What Services Do Consulates Offer?
Korean embassies and consulates handle visa issuance, apostille and document authentication, notarial services, passport renewal for Korean citizens abroad, and consular assistance. For foreigners, the most common reason to visit is applying for a visa that cannot be processed online — C-3 tourist visas, D-2 student visas, E-series employment visas, and F-series family or residency visas all require a consular appointment in your country of residence.
- Visa issuance (C-3, D, E, F series)
- Document apostille and authentication
- Consular notarization
- Korean citizen services (passport, family registry)
- Emergency assistance for Korean nationals abroad
How to Find Your Nearest Office
Korea maintains embassies and consulates general in roughly 180 countries. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs keeps the definitive list at mofa.go.kr — click Overseas Missions to see your country's representation. Large countries often have a main embassy plus multiple consulates general; your jurisdiction depends on your state or region of residence.
| Region | Main Mission | Additional Consulates |
|---|
| United States | Washington DC | LA, NY, SF, Chicago, Houston, Atlanta, Boston, Seattle, Honolulu, Agana |
| United Kingdom | London | Edinburgh (honorary) |
| Canada | Ottawa | Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver |
| Australia | Canberra | Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane |
| Germany | Berlin | Frankfurt, Hamburg, Bonn |
You must apply at the consulate that has jurisdiction over your address of residence, not any random office. Check the jurisdiction map on the consulate's website.
Booking an Appointment
Most Korean consulates require online appointment booking through the official e-consulate portal. Walk-ins are rarely accepted. Book 2-4 weeks in advance during peak seasons (summer for student visas, August-October for teaching positions). Bring every document listed on the consulate's website — missing items will mean rebooking and delay.
- Search Korean embassy + [your city] to find the correct office
- Visit the official website (usually overseas.mofa.go.kr/[country])
- Download the application form and document checklist
- Book an appointment via the online system
- Prepare documents in advance (some need translation or apostille)
- Arrive 15 minutes early with original + copies
Avoid unofficial visa services — Korean consulates do not outsource visa processing, so anyone claiming to be a Korea visa expediter is almost certainly adding margin without speeding anything up.
Always confirm address, hours, and document requirements directly on the official consulate website. Consulate hours and procedures change without notice.
What Services Do Consulates Offer?
Korean embassies and consulates handle visa issuance, apostille and document authentication, notarial services, passport renewal for Korean citizens abroad, and consular assistance. For foreigners, the most common reason to visit is applying for a visa that cannot be processed online — C-3 tourist visas, D-2 student visas, E-series employment visas, and F-series family or residency visas all require a consular appointment in your country of residence.
- Visa issuance (C-3, D, E, F series)
- Document apostille and authentication
- Consular notarization
- Korean citizen services (passport, family registry)
- Emergency assistance for Korean nationals abroad
How to Find Your Nearest Office
Korea maintains embassies and consulates general in roughly 180 countries. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs keeps the definitive list at mofa.go.kr — click Overseas Missions to see your country's representation. Large countries often have a main embassy plus multiple consulates general; your jurisdiction depends on your state or region of residence.
| Region | Main Mission | Additional Consulates |
|---|
| United States | Washington DC | LA, NY, SF, Chicago, Houston, Atlanta, Boston, Seattle, Honolulu, Agana |
| United Kingdom | London | Edinburgh (honorary) |
| Canada | Ottawa | Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver |
| Australia | Canberra | Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane |
| Germany | Berlin | Frankfurt, Hamburg, Bonn |
You must apply at the consulate that has jurisdiction over your address of residence, not any random office. Check the jurisdiction map on the consulate's website.
Booking an Appointment
Most Korean consulates require online appointment booking through the official e-consulate portal. Walk-ins are rarely accepted. Book 2-4 weeks in advance during peak seasons (summer for student visas, August-October for teaching positions). Bring every document listed on the consulate's website — missing items will mean rebooking and delay.
- Search Korean embassy + [your city] to find the correct office
- Visit the official website (usually overseas.mofa.go.kr/[country])
- Download the application form and document checklist
- Book an appointment via the online system
- Prepare documents in advance (some need translation or apostille)
- Arrive 15 minutes early with original + copies
Avoid unofficial visa services — Korean consulates do not outsource visa processing, so anyone claiming to be a Korea visa expediter is almost certainly adding margin without speeding anything up.
Always confirm address, hours, and document requirements directly on the official consulate website. Consulate hours and procedures change without notice.