Frequently asked questions about South Korea
Are foreign crypto exchanges available to Korean residents?
Generally no. South Korea's FIU registration framework and the Virtual Asset User Protection Act require crypto exchanges serving Korean residents to register with the FIU, partner with a Korean bank, and issue real-name accounts. Most offshore exchanges (Bybit, OKX, Binance.com) do not meet these requirements and are restricted for Korean-resident accounts.
How are tournament winnings taxed in South Korea?
Tournament prize income is reportable under Korean income-tax law as miscellaneous income (or business income depending on volume and pattern). Crypto-asset gains are subject to South Korea's evolving crypto-tax framework — consult a Korean tax advisor for specific situations, especially for large or recurring contest winnings.
Why do Korean stock brokers run so many trading tournaments?
South Korea's retail-trader market is one of the largest by participation rate in Asia, and broker competition for retail flow drives high tournament cadence. Major brokers (KB증권, Kiwoom, 한국투자증권, 미래에셋, Samsung 증권) treat tournaments as a primary acquisition and engagement channel, producing weekly to quarterly contest activity across the calendar.
Can I enter FTMO and other prop firms from South Korea?
Yes — FTMO, FundedNext, Apex Trader Funding and most major offshore prop firms accept Korean residents. Funding payouts to Korean bank accounts may require additional remittance documentation under FX-control regulations. Verify each firm's current Korean-eligibility before paying for an evaluation.
What's 본인인증 and why does it matter for tournaments?
본인인증 is Korea's mandatory real-name phone verification system, used to confirm a user's legal identity through the major Korean mobile carriers (SKT, KT, LG U+). Korean financial services and crypto exchanges require 본인인증 for account opening — meaning non-residents without a Korean phone number generally cannot participate in domestic Korean tournaments.
