Member
No results available
South Korea’s National Assembly sanctioned a sweeping tax reform package on 2 December 2025, introducing changes that took effect for tax years beginning 1 January 2026. For every foreign-invested company in Korea, whether a locally incorporated subsidiary, a registered branch, or a non-resident entity earning Korean-source income, the South Korea 2026 tax changes for foreign companies demand immediate action across accounting, payroll and repatriation workflows. This guide distils the Korea tax reform 2026 into a practical, step-by-step compliance resource built for CFOs, finance controllers, in-country managers and external accountants who need to act now.
From tightened tax-residency tests and new capital-gains timing rules to enhanced withholding-agent obligations and the first live filing cycle for the global minimum tax, the sections below map every critical date, journal entry and checklist item your team requires.
The 2026 reform package touches virtually every compliance function inside a foreign-invested company in Korea. Rather than reading hundreds of pages of legislative text, finance teams should focus on five immediate priorities that determine whether the entity stays compliant, or exposes itself to penalties and cash-flow disruption.
Industry observers expect that firms acting within the first 30 days will avoid the bulk of compliance risk. The sections below provide the detailed workflows, sample entries and timelines needed to execute each priority.
Every compliance programme begins with a calendar. The table below consolidates the dates that matter most for a foreign-invested company in Korea during the 2026 tax year. Teams should use this as the backbone of their project plan.
| Date | Event / Regulatory Milestone | Required Action |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Korea tax reform 2026 takes effect for tax years beginning on or after this date | Update all tax-position memoranda; confirm entity residency status; recalibrate payroll withholding tables |
| 10th of each month | Monthly payroll withholding remittance deadline (ongoing) | Remit withheld individual income tax and local income tax to the National Tax Service (NTS) by the 10th of the following month |
| March 2026 | Annual corporate income tax filing window opens (for Dec year-end entities) | Prepare corporate income tax return reflecting new provisions; apply transitional capital-gains rules where relevant |
| 9 May 2026 | Transitional cutoff for certain capital-gains relief provisions | Complete any asset disposals eligible for transitional treatment before this date; recognise taxable events and deferred-tax adjustments in the accounts |
| 30 June 2026 | QDMTT / global minimum tax top-up computation and first notification deadline for qualifying MNE groups | Compute top-up tax, file notification with NTS, and prepare payment; confirm group revenue thresholds |
| 30 September 2026 | Mid-year interim corporate income tax prepayment (for many entities) | Calculate interim tax using 2026 rates; adjust for any changes in residency or capital-gains treatment |
This timeline is drawn from the enacted legislation and procedural guidance published by the National Tax Service and the Ministry of Economy and Finance. Teams should monitor both portals for supplementary notices that may refine interim deadlines.
The 2026 reform tightens the criteria used to determine tax residency for both corporations and individuals. For a foreign-invested company in Korea, the practical effect is twofold: the entity itself may face a changed residency classification, and the expatriate employees it deploys to Korea may trigger new withholding and exit-tax obligations. Understanding tax residency Korea 2026 is essential before any downstream payroll or filing work can begin.
Under the revised rules, a corporation is treated as a Korean tax resident if its place of effective management is in Korea, with additional emphasis on where key management and commercial decisions are substantively made, not merely where the board formally convenes. For individuals, the 183-day presence test remains the primary threshold, but the reform narrows certain exclusions that previously allowed short-term assignees to avoid residency status. Detailed criteria are set out in the PwC Korea Tax News Flash and the Chambers Corporate Tax 2026 practice guide for Korea.
For every expatriate employee currently on assignment in Korea (or scheduled to arrive in 2026), the payroll team should work through the following checklist:
Once residency status is confirmed, the employer must adjust payroll compliance Korea 2026 processes accordingly. The workflow below illustrates the monthly cycle:
Sample calculation: An expatriate with monthly gross salary of KRW 10,000,000 classified as a non-resident would face withholding of KRW 1,900,000 (19% flat rate) plus KRW 190,000 local income tax, totalling KRW 2,090,000 withheld. If the same employee crosses the residency threshold mid-year, the employer must recalculate from the date residency is established and apply progressive rates going forward, potentially generating a top-up withholding obligation. The Deloitte Korea Tax Newsletter (April 2026) provides additional worked examples for mid-year residency changes.
The 2026 reform significantly strengthens the obligations of withholding agents, the Korean entities that pay dividends, interest, royalties or service fees to non-resident recipients. Where previously a withholding agent could apply a treaty-reduced rate based on reasonable belief, the new rules require documented proof before the payment is made. This section walks through the process step by step.
To apply a reduced withholding tax rate under an applicable double-tax treaty, the following documentation workflow must be completed:
The KPMG Korea 2025/2026 Tax Reform briefing confirms that these documentation requirements apply to all payments of Korean-source income made on or after 1 January 2026, regardless of when the underlying contract was signed.
Sample journal entry, withholding on a dividend payment to a non-resident parent:
Withholding agents who fail to withhold the correct amount, or who apply a reduced rate without proper documentation, face a penalty of 10% of the under-withheld amount plus daily interest. In cases of wilful non-compliance, the NTS may impose additional sanctions. The immediate remedy is to withhold at the full statutory rate wherever documentation is incomplete and to file a voluntary correction within the prescribed window to mitigate penalties.
The 2026 reform introduces revised timing rules for when a capital gain is recognised for tax purposes, with significant implications for any foreign-invested company in Korea holding real estate or substantial securities positions. The most important practical element is the transitional cutoff date of 9 May 2026, which determines whether certain disposals qualify for legacy treatment or fall under the new rules.
Under the new regime, the taxable event for capital gains is generally triggered at the earlier of contract completion or transfer of legal title, a shift from the prior rule that allowed more flexibility around settlement date. For disposals of Korean real estate by non-residents, the new rules also expand the scope of assets subject to capital-gains tax reporting, including certain indirect transfers of real-estate-rich entities.
Disposals for which a binding sale contract was executed before 9 May 2026 may elect to apply the prior-year timing and rate provisions, provided settlement occurs within a prescribed window. Disposals contracted on or after 9 May 2026 fall entirely under the new timing and rate rules. The PwC Korea Tax News Flash and the EY GlobalTaxNews summary both highlight 9 May 2026 as the key date for planning purposes.
Practical step: Any foreign-invested company contemplating the disposal of Korean real estate or a significant securities position should finalise the binding contract before 9 May 2026 if it wishes to benefit from transitional relief. The accounting team must then recognise the taxable event and any associated deferred-tax adjustment at the contract date.
Real estate disposals by non-residents remain subject to withholding at source. The buyer (or the buyer’s agent) must withhold and remit the lesser of the statutory rate applied to the gross proceeds or the actual computed tax on the gain. Securities disposals, by contrast, require the non-resident seller to file a capital-gains tax return directly, unless a withholding mechanism is contractually applied.
Sample journal entry, recognition of capital gain on disposal of Korean real estate (K-IFRS):
Under K-IFRS 2026 Korea, entities must also reassess deferred-tax balances where the new timing rules change the expected reversal period of temporary differences associated with real-estate holdings.
For many foreign-invested companies, repatriation of profits Korea is the ultimate objective. The 2026 changes affect both the withholding cost of dividends and the range of repatriation channels available. Understanding the net impact is critical for treasury and tax teams modelling post-reform cash flows.
The statutory withholding rate on dividends paid to non-residents remains at 20% (plus local income tax of 2%), though treaty-reduced rates, commonly 5%, 10% or 15% depending on the shareholding percentage and applicable treaty, continue to apply where the documentation requirements described above are satisfied. The key change for 2026 is procedural: the burden of proof has shifted squarely to the withholding agent, and the consequences of applying a reduced rate without documentation are now more severe.
Additionally, the reform adjusts the foreign dividend deduction available to Korean resident corporations receiving dividends from overseas subsidiaries. The Deloitte Korea Tax Newsletter notes that the deduction percentage is recalibrated for 2026 tax years, which may affect the group’s effective repatriation cost in multi-tier structures.
Sample net-of-tax repatriation calculation:
| Item | Amount (KRW) |
|---|---|
| Gross dividend declared | 2,000,000,000 |
| Less: Withholding tax at treaty rate (10%) | (200,000,000) |
| Less: Local income tax surcharge (10% of withholding) | (20,000,000) |
| Net cash remitted to parent | 1,780,000,000 |
Alternative repatriation channels, including intercompany loan repayments, management-fee payments and royalty payments, each carry their own withholding and transfer-pricing implications. Industry observers expect the NTS to scrutinise cross-border payments more intensively in 2026, given the enhanced documentation regime. Companies should ensure that every intercompany payment is supported by a contemporaneous transfer-pricing study and arm’s-length benchmarking analysis.
Korea is among the early adopters of the OECD/G20 Pillar Two framework. The 2026 tax year marks the first live filing cycle for the Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT), which ensures that qualifying multinational enterprise (MNE) groups pay an effective tax rate of at least 15% on profits earned in Korea.
The QDMTT applies to MNE groups with consolidated revenue of at least €750 million in at least two of the four preceding fiscal years. For Korean constituent entities within scope, the group must compute the effective tax rate (ETR) in Korea. If the ETR falls below 15%, a top-up tax is due, calculated as the difference between 15% and the actual ETR applied to the excess profit of the Korean entity. The EY GlobalTaxNews summary confirms that the QDMTT computation and notification must be filed with the NTS, with Yonhap News reporting a 30 June 2026 deadline for the first notification cycle.
Immediate preparation steps for in-scope MNE groups:
Accounting teams inside a foreign-invested company in Korea need a reliable reference for booking the tax changes under K-IFRS 2026 Korea. The table below maps common 2026 tax events to their accounting treatment and sample journal entries.
| Tax Event | K-IFRS Treatment | Sample Journal Entry |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payroll withholding (resident employee) | Recognise liability at each pay date; expense through profit or loss | Dr Salary Expense / Cr Withholding Tax Payable, Cr Net Salary Payable |
| Withholding on dividend to non-resident parent | Reduce dividend payable; recognise withholding liability | Dr Dividends Payable / Cr WHT Payable, Cr Cash |
| Capital gain on disposal of real estate | Derecognise asset; recognise gain in P&L; record current tax | Dr Cash, Dr Accum. Depr. / Cr PPE, Cr Gain on Disposal; Dr Tax Expense / Cr Tax Payable |
| Deferred-tax adjustment (changed reversal period) | Remeasure deferred-tax asset/liability at new expected rates/timing | Dr/Cr Deferred Tax Asset or Liability / Cr/Dr Income Tax Expense |
| QDMTT top-up tax accrual | Recognise current tax expense when obligation is probable and measurable | Dr Income Tax Expense (QDMTT) / Cr Current Tax Payable (QDMTT) |
| Remittance of withheld payroll taxes to NTS | Settle liability; no P&L impact | Dr Withholding Tax Payable / Cr Cash |
Each entry should be supported by contemporaneous calculations and filed with the monthly or quarterly closing pack. Retain source documentation, NTS receipts, treaty applications, residency certificates, for a minimum of five years in line with statutory retention requirements published by the National Tax Service.
Not every foreign entity in Korea faces the same compliance burden. The comparison table below summarises the key obligations by entity structure, helping finance teams prioritise resources.
| Entity Type | Key 2026 Reporting Obligations | Critical Deadline / Action |
|---|---|---|
| Korean branch of a foreign entity | Withholding agent obligations on all payments to non-residents; Application for Reduced Tax Rate documentation; Korean corporate income tax filing on branch profits | Withhold at source per new rules and remit monthly; annual CIT filing (March window for Dec year-end); retain documentation for 5 years |
| Foreign-invested company (Korean resident corporation) | QDMTT / global minimum tax group computation (if in scope); CFC rules reporting; capital-gains transitional reporting; enhanced dividend withholding documentation | QDMTT notification by 30 June 2026; capital-gains transitional elections before 9 May 2026; monthly withholding remittance |
| Non-resident company with Korean-source income | Withholding; reduced-rate applications must be filed before payment; enhanced reporting of Korean-source income to the NTS | Withhold and remit at each payment date; file within prescribed window; coordinate with Korean payer on documentation |
Converting regulatory knowledge into operational compliance requires a structured rollout. The 30/60/90-day plan below assigns owners and deliverables for each phase.
The RSM Global (Korea) Tax Changes 2026 summary and the KOTRA Taxation in Korea 2026 guide both provide supplementary checklists and templates that in-country teams may find useful alongside this plan.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ethan Cho at Lian Accounting Corporation, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 28 minutes ago
posted 50 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message