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The chusik hoesa (주식회사, also romanised jusik hoesa) is Korea's stock company — the form behind nearly every Korean business you will contract with, from chaebol flagships to ten-person suppliers. Korean companies carry two distinct numbers, and mixing them up breaks verification. Order the official record for any chusik hoesa in minutes.
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The same 주식회사 appears in English as Co., Ltd., Inc., Corp. or a bare brand name — and the company's own English rendering can differ from what your invoice shows. Verification that starts from an English name alone routinely lands on the wrong entity. The registered Korean name plus the numbers is the reliable anchor.
Once anchored, the record answers the operative questions: does the company exist as registered, where is it seated, and what identity should appear on your contract.
The official record for the chusik hoesa: registered name, identifiers, seat and disclosed company details as published, delivered as structured data plus a branded PDF by email in minutes. From €9.99, one-time payment, no account.
Two: the corporate registration number from the court commercial registry (13 digits) and the business registration number from the tax authority (10 digits, the one on invoices). They identify the same company in different systems — a solid check ties the name to the numbers consistently.
The representative director (대표이사) recorded in the commercial registry. Korean practice concentrates signing authority there, so confirming the entity and its representation is the heart of counterparty diligence.
For externally audited companies, yes — Korea's disclosure system publishes audited filings for a wide band of companies, not just listed ones. Smaller companies show less, which makes the registered identity data proportionally more important.
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