E-7 Series Part 11: E-7 Visa to Permanent Residency in Korea: F-2-7 and F-5 Explained (2026)

📋 E-7 Visa Korea Series — Part 11 of 12: E-7 → Permanent ResidencyPart 10: Rejection Reasons  |  Series Hub  |  Part 12: E-7 FAQ →

The E-7 visa isn’t just a way to work in Korea — for many foreign professionals, it’s the first step on a well-defined path toward making Korea a permanent home. Korea’s residency ladder is structured, points-based, and genuinely achievable if you plan ahead.

This guide covers the full pathway: from E-7 to F-2-7 (long-term residency) to F-5 (permanent residency) — including the point scoring system, realistic timelines, and the mistakes that reset the clock.


The Three-Step Residency Ladder

E-7

Step 1: E-7 Special Occupation Visa Where you start

Your foundation. Hold E-7 status while building your work history, Korean language skills, and income record in Korea. There is no minimum E-7 tenure required before applying for F-2-7, but most applicants need 1–3 years to accumulate enough points to qualify.

Key things to do during E-7: maintain continuous employment, grow your salary, study for TOPIK, keep your immigration record clean.

F-2-7

Step 2: F-2-7 Point-Based Long-Term Residency The bridge

The F-2-7 is a points-based residency visa that gives you broader rights in Korea — including the ability to work for any employer in almost any field without employer sponsorship. It’s the key stepping stone between E-7 and permanent residency.

You need a minimum score (see point system below) to qualify. Once on F-2-7, you begin accumulating the continuous residency time needed for F-5.

F-5

Step 3: F-5 Permanent Residency The goal

F-5 is permanent residency — no more renewals, no employer restrictions, and full eligibility for most social services available to Korean nationals. It requires meeting income, residence, and language requirements, and having a clean immigration record.

The F-5 is not citizenship — you remain a foreign national, but your right to live and work in Korea is indefinite.


The F-2-7 Point System: How Scoring Works

The F-2-7 visa uses a points-based evaluation system. You need to reach the minimum qualifying score (currently set by the Ministry of Justice and subject to periodic adjustment) across several categories. The higher your score, the stronger your application.

🎓 Education (최대 35점)

Doctoral degree (PhD)35 pts
Master’s degree30 pts
Bachelor’s degree25 pts
Associate degree (2-year)15 pts

💼 Korea Work Experience (최대 20점)

5+ years in Korea20 pts
4 years in Korea16 pts
3 years in Korea12 pts
2 years in Korea8 pts
1 year in Korea4 pts

💰 Annual Income (최대 20점)

3× GNI or above20 pts
2–3× GNI15 pts
1.5–2× GNI10 pts
1–1.5× GNI5 pts
Below 1× GNI0 pts

🗣️ Korean Language (최대 20점)

TOPIK Level 620 pts
TOPIK Level 516 pts
TOPIK Level 412 pts
TOPIK Level 38 pts
TOPIK Level 1–24 pts
💡 Additional point categories Beyond the four main categories above, additional points are available for: age (younger applicants score higher — 20s and early 30s score best), having a Korean spouse or child, volunteering hours in Korea, overseas work experience, and social integration program (KIIP) completion. The full scoring rubric is published by the Ministry of Justice and updated periodically.
⚡ Minimum qualifying score The minimum score required to apply for F-2-7 is set by the Ministry of Justice. The threshold has changed over the years as the program has become more competitive. Always check the current minimum with the HiKorea portal or an immigration specialist before applying — do not rely on scores you see cited in older articles.

F-2-7 Requirements Beyond Points

Points alone aren’t enough. To apply for F-2-7, you must also meet these baseline conditions:

  • Currently hold a valid E-7 (or other qualifying work visa) status
  • No criminal record in Korea or abroad
  • No history of immigration violations (unauthorized employment, overstay, etc.)
  • Annual income meets the minimum threshold (varies — currently tied to per-capita GNI)
  • Have maintained continuous legal residence in Korea

F-5 Permanent Residency: Requirements

After spending time on F-2-7, you can apply for F-5 permanent residency. The standard F-5 route for former E-7 holders requires:

RequirementDetails
Continuous legal residenceTypically 5 years of continuous legal residence in Korea — some of this can be pre-F-2-7 time on qualifying visas like E-7
Income requirementAnnual income at or above the applicable GNI-based threshold at time of application
Korean languageTOPIK Level 3 or higher, or completion of the Social Integration Program (KIIP) to Level 5
Basic knowledge testTest on Korean society, culture, and history (사회통합프로그램 종합평가) — waivable through KIIP Level 5 completion
Immigration recordClean record — no serious criminal convictions, no significant immigration violations
Tax complianceAll Korean income taxes must be fully paid

Realistic Timeline: E-7 to F-5

YearMilestoneWhat to focus on
Year 1E-7 issued, start workingBuild employment record, start TOPIK preparation, register for KIIP
Year 1–2Accumulate pointsImprove TOPIK score, negotiate salary increases, maintain clean immigration record
Year 2–3F-2-7 application (if points sufficient)Apply for F-2-7 once minimum score is reached — earlier is better
Year 3–5On F-2-7Continue working, maintain income, no gaps in legal residency
Year 5+F-5 applicationApply for permanent residency once 5-year continuous residency is met
✅ Fast-track tip: Start TOPIK early Korean language proficiency (TOPIK score) is one of the highest-leverage actions you can take to accelerate your F-2-7 timeline. A TOPIK Level 4 adds 12 points — equivalent to 3 extra years of Korea work experience. Students who start preparing for TOPIK in their first year on E-7 often qualify for F-2-7 a full year earlier than those who wait.

Mistakes That Reset or Delay the Clock

Certain actions can reset your residency timeline or disqualify you from the PR pathway entirely:

  • Leaving Korea for extended periods — long gaps in physical residency can break the “continuous residence” requirement for F-5. Confirm with immigration before any extended absence
  • Unauthorized employment — working outside the scope of your visa conditions creates an immigration violation that will be visible at F-2-7 and F-5 review
  • Changing jobs without updating status — employer changes that aren’t properly documented through immigration can create gaps or complications in your employment record
  • Criminal convictions — even minor criminal matters in Korea or abroad can affect F-2-7 and F-5 eligibility
  • Tax non-compliance — unpaid income taxes are checked at F-5 application and can delay or block approval

What F-5 Gives You

Once you hold F-5 permanent residency, your life in Korea changes significantly:

  • No more visa renewals — F-5 does not expire
  • Work for any employer in virtually any field with no restrictions
  • Start your own business without employer sponsorship
  • Access to most social welfare programs available to Korean nationals
  • Your F-5 status is not affected by job changes, layoffs, or income fluctuations
  • Family members already in Korea on F-3 can also apply for F-5 if they meet the requirements
💡 F-5 vs Korean citizenship F-5 permanent residency is not the same as Korean citizenship. As an F-5 holder, you remain a foreign national — you cannot vote in national elections, serve in the Korean military (as a Korean national), or hold a Korean passport. Korean citizenship (귀화) is a separate, more demanding process that requires renouncing your original nationality in most cases.

Key Takeaways

  • The E-7 → F-2-7 → F-5 pathway is structured and achievable with proper planning
  • F-2-7 uses a points system — education, Korea work experience, income, and Korean language are the four main categories
  • TOPIK score is the highest-leverage action: start early, aim for Level 4 or above
  • F-5 requires approximately 5 years of continuous legal residence and meeting income/language requirements
  • Unauthorized employment, extended absences, and criminal matters can reset or block your PR timeline
  • F-5 is permanent residency — not citizenship — but gives you broad rights to live and work in Korea indefinitely

👉 Continue to Part 12: E-7 Visa FAQ — 20 Questions Answered →

E-7 Visa Korea Series Part 1  |  Part 2  |  Part 3  |  Part 4  |  Part 5  |  Part 6  |  Part 7  |  Part 8  |  Part 9  |  Part 10  |  Part 11: PR Pathway (you are here)  |  Part 12 →  |  View All →
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Residency requirements and point systems change — always verify current requirements with the Korean Immigration Service or a licensed immigration attorney.

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