Permanent return · Moving back to Korea

Moving back to Korea from Australia: super, property, and the money you bring home

Most guides about Korea and Australia stop at the arrival gate. Almost nobody writes about the harder trip — the one back. Yet for many Korean-Australians, returning to Korea (for good, or just splitting the year) is where the real money decisions live.

Moving back touches four systems at once, and they don’t talk to each other:

  1. Your Australian superannuation
  2. Capital gains tax (CGT) on any Australian property you keep
  3. The date you stop being an Australian tax resident
  4. Korea’s rules on bringing money in

Get the order wrong and you can pay tax you didn’t need to. Here’s the map.

First, the question that changes everything: when do you stop being an Australian tax resident?

Your tax residency isn’t a checkbox you tick at the airport — it’s a test based on your circumstances, and the date it changes is the hinge that almost every other decision swings on. Selling an asset the week before vs. the week after you become a non-resident can be a different tax outcome. [검증필요: 출처 — ATO residency tests]

Your superannuation: it doesn’t “come with you”

A common assumption is that leaving Australia lets you cash out your super and carry it to Korea. For citizens and permanent residents, that’s generally not how it works — super stays preserved inside the Australian system until you reach a condition of release, wherever you live. What does need planning is how it will be taxed later and how Korea treats it once you’re a Korean tax resident. [검증필요: 출처]

Property: the main-residence exemption can shift when you leave

If you keep an Australian home after moving, your residency status can change how the main-residence CGT exemption applies — and the timing of your departure or sale matters. This is the single most expensive thing people discover after they’ve left. [검증필요: 출처]

Bringing the money home: Korea’s side

Korea regulates how residents move money across the border under the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act, with thresholds and documentation requirements. Before you wire a large sum (property proceeds, super, savings), confirm the current limit and what evidence you’ll need. [검증필요: 출처 — 외환거래법 현행 한도]

A sensible order of operations

1 Tax-residency date The hinge — everyother step keysoff when this changes. 2 Property CGT & main-residence— decide before youleave, not after. 3 Superannuation Stays preserved —plan access & howKorea will tax it. 4 Transfer home Move funds last —staged, with thedocumentation ready.
A sensible order of operations when moving back to Korea. Timing — not just the decisions — changes the tax.
  1. Pin down the likely date your tax residency changes.
  2. Decide property before that date (sell vs. hold, and when).
  3. Map your super treatment under both systems.
  4. Plan the transfer into Korea last, with documentation ready.

This is a scaffold article. Figures and rules marked [검증필요] must be confirmed against current official sources and the operator’s experience before publishing.

Frequently asked questions

Can I withdraw my Australian superannuation when I move back to Korea?

Generally no — leaving Australia as a citizen or permanent resident does not by itself unlock early access; super stays preserved until you meet a condition of release. (Temporary visa holders have a separate departing-super path.) Confirm your case with a registered professional. [검증필요: 출처]

Will I pay Australian capital gains tax on my home if I keep it after leaving?

Possibly. Becoming a non-resident can change how the main-residence exemption applies, and the timing of when you leave or sell matters. Plan this before you go, not after. [검증필요: 출처]

How much money can I bring into Korea when I return?

Korea regulates resident transfers under the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act, with thresholds and documentation rules. Confirm current limits and reporting before moving large sums. [검증필요: 출처]