Pakistan → South Korea: the D-2 Study Abroad (Student) Visa roadmap
The D-2 is South Korea's primary long-stay visa for non-resident skilled applicants pursuing a full degree (bachelor's, master's, or PhD) at an accredited Korean university; it requires a Certificate of Admission and proof of funds, and is granted for the duration of study (typically up to 2 years per issuance, renewable). The D-2 itself is not a residence or settlement visa, but it feeds a recognised chain to permanent residence (D-2 graduate to D-10 job-seeking to E-7 work or F-2-7 points residence to F-5 PR) and ultimately naturalisation. Confidence is medium: the route mechanics are well documented, but the financial-proof figure varies materially by embassy, region, and study level (roughly USD 9,000 to 20,000+), and as of February 2026 around 20 universities were barred from issuing student visas with heightened study-plan scrutiny, so applicants must confirm thresholds with their own Korean mission. This is general information, not legal advice; consult a licensed immigration professional for case-specific guidance.
Moving from Pakistan
- You apply for the D-2 Study Abroad (Student) Visa at the South Korea consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Pakistan, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Pakistan usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward South Korea's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Pakistan documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Pakistan passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Pakistan to South Korea applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by South Korea.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Admission to a full degree program (bachelor's, master's or PhD) at an accredited South Korean university that retains visa-issuing authority
- Valid passport plus a Certificate of Admission / standard admission letter issued by the university
- Proof of financial means (bank statement, typically ~USD 9,000 to 20,000+ depending on embassy, region and degree level; full scholarship can substitute)
- Academic transcripts and diplomas, generally apostilled or consular-legalised
- Language evidence where required (TOPIK for Korean-taught programs, or IELTS/TOEFL for English-taught programs)
- A credible study plan / statement of purpose (subject to intensified 2026 immigration scrutiny)
Your step-by-step roadmap
Secure admission
- Apply to and receive admission from an accredited Korean university that holds current visa-issuing status
- Obtain the Certificate of Admission and standard admission documents from the admissions office
Apply for the D-2 visa
- Submit application, passport, admission certificate, financial proof, apostilled academic documents and study plan to the Korean embassy/consulate
- Pay the visa fee and wait roughly 2 to 4 weeks for processing
Arrive and register
- Enter Korea and, within 90 days, register at the local immigration office to receive the Alien Registration Card (ARC)
- Enrol in National Health Insurance (mandatory for stays of 6 months or more) and renew the D-2 as study continues
Transition after graduation
- Change status to D-10 job-seeking (up to ~3 years post Oct 2025 reform; points-exempt for new graduates) or directly to an E-7 work visa with a sponsoring employer
- Build toward F-2-7 points-based residence (80+ points) as income, language and qualifications accumulate
Settle permanently
- After ~3 years on F-2-7 (or other qualifying status), apply for F-5 permanent residence
- Complete KIIP and, after 5 years continuous legal residence with F-5, apply for naturalisation
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: Admission to visa issuance typically takes a few weeks to a couple of months, with the D-2 visa itself processed in about 2 to 4 weeks once a complete application is submitted.
Citizenship: There is no direct PR or citizenship track on the D-2 itself; the realistic chain is D-2 graduate to D-10/E-7 work or F-2-7 points residence, then F-5 permanent residence after about 3 years of qualifying residence, and naturalisation after 5 years of continuous legal residence (KIIP completion can waive the naturalisation language interview), so settlement realistically takes the better part of a decade.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.