The answer is yes. But the details matter, and getting the structure wrong from the start creates expensive problems later. This guide walks you through exactly what foreign ownership of a Korean media company looks like in practice.
Korea Is More Open Than You Think
Korea’s legal framework is broadly welcoming to foreign investment. The Foreign Investment Promotion Act (외국인투자촉진법) allows 100% foreign ownership in most media and content sectors, and establishes protections and incentives specifically designed to attract foreign capital.
Foreign investment is generally permitted — and in most cases unrestricted — across these content business types:
| Sector | Foreign Ownership | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| OTT / Video Streaming Platform | 100% allowed | Telecom business registration required |
| Film & Video Production | 100% allowed | KOFIC registration for theatrical distribution |
| Music Production & Distribution | 100% allowed | Copyright CMO obligations apply from day one |
| Webtoon & Digital Publishing | 100% allowed | Standard business registration suffices |
| MCN Operations | 100% allowed | No dedicated MCN license; standard registration |
| Game Development | 100% allowed | Game Rating Board classification needed for release |
| Terrestrial Broadcasting | Restricted | Foreign ownership limited under Broadcasting Act |
| General / News Cable Channels | Restricted | Foreign stake caps apply; channel license required |
The core restriction to know: terrestrial broadcasting (지상파 방송) and most licensed news channels carry strict foreign ownership limits under the Broadcasting Act (방송법). For the vast majority of content startups — OTT, production companies, platforms, MCNs — these restrictions simply do not apply.
Choosing the Right Corporate Structure
Once you’ve confirmed your sector is open to foreign ownership, the next decision is corporate form. Korean law offers two main options for content businesses:
Yuhan Hoesa (유한회사) — LLC Equivalent
The Yuhan Hoesa is Korea’s limited liability company structure. It carries a lower administrative burden than the corporation equivalent, does not require mandatory public disclosure of financial statements, and is easier to manage for smaller operations or single-founder setups. It works well for holding structures, smaller content studios, or businesses that do not anticipate seeking venture capital.
Jusik Hoesa (주식회사) — Corporation Equivalent
The Jusik Hoesa is the corporate structure that Korean partners, investors, and major platform companies expect. It is required if you plan to raise venture capital, list on KOSDAQ, or enter into significant licensing or distribution agreements with Korean counterparties. Most content startups that intend to grow should incorporate as a Jusik Hoesa from the outset — converting later is possible but involves unnecessary friction and cost.
How Foreign Investment Registration Works
Foreign investment in Korea is not simply a matter of incorporating and depositing money. The Foreign Investment Promotion Act requires that foreign investment be formally registered before or concurrent with corporate establishment. This step is critical — skipping it creates serious problems later when you try to repatriate profits, prove ownership, or access government support programs.
Registration is handled through KOTRA (Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency) or a designated Korean bank (such as KEB Hana, Woori, or Shinhan). The process has become significantly streamlined in recent years and can often be initiated remotely.
The minimum foreign investment amount required to qualify for registration status under the Foreign Investment Promotion Act is KRW 100 million (approximately USD 75,000). Investments below this threshold can still proceed as general foreign currency transfers, but they do not qualify for FIPA protections or incentives.
The Incorporation Process Step by Step
- Determine your corporate form and draft articles of incorporation (정관). The articles define your company’s purpose, capital structure, officer roles, and shareholder rights. For a content business with foreign founders, the articles should be carefully drafted to address IP ownership and profit repatriation from the outset.
- Register your foreign investment with KOTRA or a designated bank. You will receive a Foreign Investment Registration Certificate (외국인투자등록증). This document is foundational — keep it carefully.
- Remit investment capital into a Korean bank account. The capital must be in Korean Won (KRW) at the time of corporate registration.
- File incorporation documents with the district court registry (등기소). This step officially creates the legal entity. A Korean attorney typically handles this filing. The process takes approximately one week once documents are complete.
- Register with the tax office (세무서). Your business registration number (사업자등록번호) is issued here. This is required before you can issue invoices, hire employees, or operate commercially.
- Register with the relevant regulatory authority if your specific business type requires it (e.g., value-added telecommunications business registration for OTT platforms, KOFIC registration for theatrical distributors).
Total timeline: approximately 2 to 4 weeks from initial document preparation to receiving your business registration number. A Korean attorney can handle most steps on your behalf, though at least one founder visit to Korea — while not always legally required — is practically useful for bank account setup and regulatory meetings.
What Business Category Code Should You Register Under?
Every Korean business must register under one or more 업종코드 (business category codes) issued by the National Tax Service. This seemingly administrative detail has real consequences: the wrong code affects your tax treatment, eligibility for government support programs, and — in some sectors — your licensing obligations.
For content businesses, common applicable codes include production companies (영화·비디오물 제작업), online content services (유선 온라인 게임 소프트웨어 개발·공급업), and information services (정보서비스업) for platform operators. Multiple codes can be registered simultaneously.
⚠ Common Mistakes Foreign Founders Make
Skipping investment registration. Some founders incorporate a Korean company through a local nominee without filing formal foreign investment registration. This creates significant problems when attempting to repatriate dividends to a foreign account or demonstrating ownership in later funding rounds.
Using home-country contracts. US or UK NDA templates, IP assignment agreements, and employment contracts often do not hold in Korean courts as written. Korean contract law has specific formal requirements — particularly for IP assignment — that differ from common law jurisdictions. Korean-law-compliant contracts are not optional if you plan to operate commercially in Korea.
Registering the wrong business category code. Correcting this after the fact requires a tax office amendment and can create a gap in your operating history for regulatory purposes.
What About a Branch Office or Liaison Office?
Foreign companies operating in Korea have two additional options short of full incorporation: a branch office (지점) and a liaison office (연락사무소).
A liaison office cannot conduct commercial activity — it can only perform market research, public relations, and administrative functions. For a content business that needs to sign contracts, receive revenue, or hire employees, a liaison office is insufficient.
A branch office can conduct commercial activity and is treated as a permanent establishment for tax purposes, but it does not create a separate legal entity — the parent company remains directly liable. For most content startups, a fully incorporated Korean subsidiary (Jusik Hoesa or Yuhan Hoesa) is the appropriate structure.
Key Takeaway
Foreign ownership of a Korean media or content company is legally well-supported in most sectors. The critical steps are: confirming your sector is unrestricted, choosing the right corporate form (Jusik Hoesa for most growth-oriented businesses), properly registering your foreign investment before or at the time of incorporation, and using contracts drafted for Korean law rather than importing templates from other jurisdictions.
Getting the structure right at the start takes perhaps two to four weeks and a modest investment in legal setup. Getting it wrong can cost multiples of that to unwind.
The next post in this series covers the licensing and regulatory registration requirements that apply specifically to OTT platforms, MCNs, music distributors, and webtoon platforms operating in Korea.