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Student Visa in Korea: Attendance, Part-Time Work, and Reporting Rules Explained

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International students in Korea must manage attendance, part-time work permission, and reporting duties to protect their student visa status.

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Why Student Visa Problems Happen

Many international students focus only on school admission and tuition. But after arriving in Korea, immigration continues to monitor whether the student is actually following the purpose of the visa.

Student visa problems usually come from three areas: attendance, part-time work, and failure to report changes.

Rule 1: Attendance Matters

Schools may report poor attendance or academic instability. Immigration may question whether the student is genuinely studying.

  • Frequent absences can create visa renewal problems.
  • Medical absences should be documented.
  • Part-time work should never damage attendance.

Rule 2: Part-Time Work Requires Permission

International students cannot freely work anywhere they want. Permission is usually required before starting a part-time job.

Work Situation Risk Safe Action
Work before permission High Apply first
Work over allowed hours High Track weekly hours
Change workplace Medium Update permission
Restricted industry Very High Avoid completely

Rule 3: Report Important Changes

  • Address change
  • School transfer
  • Leave of absence
  • Part-time workplace change
  • Visa extension timing

Common Mistakes

  • Thinking small jobs do not matter
  • Letting the employer handle student work permission
  • Missing attendance warnings from school
  • Ignoring address change reports after moving dormitories

Student Visa Protection Checklist

  • Keep attendance above the safe level, not just the minimum.
  • Save all school notices and advisor messages.
  • Apply for part-time work permission before starting.
  • Check visa expiration at least two months early.
  • Report address changes quickly after moving.

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Official study portal: https://www.studyinkorea.go.kr

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