Business & EmploymentForeign Workers in Korea: Regions, Nationalities, and Industries

Foreign Workers in Korea: Regions, Nationalities, and Industries

If you are job-hunting in Korea, it helps to know how many foreign workers there are, where they are, where they come from, and which industries hire them. Here is the picture from the latest KOSIS (national statistics) data.

About half a million foreign workers — concentrated in Gyeonggi

As of 2024, local-government records counted about 503,000 foreign workers across Korea. They are heavily concentrated in the capital region: Gyeonggi Province alone holds 35% (about 177,000), far ahead of anywhere else. South Gyeongsang, South Chungcheong, and Seoul follow. Busan, for example, has about 16,000. The pattern tracks Korea’s manufacturing and farming belts rather than the big-city office economy.

Region Workers Share
Gyeonggi 177,122 35.2%
South Gyeongsang 54,925 10.9%
South Chungcheong 40,237 8.0%
Seoul 37,734 7.5%
North Gyeongsang 29,693 5.9%
South Jeolla 29,115 5.8%
North Chungcheong 24,432 4.9%
Incheon 23,039 4.6%
Busan 16,445 3.3%
North Jeolla 14,956 3.0%
Ulsan 13,100 2.6%
Jeju 12,361 2.5%
Daegu 9,897 2.0%
Gangwon 7,989 1.6%
Gwangju 6,400 1.3%
Daejeon 2,895 0.6%
Sejong 2,294 0.5%
Total 502,634 100%
Foreign workers by region, 2024. Source: KOSIS (local-government foreign resident status).

Where they come from

The largest groups are Korean-Chinese and Vietnamese, followed by workers from Nepal, Cambodia, and Indonesia. Together, Southeast and South Asian countries make up the bulk of the foreign workforce.

Nationality Workers Share
Korean-Chinese (China) 68,273 13.6%
Vietnam 61,762 12.3%
Nepal 51,979 10.3%
Cambodia 50,716 10.1%
Indonesia 50,299 10.0%
Myanmar 35,487 7.1%
Thailand 29,239 5.8%
Philippines 28,773 5.7%
Sri Lanka 28,113 5.6%
Uzbekistan 22,122 4.4%
Bangladesh 16,874 3.4%
China (other) 12,167 2.4%
Pakistan 5,704 1.1%
Mongolia 4,775 0.9%
Other countries 36,351 7.2%
Total 502,634 100%
Foreign workers by nationality, 2024. Source: KOSIS.

What they do: the E-9 workforce by industry

Industry data is clearest for the E-9 (Employment Permit System) visa, Korea’s main route for non-professional labor, which covered about 285,000 workers in early 2026. Of these, 80% work in manufacturing, followed by agriculture and livestock, fishing, and construction. In other words, E-9 jobs are overwhelmingly in factories, farms, and fishing boats.

Industry Workers Share
Manufacturing 228,178 80.0%
Agriculture & livestock 33,702 11.8%
Fishing 14,989 5.3%
Construction 6,805 2.4%
Services 1,375 0.5%
Mining / Forestry 103 0.0%
Total 285,152 100%
E-9 (Employment Permit System) workers by industry, 2026 Q1. Source: KOSIS.

What this means for newcomers

If you are working — or plan to work — in Korea, expect the opportunities to cluster in Gyeonggi and the Chungcheong and Gyeongsang industrial provinces, especially in manufacturing and agriculture, rather than in Seoul. Knowing where your industry and community are concentrated can help you decide where to settle and job-hunt.

Sources: KOSIS — “Foreign Workers by Local Government / Nationality” (2024); “E-9 (Employment Permit System) Foreign Workers by Region and Industry” (2026 Q1). Regional and industry figures come from two different surveys, so their totals differ.

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