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Korea Launches Council to Review D-2 and D-4 Student Visa Rules

The Ministry of Justice will examine stricter pre-entry screening and more flexible post-entry management, but no new visa requirement has taken effect yet.

Key Points

  • Korea's Ministry of Justice launched the Council for the Improvement of the International Student Visa System on April 20, 2026, to review D-2 (degree) and D-4 (non-degree, including Korean-language) visas.
  • The body pairs an 11-member council with an eight-member working group; meetings run through August, with a proposal due to the Foreigners Policy Committee in November 2026.
  • The review follows two principles: stricter pre-entry checks on credentials, language ability and study intent, and more flexible post-entry residence management tied to academic progress and career path.
  • International student numbers rose from 308,838 in 2025 to 326,385 in March 2026, with Vietnam the largest group, followed by China, Uzbekistan, Nepal and Mongolia.
Korea Launches Council to Review D-2 and D-4 Student Visa Rules
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Korea's Ministry of Justice student visa review is important for applicants because it focuses on the system around D-2 and D-4 visas: pre-entry screening, university management, and post-entry residence checks. This article explains what changed in the policy discussion and what students should monitor before choosing a study route.

The Council for the Improvement of the International Student Visa System, launched on April 20, 2026, will examine policies affecting D-2 student visas for degree programs and D-4 visas for non-degree training, including Korean-language study.

The structure consists of an 11-member council and an eight-member working group. The working group will identify reform tasks and prepare proposals, while the council will review and advise on the recommendations. The ministry said working-level meetings would run through August, with a proposal expected to be submitted to the Foreigners Policy Committee in November.

The review is guided by two principles: tighter verification before entry and more flexible residence management after entry. Proposed areas of discussion include closer checks of academic credentials, Korean-language ability and genuine study intent, as well as shared responsibility among universities, overseas diplomatic missions and private study-abroad agencies.

The ministry is also considering ways to avoid rejecting applicants solely because of limited financial capacity when they can demonstrate genuine study plans and sufficient language ability. After entry, residence management may be adjusted more flexibly according to academic progress and career pathways.

The announcement does not change current D-2 or D-4 visa rules by itself. Applicants should continue to follow the latest requirements issued by the Korean embassy or consulate handling their application, the relevant immigration office and the university to which they are applying.

Ministry figures cited in the announcement show that the number of international students rose from 308,838 in 2025 to 326,385 in March 2026. Vietnamese students formed the largest group, followed by students from China, Uzbekistan, Nepal and Mongolia.

What applicants should know

  • The council is reviewing policy; it has not announced an immediately effective visa change.
  • Verification of academic records, language ability, study plans and financial documents may become more detailed.
  • Applicants should recheck current embassy, immigration and university guidance before submitting documents.

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Reporter Chan Ju Lee · lcj3117@gea.sc.kr

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