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Fully Funded Scholarships in Korea for International Students (2027)

Everyone has heard of GKS. Far fewer applicants know that university and corporate scholarships, in aggregate, fund more international students than GKS does. Here is the wider map.

Sans Bhatia
Written by
Sans BhatiaFounder, KoreaAdmit10 min read · Updated May 13, 2026
Two people comparing university options on a laptop at a desk
The students who get funded usually apply to several scholarships, not just the famous one.

A fully funded scholarship covers tuition and gives you enough to live on, so you can complete your degree without family money or a part-time job. Korea has more of these than most applicants realize. They fall into three groups: government, university, and corporate or foundation awards.

TL;DR
  • Three sources of funding: the government (GKS), individual universities, and companies or foundations.
  • GKS is the largest single award, but university scholarships collectively fund more international students.
  • Science and tech institutes like KAIST and POSTECH fund most international students generously and teach in English.
  • Apply to several. The biggest mistake is betting everything on GKS. You can hold a university offer and apply for GKS at the same time.
  • Match first, then apply. Eligibility varies a lot by nationality, field, and degree level, so filter before you write essays.

1. Government scholarships

The Global Korea Scholarship (GKS) is the flagship. It is run by the Korean Ministry of Education and covers tuition, a monthly stipend, airfare, insurance, and a year of Korean lessons, for both undergraduate and graduate students. It is the most generous single award in the country and also one of the most competitive.

If GKS is on your list, read our dedicated walkthrough first: Global Korea Scholarship (GKS): eligibility, benefits, and how to apply.

2. University scholarships

This is the category most applicants underuse. Many Korean universities waive part or all of tuition for strong international applicants automatically, based on your admission file, with no separate essay. Others run named, fully funded awards. A few worth knowing:

  • KAIST International Student Scholarship and POSTECH Global Scholarship. Korea's two leading science and technology institutes teach in English and fund international students generously, often covering tuition plus a stipend.
  • SNU President Fellowship. A competitive, high-value award at Seoul National University.
  • Yonsei, Korea University, Hanyang, Sungkyunkwan, and Ewha all run their own international scholarship schemes, ranging from partial tuition waivers to full rides.

The cleanest way to see what each school offers, and whether it is full or partial, is our filterable scholarships index and the per-university pages in the universities directory.

3. Corporate and foundation scholarships

Korean companies and foundations fund international students, often with a focus on particular regions or fields.

These can be extremely generous, but they tend to have narrower eligibility, so read each one's nationality and field rules carefully.

How the categories compare

Funding sources at a glance
SourceExamplesTypical coverageBest for
GovernmentGKS / KGSPTuition, stipend, airfare, Korean yearApplicants who fit the age and grade cutoffs
UniversityKAIST, POSTECH, SNU, Yonsei, Korea UTuition waiver to full rideStrong students set on a specific school
Corporate / foundationPOSCO, Hyundai, SamsungOften full, sometimes plus stipendSpecific regions or fields

How to find the ones you actually qualify for

Scholarship eligibility in Korea turns on a few variables: your nationality, your field of study, your degree level, your grades, and sometimes your financial need. Reading every program page by hand is slow and demoralizing.

  1. Filter first. Run the free KoreaAdmit quiz. It matches your profile against current awards so you only spend time on scholarships you can actually win.
  2. Shortlist three to five. A realistic shortlist beats a scattergun. Include at least one university scholarship, not just GKS.
  3. Track deadlines in one place. University and corporate deadlines do not line up with the GKS calendar.
  4. Reuse your materials. A strong study plan and personal statement can be adapted across applications, which is how funded students apply to several without burning out.

What to do next

  1. Take the quiz to get a personalized list of scholarships you qualify for.
  2. Browse the full scholarships index and the universities directory.
  3. If GKS is your priority, go deep with the GKS guide.
  4. New to the whole process? Start with How to Study in Korea.

Frequently asked questions

Are there fully funded scholarships in Korea besides GKS?
Yes, many. Universities such as KAIST, POSTECH, Seoul National University, Yonsei, and Korea University run their own scholarships that range from partial tuition waivers to full rides, and companies and foundations like POSCO, Hyundai, and Samsung fund international students too. In aggregate, university scholarships fund more international students than GKS does.
Can I apply for GKS and a university scholarship at the same time?
Generally yes. You can hold or pursue a university admission and scholarship while also applying for GKS. You usually cannot stack two awards onto the same degree at once, but applying to several improves your chance of being funded somewhere. Always check each program's specific rules.
Which Korean universities give the most scholarships to international students?
The science and technology institutes, KAIST and POSTECH, are known for funding international students generously and teaching in English. Large research universities including SNU, Yonsei, Korea University, Sungkyunkwan, Hanyang, and Ewha also run substantial international scholarship schemes.
Do Korean scholarships require Korean language?
Not always. GKS includes a funded Korean year and accepts applicants with no Korean. Many university scholarships are attached to English-taught programs and accept an English test score instead. See our guide on studying in Korea in English.
How do I know which scholarships I qualify for?
Eligibility depends on your nationality, field, degree level, and grades. The fastest way to filter is the free KoreaAdmit quiz, which matches your profile against current awards so you only apply to ones you can realistically win.