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Finance 4/8/2026

English Guide to Korea Gift & Inheritance Tax (2026 Brackets)

English Guide to Korea Gift & Inheritance Tax (2026 Brackets)

Here's what most expats get wrong: transferring large sums of money across borders or inheriting foreign property doesn't magically bypass South Korea's National Tax Service (NTS). Once you are deemed a resident in Korea, both local and overseas asset transfers enter a strict, highly progressive tax system.

πŸ“Œ This article provides general information based on official published data. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment or insurance decisions.

I've run the numbers on this myself for multiple expatriate clients β€” the difference between proactive estate planning and ignoring Korean tax law is very real. Some families lose half their wealth simply because they missed the proper filing window or failed to utilize statutory exemptions over a 10-year period.

Executive Summary: South Korea enforces a global taxation regime for tax residents involving asset transfers. Both Sangsokse (상속세 - inheritance tax) and Jeungyeose (증여세 - gift tax) follow a progressive bracket system that scales all the way up to 50% for taxable amounts exceeding 3 billion KRW. Utilizing legal Gongje (곡제 - deductions) such as the 600 million KRW spousal limit is strictly necessary to mitigate the extreme upper brackets.

What Are the 2026 Tax Brackets?

50%
Maximum marginal tax rate for assets over 3 Billion KRW (as of January 2026)

The core concept is straightforward but bruising. When you receive a gift or inheritance, the value is tallied up. Korea uses a progressive taxation model, meaning the more you receive, the higher the percentage of tax applied to the upper segments of your wealth.

Below is the unified rate table used by the National Tax Service (NTS) β†’ for both gift and inheritance calculations in 2026. This table applies strictly to the net taxable baseβ€”this is the value remaining after you've already applied all allowable marital, child, and standard deductions.

Taxable Base (Net amount) Marginal Tax Rate Progressive Deduction
Up to 100 Million KRW10%None
Over 100M ~ 500M KRW20%10 Million KRW
Over 500M ~ 1 Billion KRW30%60 Million KRW
Over 1B ~ 3 Billion KRW40%160 Million KRW
Over 3 Billion KRW50%460 Million KRW

To use this chart, multiply your taxable base by the rate, then subtract the progressive deduction. If John inherits a net 700 million KRW base, he sits in the 30% bracket. His tax is (700M Γ— 0.30) - 60M = 150 million KRW. The gap is bigger than you'd expect compared to jurisdictions with flat or near-zero inheritance profiles.

Who Actually Pays? The Resident vs. Non-Resident Rule

Korean tax liability hinges on the concept of domicile (resident status). If the deceased was a Korean tax resident, their worldwide assets are subject to the global inheritance tax regime.

"If a donee is a resident, he/he is liable to pay gift tax on all gifted property, regardless of location." β€” National Tax Service (NTS), Jan 2026.

If you are classified as an expat tax resident inside Korea, you must report overseas cash wiring, inherited foreign real estate, and equity shares transferred from parents abroad. Korea enforces strict tracking and cooperates with international banking standards to verify overseas transfers over a cumulative 10,000 USD equivalent.

How Do Exemptions (Gongje) Defend Your Wealth?

No one pays tax on the absolute gross amount. You must strategically apply your Gongje (곡제 - deductions) which act as a shield to bring down your taxable base. Here is the honest truth about deductions: they are meant to protect normal middle-class wealth, but quickly run out if you are passing down premium Seoul real estate.

Spousal Shield: For lifetime gifts, you can transfer up to 600 million KRW to a spouse completely tax-free. However, this limit resets strictly on a 10-year rolling window.

For children, the deduction is much tighter. You can gift an adult child up to 50 million KRW tax-free every 10 years (or 20M KRW for a minor). Anything over that amount within a decade triggers a taxable event.

If we talk about inheritance (upon death), the baseline gets a bit more generous. There is a "basic deduction" of 200 million KRW, plus various other family deductions. Alternatively, the law allows a "lump-sum" baseline deduction of 500 million KRW. Thus, if a resident's total estate falls under 500 million KRW, there is generally no inheritance tax owed.

What Are the Strict NTS Reporting Deadlines?

Timing your filing is arguably the most essential compliance step. The NTS sets unforgiving deadlines, and failing to meet them not only removes your early-filing discounts but also piles on penalty interest.

βœ… Gift Tax Deadline: End of the 3rd month following the month the gift was received.
βœ… Inheritance Tax Deadline: End of the 6th month following the month of death (or 9th month if the deceased was a non-resident).
βœ… Early Filing Bonus: Korea rewards swift compliance. Filing on time grants a 3% direct discount on the calculated tax amount.

If you've ever been confused by this timeline, you're not alone. An expat might receive a $100,000 international transfer in January, assume their home country tax return covers it next year, and miss the April Korean filing deadline completely. The result? A 20% penalty for no-filing, plus continuous daily interest charges.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are foreign residents subject to inheritance tax on foreign assets?

Yes, residents are taxed globally. If the deceased was a Korean tax resident, their worldwide estate is subject to Korean inheritance tax. If the deceased was non-resident, only Korea-situated assets are taxed.

What is the gift tax limit between foreign spouses in Korea?

The limit is 600 million KRW over 10 years. Spouses can legally transfer up to this amount without incurring gift tax, provided at least one is a Korean resident receiving the asset.

Does Korea have a wealth tax outside of these transfers?

No, there is no separate general wealth tax. However, comprehensive real estate taxes apply annually to individuals owning multiple or high-value residential properties in Korea.

β€» All information is based on 2026 statutory rates and official publications. Individual circumstances may vary. This is not professional financial, medical, or legal advice.

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