Guide
How to Choose a Korean University and Major as an International Student
Picking the right schools is half the application. A smart, balanced shortlist does more for your odds than another week polishing one essay for the wrong program.

Most international students start by typing a famous Korean university name into a search bar. That is the wrong end to start from. The better question is which programs actually fit your profile, your field, your budget, and whether you need English-taught classes. Get the shortlist right and the rest of the application has a target. You can browse programs in the free KoreaAdmit universities directory as you read this.
- Fit beats fame. The right program for you is defined by your field, your profile, and your constraints, not by which name you have heard of.
- Read rankings honestly. They are a rough signal, not a verdict. A subject ranking and the specific program matter more than the overall number.
- Check English-taught availability per program, not per university. One department may teach in English while another does not.
- Balance your list: a few reach schools, several solid matches, and one or two safe options you would still be happy to attend.
- Cross-check funding early. A school you can fund through scholarships beats a slightly better-ranked one you cannot.
Start with fit, not fame
Before you look at any ranking, get clear on what you actually need:
- Field and specialization. Which departments are strong in your specific area, not just overall?
- Language of instruction. Do you need English-taught courses, and does the specific program offer them end to end?
- Funding need. Which schools offer scholarships you could realistically win? See fully funded scholarships in Korea.
- Location and cost. Seoul is expensive and dense, the provinces are cheaper and quieter. Both have excellent universities. Check the cost of studying in Korea.
- Your profile. Be honest about your grades and test scores relative to a program's typical admits.
How to read rankings without being fooled
Rankings are useful as a rough map and misleading as a final answer. A few principles:
| Do | Instead of |
|---|---|
| Look at subject or field rankings | Fixating on the overall university number |
| Check the specific program and faculty | Assuming a top school is top in everything |
| Use rankings to discover schools | Using them to make the final decision for you |
| Weigh fit, funding, and English-taught options | Choosing purely by prestige |
Build a balanced shortlist
The mistake that ends in zero offers is applying only to the most competitive schools. Spread your list across three tiers.
| Tier | What it is | Roughly how many |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | Ambitious programs where you are below or at the typical admit | 1 to 2 |
| Match | Programs where your profile fits the typical admit well | 3 to 4 |
| Safe | Programs you would happily attend and are likely to get into | 1 to 2 |
Only include schools you would actually be glad to attend. A safe option you would resent is not a safe option.
Choosing your major
If your major is fixed by your goals, focus on which schools are strong in it. If you have flexibility, weigh how a department's strengths, English-taught availability, and funding line up with what you want to do after. Switching majors after you arrive can be hard for international students, so choose deliberately rather than assuming you will change later.
What to do next
- Browse real programs in the free KoreaAdmit universities directory.
- See how funding maps onto your shortlist in fully funded scholarships in Korea and the GKS guide.
- Confirm you can study in your language: study in Korea in English and TOPIK.
- Once your list is set, prepare the file: application documents checklist.
- Not sure where to start? Run the KoreaAdmit quiz for a tailored starting point.
