Most foreigners who apply for jobs in Korea make the same mistake: they send a Western-style CV and wonder why they never hear back. Korean recruiters are not being rude — they’re working through hundreds of applications in a specific format, and applications that don’t fit that format get filtered out before anyone reads your qualifications.
This guide shows you exactly what Korean employers expect, what a proper Korean resume looks like, and how to write the personal statement (자기소개서) that actually gets read.
📑 In this guide
- Western CV vs Korean 이력서: The Core Differences
- What to Include in Your Korean Resume
- Annotated Resume Example
- The Photo: Rules and Requirements
- How to Handle Visa Status
- Writing the 자기소개서 (Personal Statement)
- 7 Mistakes That Get Applications Rejected
- Which Resume Type for Which Company?
- Final Checklist Before You Submit
1. Western CV vs Korean 이력서: The Core Differences
❌ Western CV (what you’re used to)
- Narrative bullet points under each role
- No photo required (often discouraged)
- Age and personal details omitted
- 1–2 pages, flexible layout
- Skills section is optional or secondary
- References listed or “available on request”
- Design and visual formatting are differentiators
✅ Korean 이력서 (what you need)
- Structured table format — clean, minimal design
- Professional photo in the top corner (standard)
- Date of birth, nationality included
- Typically 1 page for junior; 경력기술서 added for senior
- Certifications and TOPIK score listed prominently
- References not typically included
- Uniform format is the norm — stand out with content, not design
The Korean 이력서 is essentially a structured data form, not a narrative document. Korean recruiters are trained to scan it quickly for specific data points — not read it like a story. Your job is to make those data points as strong as possible, not to write beautifully about yourself.
2. What to Include in Your Korean Resume
| Section | What to include | Notes for foreigners |
|---|---|---|
| Personal information (인적사항) | Full name, date of birth, nationality, contact info, address in Korea | Include your Korean address if you have one. Foreign address is fine if you’re applying from abroad. |
| Photo (사진) | Professional headshot, 3cm × 4cm | White or light background. Business attire. Recent (within 6 months). See Section 4 for full photo rules. |
| Education (학력) | All degrees, school names, graduation dates — reverse chronological | Include your degree in English and Korean if possible. If your university is internationally ranked, mention it — Korean recruiters recognize global rankings. |
| Work experience (경력) | Company name, position, dates, key responsibilities — reverse chronological | Focus on measurable outcomes, not just responsibilities. “Increased export sales to Southeast Asia by 23%” beats “Responsible for overseas sales.” |
| Language skills (어학) | TOPIK score + level, other language certifications (JLPT, HSK, etc.) | Always include your native language first. List TOPIK with level and exam date — it reassures employers about your Korea commitment. |
| Certifications (자격증) | All professional certifications, Korean licenses (기능사, etc.) | Korean certifications go first — they are weighted more heavily than foreign equivalents. |
| Visa status (비자) | Current visa type, issue date, expiration date | Always include this. Missing visa information is the #1 reason strong applications get filtered out in early screening. See Section 5. |
| Military service (병역) | Not applicable for most foreigners | As a foreigner, you can write “해당없음” (not applicable) or leave this section blank. |
3. Annotated Resume Example
Here’s what a properly structured Korean-format resume looks like for a foreign professional. The numbers correspond to the notes below.
3×4cm
Photo
- Grew SEA export revenue by 31% YoY managing 12 distributor relationships ⑤
- Negotiated KRW 8.2B supply agreement with Philippine government entity
- Led 4-person bilingual team (Korean/English/Filipino)
- Coordinated B2B sales pipeline for 40+ retail partners; quota attainment 118%
- Translated product documentation between Korean, English, and Filipino
- Filipino — Native ⑥
- English — Native (TOEIC 990, 2024.11)
- Korean — TOPIK Level 4 (2025.04) ⑦
4. The Photo: Rules and Requirements
Adding a photo to a resume is standard in Korea and expected at most companies. This is legal under Korean law and is not considered discriminatory in the Korean context. Here’s what Korean employers expect:
| Item | Standard requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 3cm × 4cm (standard passport-style) |
| Background | White or very light neutral color |
| Attire | Business formal — suit or equivalent. Avoid casual clothing. |
| Recency | Within the last 6 months |
| Expression | Neutral to slight smile. Natural and professional. |
| Angle | Face forward, shoulders squared. Not a selfie or casual photo. |
| For digital submissions | JPG format, typically under 300KB. Professional studio or high-quality shot. |
5. How to Handle Visa Status on Your Resume
As a foreigner, your visa status is the first thing a Korean HR manager checks — even before reading your qualifications. Here’s how to handle it clearly:
- Currently in Korea with a work visa: “E-7-1 (만료일: 2027.06.30)” — visa type + expiry date
- Currently in Korea, need sponsorship: “D-10 Job Seeker (만료일: 2027.01.15) — visa sponsorship required for employment”
- F-2, F-4, F-5, F-6 — no sponsorship needed: State this clearly: “F-2-7 — no employer visa sponsorship required”
- Applying from overseas: State your current country and visa need: “Currently based in [country] — will require E-7 visa sponsorship upon offer”
- Working holiday H-1: “H-1 (만료일: 2026.12.01)” — note that H-1 allows work but has restrictions
The worst thing you can do is leave the visa section blank and hope it doesn’t come up. Korean recruiters assume ambiguity means complexity — they’ll move to the next application rather than investigate.
6. Writing the 자기소개서 (Personal Statement)
The 자기소개서 is required alongside the 이력서 at most Korean conglomerates, mid-sized companies, and public institutions. It is not a cover letter. It is not a resume summary. It is a structured personal essay that Korean companies use to assess your thinking, communication, and cultural fit.
Most Korean companies specify 4 sections — each with a character limit (typically 500–1,000 Korean characters per section). As a foreigner writing in English, the equivalent is roughly 200–400 words per section.
Standard 자기소개서 Structure
7. Seven Mistakes That Get Applications Rejected
8. Which Resume Type for Which Company?
| Company type | Resume format | 자기소개서? | Language |
|---|---|---|---|
| Korean conglomerate (삼성, LG, 현대 etc.) | Korean 이력서 + 경력기술서 (for experienced hires) | Always required — 4 structured sections | Korean preferred; English accepted for foreign hires |
| Korean mid-sized company (중소기업) | Korean 이력서 | Usually required | Korean preferred |
| Korean startup | Korean 이력서 OR Western CV | Sometimes — check listing | English often accepted; check job listing language |
| Foreign-invested company in Korea (외국계) | Western CV or Korean 이력서 — both often accepted | Cover letter sometimes requested instead | English primary |
| English teaching (hagwon, public school) | Western CV usually accepted | Not typically required | English |
9. Final Checklist Before You Submit
- ☐ Resume uses Korean 이력서 table format (not a Western narrative CV)
- ☐ Professional photo attached — white background, business attire, recent
- ☐ Full name, date of birth, and nationality included
- ☐ Current visa type and expiry date clearly stated
- ☐ TOPIK score included with level and exam date
- ☐ All Korean certifications listed first
- ☐ Work experience bullets lead with measurable outcomes (numbers)
- ☐ Education in reverse chronological order
- ☐ 자기소개서 included (if required by the job listing)
- ☐ 자기소개서 references this specific company — not generic
- ☐ Korean sections reviewed by a native speaker (if written in Korean)
- ☐ File format: PDF preferred for digital submissions
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