This article is general guidance only and does not constitute legal or immigration advice. E-7 rules are subject to change. Verify your specific situation with Korea Immigration Service (1345) or a qualified immigration professional before acting.
The E-7 visa covers a specific range of professional occupations in Korea. Unlike the E-2, it is not tied to a single employer in exactly the same way — but changing jobs still requires a formal workplace change application, and timing it wrong can create problems.
This article covers the process, what to sort out before you resign, and where to get reliable answers for your specific case.
Can You Change Employers Before Your Contract Ends?
Yes — an E-7 holder can initiate a workplace change before their contract ends, provided the new employer is eligible to sponsor E-7 workers and the position falls within the same or an eligible occupation category.
The key constraint: you cannot begin working at the new employer until immigration approves the workplace change. Starting work before approval is a visa violation. This makes the timing of your resignation and your application submission more important than it might seem.
Does the E-7 Require a Letter of Release?
Unlike the E-2, the E-7 does not formally require a Letter of Release from your current employer. However, your current employer’s cooperation with paperwork — employment verification, tax records, and departure documentation — can affect the smoothness of the process. If relations with your employer are poor, this is worth factoring in before you hand in your notice.
The Workplace Change Application
The workplace change application is filed with immigration by your new employer, not by you directly. This means your new employer needs to be ready to submit before you leave your current job.
Key documents typically involved include employment verification from the current employer, tax records, a new employment contract, and documentation confirming the new employer’s eligibility to sponsor E-7 workers. Requirements can vary, so confirm the current checklist with 1345 or check Hi Korea before preparing documents.
Timing Your Resignation
The gap between leaving your current job and immigration approving the workplace change is the vulnerable period. During this time you are technically between sponsors, and working anywhere is not permitted.
A practical approach: coordinate closely with your new employer on when they plan to submit the application, and plan your resignation date around the expected processing timeline. Do not resign before your new employer has confirmed they are ready to file.
What If the Job Category Is Different?
If the new position is in a different E-7 occupation category from your current one, the process becomes more complicated and may effectively require a new visa application rather than a simple workplace change. Clarify this with immigration or an 행정사 before assuming a transfer is straightforward.
Protecting Your Tax and Employment Records
A concern raised in similar community discussions is the impact of an employment gap on tax certificates and income records. If these documents are relevant to a future visa renewal or PR application, keeping your employment timeline clean matters.
Document your resignation date, your last working day, and the immigration approval date carefully. If there is a gap, having records that explain it cleanly is better than an unexplained period.
Where to Get Reliable Answers
- Korea Immigration Contact Center: 1345 (English support available)
- Hi Korea: www.hikorea.go.kr — official immigration requirements and forms
- Licensed 행정사 (immigration administrative agent): can handle the application process on your behalf
- LOFT (Legal Office for Foreign Teachers): mainly covers E-2, but the community may have experience with E-7 situations too
- EEIK Facebook group: post your specific situation for community experience
Given the potential consequences of getting timing wrong, a one-hour consultation with a qualified 행정사 before resigning is usually money well spent.