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South Korea E-7 Visa 2026: How African Professionals Land Skilled Jobs in Seoul

The South Korea E-7 visa 2026 is one of Asia’s most underrated skilled-worker routes for African professionals. The Ministry of Justice’s Immigration Office covers 86 designated occupations — engineers, IT specialists, designers, language instructors, marine professionals and researchers — and the route leads to F-2 long-term residency in five years. Ghanaian software developers in Seoul fintech, Egyptian marine engineers in Busan shipyards and Kenyan English-language program directors are quietly building careers there. Here is the 2026 playbook.

What the E-7 visa actually is

The E-7 (Specially Designated Activities) visa is Korea’s main skilled-worker category. There are three sub-categories: E-7-1 covers specialist professionals in 86 designated occupations (the big bucket), E-7-2 covers semi-skilled workers in five occupations including welding and shipbuilding, and E-7-3 covers private-school administrators and similar roles. Most African applicants will target E-7-1.

The visa is initially valid for up to two years and renewable. After three to five years on E-7, you can apply for the F-2 long-term residence visa, and after five years total of legal residence the F-5 permanent residence becomes available. The route also supports family — spouse and dependent children come in on F-3 dependant visas, with limited work rights for spouses through a separate F-3 work permit application.

Salary floor and points system

From the 2024 update still in force through 2026, the minimum salary requirement is 80% of Korea’s gross national income per capita — which works out to roughly KRW 32–35 million annually (about USD 23,000–25,000). For ‘high-value’ professionals — IT, R&D, biotech — the threshold may be applied at 100% of GNI per capita, around KRW 42 million.

A points-based scoring system supplements the salary floor. Points are awarded for age (younger is better), Korean language ability (TOPIK level 3 or higher adds significant points), academic degree (master’s and PhD weighted heavily), prior work experience in the designated field, and Korean employer’s size and stability. Most professional applicants need to clear 60 of 100 possible points. African candidates with master’s degrees and even basic TOPIK 2 usually clear this comfortably.

The 86 designated occupations — where Africans fit

The full list spans IT (software engineers, data scientists, network architects, security specialists, AI/ML engineers), engineering (mechanical, electrical, civil, chemical, aerospace), design (industrial, graphic, fashion, UX), language teaching (native-language instructors, language program managers), research (university researcher, lab principal investigator), marine engineering, healthcare specialists and journalism.

Three African angles. (1) Software and AI — Seoul’s fintech and Samsung/LG ecosystems hire African candidates with strong English and 3+ years of relevant experience; TOPIK is not required for English-track engineering roles. (2) Marine engineering — Korean shipyards in Busan and Ulsan hire Egyptian and Nigerian marine engineers from Alexandria Maritime and the Nigerian Maritime Academy regularly; salary floors are lower (around KRW 32m) but housing is often provided. (3) Native-language instructor — South African, Kenyan and Nigerian candidates with a bachelor’s degree from an English-speaking university and a TEFL/TESOL certificate qualify as native English instructors; entry-level salaries cluster around KRW 30m.

Have a Korean employer interested but not sure if your role qualifies as one of the 86 E-7 occupations? Send the job description through https://linktr.ee/travelexpore and we will map it to the official designation list.

How African applicants actually file

The process. (1) Land a Korean employer offer at or above the threshold for your sub-category. (2) The Korean employer applies for a Certificate of Confirmation of Visa Issuance (CCVI) at the local Korean immigration office; this typically takes three to four weeks. (3) Once the CCVI issues, you apply for the actual E-7 visa at the Korean embassy in your home country (Pretoria for Southern Africa, Abuja for Nigeria/West Africa, Cairo for North Africa, Nairobi for East Africa). Visa stamping takes 7 to 14 working days for complete applications.

The three most common refusal causes for African applicants: incorrect job-to-occupation mapping (the role’s actual duties do not match the designated E-7 occupation), academic credentials not apostilled by the Hague Convention authority in your home country, and prior immigration history in countries with high Korean concerns. Get a pre-submission file review from a Korean immigration adviser — the embassy expects clean files and rejects applications with even minor inconsistencies.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to speak Korean for the E-7 visa 2026?

No, but TOPIK level 3 adds significant points and improves your case. English-track roles in software, engineering and research often do not require Korean.

What is the salary floor for the E-7 visa?

Approximately KRW 32–35 million annually for standard E-7-1, or KRW 42 million for high-value categories like IT/R&D. Thresholds reset annually with GNI per capita.

Can my spouse work on a Korean F-3 dependant visa?

Not automatically. Spouses on F-3 must apply for a separate work permit. F-3 holders also gain limited work rights after the main applicant transitions to F-2.

How long until I can apply for Korean permanent residence?

After three to five years on E-7 you can apply for F-2 long-term residence; after five years total of legal residence in Korea you can apply for F-5 permanent residence.

Are African degrees accepted for the E-7 visa?

Yes, provided they are from accredited universities. Documents must be apostilled by the Hague Convention authority in your home country. South Africa, Kenya, Egypt and many West African countries are Hague signatories.

Take the next step today

If you have a partner, child or sibling counting on this application, set up a free family-visa briefing via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

The headlines

  • E-7 covers 86 designated specialist occupations; salary floor sits around KRW 32–42m depending on category.
  • Korean language adds points but English-track engineering and research roles do not require TOPIK.
  • Apostille your African degree certificates early — missing apostilles is the top embassy refusal cause.

Share this story

  1. South Korea’s E-7 visa is one of Asia’s quietest skilled-worker routes for Africans. Here is who qualifies.
  2. 86 occupations, KRW 32–42m floor, five years to permanent residence. The Seoul plan most Africans miss.
  3. African software engineer, marine engineer or English instructor? Read this before applying for Korean visas.

Have a question about your case? Tap our team via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore and we’ll come back to you with a written next step.