FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Last updated: 2026-04-23
Application
5At designated 'visa-review-strengthened' universities (formerly 'lower-tier'), Korean-language requirements apply per program: associate degrees and root-industry training programs require TOPIK Level 2 / KIIP Level 2; bachelor's (including transfer-in) and above require TOPIK Level 4 / KIIP Level 4; arts and physical-education programs require TOPIK Level 3; non-degree exchange students require TOPIK Level 2. Other universities follow their own admission standards. English-track applicants can satisfy the language requirement with TOEFL 530 (iBT 71), IELTS 5.5, or equivalent. Only FIMS-registered institutions are accepted.
The official standard is 'one year of tuition plus living expenses' — not a fixed dollar amount. Submit a bank balance certificate scaled to your university's actual tuition and living costs. Students in a degree program at certified or high-rated universities who earned a C average (2.0) or above in the previous semester may skip the financial documents at extension time. However, at certified (non-top-tier) universities this exemption does NOT apply to nationals of 'designated' or 'focus-managed' countries. Government-scholarship recipients may also qualify for exemption under separate rules.
No. A Standard Admission Letter from a FIMS-registered institution (junior college or above) is a required document — you cannot apply for the visa without it.
Dependent visas (F-3) are restricted for associate degrees (D-2-1), Korean-language training, and short-term student programs. Bachelor's and above (D-2-2~4), research, and exchange students may qualify, and exceptions are allowed on humanitarian grounds.
Yes, you can. There are two paths: stay in Korea and apply for a Change of Status at your local Immigration Office, or leave the country and apply for a new D-2 visa at a Korean consulate abroad. Either way, what you actually need to prepare comes down to four things.
First, admission. A Standard Certificate of Admission from a FIMS-registered institution (junior college or above). Second, Korean ability. General universities follow their own admission standards, but at visa-review-strengthened universities the bar is TOPIK 4 for bachelor's or higher (TOPIK 2 for associate). English-track applicants can substitute TOEFL or IELTS. Third, financial proof. A bank balance certificate covering one year of tuition + living costs. Fourth, as a Myanmar national, you'll also need a tuberculosis screening certificate (one of the 35 high-risk countries). Get your highest-education record Apostilled while you're at it.
One tip — submit at least 2 weeks before your D-4 expires, to be safe. And a domestic change into a visa-review-strengthened university can be blocked, so in that case a fresh application from abroad is often faster. Book your visit through Hi Korea and apply at your local Immigration Office.
Living in Korea
3You must obtain prior permission from the Immigration Office. D-2-1~4, D-2-6, and D-2-7 holders can apply immediately; D-2-8 visiting students and language students (D-4-1/7) must wait 6 months after entry or status change. Allowed hours depend on Korean proficiency. When the Korean-language requirement IS met — associate/bachelor's: 25 hrs/week during term, 30 hrs on weekends & breaks; master's/PhD: 30 hrs/week during term, 35 hrs on weekends & breaks. When it is NOT met — associate/bachelor's: 10 hrs/week, master's/PhD: 15 hrs/week during term, with unlimited hours on weekends & breaks. Manufacturing work requires TOPIK Level 4+; special employment forms (dispatch, subcontracting, remote work, etc.) are prohibited. Work locations are capped at 2 for degree students and 1 for language students. Students granted an exceptional stay permit due to insufficient credits cannot work part-time, except master's/PhD thesis candidates, who are allowed up to 30 hrs/week.
In principle, changing schools or degree programs inside Korea is restricted — the standard approach is to leave Korea and reapply. If a change is needed while in good standing, only lateral moves within the same degree level (D-2-1~4) are allowed. To move to a LOWER degree level, you must meet all three conditions: (1) TOPIK Level 3+, (2) able to graduate from the prior program within its stay cap, and (3) a Ministry-of-Justice-designated 'approved major' (STEM, shortage-occupation fields, elder care, K-Culture, etc.). Students who have completed, are on leave, or were expelled — and those at visa-review-strengthened universities or on a language course — cannot transfer.
Leaves for personal reasons, deferred graduation, or insufficient credits typically result in a denied extension. Only unavoidable reasons such as illness or accident are accepted, and supporting documents must be submitted.
Visa Extension
3Apply at your local Immigration Office before your current stay expires; extensions are issued to match the academic schedule. (Note: the 'C average (2.0) or higher' rule is NOT the extension requirement — it is the restriction threshold for part-time work permits.) The actual extension rules are: (1) students at certified high-rated universities with C or above skip the financial documents and receive a 2-year stay cap (exception: at certified (non-top-tier) universities, nationals of 'designated' or 'focus-managed' countries are excluded); (2) at visa-review-strengthened universities, a D grade (1.0) or below triggers only a one-time 6-month extension with a written explanation, and repeated D grades lead to restricted extension; (3) academic leave for personal reasons or insufficient credits usually results in denied extension — only unavoidable reasons such as illness or accident are accepted. Typical documents: application form, passport, Alien Registration Card, enrollment certificate, transcript, attendance record, residence proof.
Registered D-2 students are exempt from the re-entry permit if they return within 1 year. For absences between 1 and 2 years, obtain a multiple re-entry permit before leaving (a fee applies). If you are under any entry restriction, you must still apply for permission at your local Immigration Office.
Overstaying is a serious offense and can lead to fines, forced departure, and re-entry bans. Always renew before expiration, and report any change to your name, sex, date of birth, nationality, passport, or school within 15 days.