🇰🇷South Korea Visa for Icelandic Citizens2026 Requirements, Fees & Documents
Icelandic passport holders need an approved eTA (electronic travel authorisation) before travelling to South Korea — a quick online pre-screening completed before departure, not a full visa.
K-ETA required online before boarding (KRW 10,000, ~USD 7-8); not visa-free per taxonomy
k-eta.go.kr ↗How Icelandic citizens apply for a South Korea visa
- → Apply online for the eTA before you travel; approval is usually quick. Apply here ↗
South Korea visa cost for Icelandic citizens
K-ETA (Korea Electronic Travel Authorization)
KRW 10,000 (~$7.5)
Fees checked 2 Jul 2026 · sourced from official government fee schedules
South Korea visa types
Short-Term Visit Visa (C-3)
Tourism, visiting family, short business, medical treatment, transit
Many nationalities are visa-exempt. Apply at a Korean embassy/consulate. Multiple-entry versions available. K-ETA electronic travel authorisation required for some nationalities.
Apply here ↗D-9 International Trade / Business Management Visa
Running an international-trade business, plant/equipment installation, or management activities in Korea
For sole traders/managers engaged in import-export, industrial-equipment installation and operation, or supervising business operations, who do not qualify under D-8. Period of stay up to 2 years, renewable.
Apply here ↗Other South Korea visa categories (27)Hide other visa categories
These don't apply to a typical short visit, but cover other reasons people travel to South Korea. Eligibility varies by visa type — some are limited to specific nationalities, so check each one's conditions.
E-7 Specially Designated Activities Visa
Working in a specialised job at a Korean company (requires employer sponsorship)
Requires job offer from a Korean employer. Employer must file application on behalf of the employee. Points-based system for some categories.
Apply here ↗D-2 Student Visa
Studying at a Korean university, college, or graduate school
Requires admission letter from a Korean institution. Can work up to 20 hours/week part-time.
Apply here ↗H-1 Working Holiday Visa
Holidaying and working in Korea (age 18–30, select nationalities)
Available for Australia, UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Canada, Japan, and others. Generally no fee or very low fee.
Apply here ↗F-1-D Digital Nomad Visa
Remote working in South Korea for up to 2 years (launched January 2024)
Minimum annual income USD 84,600 (GNI 2x). Available to nationals from countries with visa-free or visa agreements with Korea. Cannot work for Korean employers.
Apply here ↗E-2 Foreign Language Instructor Visa
Teaching a foreign language (e.g. English conversation) at schools, universities, or accredited language institutes
Requires a bachelor's degree or higher and, for the E-2-1 sub-type, citizenship of a designated native-English-speaking country. Criminal background check and health/drug check required. Employer files a Certificate of Confirmation of Visa Issuance via HiKorea. Period of stay up to 2 years, renewable.
Apply here ↗E-9 Non-Professional Employment Visa (Employment Permit System)
Low-skilled work in manufacturing, construction, agriculture, fishing, and services under the Employment Permit System (EPS)
Open only to nationals of the 16 EPS MOU partner countries; applicants must pass the EPS-TOPIK Korean-language test and be selected from the jobseeker roster. Employer- and sector-tied. Maximum stay 4 years 10 months. Administered by Korea's Ministry of Employment and Labor via eps.go.kr; 2026 quota 80,000.
Apply here ↗E-1 Professor Visa
Teaching or research at a Korean university or institution of higher education
For professors, assistant professors, and equivalent teaching/research staff at accredited higher-education institutions. Maximum single period of stay up to 5 years. Employer sponsorship required; e-Visa available for eligible nationals.
Apply here ↗E-6 Arts and Entertainment Visa
Artists, musicians, professional athletes, models, and entertainers performing in Korea
Sub-types cover fine/performing arts (E-6-1), hotel/entertainment performers (E-6-2), and professional athletes/coaches (E-6-3). Contract and, for some sub-types, a performance recommendation certificate are required.
Apply here ↗H-2 Work and Visit Visa
Visit plus designated employment for foreign-national ethnic Koreans from CIS and select countries
For overseas Koreans (aged 18+) from China, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and other CIS states. Multiple-entry, valid up to ~3 years, allowing work in designated industries after jobseeker registration. Distinct from F-4, which covers a broader overseas-Korean group with fewer work restrictions.
Apply here ↗D-10 Job-Seeking Visa
Job-seeking or start-up preparation for qualified graduates and professionals
Points-based visa (D-10-1 job-seeking, D-10-2 start-up preparation) for those preparing to obtain a professional-employment (E-series) or start-up (D-8) status. Initial stay up to 6 months, extendable to a maximum of 2 years total. Permits internships and limited part-time activity.
Apply here ↗D-8 Corporate Investment Visa
Foreign executives/investors establishing or managing a company in which they have invested in Korea
For essential professionals of a foreign-invested company (D-8-1) or founders of a venture/technology start-up (D-8-4). Minimum investment generally KRW 100 million (roughly USD 75,000) for D-8-1. Maximum single period of stay up to 5 years; renewable. Distinct from the immigrant-investor (F-2-8) residence-by-investment schemes tracked separately.
Apply here ↗D-4 General Training Visa (incl. Korean-language training)
Non-degree study such as Korean-language courses at university institutes, or professional/technical training
D-4-1 covers Korean-language training at a university-affiliated language institute; other sub-types cover trainees at companies or institutions. Distinct from the D-2 degree-seeking student visa. Part-time work allowed only with prior permission. Period of stay up to 2 years.
Apply here ↗F-6 Marriage Migrant Visa
Foreign spouse of a Korean national coming to reside in Korea
For the spouse of a Korean citizen (F-6-1), a parent raising a Korean citizen's child (F-6-2), or a spouse who lost marital status without fault (F-6-3). The initial single-entry 90-day visa is converted to a 1-3 year residence status after alien registration. Sponsor must meet minimum-income and the applicant basic Korean-language requirements. Grants unrestricted work; pathway to F-5 permanent residence.
Apply here ↗F-4 Overseas Korean Visa
Foreign-national ethnic Koreans (former Korean nationals and their descendants)
For overseas Koreans (former ROK nationals and their descendants to a defined degree) as defined by the Overseas Koreans Act. Multiple-entry, valid up to 3 years and renewable, with broad (though not unlimited) work rights. Administered via visa.go.kr / HiKorea.
Apply here ↗F-3 Dependent Family Visa
Accompanying spouse and unmarried minor children of long-term (D-/E-series and most non-immigrant) visa holders
Granted to the dependent spouse and minor children of a principal visa holder (e.g. D-2, D-8, E-1 to E-7). Period of stay matches the principal's status. Employment is not permitted on F-3; the dependent must obtain their own work status to work.
Apply here ↗Medical Treatment Visa (C-3-3 short-term / G-1-10 long-term)
Receiving medical treatment or recuperation in Korea, and accompanying carers
Short-term medical tourism uses the C-3-3 short-term visit sub-type (stay up to 90 days). Treatment requiring longer than 90 days uses the G-1-10 status, which can be extended for the duration of treatment. Accompanying family/carers may receive a matching visa.
Apply here ↗C-4 Short-Term Employment Visa
Short-term paid activities up to 90 days (e.g. temporary or one-off work, entertainers, models, advertising, short assignments)
For short-term profit-making activities not exceeding 90 days. Single entry; C-category holders cannot change to another sojourn status inside Korea. As of October 2025 the former C-4 seasonal agriculture/fishery sub-types were moved to the dedicated E-8 Seasonal Worker visa.
Apply here ↗D-7 Intra-company Transferee Visa
Staff of a foreign company transferred to its Korean branch, subsidiary, or affiliate
For essential professionals who have worked at least one year at the overseas headquarters or affiliate and are dispatched to the Korean entity (D-7-1 for-profit, D-7-2 public/non-profit). Renewable multi-year residence; employer sponsorship required.
Apply here ↗D-6 Religious Worker Visa
Missionaries, clergy, and social workers dispatched by a recognised religious or affiliated social-welfare organisation
For religious/missionary work or affiliated social-welfare activities under an organisation recognised abroad and its Korean counterpart. Renewable; dispatch/recommendation documents required.
Apply here ↗D-5 Long-term News Coverage (Journalist) Visa
Foreign correspondents and journalists posted to Korea for long-term news coverage
For staff of overseas media dispatched to a Korean branch/bureau or contracted correspondents. Renewable; assignment letter and press credentials required. Distinct from the C-1 short-term news-coverage status used for stays under 90 days.
Apply here ↗D-1 Culture and Arts Visa
Non-profit academic, cultural, or artistic activity, including study or research of traditional Korean arts
For persons engaged in non-profit cultural or artistic activities, or studying/researching Korean arts under expert guidance. Not for paid performances, which use the E-6 Arts and Entertainment visa. Renewable.
Apply here ↗D-3 Industrial Trainee Visa
On-site industrial/technical training at a Korean company for staff of an overseas affiliate or partner
For technical trainees dispatched to a Korean manufacturing/industrial facility, typically within a foreign-invested or affiliated company. Training-based; distinct from the D-4 general/language trainee status. Being progressively narrowed as employment routes expand.
Apply here ↗E-3 Research Visa
Researchers invited by a public or private institution to conduct research in natural sciences or advanced technology
For researchers in science/engineering or high-tech fields at a government-approved institute, university, or corporate R&D centre. Host institution sponsorship required; renewable.
Apply here ↗E-4 Technical Instruction (Technology Transfer) Visa
Specialists providing technical instruction or technology transfer under contract with a Korean organisation
For engineers/technicians supplying specialised technology or know-how not readily available domestically under a technology-introduction contract. Contract and employer sponsorship required; renewable.
Apply here ↗E-5 Professional Employment Visa
Holders of a Korean national licence practising a licensed profession (e.g. lawyer, doctor, accountant, pilot, licensed engineer)
For foreign nationals authorised under Korean law to practise a licensed profession, employed under contract with a Korean organisation. Requires the relevant Korean qualification/licence; renewable.
Apply here ↗E-8 Seasonal Worker Visa
Short-term seasonal labour in agriculture and fisheries arranged through Korean local governments
Introduced/expanded from October 2025, replacing the former C-4 seasonal sub-types. Recruited by Korean local governments via government-to-government MOUs or marriage-migrant referrals; individuals cannot apply directly. A single grant is up to 5 months and total stay cannot exceed 8 months. 2026 national quota 109,100. Sub-types: E-8-1/E-8-2 agriculture, E-8-3/E-8-4 fisheries.
Apply here ↗E-10 Maritime Crew Visa
Crew members on Korean-operated vessels (coastal/offshore fishing, cargo, cruise) under an employment contract
For seafarers employed on ships operated by a Korean shipping or fishing company under the Seafarers Act (E-10-1 fishing, E-10-2 cargo/passenger, E-10-3 cruise). Employer sponsorship required; renewable.
Apply here ↗South Korea visa for Icelandic citizens — FAQ
Do Icelandic citizens need a visa for South Korea?
Not a visa, but yes — an approved eTA (a quick online pre-screening) is required before travelling.
What documents do Icelandic citizens need for South Korea?
A passport valid well beyond your planned stay (commonly three to six months, depending on the destination), proof of onward travel and funds, and any documents required for the specific South Korea visa category — check the official portal for the exact passport-validity rule.
Related visa requirements
For Icelandic citizens
United Arab Emirates visa
Thailand visa
United States visa
United Kingdom visa
Germany visa
France visa
Italy visa
Spain visa
South Korea visa for India
South Korea visa for Malaysia
South Korea visa for South Africa
South Korea visa for Morocco
South Korea visa for Canada
South Korea visa for Mexico