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How to Open a US Brokerage Account from Korea (2026 Guide)

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For Korean and Asian digital nomads, investing in US stocks isn't just about access to the world's largest companies — it's about escaping Korea's limited investment options, avoiding the high fees on domestic ETFs, and building wealth in US dollars. But there's a catch: most US brokerages won't accept applications from Korea.

This guide covers everything you need to know to open a US brokerage account from South Korea in 2026, including which brokers accept Korean residents, the documentation you'll need, tax setup, and how to fund your account from a Korean bank account.

Why Bother with a US Brokerage Account?

Korean investors have options like Kiwoom, Samsung Securities, and NH Investment & Securities. These let you buy US stocks listed on the Korea Exchange (KRX) through OTC programs. But there are downsides:

FactorKorean Brokerage (US Stocks)Direct US Brokerage
Trading hoursLimited to Korean market hours for OTCFull US market hours (pre-market & after-hours too)
Stock selectionMajor stocks only (AAPL, TSLA, etc.)All US-listed stocks, ETFs, options
Fractional sharesRareAvailable at most US brokers
Withholding tax15.4% on dividends (Korea applies its own)15% with W-8BEN under treaty
Custody feesAnnual custody fees on foreign stocksUsually free
Currency conversionKRW → USD at bank rates (wide spreads)Lower spreads, sometimes free

For active traders, options traders, or anyone wanting full access to US markets, a direct US brokerage account is superior.

Top US Brokerages That Accept Korean Residents (2026)

Not all US brokers accept non-resident aliens, and even fewer accept Korean residents specifically due to Korea's strict capital controls and reporting requirements.

1. Interactive Brokers (IBKR) — Best Overall

Acceptance: ✅ Open to Korean residents Website: www.interactivebrokers.com Minimum deposit: $0 (no minimum for individuals) Commissions: $0.35 per trade or tiered pricing, very low margin rates

Pros:

  • Widely considered the best broker for international investors
  • Access to 135+ markets worldwide (US, Korea, Japan, Europe, etc.)
  • Low margin rates if you need leverage
  • Powerful trading platform (TWS) with advanced tools
  • Crypto, bonds, options, futures — everything in one place

Cons:

  • Complex account opening process
  • Interface can be intimidating for beginners
  • FX conversion: $2 minimum commission per currency trade (not as cheap as some alternatives)
  • Account is frozen if balance drops below $2,000 in activity fees (waived if generating $10+/month in commissions)

Verdict: Best for experienced investors and traders who want the most comprehensive platform.

2. Tradier — Best for Options & Active Traders

Acceptance: ✅ Open to Korean residents (with US bank account) Website: www.tradier.com Minimum deposit: $1,000 for brokerage accounts

Pros:

  • Very cheap options trading ($0 to open, $0.35 to close on the free tier)
  • Excellent API for automated trading
  • Clean, modern interface
  • Good for US equities and options

Cons:

  • Requires a US bank account to fund (ACH transfer)
  • Not all account types available to non-residents
  • No access to international markets
  • Smaller, less established than IBKR

Verdict: Great option if you're active in US options markets and already have a US bank account.

3. Firstrade — Best for Beginners

Acceptance: ✅ Open to Korean residents Website: www.firstrade.com Minimum deposit: $0 Commissions: $0 trades

Pros:

  • True $0 commissions on stocks, ETFs, options, and mutual funds
  • Simple, clean interface — great for beginners
  • Fractional shares available
  • $0 account transfer fees

Cons:

  • Limited to US markets only
  • No forex, futures, or international stocks
  • Margin rates are higher than IBKR
  • Customer service is US-based (time zone challenge)

Verdict: Best entry-level broker for Korean investors who want simple, free US stock investing.

4. Charles Schwab — Gold Standard (Harder Now)

Acceptance: ⚠️ Restricted — closed most international accounts in 2023 Website: www.schwab.com

Schwab used to be the top choice for expats, but it stopped opening accounts for most non-residents in 2023. If you have an existing Schwab account from before the policy change, keep it. Otherwise, don't bother applying.

Step-by-Step Account Opening Process

Let's walk through opening an Interactive Brokers account, since it's the most popular choice.

Step 1: Gather Your Documents

You'll need:

  • Korean passport (valid)
  • Korean Alien Registration Card (ARC) if you're a foreigner living in Korea — but since you're Korean, your 주민등록증 (Resident Registration Card)
  • Recent utility bill or bank statement with your Korean address (in English)
  • Tax ID: Your 주민등록번호 (Korean Resident Registration Number). IBKR accepts this as your tax ID
  • Proof of employment or income (sometimes requested for higher net worth applicants)

Step 2: Start the Application

  1. Go to www.interactivebrokers.com
  2. Click Open an AccountIndividual or Joint Account
  3. Select IndividualKorean as country of residence
  4. Enter your personal details carefully — match exactly with your passport

Step 3: Choose Account Type

For most Korean digital nomads, a Cash Account is fine. If you want to trade on margin or sell options spreads, choose Margin Account.

Funding currency: Select USD as your base currency, but note that you can hold multiple currencies in the same account.

Step 4: Complete the Financial Profile

IBKR requires detailed info:

  • Investment experience — Be honest. If you've traded stocks before, list it
  • Annual income and net worth — Convert KRW to USD approximately (use current exchange rate)
  • Trading objectives — Growth, income, speculation, hedging
  • Employment info — List your occupation, employer name, and address

Step 5: W-8BEN Certification

During the application, IBKR will present a W-8BEN form electronically. This is the most important step.

Key fields:

  • Part I, Line 6: Your Korean 주민등록번호 (for individuals) or 사업자등록번호 (for business owners)
  • Part II, Line 10: Claim treaty benefits under the Korea-US Tax Treaty:
    • "The beneficial owner is a resident of The Republic of Korea within the meaning of the income tax treaty between the United States and The Republic of Korea."
    • For dividends: Claim 15% rate under Article 10(2)(a)
  • Part III: Sign and date

Using a W-8BEN saves you from 30% withholding on dividends. Without it, your broker withholds 30% automatically by default. Don't skip this step.

Step 6: Fund Your Account

Once approved, you need to transfer funds from a Korean bank account to your new US brokerage. There are several methods:

Method A: Wire Transfer (Most Common)

  1. Go to your Korean bank (KB Kookmin, Shinhan, Woori, Hana, etc.)
  2. Initiate a foreign remittance (해외송금)
  3. Fill in your IBKR account details:
    • Beneficiary bank: IBKR's US receiving bank (Citibank or similar)
    • Beneficiary account: Your unique IBKR account number
    • SWIFT code: Provided in IBKR's funding instructions
  4. Bank will charge: ~10,000-30,000 KRW fee + 0.15-0.30% exchange rate spread
  5. Funds arrive in 1-3 business days

Method B: Wise (Formerly TransferWise) — Cheaper

  1. Create a Wise account
  2. Add KRW and hold in Wise balance
  3. Convert to USD at real mid-market rate (0.5% fee vs. 2%+ at banks)
  4. Send USD to your IBKR account via ACH or wire from Wise's US account details

Method C: Crypto Bridge (Advanced)

Some digital nomads use:

  1. Buy USDC or USDT on a Korean exchange (Bithumb, Upbit)
  2. Send to a global exchange (Binance, Kraken)
  3. Convert to USD
  4. Withdraw to IBKR

⚠️ Regulatory note: Korea's Foreign Exchange Transaction Act requires reporting for remittances over $10,000 equivalent. For smaller amounts, banks typically still require a travel purpose declaration. Always follow Korean foreign exchange rules — don't attempt to circumvent them.

Tax Implications of a US Brokerage Account

While Your Money is in the Account

  • No Korean reporting unless you have significant holdings (foreign account reporting threshold: 500M KRW / ~$375,000)
  • US withholding on dividends: 15% if you filed W-8BEN correctly
  • No US tax on capital gains for Korean residents under the treaty (taxable only in Korea)

When You Transfer Money Back to Korea

  • Korea may tax foreign exchange gains if the KRW/USD rate moved significantly
  • Dividend income received in the account is taxable in Korea (report on your 종합소득세 return)
  • Capital gains from stock sales are taxable in Korea under the securities transaction tax framework

Alternative: Korean Brokerages with US Stock Access

If opening a US account feels too complicated, consider:

  • Kiwoom Securities (키움증권): Best for active US stock trading within the Korean system
  • Toss Securities: Modern UI, fractional shares on US stocks
  • Korea Investment & Securities (한국투자증권): Large US stock selection

These handle W-8BEN and dividend withholding automatically, but you pay higher fees and have less flexibility.

TL;DR

BrokerBest ForAccepts Korean ResidentsMin Deposit
Interactive BrokersAdvanced investors, global access✅ Yes$0
TradierOptions traders✅ Yes (with US bank)$1,000
FirstradeBeginners, simple investing✅ Yes$0
  • IBKR is the most reliable choice for Korean residents — comprehensive but complex
  • Firstrade is the easiest entry point for simple US stock investing
  • Complete your W-8BEN during signup to get 15% dividend tax rate under the Korea-US treaty
  • Fund via wire transfer from a Korean bank or use Wise for better exchange rates
  • US capital gains are tax-free for Korean residents under the treaty — you only report and pay in Korea
  • Keep records of all trades for Korean tax filing (종합소득세 reporting)
  • Report foreign accounts to Korean tax authorities if total foreign balance exceeds 500M KRW