Korea, Republic of
Corporate - Taxes on corporate income
Last reviewed - 08 May 2023Resident corporations are taxed at normal CIT rates on their worldwide income, whereas non-resident corporations with a permanent establishment (PE) in Korea are taxed at normal CIT rates only to the extent of their Korean-source income. Non-resident corporations without a PE in Korea are generally taxed through a withholding tax (WHT) on each separate item of Korean-source income (see the Withholding taxes section).
The following tax table summarises the CIT rates applicable for the fiscal year starting on or after 1 January 2023:
Tax base (KRW* million) | CIT rates** | ||
Over (column 1) | Less than | Tax on column 1 (KRW)** | Marginal tax rate (%) |
0 | 200 | 0 | 9 |
200 | 20,000 | 18 | 19 |
20,000 | 300,000 | 3,780 | 21 |
300,000 | 62,580 | 24 |
* Korean won
** Before applying the local income tax.
Additional tax on corporate income
To facilitate the use of corporate retained earnings to fund facility investment and payroll increases, 20% additional tax has been applied for excess corporate earnings reserve of a company (excluding SMEs, etc.) by 31 December 2022. Companies should elect one of the following methods in computing excess corporate earnings reserve subject to the additional tax:
- ([adjusted taxable income for the year x 70%] - the total amount of facility investment, wage increases, and expenditures for mutual growth of large corporations and SMEs) x 20%, or
- ([adjusted taxable income for the year x 15%] - the total amount of wage increases and mutual growth expenditures) x 20%.
The rule for 20% additional tax was sunset at the end of December 2022 although a company having untaxed excess corporate earnings reserve carried over from prior years from 2021 and 2022 shall be subject to additional tax in a current year according to the former rule if qualifying expenditures such as facility investment, salary increase, etc. in a current year is less than the prior year’s excess corporate earnings reserve.
Agriculture and fishery surtax
When a corporate taxpayer claims certain tax credits or exemptions under the Special Tax Treatment Control Law (STTCL), a 20% agriculture and fishery surtax is levied on the reduced CIT liability.
Minimum tax
Corporate taxpayers are liable for the minimum tax, which is defined as the greater of 10% (if the tax base is KRW 10 billion or less, 12% on the tax base exceeding KRW 10 billion but not more than KRW 100 billion, 17% on the tax base exceeding KRW 100 billion) of the taxable income before certain tax deductions and credits pursuant to the STTCL or the actual CIT liability after certain deductions and credits under the STTCL.
For SMEs, the minimum tax is the greater of 7% of taxable income before certain tax deductions and credits or actual CIT liability after the deductions and credits. For middle market companies that are disqualified from SMEs (so-called ‘medium-scale companies’), an 8% minimum tax rate is applicable for the first three years, starting from the year of the SME disqualification for the first time, and a 9% rate is applicable for the next two years.
Local income tax
The local income tax is a separate income tax that has its own tax base, tax exemption and credits, and tax rates. The local income tax rates for corporations are 0.9% on the first KRW 200 million, 1.9% for the tax base between KRW 200 million and KRW 20 billion, 2.1% for the tax base between KRW 20 billion and KRW 300 billion, and 2.4% for the excess.