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Banking Question-Transferring Money Home

 
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Keepongoing



Joined: 13 Feb 2003
Location: Korea

PostPosted: Thu May 10, 2007 11:50 pm    Post subject: Banking Question-Transferring Money Home Reply with quote

I set up an account years ago with Kookmin in Itaewan and gave them a letter from my uni so that I could send an unlimited amount home. When I first got here they told me that without the letter from our school/hogwan/Uni that we were only aloud to send up to US10K in a year.

I went to a different Kookmin near my Uni to transfer 8,000,000 won home and they stamped the back of my passport. I do not have a letter with that branch so they could/would not honor it.

A colleague told me that KB had told him that one could send up to US50K home?

I hate going all the way to Ewan to transfer money and would like to continue using the closer branch, but it looks like I will have to get another letter from my Uni because I send way more than US10K home a year.
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ttompatz



Joined: 05 Sep 2005
Location: Kwangju, South Korea

PostPosted: Fri May 11, 2007 12:37 am    Post subject: Re: Banking Question-Transferring Money Home Reply with quote

Keepongoing wrote:
I set up an account years ago with Kookmin in Itaewan and gave them a letter from my uni so that I could send an unlimited amount home. When I first got here they told me that without the letter from our school/hogwan/Uni that we were only aloud to send up to US10K in a year.

I went to a different Kookmin near my Uni to transfer 8,000,000 won home and they stamped the back of my passport. I do not have a letter with that branch so they could/would not honor it.

A colleague told me that KB had told him that one could send up to US50K home?

I hate going all the way to Ewan to transfer money and would like to continue using the closer branch, but it looks like I will have to get another letter from my Uni because I send way more than US10K home a year.


You can send up to US$10k per visit in Korea without restriction.

IF you want to send out more you have to show proof of LEGAL income to cover the amount you want to send out.

You can use a letter from your employer, a copy of your contract or your pay slips to provide such proof.
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merkurix



Joined: 21 Dec 2006
Location: Not far from the deep end.

PostPosted: Fri May 11, 2007 12:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Never let them touch your passport!!! I mean, sure they can touch it for identification purposes, but do not let them put ANY kind of mark on it! One time I had a bank try to do that and I told them that they are not customs or immigration authorities to go around doing that. I had one friend who got hers stamped on every visit to her bank! Tell them to get stuffed if they insist on putting a mark of any kind in your passport. It is possible that you can get in trouble with the government later if they see "unauthorized marks." And at best this will clutter up your visa pages which could force you to needlessly apply for new passport pages.
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dogshed



Joined: 28 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Fri May 11, 2007 1:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

merkurix wrote:
Never let them touch your passport!!! I mean, sure they can touch it for identification purposes, but do not let them put ANY kind of mark on it! One time I had a bank try to do that and I told them that they are not customs or immigration authorities to go around doing that. I had one friend who got hers stamped on every visit to her bank! Tell them to get stuffed if they insist on putting a mark of any kind in your passport. It is possible that you can get in trouble with the government later if they see "unauthorized marks." And at best this will clutter up your visa pages which could force you to needlessly apply for new passport pages.


If the passport stamps were a big deal then I'm sure the US Embassy would cause a stink. For me it wasn't worth the hassle of doing the paperwork.
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merkurix



Joined: 21 Dec 2006
Location: Not far from the deep end.

PostPosted: Fri May 11, 2007 1:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

dogshed wrote:
merkurix wrote:
Never let them touch your passport!!! I mean, sure they can touch it for identification purposes, but do not let them put ANY kind of mark on it! One time I had a bank try to do that and I told them that they are not customs or immigration authorities to go around doing that. I had one friend who got hers stamped on every visit to her bank! Tell them to get stuffed if they insist on putting a mark of any kind in your passport. It is possible that you can get in trouble with the government later if they see "unauthorized marks." And at best this will clutter up your visa pages which could force you to needlessly apply for new passport pages.


If the passport stamps were a big deal then I'm sure the US Embassy would cause a stink. For me it wasn't worth the hassle of doing the paperwork.


It's only a few banks that do that if one lets them. It's not a widespread problem (or a major problem for that matter.) But I like to travel a lot and I like to save my passport pages for necessary immigration stamps and visas of my travels and not some stinkin' bank remittance transaction. I'll be gosh-darned if I have to get new passport pages because the bank cluttered them up with their f-n stamp.

The paperwork for me was no big deal (except maybe the first time if one is a new customer at the bank). I just save my previous papers and receipts from the last visit and and let the bank worker use them as a template in which to input information (a lot of info is already stored in their computers if you do it often). All I have to do is sign in a few places, enter my PIN code and the bank worker does the rest.


Last edited by merkurix on Fri May 11, 2007 1:21 am; edited 1 time in total
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dogshed



Joined: 28 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Fri May 11, 2007 1:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Under the new August 23, 2006 rule anyone can send up to 1000 US dollars per transaction with no passport stamp nor proof of income. KEB money order (Bank of New York Check that I mail) is 15000 won. The electronic transfer has a lower fee but is subject to fees from the receiving bank and intermediary banks. The fee in the US for receiving banks ranges from free to $45. There is a 20,000 US dollars per a year limit. The bad thing is that you have to pay a fee for each transaction.

To send more than $1000 US the KEB guy said I needed pay statements with my school's stamp. When I arrived with the stamped pay statements he said he would have to request the right of sending money be transfered from the bank I receive my pay at to KEB. He had a big long form he could fax. He asked why I didn't want my passport stamped and told him I didn't want to fill it up. I caved and let him stamp it. It takes up one square on a page, and I can transfer from my regular bank electronically if I have to. Using the passport stamp you can send more than $1000 US for each transaction which could save you money on the fees, but it is still limited to $20000 per year.

With the proof of Korean income, which for my guy was stamped paystubs, you can send up to your income. This requires a transfer of the right to send money from one bank to another.

On my most recent visit I sent about $5000 and he didn't need my paystubs. I guess that is just for sending over the $20,000/year limit and not for the $1000 per transaction limit. Maybe?

I take stamped paystubs, copies of the stamped paystubs in case he wants to keep a copy (I'm not giving him the originals.), and my passport.

Maybe I don't need the stamped paystubs because he is stamping my passport?

Getting the $5319 Bank of New York check cost me 20,000 won (about $20) and my bank deposited it without any fees. I mailed it regular mail and this time it took only 7 days but the last two times it took 10 days.

If I had sent five $1000 transactions using the ATM the total sending and receiving fees would have totaled about $100 for most banks.
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