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Labor & Employment/Legal Q&A

Can Foreign Companies Conduct Internal Workplace Investigations in Korea?— What Employers Should Know About HR, Compliance, and Employee Misconduct

Jin & Kim, PLC 2026. 5. 11. 17:22

Short Answer

Generally, yes.

In Korea, employers may generally conduct internal workplace investigations involving:

  • employee misconduct
  • workplace harassment
  • sexual harassment allegations
  • compliance violations
  • trade-secret issues
  • whistleblower complaints
  • fraud concerns
  • HR-related disputes

In some situations, Korean law may effectively require employers to investigate certain workplace complaints, particularly involving workplace harassment or sexual harassment allegations.

However, Korean employment disputes often heavily focus on whether the investigation was conducted:

  • fairly,
  • reasonably,
  • objectively, and
  • proportionately.

Accordingly, foreign companies operating Korean subsidiaries, branches, factories, logistics operations, engineering entities, or local offices should carefully structure investigation procedures, evidence collection, employee interviews, and disciplinary processes under Korean law.


Can Employers Investigate Employee Misconduct in Korea?

Generally, yes.

Employers in Korea may often investigate issues involving:

  • policy violations
  • workplace harassment
  • sexual harassment allegations
  • expense fraud
  • insider misconduct
  • conflicts of interest
  • attendance manipulation
  • inappropriate workplace conduct
  • unauthorized disclosure of confidential information
  • trade-secret leakage
  • compliance concerns

In practice, Korean courts generally recognize that employers may conduct reasonable internal investigations to maintain workplace order and protect legitimate business interests.

However, the investigation process itself should generally remain:

  • reasonable
  • objective
  • proportionate
  • properly documented
  • consistent with company policies and Korean law

Are There Situations Where Investigation Is Effectively Required?

Potentially, yes.

Under Korean law, employers may effectively have obligations to investigate certain complaints involving:

  • workplace harassment
  • sexual harassment allegations
  • retaliation concerns
  • whistleblower complaints

In practice, employers may also need to consider:

  • confidentiality obligations,
  • employee protection measures,
  • anti-retaliation concerns,
  • preservation of evidence, and
  • appropriate follow-up actions.

Accordingly, failure to investigate serious workplace complaints properly may itself create legal risk in Korea.


Why Is Procedural Fairness So Important?

Procedural fairness is often one of the most important issues in Korean employment disputes.

In practice, disputes frequently focus not only on whether misconduct occurred, but also on whether the employer conducted the investigation fairly and reasonably.

Korean courts often examine issues such as:

  • neutrality of the investigation,
  • consistency of procedures,
  • objectivity of decision-making,
  • fairness of disciplinary processes,
  • documentation of evidence,
  • predictability of company procedures, and
  • whether arbitrary treatment occurred.

Accordingly, even where misconduct exists, employers may still face significant legal disputes if the investigation process itself appears unfair or inconsistent.


Should Employees Be Given an Opportunity to Respond?

Generally, yes.

In disputes involving possible disciplinary action or termination, Korean legal practice often places substantial importance on whether the employee received:

  • notice of the allegations,
  • a meaningful opportunity to respond,
  • an opportunity to submit explanations,
  • an opportunity to present rebuttal materials, or
  • a fair opportunity to participate in the process.

In practice, failure to provide adequate opportunities for explanation or response may later become an important issue in:

  • wrongful dismissal disputes,
  • disciplinary proceedings,
  • workplace harassment disputes, or
  • Labor Relations Commission proceedings.

Can Employers Review Company Emails, Devices, or Electronic Records?

Potentially, yes — but significant caution is required.

In practice, disputes frequently arise involving:

  • company email accounts,
  • laptops,
  • messaging systems,
  • mobile devices,
  • access logs,
  • CCTV systems,
  • monitoring software, or
  • electronic communication records.

Importantly, workplace monitoring is not automatically justified merely because the company obtained a general consent form.

In practice, Korean legal analysis may heavily focus on:

  • proportionality
  • legitimate business purpose
  • scope of monitoring
  • employee privacy expectations
  • whether less intrusive measures were available
  • necessity of the review
  • internal company policies

Accordingly, foreign companies often strengthen their position by implementing:

  • clear IT policies,
  • device-use policies,
  • compliance manuals,
  • confidentiality agreements,
  • monitoring disclosures, and
  • employee acknowledgments.

Can Employers Suspend Employees During an Investigation?

Potentially, yes — depending on the circumstances and company policies.

In practice, temporary measures may sometimes include:

  • paid suspension,
  • administrative leave,
  • temporary reassignment,
  • restrictions on system access,
  • temporary removal from certain duties, or
  • workplace separation measures.

However, Korean courts may still examine whether such measures were:

  • reasonably necessary,
  • proportionate,
  • supported by company rules,
  • limited in duration, and
  • implemented fairly.

Accordingly, employers should carefully review suspension procedures before implementation.


What About Whistleblower or Retaliation Risks?

This area may create particularly sensitive legal risk.

In practice, Korean employment disputes sometimes involve allegations that:

  • disciplinary action,
  • reassignment,
  • exclusion from projects,
  • demotion,
  • workplace isolation, or
  • termination

occurred in retaliation for internal reporting or whistleblowing activity.

Accordingly, employers often benefit from maintaining:

  • neutral investigation procedures,
  • objective documentation,
  • consistent disciplinary standards,
  • confidentiality protections, and
  • legally reviewed HR processes.

Can Internal Investigations Lead to Employee Termination?

Potentially, yes.

However, Korean courts generally examine whether:

  • the investigation was fair,
  • evidence was sufficiently reliable,
  • disciplinary procedures were followed,
  • the misconduct was serious enough, and
  • dismissal was proportionate under the circumstances.

Accordingly, even where misconduct exists, employers may still face wrongful dismissal disputes if the investigation process itself was flawed.


Practical Considerations for Foreign Companies

Foreign companies operating in Korea often benefit from:

  • implementing localized HR policies,
  • maintaining Korean-compliant workplace rules,
  • establishing structured investigation procedures,
  • preserving evidence carefully,
  • documenting interviews and disciplinary decisions,
  • coordinating with Korean legal counsel, and
  • reviewing termination risk before major HR actions.

In practice, legal difficulties frequently arise where overseas headquarters attempt to apply global HR or compliance procedures directly in Korea without sufficient adjustment for Korean employment law and workplace practices.

In cities such as Busan, where manufacturing, logistics, shipping, engineering, and foreign-invested business operations are highly active, internal workplace investigations and cross-border HR disputes regularly arise in practice.


Conclusion

Foreign companies may generally conduct internal workplace investigations in Korea involving:

  • employee misconduct,
  • compliance concerns,
  • workplace harassment allegations,
  • whistleblower complaints, or
  • confidentiality issues.

However, Korean employment disputes often heavily focus on:

  • procedural fairness
  • proportionality
  • objectivity
  • privacy concerns
  • employee response opportunities
  • documentation
  • disciplinary consistency

Accordingly, employers should carefully structure workplace investigations in Korea in order to reduce legal risk and strengthen their position in potential employment disputes under Korean law.