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Head to head

Dominican Republic vs South Korea: the digital nomad visas compared

Partially verified Last verified June 15, 2026 Reviewed by Henry van de Vorming

The short version

  • Dominican Republic has the lower entry bar: €1,722 per month versus €4,030 for South Korea.
  • Only Dominican Republic offers a direct path to permanent residence on this permit.
  • Tax treatment differs: Dominican Republic — territorial taxation; South Korea — standard resident taxation. Tax outcomes depend heavily on personal circumstances.
Side-by-side comparison of the Dominican Republic Rentista (171-07) / Tourist-card extension and the South Korea F-1-D Workation.
Criteria Dominican Republic Rentista (171-07) / Tourist-card extension South Korea F-1-D Workation
Minimum income / month €1,722 (better) €4,030
Income basis Savings accepted Mixed (salary, freelance or savings)
Initial duration 1 year 1 year
Renewable Yes Yes
Maximum total stay No fixed limit 2 years
Path to permanent residence Yes (better) No
Path to citizenship Via permanent residence No
Family inclusion Yes Yes
Working for local clients Limited Not allowed
Tax treatment Territorial taxation (Law 171-07 incentives (Pensionado/Rentista) + general territorial regime) Standard resident taxation
Health insurance Required in practice Required (explicit), min. €70,000
Insurance duration required Full visa period Full visa period
Application fee ≈ €51 ≈ €40 (better)
Where to apply Embassy / consulate, In country, Online Embassy / consulate, In country
Processing time 1–9 weeks 3–4 weeks

Green values mark the objectively better number in that row.

Full guide

Dominican Republic Rentista (171-07) / Tourist-card extension →

Requirements, application steps, insurance and sources.

Full guide

South Korea F-1-D Workation →

Requirements, application steps, insurance and sources.

Don't forget insurance

Both programs have their own health-insurance rules — we match plans against each one's published requirement, with the evidence shown.

Sources