
Based in Seoul · Serving Clients Globally
Your Bridge to
Korean Business
From entity setup to full financial management — we act as your Virtual CFO for Korea, handling everything so you don't have to. A team that speaks your language.
Big 0
Trained
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Languages
0+
Years
What We Do
The complete Korea back-office, from day one to year-end.
Market Entry
Entity setup, business registration, and initial compliance — fully managed from start to finish.
Learn more02Accounting & Reporting
Bookkeeping, payroll, K-GAAP to IFRS conversion, and HQ-ready reporting — all in one place.
Learn more03Tax & Compliance
Corporate tax, VAT, withholding tax, and transfer pricing — filed accurately and on time, every time.
Learn more04Audit & Assurance
Statutory and voluntary audits, plus Audit PA support — we handle the full process.
Learn more05Advisory
Internal controls, management reporting, and strategic advisory — beyond the numbers.
Learn more06Liaison Service
No local staff? We handle government liaison, banking, and administrative tasks on your behalf.
Learn moreWhy Korea Biz Bridge
Not just advisors. We've been in your seat.
We are not advisors who have only ever given advice. We are practitioners who have held Finance Head roles inside foreign-owned Korean subsidiaries — and solved the same challenges you face.
- PwC (Audit & Tax) · KPMG (International Tax) · EY · IBM Consulting
- Finance Head, foreign-listed Korean subsidiaries
- English · Korean · Japanese
- Based in Songpa-gu, Seoul
One Point of Contact
A single partner manages your entire Korea back-office. No handoffs, no silos.
HQ-Ready Reporting
Monthly financials in the format your headquarters expects — IFRS, US GAAP, or custom.
Regulatory Confidence
Every filing, every deadline, every NTS communication — handled with precision.
Transparent Pricing
Fixed monthly fees. No hourly surprises, no hidden charges.
Insights
Latest from our practice
The treaty says 15%, so why am I told to withhold 16.5%?
You saw 15% in the tax treaty and set out to withhold it, only to be told the figure is 16.5%. You did not misread the rate table. There is one more tax the treaty cannot lower.