If you are a salaried worker or self-employed individual in Korea, the IRP (Individual Retirement Pension) account offers one of the most straightforward tax advantages available: up to 1,485,000 KRW in annual tax credits.
The Math Behind the 9 Million Won Limit
The annual tax credit cap for IRP combined with pension savings is 9 million KRW. For those earning under 55 million KRW annually, the credit rate is 16.5% (including local tax). That translates to a guaranteed return of 16.5% before investments even begin working.
- Annual contribution limit: 18 million KRW total, 9 million KRW eligible for tax credit
- Credit rate under 55M KRW income: 16.5% = up to 1,485,000 KRW refund
- Credit rate over 55M KRW income: 13.2% = up to 1,188,000 KRW refund
- Applies to year-end settlement (employees) and May comprehensive income tax filing (self-employed)
3-Step Asset Allocation Inside IRP
Under Financial Supervisory Service regulations, up to 70% of IRP assets can be invested in equity ETFs and other risk assets. The remaining 30% must stay in principal-protected products by law.
A practical allocation for a mid-risk investor with 20 or more years to retirement: Korean equity ETF (KODEX 200) 35%, US S&P500 ETF (TIGER) 35%, principal-guaranteed bank deposits 30%. The tax-deferral compound effect is significant as no tax applies on dividends, interest, or capital gains during the accumulation phase.
The Exit Tax Difference
This is the number that matters most. Early withdrawal triggers a 16.5% miscellaneous income tax on all tax-credited contributions plus gains. Receiving as an annuity from age 55 reduces the effective rate to just 3.3 to 5.5 percent depending on age. That is a three to five times tax gap between disciplined and impulsive IRP use.
For the full analysis in Korean including the complete tax bracket comparison table and asset allocation guide, visit Snakestock.
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