Korea’s Top-Tier Visa — previously the most exclusive visa in the country with fewer than 20 holders as of early 2026 — is being significantly expanded. The Ministry of Science and ICT and the Ministry of Justice announced on May 31 that the visa will extend to university professors and researchers in science and technology fields, effective June 2026. If you’re a STEM researcher or academic considering Korea, the eligibility bar just became much more realistic.
The Top-Tier Visa, previously limited to employees hired by companies in eight advanced industries (semiconductors, AI, robotics, secondary batteries, future mobility, and others), will now extend to professors and research personnel in science and technology — covering universities, government-funded research institutes, and corporate research centers. Effective from June 2026.
What Changed — Before and After
- Corporate employees only at 8 designated advanced industry companies
- Nobel laureates and Olympic medalists (extremely narrow)
- ~20 total holders nationwide as of February 2026
- Academic researchers not eligible regardless of credentials
- Corporate employees in 8 advanced industries (unchanged)
- STEM professors at Korean universities
- Full-time researchers at government-funded research institutes
- Researchers at corporate research centers in S&T fields
- Streamlined visa + simplified F-5 permanent residency process
Who Qualifies Under the Expanded Criteria
| Category | Qualifying profile |
|---|---|
| University professors | Appointed as full-time faculty at a Korean university in a STEM field. Appointment letter or faculty contract required. |
| Government research institute researchers | Full-time research position at a government-funded research institute (정부출연연구기관) in Korea. KIST, KAIST, ETRI, and similar institutions. |
| Corporate research center researchers | Researchers at corporate R&D centers designated in STEM fields. Must be in a qualifying advanced industry sector. |
| Academic credentials | PhD or equivalent research output from a top-200 global university (QS / THE / ARWU rankings), or researchers with publications in top-quartile (Q1) journals (Scopus), or holders of patents registered in Korea. |
The Core Benefit: 3 Years → Permanent Residency
The headline benefit of the Top-Tier Visa has not changed — and now it applies to academic talent as well:
| Benefit | Details |
|---|---|
| Accelerated F-5 permanent residency | After 3 years of legal residence in Korea on the Top-Tier Visa (F-2-T), eligible to apply for F-5 permanent residency. Standard route requires 5 years. |
| Streamlined visa issuance | Significantly reduced processing time and documentation requirements compared to standard professional visa routes. |
| Work rights | Full work authorization in any qualifying field — not restricted to a single employer the way E-7 visas are. |
| Family inclusion | Spouse and children can accompany as dependents. Spouse may receive work authorization under F-2 dependent status. |
| Simplified settlement | The government stated this expansion includes “comprehensive support for both visa and settlement conditions” — specific settlement programs will be detailed in subsequent announcements. |
Government Context: “Brain to Korea”
This expansion is part of a broader government initiative called “Brain to Korea” — a detailed task under the national policy assignment to address Korea’s challenges in advanced technology sectors, particularly given intensifying global competition for STEM talent in AI, semiconductors, and quantum technology.
Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Science and ICT Bae Kyunghoon stated at the announcement: the goal is to ensure that “outstanding overseas researchers can choose Korea as a stage for research and growth” by supporting not just research opportunities but also settlement conditions and visa efficiency simultaneously.
What’s Still Unknown
The May 31 announcement confirmed the expansion is effective from June 2026, but some operational details are still being finalized:
- Specific documentation requirements for the academic track — what exactly qualifies as “equivalent research output” and how it is assessed
- Which government research institutes are covered and whether there’s a qualifying list
- Settlement support programs mentioned in the announcement — details to be released separately
- Application processing locations — whether academic applicants can apply from overseas or must already be in Korea
We will update this article as the Ministry of Justice and Ministry of Science and ICT publish implementation guidelines. Check hikorea.go.kr for the official updated requirements.
- Top-Tier Visa (F-2-T / K-STAR) now covers STEM professors and researchers — effective June 2026
- Eligible institutions: Korean universities, government-funded research institutes, corporate R&D centers
- Credential bar: top-200 global university PhD, Q1 journal publications, or Korea-registered patents
- Core benefit unchanged: 3 years legal residence → F-5 permanent residency eligibility
- Target: 2,000 overseas S&T talents by 2030 under “Brain to Korea” program
- Implementation details still being finalized — check hikorea.go.kr for official requirements
Related: K-STAR (F-2-T) Visa: The Complete Guide for High-Tech Professionals →
Related: E-7 Visa Korea: The Professional Work Visa →
Related: F-2-R Regional Talent Residency Visa: Another Long-Term Path →