KA
我的故事

从孟买到 首尔。

破碎的 IIT 梦想,高中毕业后的一年间隔,然后是延世大学的全额奖学金和一段我从未计划过的首尔生活。如今我每周都在私信里收到同样的问题,而 KoreaAdmit 就是我的答案。

Sans Bhatia, founder of KoreaAdmit
Sans BhatiaFounder · Seoul
Before Korea

The year I thought my life was over

I grew up in India aiming for the IITs. I took a drop year after 12th grade to make it happen, the kind of year where everything else gets put on hold so you can sit JEE one more time. When JEE Advanced (2016) results came out, I had not made it.

Back then, it felt like my life was over. I joined a local college in Mumbai because it was the option in front of me, and it felt completely meaningless from day one. I could not explain it cleanly at the time, but I knew I was in the wrong environment for the kind of life I wanted. (I've talked about this in more detail in my YouTube videos.)

So I started looking elsewhere. I searched for scholarships at the bachelor's level abroad, and that is how I found GKS and a handful of other undergraduate scholarships in Korea. I gave it everything I had.

2017 · GKS

Three months of scattered paperwork

I applied for the Global Korea Scholarship, the program that covers full tuition, a monthly stipend, and a year of Korean language training. In practice, I spent three months trying to make sense of information that lived in fifty different university PDFs, on fifty different websites

There was no one to ask. Forum threads were years out of date. My parents could not help. Every program had its own document list, its own deadline, its own way of asking for the same thing. I did not even know which schools were a good fit for me, only which ones had pages I could decode.

In the end, I only applied to 2 scholarship programs: EGPP from Ewha Women's University (which I wasn't accepted to) and GKS-U (Embassy Track, which I was accepted to). Not because two was enough, but because two was all I could track.

2022 onward

My life in Seoul

I graduated in February 2022, started working at startups as a software engineer, being a GKS student + from India made me eligible for a recommendation letter from NIIED so I got my F-2-7 (Long-term residency visa) immediately after graduation, 3 years later, in December 2025, I got my permanent residency in S.Korea, and I've built a life + career here. Seoul stopped being a chapter and became home.

Along the way, something else happened. I started sharing the journey on YouTube and Instagram, mostly as a way to process and express my journey.

Looking back

My worst nightmare turned out to be a blessing in disguise

Years later, I can say it clearly: not getting into an IIT was the best thing that ever happened to me. The path I would have taken does not exist on the other side of that result. Living in Seoul, software career in Korea, permanent residency, none of it would have been on my radar otherwise.

If you are sitting with a result that feels like the end of the road right now, I want to gently tell you what I wish someone had told me: you cannot see the door this is opening yet, but it is opening.

Why KoreaAdmit

The DMs I get every week

Students and worried parents message me almost every day with the same question: how do I apply to study in Korea? A lot of them have a story similar to mine. They failed to get into their IITs, but they are smart and qualified, and they are about to make the exact mistake I made: applying to a tiny handful of programs because tracking more alone is overwhelming.

I built KoreaAdmit so that never has to happen again. One place to see every Korean university and scholarship you actually qualify for. Real guidance from someone who has been through it. Help with the documents, the deadlines, and the human support when things go wrong.

For you

Your turn

If you are reading this, you are where I was before 2017. The opportunity is real, the scholarships are real, and you are more qualified than you think.

You should not have to apply to two programs when you qualify for ten. Let's find all of them, together.

Two programs was all I could keep straight. You may qualify for ten. Let's find all of them.

从我当年无法起步的地方开始。

See every Korean university and scholarship you qualify for, with someone who has been through it. Not just two programs. All of them.

The platform

Everything I wish existed when I applied.

When I applied in 2017, none of this existed. I am building it now, the version of KoreaAdmit I would have given anything to have.

  1. Quiz

    A segmented eligibility quiz

    One branching first question routes you into one of four tracks. Each track is 8 to 15 questions tuned to that path. The output is a personalized PDF: realistic university targets, scholarship odds, estimated total cost, a timeline, and a 30-day action plan.

  2. Data

    A university and program database

    Not a SaaS, a dataset I keep clean. For every Korean university: English-taught programs, tuition by program, scholarship percentages for international students, language requirements, application windows, foreign student counts, dorm availability.

  3. Tracker

    A deadline tracker

    Pick your target schools. Get a timeline view and automated email and push reminders at the intervals that actually matter, so nothing slips while you're juggling everything else.

  4. Compare

    A university comparison tool

    Side by side, on any criteria. The honest answer to the questions people are already searching: Yonsei vs. Korea University for international students, SNU vs. KAIST for CS, and so on.

  5. Odds

    A GKS odds calculator

    Country quota data, your GPA, your language level, your degree level, plugged into a realistic probability range. The thing GKS applicants spend hours guessing at, in one place.

  6. Cost

    A real cost calculator

    An honest total: tuition, housing, food, insurance, visa fees, flights, by city, by program type, by lifestyle. Currently no one does this well, and parents need the real number, not the brochure number.

  7. Docs

    A document checklist generator

    By nationality and program type. Apostille requirements vary wildly by country, and they cause more last-minute panic than anything else in the application.