Guide
Korean language programs in Korea
You do not need to enroll in a degree to live and study in Korea. University language institutes run intensive Korean programs that students from everywhere join for a term, a year, or two: to learn the language, live the life, and often to open the door to a Korean degree.
This is the overview of the whole path. Each section below has a dedicated deep dive: the D-4 visa, the costs, choosing an institute, how to apply, part-time work, and the pathway to a degree.
- The programs live inside universities. Yonsei, SNU, Korea, Sogang, Ewha, Hanyang, and dozens of others run Korean language institutes (often called KLIs or hakdang) on their campuses.
- The year has four terms: 10 weeks each, about 200 class hours, four hours of class every weekday, levels 1 to 6.
- Zero Korean required. A placement test assigns your level, and complete beginners start in level 1.
- Budget roughly 19 to 27 million KRW for a Seoul year all-in (about USD 14,000 to 20,000), or noticeably less in a regional city.
- The visa is the D-4-1, issued for university-affiliated programs, in 6-month chunks, up to 2 years.
- The language year is also a degree pathway: TOPIK level 3, the common university admission floor, is officially a one-year, full-time project.
What a university language institute is
Korean universities run their own intensive Korean programs for international students, usually under a name like Korean Language Institute (KLI), Language Education Institute (LEI), or Korean Language Center. In Korean they are often just called eohakdang (어학당), the language school. The students are adults from everywhere: gap-year students, K-culture devotees, professionals on a break, and a large group preparing for Korean university degrees.
The distinction that matters is university institute versus private academy (hagwon). Private academies can be fine for casual classes, but Korean embassies state that the D-4-1 student visa requires a program operated by a university-affiliated institution. If you want a real language year with a visa, you are choosing among university institutes.
How the year actually works
The structure is strikingly consistent across institutes, which makes planning easy:
| Element | How it works |
|---|---|
| Terms | 4 per year: spring, summer, fall, winter |
| Length | 10 weeks per term, about 200 class hours |
| Schedule | 4 hours of class, Monday to Friday; morning (about 9:00 to 13:00) or afternoon track |
| Levels | 1 to 6, one level per term; placement test assigns your start |
| Class size | Published figures run about 12 to 16 students |
| Advancing | Pass the level and keep attendance up (institutes typically require about 80 percent) |
A "year" in this world means four consecutive terms. Plenty of students do two terms; plenty stay for the full ladder. The rhythm is genuinely full-time: class every morning, homework and language exchange in the afternoons, and the rest of the city as your immersion lab.
You start from zero, and that is normal
Institutes teach from absolute beginner. SNU's institute states that students with no prior Korean are placed straight into level 1, and every major institute runs the same placement-test-then-level-1 path. Classes are taught in Korean from early on (that is the method), but the curriculum is built for people who arrived with nothing. If you can already introduce yourself, the placement test simply starts you higher up the ladder.
What it costs, at a glance
Two numbers shape the budget: tuition, which is fixed and public, and living costs, which depend on your city and housing.
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| Tuition per 10-week term | 1,350,000 to 1,860,000 KRW depending on institute |
| Tuition for a 4-term year | About 5.4 to 7.5 million KRW |
| Monthly living costs (Seoul) | About 1.0 to 1.6 million KRW |
| A Seoul year, all-in | Roughly 19 to 27 million KRW (about USD 14,000 to 20,000) |
| A regional-city year, all-in | Roughly 13 to 17 million KRW |
The full breakdown, institute by institute, with housing options and the ways to cut the total, is in the cost guide.
The visa, in one paragraph
Programs longer than 90 days need the D-4-1 language training visa: apply at your Korean embassy after the institute admits you, show a bank balance (the benchmark inside Korea is 10 million KRW for Seoul-area institutes, 8 million elsewhere), receive 6 months of stay at a time, and extend from inside Korea up to a two-year maximum. Attendance below 70 percent puts your extensions at risk, which is the rule that surprises people. The D-4 visa guide walks through the documents, the money, and the after-arrival steps.
Choosing your institute
The famous Seoul names (Yonsei KLI, SNU, Korea, Sogang, Ewha, Hanyang) teach the same four-term structure at 1.65 to 1.86 million KRW per term, while regional national universities like Pusan National and Kyungpook National run the identical skeleton for 20 to 30 percent less, in cheaper cities. The real decision factors are cost, housing, deadlines, and whether you want a degree from that university later. The institute comparison guide puts them side by side, and the application guide covers deadlines, documents, and the placement test.
Life during the year
A few practical realities, all covered in depth in the spokes:
- Housing is the variable: some institutes offer limited dorm places (Korea University and Hanyang publish per-term rates), but most students rent a goshiwon or one-room near campus.
- Health insurance becomes mandatory at the six-month mark, around 79,000 KRW per month at the 2026 student rate.
- Part-time work is possible but tightly regulated: a permit, a six-month wait, and capped hours (10 per week, or 20 to 25 with TOPIK level 2). The work rules guide has the current limits, and the honest advice is to budget the year on savings.
- The friends default to English unless you fight for it. The students who level up fastest treat the city as the second classroom.
Where the year can take you
For a large share of students, the language year is step one of a Korean degree. The path is well paved: TOPIK level 3 is the common admission floor for Korean-taught programs, institute levels are designed around TOPIK levels, and reaching TOPIK 3 in a year of full-time study is the officially planned pace (it is exactly what the GKS scholarship budgets for its own scholars). You can apply to universities from inside Korea and switch your D-4 to a D-2 student visa at the local immigration office, without flying home.
The whole pathway, including what each university requires and the visa switch, is in the language year to degree guide. And if a degree in English sounds better than a year of Korean first, that route exists too: studying in Korea in English.
How to start
- Decide city and budget with the cost guide, then shortlist with the institute guide.
- Apply about three months before your target term: the application guide has the calendar, then the D-4 visa guide takes over.
- If a degree is the endgame, run the KoreaAdmit quiz now so your language year points at the right universities from day one.
