Healthcare

What Happens to Health Insurance Between an E-2 Contract and D-10 Visa?

When an E-2 teaching contract ends and you switch to D-10, your National Health Insurance does not disappear — but it changes. Here is what to expect and who to call.

Quick Answer
  • NHIS coverage does not simply stop when your E-2 contract ends — it transitions from employer-based to regional subscriber status
  • Your employer reports the end of employment to NHIS, which triggers the transition to regional subscriber billing
  • A premium notice will be mailed to your registered address — pay it to maintain coverage
  • Call NHIS at 1577-1000 or visit a local NHIS office before your contract ends to confirm your status
  • There may be a short gap between employer reporting and your first regional premium bill — ask NHIS about coverage during this period
  • Keep your ARC valid and your registered address current — NHIS billing goes to your registered address

Health insurance rules and NHIS processes can change. Verify your specific situation with the National Health Insurance Service (1577-1000) or an NHIS office before your contract ends.

Korea’s National Health Insurance system covers most foreign residents, but the way it works changes when your employment status changes. When an E-2 teaching contract ends and you move to a D-10 job-seeker visa, understanding what happens to your coverage — and what you need to do — prevents gaps and unexpected bills.

Two Types of NHIS Membership

Korean National Health Insurance has two subscriber categories:

직장가입자 (Workplace subscriber) — Enrolled through your employer. Premiums are split between you and your employer and deducted from your salary. This is what most E-2 teachers are under.

지역가입자 (Regional subscriber) — Individual enrollment not tied to an employer. Premiums are billed directly to you based on income, assets, and other factors. This is what you become when employment ends.

The transition between these two categories is the core of what happens when your E-2 contract ends.

What Happens When Your Contract Ends

When your employment contract ends, your school is required to report the end of employment to NHIS. This happens within a few days to a week of your final working day in most cases.

Once NHIS receives this report, your workplace subscriber status ends and you become eligible for regional subscriber enrollment. NHIS should automatically shift you to regional subscriber status and begin billing you directly.

A premium notice will be sent to your registered ARC address. Pay it to maintain coverage without interruption.

The Gap Question

The period between when your workplace coverage ends and when your first regional premium bill arrives can feel uncertain. In practice, most people remain covered during this transition — the NHIS system treats the changeover as continuous enrollment.

However, the safest approach is to call NHIS directly at 1577-1000 (Korean) or visit a local NHIS office before your contract ends, confirm your transition date, and ask specifically whether you will have coverage during the changeover period.

What to Do Before Your Contract Ends

  • Confirm your NHIS enrollment number — check your health insurance card or ask your employer
  • Call 1577-1000 or visit NHIS to ask about the transition timeline
  • Make sure your ARC registered address is current — premium bills go there
  • Ask your employer when they plan to report the end of employment — this triggers the transition

After D-10 Is Approved

Once you are on a D-10 visa, you continue as a regional subscriber. Your premiums are calculated based on your income declaration. If you have no income during D-10, report this to NHIS — it may reduce your premium.

When you start a new job and get a new employer, you transition back to workplace subscriber status. Your new employer handles enrollment.

Useful Korean Terms

  • 직장가입자 — workplace subscriber
  • 지역가입자 — regional subscriber
  • 건강보험 자격득실확인서 — NHIS enrollment/disenrollment certificate
  • 국민건강보험공단 — National Health Insurance Service
  • 보험료 — insurance premium
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