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W-8BEN for Koreans: The Simple Way to Save 15% on US Dividends
- Authors
- Name
- Hodu Atlas
- @hoduatlas
If you're a Korean investor holding US stocks — whether through a US brokerage like Interactive Brokers, a Korean brokerage like Kiwoom, or even a retirement account — you're probably overpaying US dividend taxes right now.
The default US tax withholding rate on dividends paid to foreign investors is 30%. But under the Korea-US Tax Treaty, Korean residents are entitled to a reduced rate of just 15% — or even 10% in certain cases.
The difference between 30% and 15% on a $10,000 annual dividend portfolio is $1,500 saved every single year — just by filing one piece of paper.
This guide shows you exactly how to file a W-8BEN as a Korean taxpayer, step by step.
What is a W-8BEN?
Form W-8BEN (Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding and Reporting) is an IRS document that certifies:
- You are a foreign person (non-US citizen or resident)
- You are the beneficial owner of the income
- You are eligible for a reduced withholding rate under a tax treaty
Think of it as your ticket to the treaty benefits we covered in the Korea-US Tax Treaty guide. Without this form, the IRS assumes you're a US person and withholds at the default rate — and then some.
Key insight: The W-8BEN doesn't change your tax liability. It reduces the amount the IRS withholds upfront. If you don't file it, you'd have to wait until tax filing season to claim a refund — which as a nonresident filing 1040-NR is a complex process that can take months.
The Default: 30% Withholding
When a US company (say, Apple or Microsoft) pays a dividend, the paying agent or brokerage is required to withhold US tax before sending you the net amount.
| Without W-8BEN | With W-8BEN |
|---|---|
| You receive $70 per $100 dividend | You receive $85 per $100 dividend |
| IRS keeps $30 | IRS keeps $15 |
| You need to file 1040-NR to reclaim | No further action needed |
| Refund process: 3-12 months | Savings are immediate |
For a portfolio yielding 2% annually:
| Portfolio Size | Annual Dividend | Without W-8BEN (Tax Lost) | With W-8BEN (Tax Lost) | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $1,000 | $300 | $150 | $150 |
| $100,000 | $2,000 | $600 | $300 | $300 |
| $500,000 | $10,000 | $3,000 | $1,500 | $1,500 |
| $1,000,000 | $20,000 | $6,000 | $3,000 | $3,000 |
The savings compound too — because the extra 15% stays invested in your portfolio.
The Treaty Rates: 15% or 10%
Under Article 10 (Dividends) of the Korea-US Tax Treaty:
- 15% — General rate for Korean residents receiving US dividends
- 10% — Reduced rate if you (or the company you represent) owns at least 10% of the voting stock of the US company paying the dividend
The 10% rate mainly applies to institutional investors or very large individual holdings. For most Korean retail investors, the relevant rate is 15%.
What Qualifies as a Korean Resident for W-8BEN?
You are a Korean resident for treaty purposes if:
- You have a domicile (주소) in Korea
- You spend 183+ days in Korea annually
- Your center of vital interests is in Korea (family, work, bank accounts)
Even if you're traveling as a digital nomad, maintaining a Korean address and paying Korean taxes qualifies you.
Step-by-Step: How to File W-8BEN as a Korean
Here's exactly how to complete the form. You can file it physically or — more commonly — electronically through your brokerage.
Step 1: Get the Form
Download the official IRS Form W-8BEN (Revision 2024 or later) from:
- IRS.gov: W-8BEN
- Or use your brokerage's electronic W-8BEN system (recommended)
Step 2: Complete Part I — Identification
| Line | Field | What to Enter |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Name of individual who is the beneficial owner | Your full name as it appears on your Korean passport (e.g., KIM MINSU) |
| 2 | Country of citizenship | Republic of Korea |
| 3 | Permanent residence address (street, apt #, city, province, postal code) | Your Korean address in English (e.g., 123 Gangnam-daero, Seocho-gu, Seoul 06532) |
| 4 | Mailing address | Same as #3, unless you want dividends mailed elsewhere |
| 5 | US taxpayer identification number (SSN or ITIN) | Leave blank — you don't need an ITIN unless you're filing a US tax return. If you have one, enter it. |
| 6 | Foreign tax identifying number | THIS IS CRITICAL. Enter your Korean 주민등록번호 (Resident Registration Number) in format: ######-#######. For business owners, enter your 사업자등록번호. |
| 7 | Reference number(s) | Optional — your brokerage account number |
Step 3: Complete Part II — Treaty Claim
This is where the savings happen. In the certification section:
- Line 10a: Check the box: "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."
- Line 10b: Enter:
- Dividends: "Article 10(2)(a) — 15%"
- If you own 10%+ voting stock: "Article 10(2)(b) — 10%"
- Interest: "Article 11(2) — 0%"
- Royalties: "Article 12(2) — 15%"
- Line 10c: Enter "Not applicable" or leave blank (this is for limitation on benefits provisions — Korea's treaty doesn't require a separate LOB statement for individuals)
Step 4: Complete Part III — Certification
Sign and date the form. There are three key certifications:
- You are the beneficial owner (not a nominee or intermediary)
- The information is correct
- You are not a US person
By signing, you're certifying under penalty of perjury. Don't lie — the IRS can and does audit these claims.
Step 5: Submit to Your Brokerage
For US brokerages (IBKR, Tradier, Firstrade, Schwab):
- The broker will prompt you during account opening
- You can usually update it in your account settings later
- Electronic signature is accepted
For Korean brokerages (Kiwoom, Samsung, NH, Toss Securities):
- Most handle W-8BEN automatically when you open a foreign stock account
- Check with your brokerage if you're unsure
- You may need to visit a branch or submit a physical form
For US ETFs and ADRs held through Korean brokerages:
- Your Korean brokerage is the withholding agent
- They typically have a global W-8BEN on file for their omnibus account
- The 15% rate should apply automatically — but verify by checking the dividend received (net of tax)
When to Renew Your W-8BEN
The W-8BEN is valid for:
- 3 calendar years from the date you sign it, OR
- Until your circumstances change (address, residency, etc.)
Your brokerage should send a reminder to recertify. If you move to a different country or become a US tax resident, your W-8BEN is immediately invalid — file a new one reflecting your updated status.
⚠️ Expired W-8BEN = 30% withholding. Set a calendar reminder to renew before expiry. Many digital nomads lose thousands because they forgot their W-8BEN expired mid-year.
Common Mistakes Koreans Make
Mistake 1: Leaving Line 6 Blank
This is the #1 error. Your Foreign Tax Identifying Number (FTIN) is mandatory. Without it, the IRS may reject your treaty claim. For Koreans, this is your 주민등록번호.
Mistake 2: Using a US Address
If your brokerage has a US mailing address on file, the IRS considers you a US person. Always use your Korean address on the W-8BEN.
Mistake 3: Not Updating After Moving
If you move from Seoul to Tokyo (or anywhere else), your Korean tax residency changes. File a new W-8BEN with your new country's FTIN.
Mistake 4: Filing W-8BEN for a US Person
If you have a US green card or spend 183+ days in the US, you're a US tax resident — W-8BEN doesn't apply to you. File W-9 instead.
Mistake 5: Assuming REITs Are the Same Rate
US Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) dividends are often taxed differently — some distributions are treated as "not treaty-qualified" and may still be withheld at 30%. Check if your REIT has a treaty election in place.
What About Qualified vs. Ordinary Dividends?
US tax law distinguishes between:
- Qualified dividends (taxed at lower capital gains rates for US persons)
- Ordinary dividends (taxed at regular income rates)
For Korean residents under the treaty, this distinction doesn't matter. The treaty rate of 15% applies to all dividends, regardless of whether they're qualified or ordinary. One of the few times the simple answer is the correct one.
Special Cases
Case 1: Students and Trainees (Article 21)
If you're a Korean student in the US under an F-1 visa, different rules apply. Your first $5,000 of US-source income (including dividends) may be exempt. File W-8BEN with a note referencing Article 21.
Case 2: Business Owners with US Operations
If you have a US permanent establishment (branch, office, employees), dividends paid to your business entity may be taxed differently. Consult a CPA.
Case 3: Joint Accounts
Each account holder needs their own W-8BEN. Both Koreans? Both file W-8BEN. One Korean, one US person? The US person files W-9; the Korean files W-8BEN — the account is treated as a US account for withholding purposes on the joint holder's share.
TL;DR
- Default US dividend withholding for foreigners: 30%
- Treaty rate for Korean residents: 15% (or 10% if you own 10%+ of the company)
- Form W-8BEN is a simple one-page form that reduces withholding immediately
- Line 6 is critical — enter your 주민등록번호 as your Foreign Tax Identifying Number
- Line 10 — claim Article 10(2)(a) — 15% for the treaty rate
- Valid for 3 years — set a reminder to renew before it expires
- File with your brokerage — electronic filing is standard and accepted
- Korean brokerages often handle this automatically — but verify by checking your dividend receipt amounts
- If you have a portfolio of $100K+ in US dividend stocks, the W-8BEN saves you $300+ per year with zero effort after setup