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Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious social issue in South Korea. However, many scholars and policymakers in South Korea tend to focus disproportionately on men as IPV perpetrators, rather than acknowledging their role as victims or both victims and offenders simultaneously. To develop the treatment and intervention strategies tailored to IPV offender, victims, and victim-offenders, it is important to understand the factors that are associated with each group. Using the data from the Violence Against Women, Focused on Intimate Partner Violence study, collected by the Korean Institute of Criminology and Justice (KICJ), this study examined the prevalence of IPV perpetration, victimization and both perpetration and victimization; 2) how the prevalence rate varies depending on the different types of abuse (i.e., violent vs. non-violent); and 3) the factors associated with each group, using multi-nominal analyses. We found that each type of violence (i.e., physical, sexual, emotional and controlling behaviors) was statistically different from the others when measuring IPV perpetration only, victimization only, and both IPV perpetration and victimization. In addition, both violent types and non-violent types of IPV, Korean men who had experienced IPV perpetration only and the ones who had experienced both IPV perpetration and victimization tended to share similar risk factors compared to the IPV victimization only group whereas Korean men who experienced IPV victimization only exhibited an unique risk factor. Results confirm the previous literature’s findings that some similarities exist among Korean IPV offenders, IPV victims and IPV victim-offenders, but there are distinct characteristics among them as well.