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how to set up payroll in south korea for employment

How to Set Up Payroll in South Korea for Employment (2026): Registrations, Rates & Monthly Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: June 1, 2026 | Next scheduled review: January 1, 2027, or sooner if contribution rates change.

Two headline changes make 2026 a pivotal year for every employer running payroll on the Korean peninsula: the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) has raised its total contribution rate to 7. 19 % of employee remuneration, and the Minimum Wage Commission has set the hourly floor at KRW 10,320. Together, these adjustments increase the cost of each full-time hire and alter the monthly withholding calculations that finance teams must execute without error. This guide explains, step by step, how to set up payroll in South Korea for employment, covering every registration, every rate and every filing deadline that applies in 2026.

Whether you are opening a local subsidiary, converting a branch office or evaluating an Employer of Record (EOR), the checklist below will keep you compliant from Day 1.

  • Registrations covered: National Tax Service (NTS), National Pension Service (NPS), NHIS and Employment Insurance (EI).
  • 2026 rates at a glance: NHIS 7.19 %, NPS 9 %, EI 1.8 % (base), Long-Term Care (LTC) 12.95 % of NHIS.
  • Minimum wage: KRW 10,320 / hour → approximately KRW 2,156,880 / month (209 hours).
  • Key deadlines: withholding tax deposit by the 10th of the following month; social insurance reports monthly.
  • Payroll options compared: in-house, outsourced vendor, PEO / EOR, see the comparison table below.

Quick Checklist, First 30 Days as an Employer in Korea

If you are wondering how to set up payroll for the first time in South Korea, this 30-day action list distils the entire process into a manageable sequence. Complete each item in order; most can run in parallel once your corporate bank account is open.

  1. Secure your business registration certificate, obtain a certified copy of your Korean entity registration (법인등기부등본) or branch office registration from the relevant court registry.
  2. Register with the NTS, file a Business Registration Application (사업자등록신청서) at your district tax office or via the NTS Hometax e-filing portal within 20 days of commencing business.
  3. Open a corporate bank account, you will need the NTS Business Registration Number to open a KRW-denominated payroll account at a Korean commercial bank.
  4. Appoint an authorised payroll representative, designate an in-house accounting officer or an external payroll agent authorised to file returns and sign social insurance documents.
  5. Register as an employer with NPS, NHIS and Employment Insurance, submit employer acquisition reports within 14 days of hiring each new employee (see detailed steps below).
  6. Calculate 2026 contribution shares, build your first payroll using the rates in the tables that follow (NHIS 7.19 %, NPS 9 %, EI base 1.8 %, LTC 12.95 % of NHIS).
  7. Run a test payroll cycle, process a dry run covering gross-to-net calculations, withholding deposits and payslip generation before the first live payday.
  8. Archive employee contracts and ID copies, Korean labour law requires written employment contracts; retain signed copies alongside resident registration or alien registration card details for social-insurance reporting.

A downloadable PDF version of this checklist is available in the Templates & Tools section at the end of this article.

How to Establish a Payroll in South Korea: Registering with the Authorities Step by Step

According to the National Tax Service, every entity that pays wages must withhold income tax at source and remit it to the government on a prescribed schedule. Below are the four mandatory registrations you must complete to establish a payroll in South Korea.

Step 1, NTS Business and Withholding-Agent Registration

The NTS requires employers to register as withholding agents for employment income tax and local income tax. Registration can be completed online through the Hometax portal or in person at the district tax office that covers your business address. You will need:

  • Business Registration Certificate (or application receipt if the certificate has not yet issued).
  • Corporate seal certificate (법인인감증명서).
  • Lease agreement or proof of office premises.
  • Representative’s identification document.

The NTS typically processes the registration within three to five business days. Once approved, you receive a Business Registration Number (사업자등록번호), this number is used on every withholding tax return and social insurance report.

Step 2, National Pension Service (NPS) Employer Registration

Under the National Pension Act, workplaces with one or more employees aged 18 to 59 must enrol in the NPS. The employer must file an Employer Acquisition Report (사업장가입자 취득신고) within 14 days of each employee’s start date. The NPS contribution rate for 2026 stands at 9 % of the employee’s standard monthly income, split equally, 4.5 % employer and 4.5 % employee. Reports and payments are processed monthly through the NPS online portal or at the local NPS branch.

Step 3, NHIS Registration and the 2026 Health Insurance Rate

The National Health Insurance Service confirms that the 2026 total health insurance contribution rate is 7.19 % of the employee’s monthly remuneration, shared equally between employer (3.595 %) and employee (3.595 %). In addition, a Long-Term Care Insurance (LTC) surcharge of 12.95 % of each party’s NHIS contribution applies, this is not a separate registration but is calculated and collected alongside the NHIS premium.

Employers must submit an Employee Acquisition Report to the NHIS within 14 days of hire. Registration can be filed through the NHIS online portal or at the local NHIS branch office. You will need the employee’s resident registration number (or alien registration number for foreign workers) and the employment contract start date.

Step 4, Employment Insurance (EI) Registration

Employment Insurance is administered jointly by the Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL) and the Korea Workers’ Compensation & Welfare Service. Every workplace that hires one or more employees must register. The base EI premium rate for 2026 is 1.8 % of wages, 0.9 % from the employer and 0.9 % from the employee. Employers with 150 or more employees pay an additional employment-stability and skills-development surcharge that varies by workforce size (ranging from approximately 0.25 % to 0.85 % on top of the base employer share).

File the Workplace Establishment Report and individual Employee Acquisition Reports within 14 days of hiring. Reporting is done through the MOEL’s online Employment Insurance portal.

Payroll Taxes and Withholdings: What Is the Payroll Tax in Korea?

Understanding what is withheld from an employee’s wages, and what the employer must contribute on top, is essential for computing salary in South Korea accurately. The table below summarises every payroll-related deduction and contribution for 2026.

Category Total Rate (2026) Employee Share Employer Share Source
Income tax (withholding) Progressive (6 %–45 %) Per NTS simplified tax tables Nil (withholding agent only) NTS
Local income tax 10 % of income tax withheld 10 % of employee income tax Nil NTS
National Pension (NPS) 9 % 4.5 % 4.5 % NPS
Health Insurance (NHIS) 7.19 % 3.595 % 3.595 % NHIS
Long-Term Care (LTC) 12.95 % of each party’s NHIS ≈ 0.466 % of gross ≈ 0.466 % of gross NHIS
Employment Insurance (EI), base 1.8 % 0.9 % 0.9 % + surcharge MOEL

Income Tax Withholding Rules

The employee tax rate in South Korea follows a progressive schedule ranging from 6 % on the first KRW 14 million of taxable income to 45 % on income exceeding KRW 1 billion. For monthly payroll purposes, employers use the NTS Simplified Withholding Tax Tables published each January. These tables provide a look-up amount based on monthly gross pay and the number of dependents claimed. A local income tax surcharge of 10 % of the national income tax withheld is added automatically.

Social Insurance Contributions, 2026 Rates in Detail

Combining all four social insurance schemes, the employer’s additional cost above gross wages ranges from approximately 10.36 % to 10.96 % depending on company size (due to the variable EI surcharge). The employee’s total social insurance deduction is approximately 9.86 % of gross pay before income tax withholding is applied. These percentages are critical when budgeting how to set up payroll in South Korea for employment because they directly affect the per-employee cost projection presented to headquarters.

Minimum Wage and Sample Payroll Calculations, How to Compute Salary in South Korea (KRW 10,320/hr)

The Minimum Wage Commission has confirmed the 2026 minimum wage at KRW 10,320 per hour. For a standard full-time employee working 40 hours per week, the statutory monthly paid hours amount to 209 hours (40 weekly hours × 52 weeks ÷ 12 months, plus weekly paid rest days). The resulting minimum salary in South Korea per month is:

KRW 10,320 × 209 = KRW 2,156,880 / month

At an indicative exchange rate of approximately KRW 1,370 per USD (May 2026), the South Korea minimum wage per month in USD is roughly USD 1,574. Exchange rates fluctuate; always confirm the spot rate on the date of conversion.

Worked Example 1, Full-Time Minimum-Wage Employee

Line Item Amount (KRW)
Gross monthly salary 2,156,880
NPS employee share (4.5 %) −97,060
NHIS employee share (3.595 %) −77,540
LTC employee share (≈ 0.466 %) −10,051
EI employee share (0.9 %) −19,412
Income tax (per NTS table, single, 0 dependents) −18,690
Local income tax (10 % of income tax) −1,869
Estimated net pay ≈ 1,932,258

Employer additional cost: NPS 4.5 % + NHIS 3.595 % + LTC 0.466 % + EI 0.9 % (+ surcharge if applicable) ≈ KRW 204,063 on top of gross.

Worked Example 2, Part-Time Employee (20 Hours / Week)

Line Item Amount (KRW)
Monthly paid hours (20 hrs × 52 / 12 + paid rest adjustment) ≈ 104.5 hours
Gross monthly pay (KRW 10,320 × 104.5) 1,078,440
Total employee deductions (social insurance + tax) ≈ −96,700
Estimated net pay ≈ 981,740

Worked Example 3, Mid-Level Salaried Employee (KRW 5,000,000/month)

Line Item Amount (KRW)
Gross monthly salary 5,000,000
NPS employee share (4.5 %) −225,000
NHIS employee share (3.595 %) −179,750
LTC employee share (≈ 0.466 %) −23,300
EI employee share (0.9 %) −45,000
Income tax (per NTS table, single, 0 dependents) −216,670
Local income tax −21,667
Estimated net pay ≈ 4,288,613

These examples illustrate how to compute salary in South Korea from gross to net. The exact income tax figure varies with the number of dependents and other personal deductions; use the NTS simplified withholding tables for precision.

Overtime, Working-Time Rules and the 52-Hour Rule: Impact on Payroll Costs

The Ministry of Employment and Labor enforces the Labour Standards Act, which caps standard working hours at 40 hours per week (eight hours per day). Overtime pay in Korea 2026 is governed by strict statutory multipliers, and the so-called 52-hour rule limits total weekly hours, regular plus overtime, to 52 for workplaces with five or more employees.

Statutory Overtime Multipliers

  • Overtime (beyond 40 hours/week, up to 12 hours): 150 % of ordinary hourly wage.
  • Night work (22:00–06:00): additional 50 % premium, combined with overtime, this yields 200 % of the ordinary rate.
  • Holiday work: 150 % of ordinary hourly wage for the first eight hours; 200 % for hours exceeding eight on a holiday.

For a minimum-wage employee earning KRW 10,320/hour, one hour of ordinary overtime costs KRW 15,480 (10,320 × 1.5). Night overtime on a regular weekday costs KRW 20,640 (10,320 × 2.0). Employers who breach the 52-hour cap face administrative penalties and potential criminal fines under the Labour Standards Act.

Special Cases, Shift Work, Compressed Schedules and Flexible Hours

The Labour Standards Act permits flexible working-time arrangements (two-week or three-month units) and selective working-time schemes, provided that the average weekly hours over the reference period do not exceed 40 and that a written agreement with employee representatives exists. Shift workers on continuous operations may follow alternative scheduling, but overtime premiums still apply once weekly thresholds are exceeded. Employers should document every arrangement in writing and retain records for three years to satisfy labour inspection requirements.

Payroll Calendar and Monthly Deadlines, Filings, Payments and Returns

Missing a single deadline can trigger penalties and interest. The table below outlines the recurring obligations for every employer operating a payroll in South Korea.

Obligation Deadline Authority
Withholding tax deposit (income tax + local income tax) By the 10th of the month following the pay period NTS
NPS monthly contributions By the 10th of the month following the pay period NPS
NHIS & LTC monthly premiums By the 10th of the month following the pay period NHIS
Employment Insurance monthly contributions By the 10th of the month following the pay period MOEL / KCOMWEL
Year-end tax settlement (연말정산) February of the following year (employers file adjusted returns) NTS
Annual earned income payment report March 10 of the following year NTS
NHIS annual income reconciliation Annually, per NHIS notice (typically April–May) NHIS

Monthly payroll-run checklist:

  1. Collate attendance, overtime and leave data by the 25th of the pay month.
  2. Calculate gross pay, deductions and employer contributions.
  3. Generate and distribute payslips (electronic payslips are legally acceptable).
  4. Transfer net pay to employee bank accounts on the agreed payday.
  5. Deposit withholding tax and social insurance contributions by the 10th of the following month.
  6. File monthly withholding tax return via Hometax and social insurance reports via each agency portal.

South Korea Payroll Options, In-House vs Payroll Provider vs EOR

Foreign employers evaluating South Korea payroll options generally face three paths. The comparison table below summarises the trade-offs.

Factor In-House Payroll Outsourced Payroll Vendor PEO / EOR
Entity required in Korea? Yes (subsidiary or branch) Yes (subsidiary or branch) No, the EOR is the legal employer
Setup time 4–8 weeks (entity + registrations) 4–8 weeks (entity + vendor onboarding) 1–2 weeks
Ongoing cost Lowest per employee at scale Moderate (monthly service fee) Highest (per-employee management fee)
Employer control Full High (vendor executes to your instructions) Limited (EOR sets employment terms)
Compliance responsibility Yours Shared (vendor advises; you are liable) EOR bears primary liability
Best for Long-term operations, 10+ employees Mid-size teams, cost-conscious with local entity Fast market entry, 1–5 employees, no entity

Industry observers expect the EOR model to remain popular among technology companies testing the Korean market with small teams, while manufacturers and financial-services firms that plan sustained operations will generally achieve better cost efficiency by establishing a payroll in South Korea through a local entity and an outsourced payroll vendor.

Employer Entity Types and Registration Obligations

Entity Type Registration Obligations Best Practice Timeline
Local subsidiary (Korean corporation / 주식회사) Register for corporate tax & NTS business registration; register as employer with NPS, NHIS, EI; set up corporate bank account Complete all registrations before first payroll; file employee acquisition reports within 14 days of each hire
Branch office Register branch with local tax office; register payroll with NTS, NPS, NHIS Same timelines as subsidiary; ensure branch registration certificate is ready before hiring
EOR / PEO EOR handles all local employer registrations and payments (NPS, NHIS, taxes) Use if you need to hire immediately without entity setup; evaluate cost vs control periodically

Practical Compliance Risks and Penalties, Common Pitfalls

Even experienced multinationals stumble on Korean payroll compliance. The most frequent mistakes, and their consequences, include:

  • Late social-insurance registration. Failing to file employee acquisition reports within 14 days can result in administrative fines of up to KRW 3 million per violation under the National Pension Act and the National Health Insurance Act.
  • Incorrect withholding. Under-withholding income tax exposes the employer to back-tax assessments plus a penalty surcharge of approximately 10 % of the shortfall, with additional interest accruing daily.
  • Misclassifying employees as independent contractors. The MOEL and NTS actively audit contractor arrangements. Reclassification triggers retroactive social-insurance contributions, back taxes and potential criminal liability for the representative director.
  • Failure to pay overtime. Underpayment of statutory overtime premiums can lead to criminal penalties under the Labour Standards Act, including fines of up to KRW 20 million and imprisonment of up to three years.
  • Missing the 10th-of-the-month deposit deadline. Late remittance of withholding tax incurs a non-filing penalty of 3 % of the undeposited amount, plus daily interest.

The most effective mitigation is to maintain a rigorous payroll calendar, conduct quarterly internal audits and engage a Korea-qualified accountant to review each payroll cycle before submission.

Templates and Tools, Downloadable Checklist and Simple Payroll Calculator

To simplify your first payroll run, the following resources are available:

  • Employer Payroll Setup Checklist (PDF), a printable, step-by-step version of the 30-day checklist above, with tick boxes and space for notes. [Download link to be added upon publication.]
  • 2026 Gross-to-Net Payroll Calculator (Excel / Google Sheets), enter gross monthly salary, number of dependents and company size; the spreadsheet auto-calculates NPS, NHIS, LTC, EI, income tax and local tax deductions to produce estimated net pay and total employer cost. [Download link to be added upon publication.]

Both tools are provided for illustrative purposes. The likely practical effect of using them is a faster onboarding process and fewer data-entry errors, but they do not replace professional payroll advice tailored to your entity structure and workforce composition.

Conclusion, Setting Up Compliant Payroll in South Korea for 2026

Knowing how to set up payroll in South Korea for employment is no longer optional knowledge for foreign employers, it is a regulatory prerequisite that directly affects hiring speed, employee satisfaction and corporate liability. The 2026 landscape, shaped by the NHIS rate increase to 7.19 % and the minimum wage rise to KRW 10,320 per hour, demands that finance and HR teams recalculate every contribution table and update their payroll systems before the next pay cycle. By following the registration steps, rate tables, worked examples and monthly deadline calendar outlined in this guide, employers can build a payroll function that is accurate, auditable and fully compliant from Day 1.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. National Tax Service (NTS), Employer Registration & Withholding Guidance
  2. National Pension Service (NPS), Employer & Employee Registration
  3. National Health Insurance Service (NHIS), Employer Registration & Contribution Info
  4. Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL), Working Hours & Overtime Rules
  5. Minimum Wage Commission, Official Minimum Wage Publication
  6. Activpayroll, South Korea Payroll Guide
  7. Korean Legislation Research Institute, Korean Laws in English

FAQs

How do I set up payroll for the first time in South Korea?
Register your company with the National Tax Service (NTS) to obtain a Business Registration Number, then file employer acquisition reports with the National Pension Service (NPS), National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) and Employment Insurance within 14 days of each hire. Set up withholding calculations using the 2026 NTS simplified tax tables and the social-insurance rates outlined above.
Payroll-related withholdings include progressive income tax (6 %–45 %, withheld per NTS tables), local income tax (10 % of income tax), NPS (9 % total, split equally), NHIS (7.19 % total, split equally), Long-Term Care (12.95 % of NHIS), and Employment Insurance (1.8 % base, split equally, plus an employer surcharge for larger firms).
The 52-hour rule, enforced under the Labour Standards Act, caps total weekly working hours, 40 regular hours plus a maximum of 12 overtime hours, at 52. It applies to all workplaces with five or more employees. Hours exceeding the cap attract overtime premiums and can expose employers to criminal penalties.
Employers must file employee acquisition reports with both the NHIS and NPS within 14 days of each employee’s start date. Reports can be submitted through the respective online portals or at local branch offices using the employee’s resident or alien registration number.
Net pay equals gross salary minus employee income tax withholding, local income tax, and employee shares of NPS, NHIS, LTC and Employment Insurance. Employer social-insurance contributions are an additional cost borne above gross pay and do not reduce the employee’s take-home amount.
You may process salary transfers from an international payroll platform, but you must still register with the NTS, NPS, NHIS and EI in Korea, withhold Korean income tax at source and remit social-insurance contributions monthly. Using a foreign system does not remove Korean filing or withholding obligations.
An EOR is faster (one to two weeks to hire) and eliminates the need for a Korean entity, but it typically costs more per employee and limits employer control. If you plan ongoing operations with a growing team, setting up a local payroll through a subsidiary or branch provides lower long-term costs and full operational control.
At the 2026 minimum wage of KRW 10,320 per hour and a statutory 209 paid hours per month for full-time employment, the minimum monthly salary is KRW 2,156,880, approximately USD 1,574 at the indicative May 2026 exchange rate of KRW 1,370 per USD.

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How to Set Up Payroll in South Korea for Employment (2026): Registrations, Rates & Monthly Deadlines

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