Care worker visa routes in Republic of Korea
We have not yet indexed a route that maps directly to care workers in Republic of Korea, but the general work and skilled-migration routes for Republic of Korea below may still apply. Always confirm the current rules on the primary source before acting.
Also searched as: senior care worker, social care worker, support worker, health care assistant.
What this means for care workers
Republic of Korea does not currently have a route in our index that maps one-to-one to care workers, so the general routes below are the place to start. Care workers work in a regulated field, so immigration approval is only half the journey: in most countries you must also clear a separate professional-registration or licensing step before you can practise in Republic of Korea. That recognition process often takes as long as the visa itself, so it is worth starting in parallel.
The most-used skilled route into Republic of Korea overall is the E-7 Designated Activities Visa; it is not specific to care workers but is worth understanding as the benchmark route.
Where to start
No directly-matched routes indexed yet. See all Republic of Korea routes.
Frequently asked questions
Do care workers need to requalify or register to work in Republic of Korea?+
Care workers work in a regulated field, so immigration approval is only half the journey: in most countries you must also clear a separate professional-registration or licensing step before you can practise in Republic of Korea. That recognition process often takes as long as the visa itself, so it is worth starting in parallel.