IRP vs 연금저축: Tax Deduction Comparison

💡 IRP pension contributions unlock a higher tax deduction ceiling than a standard pension savings account — and most people don’t realize they’re leaving nearly 500,000 KRW in annual tax credits unclaimed by choosing the wrong account first.

The Account Most Working Professionals Open in the Wrong Order

A colleague of mine — a 35-year-old in marketing — came to me genuinely confused last year. She’d been contributing to a yeongumseochu (pension savings account) for three years without knowing she was leaving real money on the table. Not a rounding error. We’re talking tens of thousands of won per year, just quietly evaporating.

Here’s the thing. The difference between an IRP pension account and a yeongumseochu isn’t just about investment options or fees. It’s about how much of your contribution actually reduces your tax bill. And that ceiling gap is bigger than most guides acknowledge.

Let’s break it down clearly.

The Core Difference: Deduction Limits That Actually Matter

💡 A yeongumseochu caps your annual deduction at 6 million KRW. IRP pension alone goes up to 9 million KRW — and the two accounts share a combined ceiling.

The government sets separate limits for each account type. A yeongumseochu maxes out at 6 million KRW per year in eligible deductions. Contribute more if you want, but anything over that threshold won’t move your taxable income further.

IRP pension has a standalone ceiling of 9 million KRW. That’s 50% more headroom right there.

But here’s where it gets interesting — and where most guides get lazy. These two accounts share a combined limit of 9 million KRW. Max out yeongumseochu at 6 million KRW, and you can still contribute 3 million KRW to IRP for the full 9 million KRW total deduction. You can’t push past that combined ceiling, though. No double-dipping.

Practically speaking? IRP should usually come first if you can only fund one account.

How the Tax Credit Rate Breaks Down by Income

Worth knowing: Korea’s system works as a tax credit, not a deduction from gross income. That’s actually more valuable for lower earners. Here’s the breakdown:

Annual Income Tax Credit Rate Max Credit (9M KRW)
Under 45M KRW (salary under 55M KRW) 16.5% 1,485,000 KRW
45M–120M KRW 13.2% 1,188,000 KRW
Over 120M KRW (high earners) 13.2% (reduced cap) Up to 792,000 KRW

That’s nearly 1.5 million KRW back per year if you’re in the lower bracket and max out IRP pension contributions. Every single year. Without doing anything particularly clever — just contributing consistently.

xychart
    title "Annual Tax Credit by IRP Contribution (16.5% Rate)"
    x-axis ["3M KRW", "6M KRW", "9M KRW"]
    y-axis "Tax Credit (KRW)" 0 --> 1600000
    bar [495000, 990000, 1485000]

Where Yeongumseochu Actually Wins

Honestly, I don’t want to make it sound like IRP is always the superior choice. It isn’t.

Yeongumseochu offers one meaningful advantage: flexibility. Partial early withdrawals are possible under certain conditions with fewer tax penalties than IRP. Exit an IRP account before age 55 and you’re looking at a 16.5% penalty tax on the full withdrawal amount. That stings considerably.

For someone who genuinely might need access to the money before retirement — career change, emergency, life happens — yeongumseochu might be the smarter first move despite the lower deduction cap.

Plot twist: the “right” answer depends entirely on how confident you are that you won’t touch this money for 20-plus years. Be honest with yourself about that before you optimize the tax math.

How to Split Contributions Efficiently

💡 The most common efficient strategy for mid-range earners: 6M KRW into IRP pension, 3M KRW into yeongumseochu — hitting the full 9M KRW combined ceiling.

If reaching the full 9 million KRW combined cap is possible for you, the specific split matters less than simply hitting the ceiling. But if you have to prioritize:

  • Income under 45M KRW: Max IRP pension first — the 16.5% credit rate amplifies every won.
  • Income over 45M KRW: The gap between IRP and yeongumseochu narrows. Factor in how much flexibility you actually need.
  • Self-employed or freelancers: IRP is broadly available; some yeongumseochu products have employment income requirements. IRP wins here by default.

One thing worth saying plainly: don’t optimize account selection so hard that you end up doing nothing. The best IRP pension strategy is the one you actually stick with for two decades. Pick something sustainable and automate it.

Has anyone else found themselves spending six months researching the “perfect” account while contributing nothing to either? Because I see that pattern far more often than I see people making the wrong account choice.

mindmap
  root((IRP vs Yeongumseochu))
    fa:fa-coins IRP Pension
      Deduction Cap: 9M KRW
      Credit Rate: 13.2–16.5%
      Early Exit Penalty: High
      Best For: Long-term committed savers
    fa:fa-piggy-bank Yeongumseochu
      Deduction Cap: 6M KRW
      Credit Rate: 13.2–16.5%
      Flexibility: Higher
      Best For: Uncertain timelines
    fa:fa-balance-scale Combined Ceiling
      Total Cap: 9M KRW
      Max Annual Credit: 1.485M KRW
      Common Split: 6M IRP + 3M Savings

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