Attendance and grades | Poor academic participation may affect permission or renewal |
| Workplace and job type | Some activities may be unsuitable or restricted |
| Working schedule | Employment must not interfere with study requirements |
| Previous violations | Unauthorized work can affect future applications |
Jobs That May Require Special Caution
A job being advertised to foreigners does not mean it is automatically permitted for student-visa holders.
- Jobs with unclear employers or cash-only payment
- Work at a different address from the approved workplace
- Freelance content, modeling, promotion, or sales work
- Online work connected to a Korean company or customer
- Work that continues late enough to affect attendance
- Internships that are actually regular paid employment
- Jobs in restricted or adult-oriented businesses
Documents Commonly Needed
- Passport
- Residence card
- Application or reporting form
- School confirmation or recommendation, when required
- Employment contract
- Employer business information
- Class schedule or enrollment certificate
- Language or academic documents, when applicable
Step-by-Step Application Process
Step 1: Ask the International Student Office
Explain the job type, employer, address, schedule, and expected start date. Ask which school documents are needed.
Step 2: Check Whether the Job Is Permitted
Do not rely only on the employer. Employers may understand labor needs but not student-visa restrictions.
Step 3: Sign a Clear Employment Contract
The contract should show the employer, workplace, duties, working days, hours, wage, and contract period.
Step 4: Submit the Required Application
Follow the method instructed by the school and immigration. Keep the application receipt or online confirmation.
Step 5: Wait for Confirmation
Do not perform trial shifts, training, or paid work until permission is confirmed.
Changing Part-Time Jobs
Permission for one employer does not necessarily allow work for another employer. A new workplace, address, duty, or schedule may require a new application or update.
- Confirm the final date at the old workplace.
- Obtain the new employment contract.
- Ask the school whether the change must be reported.
- Submit the required information before starting.
- Keep records of both the old and new workplace.
What Counts as Unauthorized Work?
| Situation | Possible Problem |
|---|---|
| Starting before permission | Work performed without required authorization |
| Working at an unreported branch | Workplace information does not match approval |
| Exceeding permitted conditions | Schedule or work pattern violates the approved terms |
| Using another person’s name | Employment, tax, and identity records become inconsistent |
| Cash work without records | The student may still be discovered through inspections or employer records |
What to Do If You Already Started Without Permission
Do not create additional false records or continue because the violation has already occurred. Contact the school’s international office and obtain official guidance promptly.
- Write down the exact start date and hours worked.
- Collect the employment contract and payment records.
- Stop relying on informal advice from coworkers.
- Ask how to correct the situation properly.
- Prepare for possible immigration review.
Common Mistakes International Students Make
- Believing a small number of hours does not require permission
- Assuming unpaid training is never considered work
- Changing store branches without updating information
- Letting work reduce class attendance
- Accepting a job because another foreign student already works there
- Failing to keep copies of approval records
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I work immediately after signing a contract?
A contract alone does not replace required immigration permission. Confirm authorization before starting.
- Can the employer apply for me?
The employer may provide documents, but the student remains responsible for maintaining lawful visa status.
- Can I work during school vacation?
Vacation rules may differ from semester conditions, but permission and other restrictions can still apply. Confirm the current rules.
- Does online freelance work count?
It can raise complex questions about location, clients, income, and visa activity. Obtain official guidance before accepting the work.
Related Articles
- D-2 Student Visa Complete Guide
- D-4 Language Student Visa Guide
- Student Attendance and Visa Renewal in Korea
- Changing Universities in Korea
Official Study in Korea portal: https://www.studyinkorea.go.kr
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