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How to Apply for the F-4 Visa (Documents & Steps)
A step-by-step F-4 visa application guide: the documents that prove overseas-Korean status, how to file abroad or change status in Korea, and after-arrival steps.
Applying for the F-4 visa is mostly about assembling the documents that prove your Korean heritage. Once those are in order, the filing itself is straightforward. Here's the step-by-step.
Not sure your documents are enough? Ask an F-4 consultant.
Step 1 — Confirm eligibility
Before anything, make sure you likely qualify — see F-4 eligibility. This saves you gathering documents for the wrong visa.
Step 2 — Gather heritage documents
This is the hard part. A typical set:
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Former family register (제적등본) | Traces Korean nationality |
| Parents'/grandparents' records | Links the lineage to you |
| Current passport | Plus proof of foreign nationality |
| Personal/civil documents | As required by your case |
Legalize (apostille/consular) foreign documents early — it can take time.
Step 3 — File
- Abroad: apply at the Korean embassy/consulate for your region.
- In Korea: apply for a change of status at an immigration office if you're already here on another visa.
Pay the fee and keep your receipt.
Step 4 — After approval
Enter or continue your stay, then register for an ARC at your local immigration office. Keep your address registration current for future renewals.
Common pitfalls
- Incomplete or mismatched heritage records.
- Un-legalized foreign documents.
- Applying for the F-4 when another visa actually fits better.
How Langle can help
Langle's consultants review your heritage documents against what immigration expects, handle legalization guidance, and manage change-of-status timing. Start free on our visa consulting page.
General information, not legal advice. Rules change; verify on HiKorea or with a consultant before applying.
Frequently asked questions
- What documents prove overseas-Korean status?
- Usually a former Korean family register (제적등본), your parents'/grandparents' Korean records, your current passport, and proof of your foreign nationality. Requirements vary by case.
- Can I apply for the F-4 inside Korea?
- Often yes — you can apply for a change of status at an immigration office if you're already in Korea on another visa, subject to conditions.
- How long does the F-4 take?
- It varies by consulate and how complete your heritage documents are. Gathering records is usually the slowest part, so start early.
- Do I need my documents legalized?
- Foreign civil documents may need apostille or consular legalization. Confirm what your embassy requires and start it early.
- What do I do after I get the F-4?
- Enter (or continue your stay) and register for an Alien Registration Card (ARC) at your local immigration office.