Pakistan → South Korea: the E-7-1 Professional Personnel Visa (Foreign National of Special Ability) roadmap
South Korea's primary route for a skilled non-resident professional is the employer-sponsored E-7-1 (Professional Personnel) visa, one of the 87 designated occupations under the broader E-7 work-visa framework. It requires a confirmed job offer from a Korean employer, a relevant degree or equivalent experience, and a minimum annual salary of KRW 31,120,000 (effective 1 February 2026). A long-term path exists (E-7 to F-2-7 points-based residence to F-5 permanent residence to naturalization), but it is demanding: it requires Korean-language proficiency (KIIP), continuous residence, and (for citizenship) generally renouncing the original nationality. Government fee figures are modest but vary slightly by consulate, so confidence on the exact lower-cost line items is medium.
Moving from Pakistan
- You apply for the E-7-1 Professional Personnel Visa (Foreign National of Special Ability) at the South Korea consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Pakistan, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Pakistan usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward South Korea's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Pakistan documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Pakistan passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Pakistan to South Korea applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by South Korea.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- A confirmed job offer and sponsorship from a registered Korean employer; the visa is employer-tied and not self-sponsored
- Education/experience matching the role: master's degree in a relevant field, or a bachelor's degree plus at least 1 year of related experience, or 5+ years of relevant work experience
- The occupation must fall within one of the ~87 Ministry of Justice designated E-7 job categories (E-7-1 covers ~67 professional, managerial and specialist roles)
- Offered annual salary at or above the 2026 threshold of KRW 31,120,000 for E-7-1 (KRW 25,890,000 for E-7-2/E-7-3)
- Employer must satisfy quota/ratio rules (limits on number of foreign vs Korean staff) and demonstrate the role genuinely requires a foreign specialist
- Clean criminal record and valid supporting documents (degree, career certificates), typically apostilled/legalized and translated
Your step-by-step roadmap
Secure job offer and prepare documents
- Obtain a job offer from a Korean employer in a designated E-7 occupation
- Confirm the role and salary meet the 2026 E-7-1 thresholds and quota rules
- Gather and legalize/translate degree, career certificates, and passport
Certificate of Visa Issuance (CCVI) and visa
- Employer files the CCVI application with the local immigration office via HiKorea
- Receive the CCVI confirmation number, then apply for the visa stamp at a Korean embassy/consulate
- Pay the single-entry visa fee (approx USD 60) and collect the E-7 visa
Enter Korea and register residence
- Enter Korea on the E-7 visa
- Apply for the residence card (formerly Alien Registration Card) within 90 days, fee KRW 35,000
- Begin work with the sponsoring employer
Transition to long-term residence
- Accumulate continuous residence; build points toward F-2-7 (need 80 of 170, or income waiver if annual income >= KRW 40,000,000)
- Study Korean / complete KIIP to meet language requirements
- Apply to change status from E-7 to F-2-7
Permanent residence and citizenship
- After ~5 years of qualifying residence and meeting income/language criteria, apply for F-5 permanent residence
- Hold F-5 (and meet integration/language tests) for the required period
- Apply for naturalization after ~3 years on F-5 (generally requires renouncing prior citizenship)
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: From signed job offer, the E-7-1 visa typically takes about 3 to 7 weeks to process (CCVI plus consular stamp), after which the worker enters Korea and registers a residence card within 90 days.
Citizenship: A genuine long-term track exists but is demanding: E-7 holders move to F-2-7 points-based residence, then to F-5 permanent residence after roughly 5 years of qualifying residence (with stable income and KIIP/Korean-language proficiency), and may apply for naturalization after about 3 years on F-5, which generally requires renouncing the original nationality since Korea does not normally permit dual citizenship for naturalized adults.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.