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South Korea Student Visa: Requirements & How to Apply
A step-by-step South Korea student visa guide: the requirements, documents, application process, costs, and timeline — for degree and language students.
Getting a South Korea student visa is mostly about being organized: the rules are clear, but a missing document or an out-of-date financial figure can cost you weeks. This guide covers the requirements, the exact steps, costs, and timeline so you can apply with confidence.
For a quick overview or to ask about your case, see our study visa consulting page.
Student visa requirements
To qualify you generally need:
- An admission offer from a school recognized by Korea's Ministry of Education.
- Proof of funds — usually a bank balance certificate covering tuition and living costs, or a scholarship letter.
- A valid passport and a clean immigration record.
- Program requirements — for example a TOPIK level or English-program proof, depending on the course.
D-2 or D-4?
- D-2 — full degree programs.
- D-4 — non-degree study (language institutes and similar).
If you're doing a degree, apply for the D-2.
Documents you'll prepare
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application form + photo | Standard format |
| Passport | Valid beyond your start date |
| Standard Admission Letter | Issued by your university |
| Proof of finances | Bank balance certificate / scholarship |
| Academic records | Diplomas & transcripts (sometimes apostilled) |
Your embassy may add a TB test, a study plan, or extra civil documents — always confirm its checklist.
How to apply, step by step
- Get admitted and request your Standard Admission Letter.
- Gather documents, including a bank certificate that meets the current amount.
- Submit at your Korean embassy/consulate (or its application center/portal).
- Pay the fee and keep the receipt.
- Wait for processing, then collect your visa.
- Enter Korea and, after arrival, apply for your ARC.
Cost & timeline
Fees are modest and depend on nationality and entry type; your consulate lists the current amount. Processing is commonly a few weeks, longer around semester start — so apply early.
How Langle can help
Langle's consultants can pre-check your documents, confirm the current financial requirement, and flag anything an embassy is likely to question — before you submit. 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 are the requirements for a South Korea student visa?
- An admission offer from a recognized school, proof you can fund your studies (usually a bank balance certificate), a valid passport, and any program-specific language or academic requirements.
- Which student visa do I need — D-2 or D-4?
- A D-2 for a full degree program, or a D-4 for non-degree study such as a university language institute. Many students start on a D-4 and change to a D-2 later.
- How early should I apply for a Korean student visa?
- Start as soon as you have your admission letter. Processing takes a few weeks and gets busier near semester start, so apply well before your program begins.
- Can my family come with me?
- Some students can bring dependents on a related visa, subject to conditions. Check your embassy's rules and be ready to show extra financial support.
- Do I need to register after arriving in Korea?
- Yes — if you stay over 90 days you must get an Alien Registration Card (ARC) at your local immigration office, generally within 90 days of entry.