Guide
Korean University Application Timeline for 2027
Most international students do not miss because their grades fall short. They miss because a deadline passed while a document was still in the mail. Here is the calendar, and how to work backward from the day you want to start.
Korean university admissions run on a predictable rhythm, but the exact dates shift by a few weeks every year and differ by university and by your home country. This guide gives you the shape of the calendar so you know roughly when each window opens, then tells you exactly what to confirm and where. Treat every month below as "around this time," and verify the real date on your target university's admissions page and, for scholarships, with the official source.
- There are two intakes: spring (classes start in March) and fall (classes start in September). For most international undergraduates, spring is the main intake.
- Applications open months ahead. Spring applications generally run in the autumn of the year before; fall applications generally run in the spring of the same year.
- GKS runs on its own clock. The embassy track and the university track open at different times of year, and the embassy track is once a year.
- Documents are the real bottleneck. Apostille or legalization and certified translations can take weeks, so they decide your timeline more than the application form does.
- Work backward, not forward. Choose your start semester first, then place document prep, tests, and the application in the months before it.
- Confirm every date at the source. Windows move each cycle, so this calendar is a planning frame, not a set of fixed 2027 dates.
The two intakes: spring and fall
Korean universities admit students twice a year. The intake you choose sets your whole timeline.
| Intake | Classes start | Applications usually open | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring | March | Around September to November the year before | Most international undergraduates; the larger intake |
| Fall | September | Around March to May the same year | Many graduate programs and some undergraduate transfers |
If you want to begin your degree in March 2027, you are applying in roughly the last quarter of 2026. If you want to begin in September 2027, you are applying around the spring of 2027. The single most common mistake is assuming you apply a month or two before classes start. You do not. You apply a full semester or more ahead.
The standard university calendar
For a regular (self-funded or university-scholarship) application, most schools run their international admissions in a single main round per intake, and some add an earlier round. The pattern for a spring 2027 start looks like this:
| When | What happens |
|---|---|
| Mid 2026 | Shortlist universities and programs; start gathering and translating documents |
| Around September to November 2026 | Application window opens and closes; submit before the deadline, not on it |
| Late 2026 to early 2027 | Results announced; pay the admission deposit if required |
| Once admitted | Apply for your D-2 student visa, then arrange housing and travel |
| March 2027 | Semester begins |
A fall 2027 start shifts the same sequence about six months later: document prep over winter, applications around spring 2027, results in summer, and classes in September. Graduate applicants who need to contact a prospective advisor should add time before the application window to exchange emails with the department or lab.
GKS timing: embassy track vs university track
If you are aiming for the Global Korea Scholarship, its calendar matters more than any single university's, because GKS opens at a fixed time of year and you cannot apply outside it.
| Track | You apply through | Roughly when it opens | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Embassy track | The Korean embassy in your country | Around February to March | Once a year; the main route for undergraduates; deadlines vary by embassy |
| University track | A Korean university directly | Around September | Mostly graduate; you apply to the university, which nominates you |
Two practical consequences. First, the embassy track happens early in the year for a program that starts later that year, so by the time most people start thinking about studying in Korea, that year's undergraduate GKS window may already be closing. Second, embassy deadlines are set by each embassy, so two applicants in different countries can face different dates for the same scholarship. Find your country's deadline on the official GKS notice and your embassy's announcement, and confirm it rather than copying a date from a forum.
A month-by-month plan, working backward
Pick the semester you want to start. Then place these blocks in the months before it. The exact months depend on whether you target spring or fall and whether you go through GKS, but the order never changes.
| Months before start | Focus |
|---|---|
| About 10 to 12 months out | Decide your intake and shortlist programs; read each school's admission rules and language requirements |
| About 8 to 10 months out | Order transcripts and diplomas; begin apostille or legalization and certified translations |
| About 6 to 8 months out | Take or retake English tests (or TOPIK if your track needs it); draft your statement of purpose |
| About 4 to 6 months out | Request recommendation letters; finalize documents; submit applications as windows open |
| About 2 to 4 months out | Results and deposits; once admitted, start the D-2 visa |
| About 1 to 2 months out | Visa issued, housing booked, flights arranged |
The document blocks are the ones people underestimate. Apostille or legalization runs through a government office, sometimes more than one, and certified translation adds another step. Neither is hard, but both take real calendar time and neither is something you can rush at the end. Start them the moment your shortlist is set. The full list is in the application documents checklist.
What to do next
- Run the KoreaAdmit quiz to find programs and scholarships that match your profile, then note each one's intake.
- Open every target school's admissions page and write down the earliest deadline; plan to that date.
- If you want GKS, read the GKS guide and confirm your country's embassy deadline at the official source.
- Start your documents early, since apostille and translation set your real timeline.
- Once you are admitted, plan your D-2 student visa.
