Korea 4대보험 for Foreigners (2026): What You Actually Pay & Why It Matters
The moment your first Korean payslip arrives, you notice it. Your gross salary is one number. Your bank account receives something noticeably smaller. The gap isn't random — it's the 4대보험 (sa-dae-bo-heom), Korea's four mandatory social insurance programs. Every single employed worker in South Korea, regardless of nationality, is swept into this system by default.
Here's what most expats don't realize: this isn't just a tax. It's a structured benefits system with real, usable protections. I've gone through my own payslips line by line and cross-checked every rate against the official NPS and NHIS publications — knowing what you pay and what you get back is the difference between feeling robbed every month and actually leveraging Korea's social safety net.
📌 This article provides general information based on 2026 official published rates from NPS, NHIS, and MOEL. Individual deduction amounts may vary based on your salary, visa type, and employer. Always confirm your enrollment status directly with your employer or the relevant institution.
What Exactly Are the 4 Major Insurances?
Korea's social insurance system is built on four legally distinct pillars. Each has its own governing body, its own rate, and its own set of rules for foreigners. Let's break them down precisely.
| Insurance | Employee Rate | Employer Rate | Governing Body |
|---|---|---|---|
| 국민연금 National Pension (NPS) | 4.75% | 4.75% | NPS (국민연금공단) |
| 건강보험 Health Insurance (NHIS) | 3.595% | 3.595% | NHIS (건강보험공단) |
| 장기요양 Long-term Care | 14.14% of health premium | 14.14% of health premium | NHIS (통합 징수) |
| 고용보험 Employment Insurance (EI) | 0.9% | 0.9% + 0.25–0.85% | MOEL (근로복지공단) |
| 산재보험 Industrial Accident (WCI) | ₩0 (Employer Only) | Varies by industry | 근로복지공단 |
Source: National Pension Service (NPS), NHIS, MOEL — as of April 2026. NPS monthly income ceiling: ₩6,370,000.
Notice that the Industrial Accident Insurance costs you nothing from your paycheck. It's entirely the employer's responsibility. So when budgeting your take-home pay, focus on the first four lines.
Do Foreigners Have to Pay All 4 Insurances?
The direct answer: mostly yes, but with important carve-outs. Your visa type and your home country's social security treaty status with Korea determine which insurances apply to you. Here's the real breakdown — no vague statements, just the actual rules.
국민연금 (National Pension): The Most Complicated One
NPS is where foreigners face the most confusion. The baseline rule is that any foreigner aged 18–60 working at a Korean company is automatically enrolled. But the exemptions are significant.
You are exempt from NPS enrollment if: (1) your home country applies a reciprocal exclusion — meaning Korea doesn't offer NPS to their citizens either, so the reverse applies to you; or (2) your country has a Social Security Totalization Agreement with Korea (USA, Germany, Canada, UK, India, France, Italy, Australia, Slovakia, etc.), and you certify that you remain covered by your home country's pension. In case (2), you apply for an exemption certificate through your home country's social insurance authority.
Additionally, holders of the following visa types are categorically excluded from NPS regardless of nationality: D-1, D-3, D-4, D-6, F-1, F-3, G-1. These visas are considered non-employment or dependency status.
"The 2026 NPS monthly income ceiling is ₩6,370,000. Even if you earn ₩8,000,000/month, your NPS deduction is capped at ₩6,370,000 × 4.75% = ₩302,575 per month." — National Pension Service guidance, April 2026.
건강보험 (Health Insurance): Near-Universal Mandate
As of 2024 and continuing through 2026, all registered foreign workers pay NHIS at identical rates to Korean nationals — 3.595% of gross salary. The previous foreigner premium surcharge was abolished. Long-term care (장기요양보험) is automatically bundled in, calculated at 14.14% of your base health insurance premium (as of January 2026 rate per NHIS announcement).
The only exemption route: if you can prove you have equivalent medical insurance coverage from your home country or employer contract, you may apply for an exclusion. In practice, very few expats qualify. If you're employed at a Korean company and registered as a foreign resident, assume you're enrolled.
고용보험 (Employment Insurance): Visa-Gated
This is where visa type directly determines your fate. Employment Insurance isn't universal for foreigners — unlike health insurance, it's gated by your residence status.
| EI Status | Visa Types |
|---|---|
| Mandatory Enrollment | F-2 (Resident), F-5 (Permanent), F-6 (Marriage Migrant) |
| Optional (Worker's Choice) | E-1 through E-9, F-4, H-2 — can opt in voluntarily |
| Not Eligible | D-1 through D-6, D-10, D-8, B and C visas |
Source: Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL), as of April 2026.
If you're on an E-7 or E-2 visa and chose to enroll in Employment Insurance, you're building toward 실업급여 (unemployment benefit) eligibility. That's roughly 60% of your average daily wage for 90–240 days if you are involuntarily terminated. For a ₩3,500,000/month salary worker, that's approximately ₩1,260,000–₩2,100,000/month during your job gap — not nothing.
산재보험 (Industrial Accident Insurance): Free Protection
Here's the good news. Industrial Accident Insurance is 100% employer-funded and applies to every single worker in Korea — citizens, documented foreigners, and even undocumented workers. Your legal status is irrelevant. If you're injured on the job, you're covered. The employer's rate varies by industry (roughly 0.6% to 34%), but none of it comes from your paycheck.
Real-World Sample Calculation for 2026
Abstract percentages don't hit home until you see them applied to an actual salary. Let's run the full math for a common expat scenario — monthly gross salary of ₩3,500,000, NPS enrolled, on an E-7 visa with Employment Insurance opted in.
Note that this is before income tax. Your actual take-home will be further reduced by earned income tax (근로소득세) and local income tax. For the full picture, use the Net Salary Calculator →
"What surprised me most was the employer's matching contribution. For every ₩341,000 I pay, my employer is also paying roughly ₩341,000 in matching NPS and health contributions — plus industrial accident insurance on top. The total cost of my employment to the company is significantly more than my listed salary." — E-7 visa holder, Seoul, 2026.
What Benefits Do You Actually Get From Paying 4대보험?
Let's be clear about what you're buying with that ₩340,000/month.
That unemployment benefit is the most underutilized tool among expats. If you opted into Employment Insurance and your contract is terminated (not resigned voluntarily), you can file for 실업급여 even as a foreigner. The process requires registration with a local employment center (고용센터) and a job search activity record, but the payout is real.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get my NPS contributions refunded when I leave Korea?
Yes — if your country has a reciprocal refund arrangement or you're on certain visa types. Citizens of countries with a Social Security Totalization Agreement (USA, Canada, Germany, Australia, UK, India, France, etc.) may be exempt from enrollment entirely. Those without an agreement — and enrolled workers on E-9, H-2 visas — can typically claim the full lump-sum refund plus interest when permanently departing. Apply at any NPS branch location or at Incheon Airport. The statute of limitations is 5 years from departure. Use our NPS Refund Calculator → to estimate your payout.
What happens if my employer doesn't enroll me in 4대보험?
Your employer is breaking the law. If you discover you haven't been enrolled despite being eligible, you can file a complaint with the relevant insurance authority (국민연금공단: 1355, 건강보험공단: 1577-1000, 근로복지공단: 1588-0075). Employers who fail to enroll eligible workers face fines and are required to retroactively pay missed premiums, including their own matching contributions. Don't let it slide — those are your benefits.
I'm on a D-10 (Job Seeker) visa. Do I pay 4대보험?
Not while you're unemployed. D-10 holders between jobs are not enrolled in employment-based 4대보험. However, if you take a part-time or contract position while on D-10, you may be enrolled depending on the employer's assessment. Once you convert to an employment visa (E-series or F-series), standard enrollment rules apply.
Does the 4대보험 deduction affect my 19% Flat Tax option?
Yes, indirectly. The 19% Flat Tax (외국인 단일세율) option applies to your income tax only — not to 4대보험. Social insurance deductions happen before income tax is calculated and are separate from the tax regime you choose. If you're comparing flat tax vs. progressive rates, don't forget to account for 4대보험 in your total compensation model. Use our Income Tax Optimizer → for a side-by-side comparison.
※ All rates shown are based on 2026 statutory schedules published by the National Pension Service (NPS), National Health Insurance Service (NHIS), and Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL). Actual deductions may differ based on salary thresholds, industry type, and individual visa circumstances. This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice.