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I'm a Filipino immigrant from USA about to visit home in December. I have a 14-hour lay over in Seoul, South Korea.

Do I need a visa to leave the airport to do a little sightseeing?

2 Answers 2

-1

According to the visa policy of South Korea and taking into note that you are a Filipino Citizen you will require a visa to enter South Korea.

The fact that you are a permanent resident of the United States will not change this fact.

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  • 3
    (-1) This answer is incorrect. It does not acknowledge Korean visa exemptions listed in TIMATIC; refer to the other answer posted to this question.
    – Urbana
    Aug 29, 2016 at 20:45
  • I agree! It seems that this answer is deprecated now. Aug 30, 2016 at 17:15
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I am sorry, but it appears that the answer above might not be correct anymore.

According to Consulate General of the Republic of Korea in Boston, it seems that you should be able to visit Korea without visa:

Although citizens of the countries are not under Visa Exemption Agreement, visa-free entry for a limited time is allowed under certain conditions. They include:

  • Citizens whose final destination is the United States, Japan, Canada, Australia or New Zealand and have a valid visa (re-entry certificate) for those countries.

  • Citizens who departed from the United States, Japan, Canada, Australia or New Zealand and transiting in Korea in order to go to their home country or a third country.

Entry Requirements

  • Must have a departure ticket from Korea within 30 days from entry
  • Citizens must not have any record of illegal stay or violations in the United States, Japan, Canada, Australia or New Zealand

So if you fly FROM USA to Philippines (or the other way), AND have a valid US visa or residence permit, AND arrive on a direct flight from USA (or departing on a direct flight to USA) you should be able to enter Korea for 30 days maximum.

This is further confirmed by Timatic (note that I put in Korea as a destination country, not a transit country):

Visa required.

The following are exempt from holding a visa:

Passengers with a residence permit issued by USA to nationals of Philippines if in transit through Korea (Rep.):

  • holding confirmed onward tickets on flights departing within 30 days; when
    • arriving on a direct flight from USA, departing to a third country (e.g. USA-ICN-PVG); or
    • arriving from a third country, departing to USA (e.g. PVG-ICN-USA). Not applicable if traveling from/to Northern Mariana Isl.

Thus the main requirement here seem to be to have a direct flight from/to USA (i.e. you cannot get visa-free entry if you fly USA-Japan-Korea-Philippines according to Timatic)

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