Guide
How to choose a Korean language institute
Yonsei, SNU, Korea, Sogang, Ewha, Hanyang: the famous institutes teach the same 10-week, 200-hour terms. What differs is price, housing, deadlines, and what each one gets you later. Here is the factual comparison.
This guide compares the major university-affiliated institutes. For how these programs work in general, start with the Korean language programs overview. Everything below comes from each institute's official pages as of June 2026, and fees change yearly, so confirm details at the source before applying.
- The structure is nearly identical everywhere: four terms a year, 10 weeks and about 200 hours per term, levels 1 to 6, classes Monday to Friday.
- Price is the clearest difference. Seoul's big names charge 1.65 to 1.86 million KRW per term in 2026; regional national universities charge 1.35 to 1.5 million.
- Housing is scarce. Only some institutes offer dorms to language students, usually for new students only and first come first served.
- There is no official ranking of language institutes. Choose on cost, city, housing, and where you want a degree later, not on fame alone.
- Studying at your target university's institute has real, published benefits at some universities, like admission eligibility or tuition scholarships, but it never guarantees degree admission.
What actually differs (and what does not)
What does not differ much: the calendar and the workload. Yonsei, SNU, Sogang, Pusan National, and Kyungpook National all publish the same skeleton: four terms a year, 10 weeks per term, about 200 class hours, four hours of class per weekday, six levels. Most offer a morning track (roughly 9:00 to 13:00) and an afternoon track.
What does differ:
- Tuition, by up to half a million KRW per term between Seoul and the regions.
- Dormitory access, from "decent but limited" to "none for regular terms."
- Application deadlines, from about five weeks before term (Ewha) to ten or eleven weeks (SNU, Pusan National, Kyungpook National).
- Class size, where published: about 13 per class at Yonsei, 12 to 16 at SNU, 14 at Korea, 15 or fewer at Hanyang.
- What the institute gets you at that university later, covered below.
Each institute also publishes its own teaching approach and curriculum on its course pages. Read those pages directly rather than relying on reputation: the differences they describe are smaller than internet folklore suggests.
The big comparison table
| Institute | Tuition / term | Dorm for language students | Apply by (before term) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yonsei KLI | 1,860,000 KRW | Limited (about 10% of students) | About 7 weeks |
| SNU LEI | 1,800,000 / 1,650,000 KRW (am/pm) | Yes, separate application | About 11 weeks |
| Korea Univ. KLC | 1,800,000 KRW | Yes, 1.4M KRW/term, new students, 1 term max | About 6 to 7 weeks |
| Sogang KLEC | 1,860,000 / 1,800,000 KRW (am/pm) | Summer program only | About 6 to 7 weeks |
| Ewha Language Center | 1,800,000 KRW (1.85M from Winter 2026) | Not published for the intensive program | About 5 weeks |
| Hanyang IIE | 1,800,000 KRW (1.85M from Fall 2026) | Yes, 1.63 to 1.88M KRW/term, up to 2 terms | About 8 weeks |
| Pusan National LEI | 1,500,000 / 1,350,000 KRW (am/pm) | Not published | About 10 weeks |
| Kyungpook National | 1,400,000 KRW | Not published | About 10 to 11 weeks |
Full fee detail, including application fees, is in the cost guide.
The institutes, one by one
Yonsei KLI (Korean Language Institute). The oldest brand name in this space, in Sinchon, Seoul. The Regular Program runs morning (9:00 to 13:00) or afternoon classes, about 13 students per class, with levels it describes as designed according to TOPIK levels. Yonsei also runs a separate, pricier University Korean Program focused on academic Korean, so do not confuse the two when comparing fees.
Seoul National University LEI. The Korean Language and Culture Program at Korea's flagship national university, in Gwanak, Seoul. Notable for the cheapest afternoon track among the Seoul names (1,650,000 KRW) and for an advanced academic track after level 6. SNU's own admissions FAQ accepts completion of its language center's level 4 or higher as proof of Korean for undergraduate admission, alongside TOPIK 3.
Korea University KLC. In Anam, Seoul, with about 14 students per class. The practical draws are the on-campus Frontier Hall dorm for new language students and a clearly published tier system: in Korea University's own international admissions guide, its KLC level certificates substitute one for one for TOPIK levels.
Sogang KLEC. In Mapo, Seoul. Sogang publishes a concrete pathway benefit: completing its regular course level 3 or higher confers eligibility to apply for Sogang's international undergraduate admission on the language-proficiency basis, plus access to a dedicated scholarship for KLEC students.
Ewha Language Center. In Seodaemun, Seoul. The Intensive Program follows the standard structure with morning classes, and the placement test is taken online before arrival. Ewha states plainly that D-4 visa sponsorship requires registering for at least two terms.
Hanyang IIE. In Seongdong, Seoul. Standard structure with both morning and afternoon 200-hour tracks, classes of 15 or fewer, and dorm access for new students for up to two terms, which is the most generous published dorm allowance among the Seoul institutes.
The regional national universities. Pusan National (Busan) and Kyungpook National (Daegu) run the same four-term, 200-hour structure at 20 to 30 percent lower tuition, with materials included at Pusan National. Living costs in those cities are also lower than Seoul. The trade-off is a smaller international-student bubble, which many learners consider a feature: more daily Korean, fewer classmates defaulting to English.
Choosing for your goal
- Your goal is a degree at a specific university. Look hard at that university's own institute first, then check what its admissions guide says about its institute's certificates. The pathway guide explains what completion actually unlocks.
- Your goal is the year itself: language and life in Korea. Optimize for cost and housing. A regional national university or a Seoul institute with a dorm (Korea University, Hanyang) removes the two biggest stress lines.
- Your goal is a degree, university not yet chosen. Any of these institutes works, because TOPIK is portable everywhere. Take the KoreaAdmit quiz to shortlist degree programs first, then pick an institute near that shortlist.
What to do next
- Price your shortlist with the cost guide.
- Check deadlines and the application steps in the how to apply guide.
- Line up the D-4 visa requirements before you are admitted, not after.
