E-7 Series Part 8: Changing Jobs on an E-7 Visa in Korea: What You Need to Know

📋 E-7 Visa Korea Series — Part 8 of 12: Changing Jobs on E-7Part 7: For International Students  |  Series Hub  |  Part 9: Renewing Your E-7 →

Your E-7 visa is tied to a specific employer. That’s the fundamental fact that shapes everything about changing jobs in Korea as a foreign worker. It doesn’t mean you’re trapped — but it does mean there’s a process to follow, and getting it wrong has real consequences.

This guide covers every scenario: planned job changes, unexpected layoffs, changing occupation codes within the same company, and the E-7 → D-10 rules that many people misunderstand.


The Core Rule: E-7 Is Employer-Specific

Your E-7 visa authorizes you to work for the specific employer listed on your visa, in the specific occupation code your application was based on. This means:

  • You cannot simply start working for a new company because you have an E-7 visa
  • You must notify immigration and go through a formal process before starting with a new employer
  • Working for a different employer without updating your visa status is unauthorized employment — a serious violation
⚠️ Do not start work at a new company before updating your visa Many E-7 holders assume that because they already have a valid E-7 visa, they can freely change employers. This is incorrect. Starting work at a new company — even temporarily, even if the new role is identical to your old one — without completing the employer change process is a violation of your visa conditions. It can result in your E-7 being revoked and affect future visa applications.

Scenario 1: Planned Job Change (You’re Leaving Voluntarily)

If you’ve found a new job and are planning to leave your current employer, here is the correct process:

  1. 1

    Secure a signed contract with your new employer before resigning

    Before you hand in your notice, have a signed employment contract with the new company in hand. This is important because once you leave your current employer, your E-7 status begins a clock — you need to move quickly.

  2. 2

    Prepare the new employer’s documents

    Your new employer must prepare the same set of company documents required for any E-7 application: business registration, insurance lists, tax certificates, financial statements, company profile, and 고용사유서. Full document list in Part 4 →

  3. 3

    Submit a status change application at the immigration office

    File for a 체류자격 변경 (status change) at your local immigration office. Even though your visa type remains E-7, changing employers requires a formal re-evaluation. The new employer’s documents and your updated employment contract are submitted alongside your personal documents.

  4. 4

    Wait for review (4–8 weeks)

    The review process is the same as the original E-7 application. Your new employer’s financial health, the occupation code match, and your qualifications are all re-evaluated. Do not start working at the new company during this period.

  5. 5

    Collect updated ARC and begin work

    Once approved, your ARC is updated with the new employer information. You can now legally start work at the new company.


Scenario 2: Laid Off or Dismissed (Employer Terminates)

Being let go while on an E-7 is stressful — but you have options. The key is acting quickly.

Timeline after terminationYour statusWhat to do
ImmediatelyE-7 status technically still valid but employment basis is goneNotify immigration and assess your options immediately
Within 14 daysGrace period — still legally in KoreaApply for status change to D-10 OR secure new E-7 employment
After 14 days without actionRisk of visa status becoming invalidUrgent action required — consult an immigration specialist
⚡ The E-7 → D-10 switch is NOT automatic Many E-7 holders assume that if they lose their job, they automatically qualify for a D-10 job seeker visa. This is a common misconception. Whether you can switch to D-10 depends on your cumulative work history in Korea, how long you held your E-7, and other factors. Not everyone qualifies. Check with your immigration office or a specialist immediately after losing your job — do not assume.

The E-7 → D-10 Rules in Detail

D-10 (job seeker visa) is available to some E-7 holders who lose their employment — but there are conditions:

ConditionDetails
Minimum E-7 work periodYou typically need to have held E-7 status for a meaningful period — check current requirements with your immigration office as the rules have been updated
Reason for terminationVoluntary resignation may be treated differently from layoff or company closure — the circumstances matter
D-10 durationTypically 6 months, with possible extension depending on circumstances
Work authorization on D-10Full-time work is not permitted — job seeking only
Income during D-10No income from employment — plan financially for this period

Scenario 3: Changing Occupation Code at the Same Employer

If you’re staying at the same company but your role is changing significantly — for example, moving from a marketing role to a product management role with a different occupation code — you may need to update your E-7 status even without changing employers.

✅ Same code — no action needed

If your job duties evolve within the scope of your existing E-7 occupation code, no immigration action is typically required. Promotions, salary increases, and expanded responsibilities within the same code are fine.

⚠️ Different code — update required

If your role changes to a different occupation category requiring a different E-7 code, you must apply for a status change. Confirm with your immigration office whether the new duties constitute a code change before assuming no action is needed.


Scenario 4: Your Employer Changes (Merger, Acquisition, Restructuring)

If your Korean employer undergoes a merger, acquisition, or corporate restructuring that results in a change to the legal entity you work for, your E-7 status may be affected even though you haven’t changed jobs. In this case:

  • Notify your immigration office of the corporate change promptly
  • The new legal entity may need to re-register as your sponsoring employer
  • In many cases, continuity of employment is recognized — but confirmation from immigration is required
  • Your HR department should be actively managing this process; if they’re not, raise it immediately

Impact on Your PR Timeline

Frequent job changes can affect your path to long-term residency. The F-2-7 point system rewards stability and continuous employment — multiple short-term positions, extended gaps between employers, or periods on D-10 can reduce your points and delay your F-2-7 application timeline.

💡 Job changes and the PR timeline One well-managed job change — especially a move to a higher-salary role at a more established company — may actually help your F-2-7 application by increasing your income score. The key is to manage the transition correctly through immigration and avoid unauthorized employment gaps. Read more about the F-2-7 point system in Part 11 →

Key Takeaways

  • Your E-7 visa is tied to a specific employer — you cannot freely switch companies without an immigration process
  • For planned job changes, secure the new contract first, then submit a status change application before starting work
  • If you are laid off, act within 14 days — do not assume D-10 is automatically available to you
  • Changing your occupation code (even at the same company) may require a status update
  • Corporate restructuring that changes your legal employer requires immigration notification
  • Unauthorized employment — even briefly — can result in E-7 revocation and affect future visa applications

👉 Continue to Part 9: Renewing Your E-7 Visa →

E-7 Visa Korea Series Part 1  |  Part 2  |  Part 3  |  Part 4  |  Part 5  |  Part 6  |  Part 7  |  Part 8: Changing Jobs (you are here)  |  Part 9 →  |  View All 12 Parts →
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Visa regulations change frequently — always verify current requirements with the Korean Immigration Service or a licensed immigration attorney before submitting your application.

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