Filing for Love is a 2026 tvN weekend drama starring Shin Hye-sun, Gong Myoung, Kim Jae-wook, and Hong Hwa-yeon. At first glance, the drama looks like a light office romantic comedy set inside the audit department of a major conglomerate. However, as the story unfolds, it becomes more than a workplace romance. It explores corporate politics, personal trauma, hidden relationships, and the courage it takes to let someone into a life that has always been built around survival.
The drama follows Joo In-ah, a sharp and mysterious audit director at Haemu Group, and Noh Ki-joon, a talented audit team ace who suddenly gets transferred to a department handling internal misconduct and workplace scandals. What begins as a frustrating demotion for Ki-joon gradually becomes the start of an unexpected emotional connection between two very different people.

Drama Information
Title: Filing for Love
Korean Title: 은밀한 감사
Network: tvN
Episodes: 12
Genre: Office Romance, Workplace Comedy, Corporate Drama
Cast: Shin Hye-sun, Gong Myoung, Kim Jae-wook, Hong Hwa-yeon
Streaming: TVING, Wavve

A Romance That Starts With Suspicion
The story begins with Noh Ki-joon as a confident and highly capable audit team member. He is proud of his work, his performance, and his reputation inside Haemu Group. But everything changes when Joo In-ah returns to the company as the new audit director.
Instead of keeping Ki-joon in the elite audit team, In-ah sends him to Audit Team 3, where he must handle cases involving workplace affairs, inappropriate relationships, and internal complaints. To Ki-joon, this feels like an insult. To In-ah, however, it seems like part of a much bigger plan.
Their relationship starts with tension, misunderstanding, and constant power play. Ki-joon thinks In-ah is cold and unreasonable, while In-ah sees through his arrogance and immaturity. Yet the more they work together, the more they begin to notice each other’s hidden wounds.


Joo In-ah: A Woman Who Learned to Survive Alone
Joo In-ah is easily the most compelling character in the drama. On the outside, she is composed, efficient, and almost impossible to shake. She knows how corporate politics works, and she is willing to become the villain if that is what it takes to protect the people under her.
But behind her controlled image is a woman carrying deep emotional scars. In-ah grew up as the daughter of a woman who had been judged by society because of an affair. She lived with shame that was never truly hers, and she learned early that people’s judgment could be cruel and unforgiving.
One of the most surprising revelations in the drama is why In-ah works as a nude model at an art studio. At first, it seems shocking and difficult to understand. But later, it becomes clear that this space allows her to experience a gaze without prejudice. For In-ah, standing as a model is not about exposure. It is about freedom, forgiveness, and learning to accept herself.


Noh Ki-joon: From Arrogant Ace to Steady Comfort
Noh Ki-joon begins the drama as someone who believes his value comes from achievement. He wants recognition, promotion, and proof that he is important. Being transferred to Audit Team 3 feels like humiliation.
But through the cases he handles with In-ah, Ki-joon slowly changes. He learns that auditing is not only about catching big corruption cases. Sometimes, it is about protecting ordinary employees, exposing hidden abuse, and understanding the human cost behind corporate decisions.
His relationship with In-ah also changes him. At first, he is curious about her. Then he becomes worried. Eventually, he falls in love with her not because she is perfect, but because he sees how lonely and wounded she is beneath her strength.
What makes Ki-joon charming is that he does not try to “fix” In-ah. He waits, listens, and stays. His love is direct but not forceful, warm but not naïve. Gong Myoung gives the character a bright, sincere energy that balances Shin Hye-sun’s restrained emotional performance beautifully.


Corporate Politics and the Haemu Group Power Struggle
While romance is at the center of the drama, Filing for Love also spends a lot of time on Haemu Group’s internal politics. The conflict between Jeon Jae-yeol and Jeon Seong-yeol adds a darker layer to the story.
Jae-yeol is connected to In-ah’s past. He was once her lover, and their relationship ended because of family pressure, class differences, and his decision to accept a strategic marriage. His lingering feelings for In-ah complicate the present, especially when Ki-joon becomes someone who can give her the emotional honesty Jae-yeol never could.
Seong-yeol, on the other hand, represents corporate greed. His plan to restructure and sell parts of the company creates a final conflict that brings In-ah, Ki-joon, and Jae-yeol together. The drama’s final act focuses on whether Haemu Group will remain a place for people to work and live, or become just another asset to be carved up for power.


The Ending Explained
The final episode resolves both the corporate conflict and the romance in a satisfying way. Seong-yeol’s attempt to sell off key affiliates is stopped through an emergency board meeting. Jae-yeol chooses to step away from direct management, while In-ah returns to the audit department and eventually gets promoted.
The most meaningful part of the ending, however, is In-ah and Ki-joon’s relationship.
Instead of giving viewers a sudden marriage proposal, the drama chooses a more realistic ending. In-ah admits that she is still not ready for marriage. Given her painful family history, marriage is not something she can easily accept. But she also realizes that happiness and sadness have become things she wants to share with Ki-joon.
So she asks him to live with her.
This choice feels very true to In-ah’s character. She does not magically become someone free of fear. Instead, she takes one honest step forward. For a woman who has spent her life alone, choosing to share daily life with someone is already a huge act of love.


Final Review
Filing for Love is not a perfect drama. Some late-stage corporate plot points feel a little rushed, and certain character choices, especially around Park Ah-jung, may not convince every viewer. However, the emotional core of the drama remains strong until the end.
The biggest strength of the series is undoubtedly Shin Hye-sun. Her performance gives Joo In-ah both sharpness and vulnerability. She makes the character feel powerful without making her cold, wounded without making her weak.
Gong Myoung also leaves a strong impression as Noh Ki-joon. His character could have easily become a typical younger male lead, but he brings warmth, humor, and emotional steadiness to the role. Together, Shin Hye-sun and Gong Myoung create a romance that feels mature, healing, and surprisingly comforting.
In the end, Filing for Love is a drama about people who learn that work, love, and life are all built through trust. It begins as a story about audits and workplace scandals, but it ends as a story about choosing to stay beside someone, even when the future is uncertain.
For viewers who enjoy office romances with emotional depth, strong female leads, and a relationship that grows through honesty rather than fantasy, Filing for Love is worth watching.


🔗 Official Drama & Reference Resources
Filing for Love (2026) — tvN Official Page
Explore the official tvN drama page for Filing for Love, including the synopsis, character information, official clips, highlights, and drama updates.
https://tvn.cjenm.com/ko/Filing-for-Love/
Filing for Love (2026) — IMDb
Full cast, episode guide, production details, ratings, and viewer information for the Korean office romance drama.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt39010903/
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