[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
south korea withholding tax on services

South Korea Withholding Tax on Services: Rates, Treaty Relief and Filing Steps for Payers & Providers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 53 minutes ago

When a Korean entity pays a non-resident for consulting, technical assistance or any other qualifying service, South Korea withholding tax on services applies at source, and the payer, not the provider, bears the legal obligation to deduct, report and remit the correct amount. Korea’s domestic withholding rate on most service fees paid to non-residents sits at 20 per cent of the gross payment (plus a local income surtax that brings the effective rate to roughly 22 per cent), as set out in Article 129 of the Corporate Income Tax Act (CITA).

However, more than 90 bilateral tax treaties can reduce, and in some cases eliminate, that headline rate, provided the payer collects the right documentation and follows the National Tax Service (NTS) filing procedure. This guide walks B2B payers and foreign service providers through every compliance step, from determining whether a payment is in scope through to obtaining an NTS Certificate of Tax Payment.

Executive Summary, What Payers Need to Do Today

If you are a Korean-resident company or branch paying a non-resident for services, the following checklist captures your core obligations under the withholding tax on services South Korea framework:

  • Determine scope. Confirm whether the payment falls within the categories listed in CITA Article 129, personal services, technical services, royalties or another specified income type, because each attracts different rates and treaty treatment.
  • Apply the correct rate. The standard domestic Korea withholding tax rate is 20 per cent of gross, plus a 10 per cent local income surtax on the tax itself, producing an effective rate of approximately 22 per cent. A lower rate may apply if a tax treaty is in force.
  • Collect treaty-relief documents before payment. To withhold at the treaty-reduced rate at source, obtain the provider’s Certificate of Tax Residence issued by their home-country tax authority and an Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate under a tax treaty (NTS form).
  • Remit withheld tax to the NTS by the 10th of the following month. File the relevant withholding tax return and retain copies of contracts, invoices and residency certificates for a minimum of five years.
  • Issue a Certificate of Tax Payment. The provider will often need this document, available in English from the district tax office, to claim a foreign tax credit in their home jurisdiction.

Each of these steps is unpacked in full below, with invoice-wording templates, worked calculations and a downloadable checklist.

How Korean Withholding Tax on Services Works, Key Definitions

South Korea’s withholding regime for non-resident service providers is governed primarily by CITA Article 129 and the corresponding provisions in the Income Tax Act (ITA) for individual non-residents. The mechanism is straightforward in principle: the Korean payer acts as a withholding agent, deducting a prescribed percentage of every qualifying gross payment before releasing the net amount to the non-resident. The withheld amount is the provider’s final Korean tax liability on that income, unless the provider has, or is deemed to have, a permanent establishment in Korea, in which case corporate income tax (CIT) filing rules apply instead.

Understanding three key definitions is essential before calculating any rate or reaching for a treaty article.

Withholding Agent Obligations

Any Korean-resident entity, corporation, branch of a foreign company, or even an individual entrepreneur, that makes a payment to a non-resident for services rendered in or connected to Korea qualifies as a withholding agent. The agent must calculate the correct withholding amount at the time the payment becomes due or is actually made (whichever is earlier), deduct that sum, remit it to the NTS by the 10th of the month following the payment date, and file a withholding tax return. Failure to withhold, or withholding at the wrong rate, exposes the agent, not the non-resident provider, to penalties and interest.

Distinguishing Services, Salary and Royalties

The classification of a payment determines which rate column in Article 129 applies and which treaty article governs relief. Independent personal services (consulting, legal, accounting and management advisory fees) are typically covered by Article 14 or Article 7 of Korea’s tax treaties. Royalties, including payments for the use of intellectual property, patents, trademarks and, importantly, technical services that transfer specialised know-how, fall under treaty Article 12. As leading Korean law firms have noted, the boundary between a consultancy service fee and a royalty for technical services in Korea can be narrow, and misclassification is a frequent audit trigger.

Employment income (salary, wages, bonuses paid to dependent employees) follows a different withholding table and is generally taxed under treaty Article 15, falling outside the scope of this guide.

South Korea Withholding Tax on Services, Rates by Payment Type

The table below summarises the standard domestic Korea withholding tax rate for the most common payment categories, alongside the typical treaty-reduced caps that a payer may apply when proper documentation is on file. All domestic rates are set by CITA Article 129; treaty caps vary by bilateral agreement and the specific article invoked.

Payment Type Standard Domestic WHT Rate Typical Treaty Cap (Selected Examples)
Fees for independent personal services (consulting, legal, accounting, management) 20% of gross (effectively ~22% with local surtax) Often 0% if no Korean PE; some treaties cap at 10–15% where services are performed in Korea beyond a specified period
Technical services / royalties (know-how, patents, trademarks) 20% of gross (~22% effective) Typically 10–15% (e.g., US–Korea treaty: 10–15% for royalties; UK–Korea treaty: 10%)
Interest 20% of gross (~22% effective) Typically 10–12% (e.g., US–Korea: 12%; UK–Korea: 10%)
Dividends 20% of gross (~22% effective) Typically 5–15% (e.g., US–Korea: 10–15%; UK–Korea: 5–15% depending on shareholding)
Director’s fees 20% of gross (~22% effective) Usually taxable in Korea per treaty; rate may mirror domestic rate

Key practice point: The 20 per cent headline figure is the base income tax rate. A 10 per cent local income surtax is then levied on that amount, producing an effective total withholding of approximately 22 per cent. Some treaties explicitly reference the surtax; others do not, meaning the practical cap may still attract surtax on top of the treaty rate. Payers should confirm whether the applicable treaty’s limitation-on-benefits clause addresses the surtax before applying a reduced rate.

Industry observers note that the NTS has, in recent audit cycles, paid close attention to how payers classify payments as independent service fees versus royalties for technical services. Where a contract bundles consulting and IP licensing, the NTS may re-characterise the entire payment as a royalty, changing the applicable treaty article and, potentially, the withholding rate.

Korea Tax Treaty Withholding, Treaty Relief and How to Apply It

Treaty relief is the single most important mechanism for reducing the effective South Korea withholding tax on services. Korea maintains an extensive treaty network covering major trading partners including the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Singapore and Australia. The steps below outline the practical workflow for both the payer and the foreign service provider.

  1. Confirm treaty availability. Verify that a tax treaty is in force between Korea and the provider’s country of tax residence. The PwC Tax Summaries page for Korea publishes a current table of treaty rates by country and income type.
  2. Identify the correct treaty article. Determine whether the payment is classified as business profits (Article 7), independent personal services (Article 14, where present), royalties (Article 12) or another category. This dictates the cap and any conditions (e.g., a minimum number of days of presence in Korea to trigger taxation).
  3. Collect residency and entitlement documents from the provider. See the subsection below for the full checklist.
  4. File the Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate. Submit the NTS-prescribed application form together with the supporting documents before or at the time of payment. If accepted, the payer withholds at the treaty rate rather than the domestic 22 per cent.
  5. Retain records for five years. The NTS may audit the application retroactively; maintaining a complete paper trail is essential.

Documents Providers Must Supply

For the payer to apply the treaty rate at source, the foreign provider must supply the following:

  • Certificate of Tax Residence, issued by the provider’s home-country tax authority, confirming residency for treaty purposes. The certificate must be current (generally dated within one year of the payment date).
  • Authorised Korean translation, where the certificate is not in English or Korean, a certified translation is required.
  • Power of Attorney (POA), if the provider appoints a Korean agent or the payer to file on their behalf, a notarised POA should accompany the application.
  • Supporting contract and invoices, to evidence the nature of the service and the amount payable.

Withhold at Domestic Rate and Claim Refund, or Apply the Reduced Rate at Source?

Korean law permits two approaches. The preferred route is to withhold at the treaty rate at source, provided the Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate and all supporting documents are submitted to the relevant district tax office on time. If the documentation is incomplete or the payer is unsure of the correct classification, the safer approach is to withhold at the full domestic rate (~22 per cent) and let the provider file a refund claim with the NTS afterwards. Refund claims must be submitted within five years of the end of the month in which the tax was withheld. The NTS typically processes straightforward refund claims within two to three months, though complex cases involving classification disputes can take longer.

It is important to note that “avoiding” withholding tax is not the same as treaty-based reduction. Payers sometimes encounter advice suggesting they can simply structure an invoice to eliminate Korean WHT altogether. Absent a valid treaty exemption or a determination that the income is not Korean-source, this approach is non-compliant and exposes both parties to back-tax assessments plus penalties.

Invoices, Contracts and Sample Wording for Payers and Providers

Clear invoice language protects both the withholding agent and the foreign provider in the event of an NTS audit. The following elements should appear on every cross-border service invoice connected to a Korean payment:

  • Provider’s full legal name, address and Tax Identification Number (TIN) in their country of residence.
  • Statement of tax residence: “The provider confirms it is a tax resident of [Country] for the purposes of the [Country]–Korea tax treaty.”
  • Description of services, specific enough to support the payer’s WHT classification (e.g., “management consulting services relating to market-entry strategy” rather than a vague “professional fees”).
  • Gross amount, withholding tax deducted and net payable, displayed as three separate line items.
  • Bank details for the net payment.
  • Reference to the applicable treaty article and rate if a reduced rate is being applied (e.g., “WHT applied at 10% per Article 12(2) of the Korea–UK tax treaty”).

On the payer’s side, a withholding statement should be issued to the provider after each payment, confirming the gross amount, the rate applied, the amount withheld and the NTS office to which the tax was remitted. This statement serves as the provider’s primary evidence for claiming a foreign tax credit at home.

NTS Forms, Certificates and How to Obtain or Issue Them

Korea’s National Tax Service administers a suite of forms and certificates that are central to the withholding process. The most frequently used documents are outlined below.

  • Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate under a Tax Treaty, filed by the payer (or provider through an agent) to request withholding at the treaty rate. This form must be submitted to the competent district tax office before or at the time of payment.
  • Withholding Tax Return, the monthly (or, for qualifying small payers, semi-annual) return that reports all withholding events for the period. Due by the 10th of the month following the payment.
  • Certificate of Tax Payment (납세증명서), confirms to the provider that Korean tax has been withheld and remitted. Available in both Korean and English from the district tax office or through the NTS Hometax online portal.
  • Year-End Withholding Tax Reconciliation Statement, an annual summary reconciling all withholding events, due in February of the year following the tax year.

To obtain an English-language Certificate of Tax Payment, the provider or payer may apply at the district tax office with jurisdiction over the payer’s registered address. The NTS also offers issuance through the Hometax portal for registered users. Processing typically takes one to three business days for standard requests, and there is no issuance fee. For providers who need the certificate apostilled or notarised for use in their home jurisdiction, additional time should be allowed for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs apostille process.

Filing, Payment and Refund Steps for the Withholding Agent

The following timeline captures the withholding agent’s obligations from the moment a qualifying payment is made to a non-resident service provider:

  1. Payment date (Day 0). Calculate withholding on the gross amount using the applicable rate (domestic or treaty). Deduct the withheld amount and transfer the net sum to the provider.
  2. By the 10th of the following month. Remit the withheld tax to the NTS via electronic transfer (Hometax) or at a designated bank. File the monthly Withholding Tax Return.
  3. Within 30 days of the payment (for treaty applications). If applying a treaty-reduced rate, ensure the Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate and all supporting documentation are on record with the district tax office.
  4. Issue a withholding statement to the provider. Provide the statement promptly after remittance, showing gross, rate, amount withheld and NTS remittance details.
  5. February of the following year. File the Year-End Withholding Tax Reconciliation Statement, summarising all non-resident payments and withholding events during the preceding calendar year.
  6. Retain all records for five years. Contracts, invoices, residency certificates, NTS receipts and internal ledger entries must be preserved and available for inspection.

Penalties for non-compliance include a surcharge of 10 per cent of the under-withheld amount for failure to withhold, plus daily interest on late remittances. Where a payer deliberately applies a treaty rate without holding valid documentation, the NTS may impose the full domestic rate retroactively together with penalties.

Common Errors and How to Avoid Them

  • Misclassifying technical services as general consulting. If a payment involves the transfer of specialised know-how, it may properly be a royalty, attracting a different treaty article and, possibly, a higher or lower cap.
  • Accepting expired residency certificates. A certificate dated more than one year before the payment date may be rejected on audit. Request updated certificates annually.
  • Failing to account for the local income surtax. Even when a treaty rate of 10 per cent applies, the surtax may still be payable unless the treaty explicitly covers it. This is a frequent cause of under-withholding assessments.
  • Missing the remittance deadline. Late remittance triggers automatic interest charges; calendar the 10th-of-the-month deadline with a buffer for bank processing days.

Practical Examples and Worked Calculations

Example 1, Consulting invoice with treaty relief (UK provider). A Korean company pays a UK-based management consultancy GBP 50,000 (approximately KRW 85,000,000) for market-entry advisory services. The Korea–UK tax treaty caps withholding on independent personal-service fees at 0 per cent, provided the UK firm has no Korean PE and the services are not performed in Korea for more than 183 days. The payer has on file a valid UK tax residency certificate and has submitted the Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate. Result: no withholding is applied; the full KRW 85,000,000 is remitted to the UK provider.

Example 2, Technical-service royalty at domestic rate, followed by refund. A Korean manufacturer pays a German engineering firm EUR 100,000 (approximately KRW 150,000,000) for proprietary process optimisation know-how. The payer is uncertain whether the payment qualifies as a royalty or a service fee and withholds at the domestic rate: 20 per cent tax (KRW 30,000,000) plus 10 per cent surtax on that amount (KRW 3,000,000), totalling KRW 33,000,000 withheld. The German firm subsequently files a refund claim with the NTS, providing its German tax residency certificate and demonstrating entitlement to the Korea–Germany treaty royalty cap of 10 per cent (plus surtax). The NTS processes the refund of the excess within approximately two to three months.

Permanent Establishment and When WHT Is Not the Final Tax

Where a foreign service provider maintains a permanent establishment (PE) in Korea, for example, a fixed office, a project site lasting beyond a treaty-specified threshold, or a dependent agent habitually concluding contracts, the withholding tax on services South Korea is no longer the final tax. Instead, the provider becomes subject to Korean corporate income tax on profits attributable to the PE, filed via annual CIT returns. Any withholding tax already deducted by Korean payers is credited against the PE’s CIT liability.

The practical consequence is significant: if a provider triggers a service PE in Korea, the effective tax rate may be higher or lower than the flat withholding rate, depending on deductible expenses and the applicable CIT bracket. Industry observers expect the NTS to continue scrutinising long-duration consulting and IT-implementation projects for undisclosed PE creation, particularly where service personnel remain on-site for extended periods.

Conclusion, Key Takeaways and Actionable Checklist

Managing South Korea withholding tax on services correctly requires attention to classification, documentation and filing deadlines. The checklist below captures the essentials.

For payers:

  • Classify every non-resident service payment under the correct CITA Article 129 category before making payment.
  • Collect a current tax residency certificate and file the Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate if applying a treaty cap.
  • Withhold at the domestic rate (~22 per cent effective) if treaty documentation is incomplete.
  • Remit withheld tax by the 10th of the following month and file monthly returns.
  • Issue a withholding statement to the provider and retain all records for five years.

For providers:

  • Supply your payer with a current Certificate of Tax Residence before the first payment.
  • Request an NTS Certificate of Tax Payment (available in English) to support foreign tax credit claims at home.
  • Monitor your physical presence in Korea to avoid inadvertently creating a permanent establishment.

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. KLRI, English Law Text: Article 129 (Withholding Tax Rates)
  2. National Tax Service (NTS), Forms & English Certificates
  3. PwC Tax Summaries, Korea: Withholding Taxes
  4. KPMG, Korea Tax Profile
  5. Taxand, Korea Tax Note
  6. Kim & Chang, Royalties Definition Changes
  7. Trading Economics, Withholding Tax Rate (South Korea)
  8. Legal 500, South Korea: Tax Guide

FAQs

Is there withholding tax in South Korea?
Yes. South Korea imposes withholding tax on a range of payments made to non-residents, including fees for services, royalties, interest and dividends. The withholding agent, the Korean entity making the payment, is legally responsible for deducting and remitting the tax to the National Tax Service.
Independent personal services such as consulting, legal advisory, accounting, management and technical services are generally subject to withholding when paid by a Korean entity to a non-resident. The scope is defined by CITA Article 129 and corresponding treaty provisions. Employment income (salaries paid to dependent employees) follows a separate withholding table.
The provider must supply a valid Certificate of Tax Residence from their home-country tax authority. The Korean payer then files an Application for Entitlement to Reduced Rate with the relevant district tax office. If the application is accepted, the payer withholds at the treaty-reduced rate rather than the domestic rate of approximately 22 per cent.
A refund claim submitted to the NTS should include a Certificate of Tax Residence, the withholding statement issued by the Korean payer, copies of the underlying contract and invoices, and the completed NTS refund application form. Claims must be filed within five years of the end of the month in which the tax was withheld.
The domestic withholding rate on royalties and technical services is 20 per cent of the gross payment, plus a 10 per cent local income surtax (approximately 22 per cent effective). Treaty rates typically range from 0 to 15 per cent depending on the provider’s country of residence and the applicable treaty article.
Standard requests processed through the district tax office or the Hometax online portal are typically completed within one to three business days. There is no issuance fee. English-language certificates are available on request. If apostille is required for use abroad, allow additional processing time through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Yes. If a foreign service provider is found to have a permanent establishment in Korea, withholding tax is no longer the final tax. The provider must file annual corporate income tax returns on profits attributable to the PE, and any withholding already deducted is credited against that CIT liability.
patent enforcement in italy
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

how do you enforce a trademark

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

South Korea Withholding Tax on Services: Rates, Treaty Relief and Filing Steps for Payers & Providers

Send welcome message

Custom Message