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Korea University Application Guide

Applying to a Korean university as an international student is mostly about hitting deadlines and assembling the right documents. This guide walks through the intakes, the paperwork, language scores, financial proof, and a realistic timeline. Every university runs its own admissions, so treat this as a map and confirm the specifics on each school's official international-admissions page.

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The two intakes

Step-by-step application

  1. Choose programs and confirm the language of instruction. Korean-taught or English-taught changes which test scores you need.
  2. Read each university's admission guidelines. The international office publishes a document checklist and deadlines.
  3. Take the required language test early. TOPIK for Korean-taught programs (commonly Level 3+), or IELTS/TOEFL for English-taught.
  4. Gather academic records. Official transcripts and diplomas, often needing notarization or apostille and certified translations.
  5. Write your study plan and statement. Many programs require a study plan, personal statement, and self-introduction.
  6. Request recommendation letters. Usually one or two, from professors or employers.
  7. Prepare financial proof. Bank statements showing you can cover tuition and living costs (commonly around 15,000–20,000 USD for the visa stage).
  8. Submit the online application and fee. Upload documents and pay the application fee before the deadline.
  9. Receive your admission decision and Certificate of Admission (CoA). The CoA is central to your visa.
  10. Apply for the D-2 student visa. At a Korean embassy or consulate, using the CoA and financial proof.

Documents most schools ask for

Helpful tip: notarization, apostille, and certified translation of transcripts can take weeks. Start document collection early — it's the most common reason applications run late.

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Frequently asked questions

When are the deadlines?

There are two main intakes: Spring (starting March) and Fall (starting September). Deadlines usually fall several months earlier — roughly September–November for Spring and May–June for Fall — but exact dates vary by university.

What documents do I need?

Common requirements include transcripts and diplomas, a language score (TOPIK or IELTS/TOEFL), a passport copy, a study plan, recommendation letters, and proof of finances. Each university publishes its own checklist.

Do I need TOPIK to apply?

For Korean-taught programs, most universities require TOPIK Level 3+, and competitive programs may ask for Level 4. English-taught programs usually require an English test instead. Some schools offer conditional admission tied to language study.

How much financial proof do I need?

For the D-2 visa, a commonly cited threshold is around 15,000–20,000 USD (about 20,000,000 KRW) in bank statements, though the exact amount varies by nationality and embassy.

What is a Certificate of Admission?

The Certificate of Admission is an official letter the university issues once you're accepted. It's a key document for the D-2 student visa application.

Requirements, deadlines, and document lists vary by school and year. Always verify with the official university admissions office and the Study in Korea site before applying.
Last reviewed June 2026.

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