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Practical Tax Strategy and Government Support Guide for Korean Startup Founders

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Practical Tax Strategy and Government Support Guide for Korean Startup Founders

When you start a business, all your energy goes into product development, marketing, and team building. Tax matters tend to get pushed to the back burner. But not knowing your tax strategy can cost you tens of millions of won. On the flip side, understanding and leveraging these benefits can significantly reduce your tax burden in the early years and improve cash flow through government support programs.

This guide walks through tax strategies and government support programs that founders can actually use, organized by stage from pre-launch through growth.


1. The Tax Roadmap Every Founder Must Know

Before Launch: Choosing Your Business Structure (Sole Proprietorship vs Corporation)

The first decision when preparing to start a business is whether to register as a sole proprietor (개인사업자) or incorporate as a corporation (법인). This choice affects not only your tax burden but also investment fundraising, credibility, and liability.

Sole Proprietorship Characteristics

  • Simple setup with minimal cost (online via Hometax or in-person at the tax office)
  • Business income is taxed as aggregate income (6%–45% progressive rate)
  • Owner's personal assets are exposed to business liabilities
  • Advantageous when revenue is low (roughly under 80 million KRW annual income)

Corporation Characteristics

  • Setup costs apply (legal fees + registration costs, typically 500,000–1,500,000 KRW)
  • Lower corporate tax rates: 9% on the first 200 million KRW, 19% up to 20 billion KRW, 21% up to 300 billion KRW, 24% above that
  • The CEO's salary can be treated as a deductible expense (not possible with sole proprietorships)
  • Investors prefer the clear equity structure
  • Tax savings grow as the business scales

How to Choose

CriteriaSole ProprietorshipCorporation
Annual RevenueUnder 100 million KRW initiallyOver 100 million KRW or high growth expected
Investment PlansNoneExternal investment planned
HeadcountSmall teamHiring planned
Business TypeSimple serviceTech startup
LiabilityWilling to accept personal liabilityNeed legal separation

Right After Launch: Business Registration (Required Within 14 Days)

You must register your business within 14 days of starting operations. Missing this deadline can trigger penalty taxes.

How to Register

  1. Online via Hometax (www.hometax.go.kr): requires a joint certificate (공동인증서)
  2. In person at your local tax office: bring your lease agreement and ID
  3. For corporations: register after completing corporate registration (법인등기)

Key Decisions at Registration

  • Tax type: General taxpayer (expected annual revenue over 80 million KRW) vs Simplified taxpayer (under 80 million KRW)
  • Business category and type: Register as broadly as possible to match your actual activities (you can add more later, but it's easier to register them upfront)
  • Tax invoice issuance: General taxpayers must issue tax invoices; simplified taxpayers issue receipts

Preparing for Tax Invoice Issuance

  • Electronic tax invoice mandatory for corporations and sole proprietors with annual revenue over 80 million KRW
  • Joint certificate (공동인증서) is required
  • Tax invoices must be issued by the 10th of the following month after the transaction

Year 1: VAT Filing and Income Tax Preparation

Value Added Tax (VAT) Filing Schedule

Individual general taxpayers file twice a year:

  • 1st period final filing: July 1–July 25 (transactions from January through June)
  • 2nd period final filing: January 1–January 25 of the following year (transactions from July through December)

Corporations file four times a year (two preliminary + two final filings).

Actively Pursue VAT Refunds

If you carefully collect purchase tax invoices, you may receive VAT refunds. In the early stages when you incur large expenses on equipment, software, or fit-out, you may actually get money back.

Comprehensive Income Tax (Sole Proprietors)

  • Filing period: May 1–May 31 of the following year
  • Business income combined with other income sources
  • Carefully claiming all deduction items can dramatically reduce taxes

Year 3: Time to Consider Incorporating

By year three, revenue and profit typically start to stabilize. Sole proprietors should seriously evaluate converting to a corporation at this point.

Signs That Incorporating Makes Sense

  • Annual net profit starts exceeding 50 million KRW
  • External investment becomes a realistic possibility
  • Headcount grows to five or more employees
  • Customers or partners request corporate bank account transactions

How to Convert to a Corporation

  • In-kind contribution method: Transfer assets and liabilities of the sole proprietorship into the corporation as in-kind capital contributions (tax deferral possible)
  • Business transfer method: Sell the existing business to a new corporation (watch for VAT)
  • Comprehensive transfer method: A comprehensive business transfer is VAT-exempt

Year 5: Rebuilding Strategy After Exemptions Expire

Youth startup tax exemptions and other relief programs expire five years after founding. You need a fresh tax strategy at this point.

  • Aggressively pursue R&D tax credits
  • Equipment investment tax credits
  • Job creation tax credits
  • Revisit corporate retained earnings: dividends vs salary strategy

2. Complete Summary of Startup Tax Exemptions

Youth Startup Tax Exemption (Article 6 of the Special Tax Treatment Control Law)

This is the most powerful tax benefit for young founders. If properly applied, you may pay virtually no taxes for five years.

Eligibility Requirements

  • Age: 34 or younger as of the date of founding (military service period added, up to 6 years)
  • Example: If you served two years in the military, the benefit extends to age 36
  • Business type: Manufacturing, construction, food service, IT services, professional science and technology services, etc. (real estate, finance, entertainment, etc. are excluded)

Exemption Rates

RegionExemption RateDuration
Seoul Capital Area Overcrowded Control Zone50%5 years
Areas outside the Overcrowded Control Zone100%5 years

The "Seoul Capital Area Overcrowded Control Zone" refers to parts of Seoul, Incheon, and Gyeonggi-do. Founding outside this zone means zero income or corporate tax for five years.

How to Apply

  1. Apply together with your comprehensive income tax (individuals) or corporate tax filing
  2. Attach the [Tax Deduction/Exemption Application Form] on Hometax
  3. Prepare documentation proving your founding date (business registration certificate, etc.)

Important Notes

  • Automatically expires five years after founding (no extensions)
  • If employment decreases in a year you received the exemption, some taxes may be recouped
  • Moving your business location to a different region can change your exemption rate

SME Startup Tax Exemption

Available even if you do not meet the youth requirements.

Eligibility Requirements

  • Founding SME (qualifies as an SME under the Framework Act on Small and Medium Enterprises)
  • 50% exemption for five years if founded outside the Seoul Capital Area Overcrowded Control Zone

SME Qualification Criteria

Criteria vary by industry, but most startups will qualify in the early stages. For IT and service businesses, qualification is typically based on average revenue thresholds.

Key Conditions for Startup SME Tax Exemptions

You must meet certain obligations to retain the exemption.

Employment Maintenance Obligation

  • You must maintain your regular workforce in the years you claim the exemption
  • If employment drops significantly within two years of receiving the exemption, some exempted taxes may be clawed back

Exemption Calculation

The startup tax exemption is not applied to the entire tax liability but is calculated based on the ratio of exempt income.

Exempt tax amount = Calculated tax × (Exempt income / Total business income) × Exemption rate

3. Complete Guide to Government Grants and Subsidies

Major Startup Grant Programs

The Korean government deploys hundreds of billions of won annually to support startups. Leveraging these programs can significantly reduce the burden of early-stage funding.

Pre-Startup Package (예비창업패키지)

  • Operator: Korea Entrepreneurship Foundation (KISED)
  • Target: Pre-registration aspiring entrepreneurs
  • Grant amount: Up to 100 million KRW (average around 50 million KRW)
  • Covered expenses: Commercialization funds (prototypes, marketing, IP, etc.)
  • Application period: Announced annually around February to March
  • Selection process: Document screening → Presentation evaluation

Early Startup Package (초기창업패키지)

  • Operator: KISED + Business Incubators (BI)
  • Target: Companies within three years of founding
  • Grant amount: Up to 100 million KRW
  • Covered expenses: Commercialization funds + mentoring + investment connections
  • Key point: Moving into a BI provides both space support and program participation

Startup Leap Package (창업도약패키지)

  • Operator: KISED
  • Target: Companies three to seven years post-founding
  • Grant amount: Up to 300 million KRW
  • Covered expenses: Product/service advancement, overseas expansion support
  • Best fit: Scale-up stage companies

TIPS (Tech Incubator Program for Startup)

  • Operator: Ministry of SMEs and Startups
  • Structure: Private TIPS operators invest + government matches R&D funding
  • Grant amount: Up to 500 million KRW (R&D funds)
  • Target: Technology-based startups
  • Advantage: Simultaneous access to investment and R&D capital
  • How to apply: Must be recommended through a TIPS operator (accelerator)

K-Global Startup Support

  • Operator: Ministry of Science and ICT
  • Content: Overseas expansion support for AI, big data, and cloud startups
  • Support includes: Overseas marketing, exhibition participation, localization support

Tax Treatment of Government Grants

Founders sometimes celebrate receiving a government grant only to face an unexpected tax bill later. Knowing this in advance lets you prepare.

Business-Related Grants → Treated as Revenue

Government startup grants are in principle treated as business revenue. They are therefore subject to taxation.

However, expenses funded by the grant can simultaneously be deducted as costs, so the actual additional tax applies only to the net profit portion of the grant.

Example Scenario

Grant received: 50,000,000 KRW
Expenses incurred from grant: 45,000,000 KRW (labor, equipment, marketing)
Increase in taxable income: 5,000,000 KRW (= 50,000,000 - 45,000,000)

Non-Taxable Grants

Some employment-related subsidies are treated as non-taxable:

  • Subsidies for hiring people with disabilities
  • Certain industrial accident compensation payments

Most startup grants are taxable, so factor the tax liability into your budget when you receive funds.

Strategies to Minimize Tax on Grants

  1. Maximize expense execution in the year the grant is received (equipment purchases, hiring, etc.)
  2. Execute spending according to your grant usage plan → full grant amount treated as expenses
  3. Grant funds carried over to the next year should be recorded as prepayments and recognized as expenses in the year they are used

R&D Tax Credits

This is one of the most powerful tax reduction tools for tech startups — do not overlook it.

R&D and Human Resource Development Expense Credit Rate (SMEs)

MethodCredit Rate
Current year method25%
Incremental method50%

This means that spending 100 million KRW on R&D can directly reduce your corporate or income tax by up to 50 million KRW.

Qualifying R&D Expenses

  • Salaries of R&D personnel (directly engaged in research)
  • Materials and supplies for dedicated research departments
  • Commissioned research fees (outsourced to research institutions, universities, etc.)
  • Depreciation of research equipment
  • Patent application costs

How to Apply

  1. Apply for recognition of a research institute or dedicated department (through KOITA)
  2. Maintain records of R&D activities (research notebooks, meeting minutes, etc.)
  3. Submit the tax credit application with your corporate or income tax filing
  4. Required documents: Research institute certification, payroll breakdown, R&D activity evidence

4. Social Insurance and Labor Cost Reduction Strategies

Hiring employees triggers four categories of social insurance (national pension, health insurance, employment insurance, and industrial accident insurance). Here are legal ways to reduce these costs.

Durunuri Social Insurance Support

A social insurance support program for small businesses that is extremely useful in the early startup stage.

Eligibility

  • Business size: Fewer than 10 regular employees
  • Employee eligibility: Monthly salary below 2,700,000 KRW (2024 standard, adjusted annually)
  • Newly enrolled employees (existing enrolled employees have limited eligibility)

Support Content

  • 80% of employer's employment insurance + national pension contributions supported (36 months for new enrollees)
  • Existing enrollees receive 40% support

Savings Example

Hiring 3 employees at 2,500,000 KRW per month:

  • Employer employment insurance: approximately 200,000 KRW/month
  • Employer national pension: approximately 340,000 KRW/month
  • Durunuri support (80%): approximately 430,000 KRW/month saved
  • Annual savings: approximately 5,160,000 KRW

How to Apply

  • Social Insurance Information Integration Center online application (www.4insure.or.kr)
  • Or visit individual insurance offices in person

Various employment subsidies are available when you hire staff.

Youth Employment Incentive Grant (청년일자리도약장려금)

  • Target: Companies with five or more employees that hire disadvantaged youth
  • Grant amount: 600,000 KRW/month × up to 12 months = up to 7,200,000 KRW per person
  • Additional incentive: If employment is maintained for two years, an additional 4,800,000 KRW (total up to 12,000,000 KRW)
  • Target youth: Disadvantaged youth (unemployed for 2+ years after graduation, etc.)
  • Apply at: Work24 (www.work24.go.kr)

Job Creation Incentive (고용창출장려금)

  • Target: SMEs that increase employment
  • Grant amount: Up to 9,600,000 KRW per new hire annually
  • Apply at: Regional employment centers or Work24

Work-Life Balance Environment Improvement Subsidy

  • Content: Support for companies that introduce flexible work arrangements and remote work
  • Highly suited for IT startups
  • Covers infrastructure construction costs + indirect labor costs

5. Corporate Card and Company Vehicle Expense Management in Practice

Corporate Card Strategy

Corporate cards are the core tool for transparently managing all business-related spending and having it recognized as a deductible expense.

Expenses That Can Be Processed via Corporate Card

  • Business-related meals and transportation
  • Client entertainment (within limits)
  • Office supplies and consumables
  • Software and subscription services
  • Business travel expenses

Entertainment Expense Limits

Entertainment expenses are not fully deductible — they have limits:

  • Corporation: 12,000,000 KRW base + (revenue × set rate)
  • Sole proprietor: 6,000,000 KRW base + (revenue × set rate)

Entertainment expenses exceeding the limit are disallowed as deductions.

How to Handle Personal Use of Corporate Cards

If the CEO uses a corporate card for personal expenses:

  1. Immediately repay the company from personal funds → no problem
  2. If not repaid, recorded as a provisional payment (가지급금) → imputed interest is calculated and taxed
  3. Processed as salary at year end → subject to employment income tax

Accumulated provisional payments can cause problems during a tax audit, so be careful.

Complete Guide to Company Vehicle Expenses

Vehicles involve large amounts, so the tax difference based on how they are processed is significant.

Sole Proprietor Vehicle Expenses

Sole proprietors have expenses recognized based on the ratio of business use:

  • Exclusive business vehicle: 100% deductible
  • Mixed personal and business use: Only the business use ratio is recognized
  • How to prove business use ratio: Keep a driving log

Corporation Vehicle Expenses

More complex rules apply to corporate vehicles:

SituationWith Driving LogWithout Driving Log
Expense recognition limitApply business use ratio15,000,000 KRW annual cap
Treatment of excessDisallow non-business use portionDisallowed as deduction

Keeping a meticulous driving log allows expenses above 15,000,000 KRW to be recognized.

Required Entries in a Driving Log

- Date
- Departure location / destination
- Purpose of trip (client visited, meeting details, etc.)
- Distance driven (odometer before departure + after arrival)
- Driver's name

Tax Comparison: Purchase vs Finance Lease vs Operating Lease/Rental

CategoryPurchaseFinance LeaseOperating Lease / Rental
Expense methodDepreciation (5 years)Full lease paymentFull lease/rental payment
Upfront cash burdenHighMediumLow
VAT recoveryPossible (business use)PossiblePossible
Asset recognitionRequiredRequired (finance lease)Not required
Best forLong-term ownershipBalanced cost distributionNeed flexibility

6. Expense Management for Office-Free Startups

Many startups today operate without a fixed office, using remote work or coworking spaces. Here is how to handle expenses in these situations.

Home Office Expense Deductions for Remote Work

For Sole Proprietors

If your home is registered as your place of business:

  • Deduct rent in proportion to the business use area
  • Internet and electricity costs also deductible based on business use ratio
  • Furniture and equipment purchased for the home office are deductible

Business use ratio = Business use area / Total living area

For Corporations

The corporation can lease the CEO's home:

  • Corporation pays rent to the CEO → deductible expense for the corporation
  • CEO must report rental income
  • Note: Setting rent higher than market rate risks being treated as an unreasonable transaction

Coworking Space Costs

  • Coworking space membership fees are fully deductible
  • Must obtain a tax invoice
  • Meeting room fees and additional service costs are also fully deductible
  • Note: Confirm whether the space can issue a tax invoice if you use it as your registered business address

Cloud and SaaS Expense Management

Digital tools are core costs for modern startups. All of them are deductible.

Examples of Deductible Digital Expenses

Service TypeExamplesExpense Method
Cloud infrastructureAWS, GCP, AzureFully deductible (tax invoice or foreign currency payment record)
Collaboration toolsSlack, Notion, JiraFully deductible (subscription receipt)
Design toolsFigma, Adobe CCFully deductible
Development toolsGitHub, VercelFully deductible
Marketing toolsVarious SaaSFully deductible

Notes on Foreign Currency Payments

International SaaS subscriptions are charged in foreign currency:

  • Corporate card payments: Card statement serves as expense documentation
  • Tax invoices are not required; card receipts are accepted
  • Foreign exchange gains and losses must also be recorded

Domain and Server Hosting Costs

  • Domain registration/renewal fees: Deductible (as intangible assets or revenue expenditure)
  • Server hosting: Fully deductible
  • SSL certificates: Deductible
  • CDN services: Deductible

7. Essential Tax Reduction Items for Freelancers and Sole Proprietors

Detailed Guide to the Yellow Umbrella Mutual Aid Fund (노란우산공제)

The Yellow Umbrella Mutual Aid Fund is a government-backed retirement fund for small business owners and sole proprietors with exceptional income deduction benefits.

Income Deduction Limits

Business IncomeDeduction Limit
Under 40,000,000 KRWUp to 5,000,000 KRW/year
40,000,000 – 100,000,000 KRWUp to 3,000,000 KRW/year
Over 100,000,000 KRWUp to 2,000,000 KRW/year

Payment Options

  • Monthly: Automatic debit each month
  • Quarterly: Quarterly payment
  • Payment limit: 1,000,000 KRW per month (12,000,000 KRW per year)

Benefits of the Yellow Umbrella Fund

  1. Income deduction effect (amount contributed × tax rate = tax savings)
  2. Protection from seizure (protected from creditors)
  3. Lump sum or installment payment upon business closure, resignation, or death
  4. Compound interest returns applied (competitive versus market rates)

Example Calculation

A sole proprietor with annual income of 50,000,000 KRW who contributes 3,000,000 KRW:

  • Applicable tax rate approximately 26.4% (income tax + local income tax)
  • Tax savings: approximately 792,000 KRW
  • Effective contribution cost: 2,208,000 KRW (3,000,000 minus 792,000 KRW in savings)

How to Apply

  • Korea Federation of SMEs (www.noranwasan.or.kr)
  • At any bank branch or online
  • Business registration certificate required

Individual Retirement Pension (IRP) Tax Credit

IRP is available not just for salaried workers but also for sole proprietors.

Tax Credit Limits

  • Annual contribution limit: 18,000,000 KRW
  • Tax credit limit: Combined pension savings + IRP up to 9,000,000 KRW (IRP alone up to 9,000,000 KRW)
  • Credit rate: 16.5% for total income/business income under 55,000,000 KRW, 13.2% above that

Example Calculation

A sole proprietor with annual income of 40,000,000 KRW who contributes 9,000,000 KRW to IRP:

  • Tax credit: 9,000,000 KRW × 16.5% = 1,485,000 KRW

Pension Savings Fund (연금저축펀드) Tax Credit

Tax Credit Limits

  • Annual contribution limit: 18,000,000 KRW
  • Tax credit limit: 4,000,000 KRW
  • Credit rate: 16.5% (income under 55,000,000 KRW) or 13.2% (above)

Combined IRP + Pension Savings Strategy

Combining IRP and pension savings allows up to 9,000,000 KRW in tax credits:

  • Pension savings: 4,000,000 KRW credit
  • IRP: additional 5,000,000 KRW credit
  • Total: 9,000,000 KRW × 16.5% = approximately 1,485,000 KRW in tax savings

Health Insurance Cost Reduction Strategies

Sole proprietors can face higher health insurance burdens than salaried workers. Premiums are levied not only on income but also on assets.

Regional Subscriber Premium Calculation Basis

  • Combined score of income points + asset points + vehicle points
  • Premiums apply even without income if you hold assets (real estate, etc.)

Managing Dependents' Eligibility

Family members with little or no income can be registered as dependents of a salaried worker:

  • Parents, spouses, children, etc. registered as dependents pay no separate premiums
  • Loss of dependent status threshold: Annual income exceeding 20,000,000 KRW or property tax base over 540,000,000 KRW

Using Voluntary Continued Enrollment (임의계속가입)

Those who leave employment to start a business can apply to maintain their status as a workplace subscriber for 36 months:

  • Premiums remain at the level paid while employed
  • Advantageous if income rises quickly in the early startup stage

8. When to DIY vs Hire a Tax Accountant

When You Can File on Your Own

Consider filing yourself if all of the following apply:

  • Running a simple service business solo
  • Annual revenue under 100,000,000 KRW
  • No employees (no social insurance filing required)
  • Major expenses are transparently tracked via card payments
  • Comfortable using Hometax

DIY Filing Tools Available

  • Hometax (www.hometax.go.kr): VAT and comprehensive income tax filing
  • Sontax: Mobile filing app
  • Samjjeomssam (삼쩜삼): AI-based comprehensive income tax filing service (good for simplified taxpayers)

When You Need a Tax Accountant

Strongly recommend hiring a professional if any of the following apply:

  • You have even one employee (payroll filing and social insurance filing become complex)
  • Operating as a corporation
  • Complex exemption items: government grants, tax credits, etc.
  • Annual revenue over 300,000,000 KRW (increased audit risk)
  • Multiple income streams: real estate, investments, etc.

Tax Accountant Fees Are Themselves Deductible

Tax accountant fees are a business expense:

  • Sole proprietor: Tax agency fees fully deductible
  • Corporation: Tax agency fees fully deductible as a business loss

Reference Tax Accountant Fee Ranges

ServiceMonthly Cost (Reference)
Bookkeeping (no employees)100,000–200,000 KRW
Bookkeeping (with employees)200,000–400,000 KRW
Corporate bookkeeping300,000–700,000 KRW
Tax audit representationNegotiated separately

Using AI Tax Services

AI-based tax services have matured significantly and offer new options:

  • Samjjeomssam (삼쩜삼): Automated comprehensive income tax filing, refund lookup
  • Taxwatch (택스워치): Real-time tax savings alerts, expense processing assistant
  • Jarvis (자비스): Accounting automation + tax integration
  • Wisznie (위즈니): Tax and accounting services tailored for startups

These services automate basic filing work, but complex tax credits or tax audit defense still ultimately require a qualified tax accountant.


9. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Penalty Taxes

Here are the most common tax mistakes in early-stage startups and the penalties they trigger.

Missing the Tax Invoice Issuance Deadline

Tax invoices have set issuance deadlines:

  • Monthly batch issuance: By the 10th of the following month
  • Per-transaction issuance: On the date the transaction occurs

Penalty: 1% of the supply amount for late issuance

Prevention: Register "Tax Invoice Day" on the 10th of every month on your calendar with an alert

Failure to Obtain Receipts for Cash Transactions

Failing to receive a tax invoice or cash receipt for cash transactions:

Penalty: 2% of the unreceipted amount (buyer's side)

Prevention: Always request a cash receipt or obtain a tax invoice for any cash transaction

Missing the VAT Filing Deadline

Types of penalties:

  • Non-filing penalty: 20% of the tax owed
  • Late payment penalty: Unpaid tax × number of days × 0.022% per day

Prevention: Mark the VAT deadlines (January 25 and July 25) on your calendar without fail

Failure to Submit Payroll Payment Statements (지급명세서)

When paying salaries, you must submit payroll payment statements:

  • Submission deadline: March 10 of the following year (employment income), February 28 (other income)
  • Daily workers: By the end of the month following payment

Penalty: 1% of the non-submitted amount (0.5% for late submission)

Failure to Register a Business Account

Businesses required to use double-entry bookkeeping (above a certain revenue threshold) must register a business account:

  • Failure to register: 0.2% of revenue as a penalty

Prevention: Open a dedicated business bank account and register it on Hometax as a business account

Watch Out for the Sincere Reporting Confirmation System

Businesses exceeding certain revenue thresholds become subject to the sincere reporting confirmation (성실신고 확인) requirement:

  • Wholesale/retail: 1.5 billion KRW or more in annual revenue
  • Service businesses: 750 million KRW or more
  • Must obtain a sincere reporting confirmation from a tax accountant
  • Deadline: June 30 (extended by one month from the standard May 31)

10. Annual Tax Reduction Checklist

January–February: Year-End Adjustment and VAT

  • January VAT filing (2nd period final) — January 25 deadline
  • Employee year-end tax adjustment (withholding tax status report by February 28)
  • Prepare payroll payment statement submission (employment income: March 10)

March–April: Corporate Tax Filing

  • Corporate tax filing — March 31 deadline
  • Confirm startup tax exemption claims
  • Prepare R&D tax credit application documents
  • Confirm Yellow Umbrella Fund contributions

May: Comprehensive Income Tax Filing

  • Sole proprietor comprehensive income tax filing — May 31 deadline
  • Youth startup tax exemption application
  • Verify income deduction items (IRP, pension savings, Yellow Umbrella Fund)
  • Maximize tax credit items (R&D, job creation)

July: VAT Filing

  • July VAT filing (1st period final) — July 25 deadline
  • Check for missed expense items in the first half of the year

September–October: Tax Strategy Review

  • Estimate full-year income and projected tax liability
  • Plan additional expenses before year-end (equipment purchases, training costs, etc.)
  • Plan additional Yellow Umbrella Fund and IRP contributions
  • Review status of government grant applications for the year

November–December: Year-End Wrap-Up

  • Complete all deductible expense execution before year-end
  • Check for missing tax invoices
  • Organize company vehicle driving logs
  • Confirm entertainment expense limits have not been exceeded
  • Review next year's business structure from a tax perspective

11. Quiz: How Well Do You Know Your Startup Taxes?

Quiz 1: To qualify for the youth startup tax exemption, how old must you be on the date of founding?

Answer: 34 or younger (military service period of up to 6 years added)

Explanation: Under Article 6 of the Special Tax Treatment Control Law, the founder must be 34 or younger as of the date of founding. If you completed military service, that period is added to your age for this calculation. For example, two years of service means the benefit extends to age 36. The exemption rate is 50% in the Seoul Capital Area Overcrowded Control Zone and 100% in other regions, applied for five years.

Quiz 2: If you receive a government startup grant (such as the Early Startup Package), do you owe taxes on it?

Answer: Yes, it is generally subject to taxation

Explanation: Government startup grants are treated as business revenue and are therefore taxable. However, expenses funded by the grant are simultaneously deductible, so the actual tax applies only to the net profit portion remaining after expenses are paid. Maximizing expense execution in the year the grant is received minimizes the tax burden.

Quiz 3: For a corporation's business vehicle, what is the deductible limit without a driving log?

Answer: 15,000,000 KRW per year

Explanation: Without a driving log, corporate vehicle-related expenses (depreciation, lease payments, insurance, fuel, etc.) are recognized up to 15,000,000 KRW annually. Any amount above this cap is disallowed as a deduction. With a properly maintained driving log, the actual business use ratio applies, allowing expenses above 15,000,000 KRW to be recognized.

Quiz 4: What is the headcount requirement for a business to be eligible for Durunuri Social Insurance Support?

Answer: Fewer than 10 regular employees

Explanation: The Durunuri Social Insurance Support program applies to businesses with fewer than 10 regular employees where eligible employees earn under 2,700,000 KRW per month. Newly enrolled employees receive 80% support on the employer's employment insurance and national pension contributions for 36 months. Applications are made through the Social Insurance Information Integration Center (www.4insure.or.kr).

Quiz 5: What is the non-filing penalty rate if you miss the VAT filing deadline?

Answer: 20% of the tax owed

Explanation: Failing to file VAT by the deadline results in a non-filing penalty of 20% of the tax owed. Additionally, a late payment penalty of 0.022% per day is charged on unpaid amounts past the due date. Individual general taxpayers have VAT filing deadlines of January 25 (2nd period final) and July 25 (1st period final).


Closing Thoughts

Taxes and government grants are critical resources for founders. Many benefits disappear if not claimed on time, and failing to know about them can cost you tens of millions of won in missed opportunities.

Key takeaways from this guide:

  1. Youth startup tax exemption: If you are 34 or younger, apply without fail (100% in provincial regions, 50% in the Seoul Capital Area, for five years)
  2. Government grants: Never miss annual application opportunities for the Early Startup Package, TIPS, and similar programs
  3. R&D tax credits: Tech startups should register a research institute or dedicated department to claim up to 50% in credits
  4. Durunuri support: If you have fewer than 10 employees, leverage the 80% social insurance subsidy
  5. Yellow Umbrella Fund + IRP: Core tax reduction tools for sole proprietors (up to 14,000,000 KRW deductible annually)
  6. Avoid penalty taxes: Register VAT deadlines on your calendar and manage tax invoices carefully

The tax landscape changes every year. Review major tax law revisions annually, and always consult a qualified tax professional for complex situations.

This article is written for general informational purposes. Application methods vary depending on individual circumstances, so please consult a certified tax accountant for specific tax decisions.