You’ve spent years studying in Korea — learning the language, building a network, understanding how Korean companies work. Graduation shouldn’t mean leaving. The good news is that Korea’s immigration system provides several clear paths from a D-2 student visa to legal employment in the country. The bad news is that timing matters enormously, and many international students miss key windows that could have kept them in Korea legally.
This guide explains every transition path from D-2 to a Korean work visa, in the order you should consider them.
📑 In this guide
- What to Do Before You Graduate
- Your Three Main Paths After Graduation
- Path 1: D-2 → D-10 (Job Seeker Visa)
- Path 2: D-2 → E-7 Directly (If You Have a Job Offer)
- Path 3: D-10 → E-7 (Most Common Route)
- Part-Time Work During Your D-2 Visa
- The International Student Advantage
- KOTRA International Student Job Fair
- Full Timeline: Graduation to Work Visa
- Common Mistakes That Trap Students
1. What to Do Before You Graduate
The most important thing to understand about D-2 to work visa transitions: your options are significantly better if you plan during your final year, not after graduation. Students who wait until after graduation often find themselves in a tight window or missing it entirely.
Your final year checklist
- Final year, semester 1: Research target companies, build LinkedIn profile, attend university career fairs, apply to KOTRA Global Talent Fair (usually held May–June)
- Final year, semester 2: Apply to companies, attend on-campus recruiting events, prepare Korean resume (이력서) and 자기소개서, research D-10 eligibility
- Before graduation: Confirm whether you have a job offer (E-7 path) or need to continue searching (D-10 path). Visit your university’s immigration support office — most Korean universities have dedicated staff for this.
- At graduation: Apply for status change (D-10 or E-7) before your D-2 expires. Do not wait.
2. Your Three Main Paths After Graduation
D-2 → D-10 → E-7
Graduate → apply for D-10 Job Seeker visa → job hunt legally for up to 6 months → receive job offer → change to E-7. Clean, well-established path.
D-2 → E-7 Direct
Graduate with a job offer already in hand → change directly to E-7 without going through D-10. Skips the waiting period entirely.
D-2 → D-10-T / E-7-T
Graduates from Korea’s priority-designated universities get accelerated processing and extended D-10 periods. Check if your university is on the list.
3. Path 1: D-2 → D-10 (Job Seeker Visa)
The D-10 (구직) visa is Korea’s dedicated job seeker visa — it lets international graduates stay in Korea legally while searching for employment. This is the most commonly used bridge between graduation and a work visa.
D-10 eligibility for international students
| Category | Requirements |
|---|---|
| Korean university graduates | Bachelor’s degree or higher from a Korean university → directly eligible for D-10. No additional conditions. This is the standard path for most international students in Korea. |
| Korean graduate school completers | Master’s or PhD from a Korean institution → eligible. Graduate degree holders often receive longer D-10 periods. |
| Priority university graduates (탑티어 D-10-T) | Graduates of Korea’s government-designated priority universities receive the D-10-T (Talent) track with faster processing, extended stay periods, and relaxed requirements. Check the 2026 priority university list at our Priority University guide → |
D-10 key conditions
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Stay period | Standard: up to 6 months. D-10-T (priority university): extended period. Extension possible under certain conditions. |
| Work permitted during D-10? | No full-time work. Part-time work up to 20 hours/week is permitted in certain fields — confirm the specific conditions with your immigration office. |
| Internship permitted? | Yes — paid internships are permitted on D-10. Internships are an excellent way to build Korean work experience and often lead directly to E-7 offers. |
| Family permitted? | Limited. Confirm with immigration — D-10 family invitation rights are more restricted than E-7. |
| Apply when | Before your D-2 expires. Do not let your D-2 lapse before applying — apply for D-10 while still on D-2 status. |
D-10 application documents
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| 통합신청서 (Integrated Application Form) | Download from HiKorea — use the current version |
| Passport + ARC | Valid passport and current ARC copy |
| Graduation certificate (졸업증명서) | Issued by your Korean university — not your diploma, but an official 졸업증명서 |
| Transcript (성적증명서) | Official transcript from your Korean university |
| Job search plan (구직활동계획서) | A brief document explaining your job search strategy — what types of roles you’re targeting, companies you’re approaching, your qualifications. Not a formal plan; a general statement is sufficient. |
| Financial proof | Bank statement showing sufficient funds to support yourself during the job search period |
4. Path 2: D-2 → E-7 Directly
If you secure a job offer before graduation, you don’t need D-10 at all — you can change directly from D-2 to E-7 in-country. This is the fastest and cleanest path.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Timing | Apply for E-7 status change while still on D-2 (before graduation or within the grace period after). You don’t need to graduate first — a job offer + D-2 status is sufficient to begin the process. |
| Employer’s role | Your employer submits the visa sponsorship application. You provide your Korean degree/transcript as the education credential. Korean university graduation is highly valued by Korean employers applying for E-7 — the local education background reduces the documentation burden. |
| Occupation requirement | The role must qualify for E-7 (one of the 91 designated occupation codes). See our E-7 Visa Complete Guide → for the full occupation list. |
| Salary requirement | Must meet the E-7-1 minimum salary threshold (currently KRW 28,670,000/year for most professional occupations). |
5. Path 3: D-10 → E-7 (Most Common Route)
The majority of international graduates who stay and work in Korea go through: D-2 → D-10 → E-7. Here’s what the D-10 to E-7 transition looks like:
-
1
Job search on D-10 (up to 6 months)
Use your D-10 period to actively search — KOTRA fair, company applications, university alumni networks, KOWORK. Focus on roles that match your degree and where your Korean language ability + Korean education background is the competitive advantage.
-
2
Accept an internship or job offer
Paid internships on D-10 are permitted and highly strategic — they let you demonstrate your capabilities to a Korean employer before they commit to E-7 sponsorship. Many D-10 holders who do internships receive full-time E-7 job offers from the same employer.
-
3
Confirm E-7 eligibility with employer
Before accepting any offer, confirm that the role qualifies for E-7 and that the employer is willing to sponsor. Ask HR explicitly: “Is this role E-7 eligible and will the company handle the visa process?” A role that doesn’t qualify for E-7 cannot be used for in-country status change.
-
4
Apply for E-7 status change in-country
Your employer submits the sponsorship documents to immigration. You provide your Korean graduation certificate, transcript, and personal documents. Because you’re already in Korea on D-10, this is an in-country status change — you don’t need to leave Korea. Processing typically takes 2–4 weeks.
-
5
Receive E-7 ARC and begin work
Once approved, visit the immigration office to receive your updated ARC showing E-7 status. You can now work legally at your employer on a full-time basis. Your Korea career has officially begun.
6. Part-Time Work During Your D-2 Visa
While studying on D-2, you can legally work part-time — but with strict limits:
| Period | Allowed hours | How to apply |
|---|---|---|
| During semester | Up to 20 hours/week | Apply for 체류자격외 활동허가 at your local immigration office. Bring your ARC, enrollment certificate, and student ID. |
| During official vacation periods | Unrestricted hours | Same application, but vacation period work is allowed at full hours. Keep your enrollment certificate showing the vacation period. |
| Permitted work types | Most service and professional jobs. Entertainment-type work (E-6 category) is prohibited. Confirm your specific industry with immigration before starting. | |
7. The International Student Advantage
Korean employers view international graduates of Korean universities differently from foreign applicants who studied abroad. The advantages are real and worth understanding:
| Advantage | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Korean language proficiency | Years of immersion produces practical Korean ability that is genuinely different from classroom-only learners. Korean employers trust it. |
| Korean workplace culture familiarity | You understand hierarchy, meeting dynamics, communication norms — the things that cause friction when foreign hires from overseas join Korean companies. |
| Domestic network | University alumni networks (동문) are taken seriously in Korea. Your professors, classmates, and research supervisors are direct career assets. |
| Simpler documentation | Korean degree certificates are in Korean, issued by trusted institutions, and don’t require apostille or translation. The E-7 application process is cleaner. |
| Employer familiarity | Many Korean companies have specific programs for international student recruitment precisely because they know these candidates integrate more smoothly than overseas hires. |
8. KOTRA International Student Job Fair
The KOTRA Global Talent Fair includes a dedicated International Student zone specifically for foreign graduates of Korean universities. This is one of the most targeted job search opportunities available to you — approximately 100 Korean domestic companies attend specifically to hire international students.
The 2026 event is June 1–2 at COEX Seoul. Registration is at jffis.kotra.or.kr.
What makes the International Student zone different from the general fair:
- Companies have pre-selected to target international student candidates specifically
- Ministry of Justice immigration officers are on-site for visa consultation — you can get direct answers about your D-10 to E-7 transition
- Korean resume editing and career consulting in multiple languages is provided on-site
- Portrait photos for resumes are taken on-site (free)
See our full KOTRA Job Fair preparation guide → for how to maximize your day.
9. Full Timeline: Graduation to Work Visa
Final year of study — 6 months before graduation
Begin active job search. Attend university career fairs. Apply to KOTRA fair. Build LinkedIn. Apply to target companies. Begin part-time work/internship at a target employer if possible.
Graduation
If you have a job offer: apply directly for E-7 status change. If you don’t: apply for D-10 status change immediately — before your D-2 expires. Do not delay this step.
D-10 period (up to 6 months)
Active job search and/or paid internship. Target your job search specifically — apply to the KOTRA International Student Fair, use your university alumni network, approach companies directly via LinkedIn. Stay within D-10 work restrictions.
Job offer → E-7 status change
Employer sponsors E-7 application in-country. Provide Korean graduation documents. Processing 2–4 weeks. Receive E-7 ARC. Begin full-time work. Korea career officially started.
Long-term: E-7 → F-2-7 → F-5 (years later)
Years of E-7 experience in Korea accumulate toward F-2-7 long-term residency points. Your Korean education years also contribute. The path to permanent residency is available — it just takes time and consistency.
10. Common Mistakes That Trap Students
- Start job hunting at least 6 months before graduation
- Apply for D-10 before D-2 expires — don’t wait
- Paid internships on D-10 are permitted and strategically valuable
- Direct D-2 → E-7 is possible with a job offer in hand
- KOTRA International Student Fair (June 1–2 at COEX) is your best single event
- Use your university’s immigration support office
- Korean degree + Korean language = real competitive advantage over overseas applicants
← Back to: How to Work in Korea — Complete Starting Guide
Related: E-7 Visa Complete Guide → | KOTRA Job Fair Guide →