Guide
Korean University Application Documents Checklist for International Students
Most applications do not fail on grades. They fail because one document was not apostilled in time, or a translation was not certified, and the deadline passed.

Korean university and Global Korea Scholarship applications ask for a fairly standard set of documents, but the formatting rules around them, certified translations, apostille or consular legalization, and originals versus copies, are where applicants lose time. The exact list varies by university and by the GKS track, so always confirm against the official notice for your specific program. This is the common core and the order to tackle it in.
- The paperwork is the most controllable part. Grades are set. The documents are entirely in your hands if you start early.
- Apostille or legalization is the long pole. It can take weeks. Start your diploma and transcripts first, not last.
- Translations usually must be certified. A casual translation is often rejected. Use the method the university specifies.
- Financial proof is a real requirement, for both some applications and the later D-2 visa. Know the figure early.
- Read the official notice for your program. Every list here is a starting point. The program notice is the authority.
The core document checklist
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application form | Completed in the university or NIIED format, often online plus a printed copy. |
| Academic transcripts | From every institution attended. Often need certification and translation. |
| Diploma or certificate of graduation | Or a certificate of expected graduation if you are still studying. |
| Statement of purpose | See the dedicated SOP and study plan guide. |
| Study plan | Concrete plan for your studies and after. Often separate from the SOP. |
| Recommendation letters | Usually one or two, sometimes sealed or submitted directly. |
| Proof of language ability | TOPIK for Korean-taught programs, or IELTS or TOEFL for English-taught. |
| Passport copy | Photo page, valid well past your intended start date. |
| Proof of citizenship | Yours and often your parents', to prove you and your parents are not Korean citizens for GKS. |
| Financial proof | Bank statements or a sponsor letter, where the application requires it. |
| Passport photos | Recent, to the size the application specifies. |
Apostille and legalization: start here
This is the step that catches people. Many of your documents, especially your diploma and transcripts, must be verified for use in Korea. There are two systems, and which one you use depends on your country.
| If your country is | You use | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| A member of the Apostille Convention | Apostille | A single certificate from a designated authority in your country. |
| Not a member | Consular legalization | A multi-step process through your foreign ministry and the Korean embassy. |
Translations
Documents not in Korean or English almost always need a translation, and a casual one will not do. Universities and NIIED typically want a certified translation: done or attested by an approved translator, a notary, or your institution, depending on the rules. Check the exact method the program accepts before you pay anyone, because a rejected translation means starting over.
Financial proof
Some applications, and the D-2 student visa that comes after, ask you to show you can support yourself. This is usually a bank balance held in your name, or a sponsor's documents plus a letter. You do not hand the money over, you show it. Knowing the figure early matters because the balance often must be held for a set period before you apply.
A timeline that works backward from the deadline
- Twelve weeks out. Confirm the exact document list from each program notice. Start apostille or legalization on your diploma and transcripts.
- Eight weeks out. Order certified translations once verification is done. Ask for recommendation letters now, not later.
- Six weeks out. Draft your statement and study plan. Arrange financial proof so the holding period is satisfied in time.
- Three weeks out. Assemble everything, check originals versus copies and sealed versus open, and confirm the submission method.
- One week out. Submit. Do not aim for the final day. Portals get slow and couriers get delayed.
What to do next
- Need a shortlist before you can confirm document lists? See how to choose a Korean university and major.
- Writing the essays in your file? Read how to write a statement of purpose and study plan.
- Lining up references? See the recommendation letters guide.
- Confirm the exact, current requirements on the official program notice and, for GKS, on the Study in Korea portal.
