Guide
How to apply to a Korean language institute
The application itself is a short online form. The timing is the hard part: deadlines fall five to eleven weeks before classes, and the visa step only starts after you are admitted. Here is the calendar, the documents, and a backward plan.
This guide covers the application process itself. For the bigger picture of what a language year is and whether it fits your plan, start with the Korean language programs overview. For picking which institute to apply to, see the institute comparison guide.
- There are four intakes a year: spring (around March), summer (around June), fall (around September), and winter (around December), each a 10-week term.
- Deadlines come early. Depending on the institute, applications close five to eleven weeks before classes start. Treat three months ahead as your safe minimum.
- The documents are light compared with a degree application: a form, your passport, a photo, proof of education, financial proof, and the application fee.
- You do not need any Korean. A placement test after admission assigns your level, and complete beginners are placed in level 1.
- Book at least two terms if you need a D-4 visa. Institutes such as Ewha state that visa sponsorship requires registering for two terms or more.
- The visa comes after admission, so a late application can push your whole start date back a full term.
The four-term calendar
Nearly every university language institute runs the same rhythm: four regular terms a year, 10 weeks each, about 200 class hours per term. The exact dates differ by a week or two between institutes. For reference, here are published 2026 start dates at four of them:
| Institute | Spring | Summer | Fall | Winter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yonsei KLI | Mar 6 | Jun 5 | Sep 1 | Dec 1 |
| Sogang KLEC | Mar 10 | Jun 4 | Sep 8 | Dec 3 |
| Korea Univ. KLC | Mar 19 | Jun 17 | Sep 11 | Dec 11 |
| Pusan National LEI | Mar 2 | May 25 | Aug 24 | Nov 23 |
Application windows close well before those dates. At Ewha the window closes about five weeks before classes; at Yonsei, Korea, and Sogang it is roughly six to seven weeks; at Hanyang about eight; and at SNU, Pusan National, and Kyungpook National the window closes ten to eleven weeks ahead. Every institute publishes the exact dates for each term on its website, so always confirm there.
The application, step by step
- Pick your institute and term. The comparison guide covers how the major institutes differ. Check the institute's published deadline for your target term.
- Apply online. Institutes take applications through their own websites. You fill in a form, upload documents, and pay the application fee, which runs from about 70,000 KRW at regional national universities to 150,000 KRW at some Seoul institutes (2026 published fees). The fee is not refundable.
- Send original documents if asked. Some institutes, such as Korea University's KLC, require originals by post or in person rather than scans, with their own arrival deadline. Factor in international mail time.
- Receive your admission certificate. This is the document the visa application is built on.
- Apply for the D-4 visa at the Korean embassy or consulate that serves you. The full checklist is in the D-4 visa guide.
- Pay tuition by the institute's deadline. At SNU, for example, payment is due eight weeks before classes begin. Per-term costs are in the cost guide.
- Take the placement test and start. Tests happen online before arrival or on campus in the week or two before the term.
The documents institutes ask for
The exact list varies, but the core set is consistent:
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application form | Online, on the institute's own site |
| Passport copy | Valid for your whole intended stay |
| Photo | Passport-style, per the institute's spec |
| Proof of education | High school graduation or equivalent is the standard floor |
| Financial proof | A bank statement; the exact amount is set by the institute and the visa rules |
| Application fee | About 70,000 to 150,000 KRW, non-refundable |
This is far lighter than a degree application: no statement of purpose, no recommendation letters, no apostille marathon. If you are also planning a degree later, the documents checklist guide shows what that bigger pile looks like.
The placement test and levels
You do not choose your level; the institute assigns it. After admission you take a placement test, written and spoken at most institutes, online at some (Ewha runs its test online before arrival). Complete beginners skip the stress: SNU states that students with no prior Korean are placed directly into level 1, and that is the standard practice across institutes. The six levels each take one 10-week term, so moving from zero to the top of the ladder is a multi-year project, but reaching conversational comfort happens much earlier. How levels relate to TOPIK and university admission is covered in the language year to degree guide.
How many terms should you book?
This decision is tied to your visa:
- One term: some nationalities can do a single 10-week term on a short-term stay without a D-4 visa. Whether that applies to you depends on your country's visa-waiver arrangement with Korea, so check with your Korean embassy.
- Two terms or more: this is the standard package for a D-4 visa. Ewha, for example, states that D-4 sponsorship requires registering for at least two semesters. Most students planning a real language year book two terms up front and extend from inside Korea.
- A full year (four terms): you usually pay term by term or in blocks, not all four at once. Check each institute's payment schedule.
A backward-planned timeline
Say you want to start in the spring term, around early March. Plan backward like this:
| When | What |
|---|---|
| June to September | Shortlist institutes, check costs, gather documents |
| October | Apply online, pay the application fee, mail originals if required |
| November | Receive admission, pay tuition, apply for the D-4 visa |
| December to January | Visa processing, book flights, arrange housing |
| February | Take the placement test (online or on arrival), travel to Korea |
| Early March | Term begins |
The same shape applies to any term: submit the application about three months out, and use the gap for the visa and housing.
What to do next
- Compare institutes and fees in the institute guide and cost guide.
- Read the D-4 visa guide so the visa documents are ready the day you are admitted.
- If your language year is step one of a degree, see how the pathway works and take the KoreaAdmit quiz to shortlist universities.
