A passport booklet resting on a stack of white paper documents — applying for the E-2-2 visa at a Korean consulate
Guide

How to Apply for the E-2-2 Visa at Your Local Korean Consulate

Updated: May 20, 2026 · 11 min read · Korvia Team

Your EPIK Notice of Appointment is on its way. Once the envelope lands, you have roughly two to four weeks of work before the visa does — and the exact playbook changes depending on whether you're filing from Atlanta, London, Pretoria, or somewhere else entirely.

This guide is for that window. It covers what to put in the application packet, where to physically take it, what's different about your specific consulate, and what your approved visa will look like. If you're earlier in the process — apostilling your degree, waiting on your FBI check, picking a TEFL course — start with our E-2 Visa Korea 2026 guide and the EPIK Fall 2026 Application Timeline, then come back.

The four steps, after the package arrives

Prepare. Track. Apply. Wait.

  1. Prepare — gather the paperwork the consulate needs from you, on top of what EPIK sends.
  2. Track — your NoA and contract package is shipped by courier; be ready to sign for it.
  3. Apply — submit to your assigned consulate as soon as the package arrives. Same week, if you can.
  4. Wait — wait for approval. Do not book flights yet.

The framework is simple. The friction is in the details — and the details change depending on which consulate covers your address.

What goes in your application packet

Every consulate asks for a slightly different stack, but the core is consistent.

What your NoA and contract envelope will actually contain: a single-page Notice of Appointment from the National Institute for International Education (NIIED) confirming your acceptance, alongside a multi-page Contract for Native English Teacher with your Office of Education (e.g., Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education, Gyeonggi Office of Education).

Single-entry or multiple-entry? Almost always single.

This is the question every webinar Q&A leads with. Here's the rule:

One applicant on our May 18 session asked: "I'm arriving in Korea, then going outside the country, then back to Korea for orientation — do I need multiple-entry?"

Yes. That's textbook multiple-entry territory. The risk to avoid is entering Korea on a single-entry, leaving for that side trip, and then not being able to get back in for orientation.

A second applicant asked the inverse: "What if I want to leave Korea on vacation after orientation?" Different scenario entirely. By that point you'll have your Residence Card, which makes the entry type on your original visa irrelevant — come and go as you like.

"Can I just use the consulate closer to me?" No.

Korean consulates have jurisdiction: a fixed list of states or regions assigned to each one. You apply at the consulate that covers your registered address. Not the closer one. Not the one with shorter wait times. The one assigned to your state.

We had an applicant on the May 18 session ask exactly this: "I'm assigned to Atlanta, but DC is closer. I can do both, right?" No — going to a different consulate, even if it's closer, will almost certainly be rejected. Consulates typically ask for proof of address.

If you're moving soon, contact the consulate of the jurisdiction you'll be in by the time you submit. Don't apply from your current state and then move mid-process.

The official jurisdiction lookup lives at overseas.mofa.go.kr/us-en/wpge/m_4501/contents.do. Check yours before you do anything else.

Korean consulates in the United States

This is the jurisdiction breakdown as shown in the official MOFA table:

Phone numbers and current consulate hours can shift; always confirm by clicking through to your consulate's page from the MOFA link above before mailing or visiting.

US sub-cases worth knowing about

The US consulates don't all run the same playbook. Four specific cases come up often enough that they're worth calling out.

Washington D.C.: notify Korvia before you apply. If your jurisdiction routes you to D.C., let your Korvia coordinator or the Korvia-EPIK team know before you go in. The D.C. office expects a few preparatory steps to be coordinated through us, and we'd rather flag them up front than have you make a return trip.

Seattle and Houston: e-form on the Korea Visa Portal is typically expected. Both of these consulates often require you to file the e-form at www.visa.go.kr and print the barcoded receipt before you arrive — they'll expect that printout on top of your application packet. Policy can change, so confirm with your consulate before visiting.

Dallas, Atlanta, and Philadelphia: file the e-form anyway. The e-form isn't strictly required here, but doing it first noticeably smooths the appointment and cuts down back-and-forth. The 10 minutes online saves you a return trip more often than not.

Any other US consulate: phone or email them first. One applicant on our May 18 session pointed out: "When I look at the Dallas Consulate page, there isn't an E-2-2 Visa page that pops up. Will I just need to go in person?" That's a common experience. A lot of consulate websites file E-2-2 under the broader "E-2" category without breaking it out, so the procedures you need aren't always findable online. Calling or emailing the visa section directly is faster than guessing.

United Kingdom — KVAC London

UK applicants don't submit at an embassy or consulate directly. You submit through the Korea Visa Application Center (KVAC) in London, which is operated by IOM UN Migration on behalf of the Korean government.

Korvia sends every UK applicant a separate KVAC instructions PDF in the follow-up email after the live session. Read it cover to cover before you mail anything. KVAC is strict about document order and labelling, and a missing label can mean your package gets sent back instead of forwarded for processing.

One realistic expectation: UK applicants typically wait longer than US applicants overall, because KVAC adds an intake step before your documents reach the Embassy.

South Africa — Pretoria Embassy

South African applicants submit at the Embassy of the Republic of Korea in Pretoria. Not Cape Town. Not Johannesburg.

One South African applicant asked us: "We have agencies that assist in applying for visas. Can we use those?" As long as the agency is reputable, it should be fine. Most applicants submit themselves (in person or by post). If you're working with an agency, confirm directly with Pretoria that they recognize the agency before you hand over your originals.

The TB chest X-ray requirement (South African applicants only)

This is the part that catches the most South African applicants off guard. The Korean government requires E-2 visa applicants from South Africa to submit a TB chest X-ray certificate issued by an Embassy-approved hospital.

Two non-negotiables:

  1. The hospital has to be on the Embassy's approved list. Using a hospital that isn't on the list means an automatic rejection — no exceptions. Korvia sends the current list with the TB report form in your follow-up email. Book your appointment early; slots at the approved providers fill up quickly.
  2. Use the official "Certificate of TB Screening" form. The Embassy publishes its own form for the doctor to fill out and sign. Print it, bring it to your X-ray appointment, and the hospital completes the medical sections.

A common question we got on May 18: "For the TB X-ray, there are three types — standard, single view, and double view. Which do you recommend?" We don't make this call for you; it's a medical question and a consulate-policy question. Ask the Pretoria visa section directly at the email above when you book.

A deeper walkthrough of the SA TB test process lives at korvia.com/south-african-e2-visa-applicants-tb-test.

Applying from other countries

Korvia primarily processes applications from the US, UK, and South Africa, so the consulate-specific notes above reflect what we know firsthand.

For applicants from Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and other regions: use the MOFA jurisdiction lookup (overseas.mofa.go.kr), find the Korean consulate or embassy with jurisdiction over your address, and contact them directly for E-2 (English Teacher) procedures. Practice varies country to country, and the consulate is your source of truth. We'll relay anything they tell you back to your Korvia coordinator so we can update this guide.

Tracking your application

Once you submit, you can check your application status on the Korea Visa Portal: www.visa.go.kr → Check Application Status. The portal is at www.visa.go.kr.

You'll need:

Bookmark this site. You'll use it again later for status checks on dependents, re-issuances, or future visa types.

What your approved visa actually looks like

The document you receive is called a Visa Grant Notice (사증발급확인서). Some consulates print it for you to pick up; others mail it. A few will email a PDF for you to print.

For EPIK teachers, the key fields you'll see on the Visa Grant Notice are:

The 13 months covers your standard EPIK contract year plus a buffer at each end. Once you're in Korea and pick up your Residence Card, the Residence Card becomes the document that governs your stay, not the original visa.

When can you book your flight?

After approval. Not before.

We get asked every webinar: "Once my visa is approved, do I need to let you know before booking flight tickets?" Yes. Flight tickets should not be booked until you have your Visa Grant Notice in hand and we (and EPIK) give you the green light. Korvia coordinates the timing because orientation arrival dates are EPIK-set and tight; we'll let you know the booking window once orientation logistics are confirmed.

Booking before approval means risking a rebooking fee — or worse, a flight you can't take. A few hundred dollars in airfare difference is not worth that risk.

Need help on a specific step?

If your situation is unique — your consulate's website is unclear, your timing is tight, you're mid-move — You can also reach us through our contact form or by emailing support@korvia.com.

The visa is the last big milestone before the flight. Walk into your consulate prepared, expect the four steps to take two to four weeks end to end, and keep us in the loop as each one closes. Korvia has been EPIK's exclusive recruiting partner since 2008, and most of what your consulate is going to ask, we've heard before.

Frequently asked questions

How long does the E-2-2 visa take to process?

Typically 1–2 weeks, varying by consulate workload. UK applicants often wait longer due to the KVAC intake step.

Do I need a medical test before arriving in Korea?

No, with one exception: South African applicants need a TB chest X-ray from an Embassy-approved hospital. All other medical examinations happen during EPIK orientation in Korea.

I already have an F visa. Do I need to apply for E-2-2?

No. F-series visa holders (F-2, F-4, F-5, F-6) already have residency and work rights in Korea — you can enter on your existing visa. Let your Korvia coordinator know so we can adjust the paperwork on our side.

How many passport photos do I actually need for the E-2 visa?

For the visa application itself, one is usually enough. Some consulate websites list up to five; bring two extra to be safe. Spare photos are easy to get in Korea once you arrive.

Can I use a closer Korean consulate instead of my assigned one?

No. Korean consulates have jurisdiction by state or region. Apply at the one assigned to your address, even if another is geographically closer. Consulates typically ask for proof of address.

Single-entry or multiple-entry E-2 visa — which do I need?

Single-entry is enough if you fly directly to Korea and stay through orientation. Multiple-entry is required only if you plan to leave Korea after arrival but before receiving your Residence Card. Once you have your Residence Card, you can enter and exit Korea freely regardless of original visa type.

When can I book my flight to Korea?

After your visa is approved — not before. Flight tickets should not be booked until you have your Visa Grant Notice in hand and Korvia + EPIK have confirmed the orientation timing.

My consulate's website doesn't list E-2-2 specifically. What do I do?

Some consulates file E-2-2 under the broader 'E-2' category and don't break out the sub-codes. Call or email the visa section directly, or contact your Korvia coordinator and we'll relay the question.

A note on freshness

Korvia Consulting has placed English teachers in Korea since 2006. This guide reflects our experience as of May 2026, drawn from our live visa preparation webinars and our coordinators' direct work with consulates. Consulate practices and processing times change. Always confirm requirements with your assigned consulate, KVAC, or embassy before submitting your application.

Want to see the full slide deck from our May 18, 2026 Visa Prep Webinar? Download it here.