Alternatives to Hiring a Korean Probate Lawyer for Expats
5 alternatives to hiring a full-service Korean probate lawyer for estate settlement. Compare cost, coverage, and when each option makes sense.
All articles about Someone Died in South Korea: English Speaker's Emergency Guide.
5 alternatives to hiring a full-service Korean probate lawyer for estate settlement. Compare cost, coverage, and when each option makes sense.
How to use Korea's Safe Inheritance One-Stop Service (Ansim Sangsok) to find the deceased's bank accounts, real estate, debts, insurance, and pensions — eligibility and deadline.
How to apostille and legalize documents for Korean estate settlement — birth certificates, marriage certificates, POAs, death certificates, and the translation workflow.
How to settle a South Korean estate when you live abroad. Covers remote power of attorney, Ansim Sangsok access, tax filing, and bank account claims.
Guide for overseas Koreans (F-4/F-5) inheriting property in South Korea. Covers tax residency, Yuryubun, Family Relations Register, and the ₩300M deduction gap.
How to find and hire an English-speaking Korean inheritance lawyer — what to look for, expected fees, when you need one vs. self-administering, and estate planning for foreigners.
How F-4 visa holders and overseas Koreans inherit property in South Korea — automatic heirship, the deduction trap, Family Relations Register, and tax residency rules.
Compare hiring a Korean probate lawyer at ₩300,000/hour with using a structured English guide for estate settlement. When each option makes sense.
Step-by-step guide for English speakers handling inheritance in South Korea. Covers language barriers at government offices, hospitals, and courts.
Remote estate settlement in South Korea — how overseas heirs can handle bank accounts, property transfers, tax filings, and court petitions without traveling to Korea.
How to ship a body or cremated remains home from South Korea — zinc-lined casket requirements, airline cargo rules, embassy cremation letters, and cost estimates.
What happens to Korean bank accounts when someone dies — the automatic freeze, why using the deceased's ATM card is criminal fraud, and how heirs legally unfreeze funds.
Complete guide to obtaining a Korean death certificate, getting it apostilled, and securing an English translation for embassy and probate use.
How to protect yourself from inheriting debts in South Korea — the 3-month deadline, qualified acceptance vs full renunciation, implied acceptance traps, and court filing process.
Complete step-by-step checklist for settling an estate in South Korea — every deadline, document, agency, and filing in chronological order for foreign families.
Guide to Korean funeral customs for foreigners — the three-day Samiljang, cremation booking, hospital funeral halls, costs, mourning etiquette, and what families need to know.
How Korean inheritance law applies to foreigners — statutory heir rankings, the 1.5x spousal premium, yuryubun forced shares, and the Goo Hara Law explained.
Korean inheritance tax rates (10%–50%), the non-resident deduction trap, NTS audit triggers, filing deadlines, and how to avoid penalties as a foreign heir.
How to claim National Pension Service survivor pension or lump-sum refund after a death in South Korea — eligibility by country, deadlines, and required documents.
How to draft and apostille a Special Power of Attorney for Korean estate administration — why general POAs fail, what Korean courts require, and the death cessation rule.
How probate works in South Korea for foreign estates — Family Court filings, heir agreements, inheritance disputes, and the complete settlement timeline.
How to transfer real estate ownership after a death in South Korea — title registration, foreigner restrictions, tax triggers, and required documents for overseas heirs.
How to report a death to the US, UK, or Canadian embassy in Seoul — CRODA process, cremation letters, consular death certificates, and document requirements.
Step-by-step emergency guide for English speakers dealing with a death in South Korea — first 24 hours, hospital procedures, police reports, and embassy contacts.