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Want to study in Korea from India?

You study in English already, and your documents move on the apostille. The barrier most Indian students hit is not language; it is knowing how to pay for it. Here are all the ways.

Sans Bhatia
Written by
Sans BhatiaFounder, KoreaAdmit10 min read · Updated Jun 4, 2026
International students studying together at a table in a university library
Korea is set up to take international students, and English-taught degrees mean you can start without Korean.

Korea actively recruits international students, and for Indians two things help: much of your education is already in English, and since 2005 your documents move on the apostille. So the real work is funding. Most people only know about one scholarship. In reality there are four ways to fund a degree in Korea, and the best plan usually combines a few.

TL;DR
  • There are four ways to pay, not one: GKS, university scholarships, foundation or corporate scholarships, and the self-funded route.
  • English is your advantage. Much of Indian higher education is in English, so you can target English-taught Korean degrees that need an English score, not TOPIK.
  • University scholarships are underrated. Collectively they fund more international students than GKS does.
  • Self-funding is realistic. National-university tuition is often near USD 3,500 a year, plus partial scholarships and part-time work.
  • The apostille is straightforward. India joined the apostille system in 2005, and the Ministry of External Affairs issues it.
  • GKS from India runs through the Korean Embassy in New Delhi, under India's quota.

English: a built-in advantage

Because English is a medium of instruction across much of Indian higher education, you start ahead. Korea offers full bachelor's and master's degrees taught entirely in English, especially in engineering, computer science, business, and the sciences. These ask for an English proficiency score such as TOEFL or IELTS rather than TOPIK, and many applicants meet the requirement through prior English-medium study. You do not need Korean to enroll. The details are in Study in Korea in English.

How Indian students actually fund Korea

Think in four routes. Strong applicants stack them, applying for GKS while also sending regular applications that carry their own university scholarships.

Four ways to fund a degree in Korea
RouteWhat it isGood to know
GKSThe Korean government scholarship, fully fundedTuition, stipend, airfare, and a year of Korean; applied for through the embassy in New Delhi
University scholarshipsAwards from the universities themselvesKAIST, POSTECH, SNU, Yonsei, Korea University, Hanyang, SKKU and more; collectively fund more students than GKS
Foundation and corporatePrivate and company-funded awardsPOSCO Asia Fellowship, Hyundai Chung Mong-Koo, Samsung Global Sungkyun
Self-fundedYou pay, with partial helpNational-university tuition is often near USD 3,500 a year; part-time work on a D-2 visa helps

1. GKS, the government scholarship

The Global Korea Scholarship covers tuition, a monthly stipend, airfare, and a funded year of Korean. From India, undergraduates apply on the embassy track through the Embassy of the Republic of Korea in New Delhi, under India's country quota. It is competitive, so treat it as one bet among several.

2. University scholarships

This is the route most people overlook. Korean universities offer their own tuition waivers and stipends to international students, and in aggregate they fund more international students than GKS does. Strong options include KAIST International and POSTECH Global in science and engineering, Seoul National, Yonsei (including the English-medium Underwood International College), Korea University, Hanyang, and Sungkyunkwan. Many are awarded automatically based on your admission profile, so a regular application can come with funding attached. Browse them in the scholarships directory and the fully funded scholarships guide.

3. Foundation and corporate scholarships

Private foundations and companies fund international students too, often with their own focus. Examples include the POSCO Asia Fellowship, the Hyundai Chung Mong-Koo scholarship, and Samsung Global Sungkyun at SKKU. Worth checking against your field.

4. The self-funded route

You do not need a full scholarship to study in Korea. Tuition at national universities is often around USD 3,500 a year, lower than many assume, and private universities are higher but frequently discount tuition for international students. Add a partial scholarship and part-time work, which a D-2 student visa allows within limits, and a self-funded degree is realistic. Run the numbers with the cost of studying in Korea guide.

The application route from India

Use one or both of two channels: the GKS embassy track, and direct applications to universities.

How you apply from India
ChannelHow it works
GKS embassy trackApply through the Korean Embassy in New Delhi under India's quota; name up to three universities; the embassy, then NIIED, then the universities review you
Direct to universitiesApply to each university's international admissions, where university and foundation scholarships are decided

The 2026 GKS undergraduate cycle moved to a mandatory online application through the official Study in Korea site, though the embassy may keep its own step. Confirm with the Korean embassy in New Delhi how and when to submit.

Your documents: apostille and translation

Korea needs your academic documents authenticated. Because India joined the apostille system in 2005, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) issues an apostille on your documents, so you avoid the longer consular legalization chain.

Documents to prepare from India
StepNotes
AuthenticateHave your degree, mark sheets, and certificates apostilled by the MEA (the process runs through its authorized channels)
TranslateAny document not in English or Korean needs a certified translation
Confirm formatCheck whether your university wants the apostille on the original, the translation, or both

Apostille processing and collecting official transcripts still take time, so begin once your shortlist is set. The full list is in the application documents checklist.

What to do next

  1. Run the KoreaAdmit quiz to see the English-taught programs and scholarships you qualify for from India.
  2. Browse the scholarships directory and the fully funded scholarships guide for university and foundation awards.
  3. Map your dates with the application timeline.
  4. Apostille and translate your documents early.
  5. Budget with the cost of studying in Korea guide.

Frequently asked questions

How can I study in Korea from India for free?
Through a fully funded scholarship. The Global Korea Scholarship (GKS) covers tuition, a monthly stipend, airfare, and a year of Korean, applied for through the Korean Embassy in New Delhi. Beyond GKS, many Korean universities offer their own full or partial scholarships to international students, and these collectively fund more students than GKS does. Foundation and corporate awards add more options.
Can Indian students study in Korea in English?
Yes. Many Korean universities offer complete degrees taught entirely in English, especially in engineering, computer science, business, and the sciences. These require an English proficiency score such as TOEFL or IELTS rather than TOPIK, and Indian applicants can often meet it through their English-medium education.
Do I need an apostille for my documents from India?
India joined the apostille system in 2005, so the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) issues an apostille on your degree, mark sheets, and certificates, which Korea recognizes without the longer consular legalization. Any document not in English or Korean also needs a certified translation. Confirm with your university whether it wants the apostille on the original, the translation, or both.
How much does it cost to study in Korea from India if I self-fund?
Less than many expect. Tuition at national universities is often around USD 3,500 a year, while private universities cost more but frequently discount tuition for international students. With a partial scholarship and part-time work, which a D-2 student visa allows within limits, a self-funded degree is realistic. See the cost of studying in Korea guide for a full budget.