Korea E-2 English Teaching Visa Guide (2026)
The E-2 is the visa most people use to teach English in Korea. It has a fairly clear set of gates — citizenship of an eligible country, a degree, a clean apostilled background check, and a job offer — but each one has details that catch people out, especially the background check timing. This page explains who qualifies, the documents that take the longest, and how the employer sponsorship works — honestly, with the official sources that decide each case.
Who the E-2 visa is for
The E-2 (foreign language instructor) is for people coming to teach a foreign language — most commonly English — at an eligible school or academy. The core gates below are widely reported, but immigration sets the exact rules, so treat this as orientation.
1. Eligible-country citizenship
2. Bachelor's degree
3. Apostilled criminal background check
4. Job contract with a Korean employer
The documents that take longest (2026)
The slowest part of an E-2 application is usually the paperwork that needs apostilles. Plan your timeline around the items below — the figures are widely reported, but processing varies by country and office.
| Item | What to know |
|---|---|
| Criminal background check | Must be apostilled; commonly valid ~6 months; apostille can take weeks |
| Degree / diploma | Usually must be apostilled to confirm authenticity |
| TEFL / TESOL / CELTA | Often not a legal visa requirement, but many employers require it |
Required documents, validity windows, and processing times are set officially and change. Confirm the current list on HiKorea, with your Korean embassy, and with your employer before you start gathering documents.
Sponsorship, health check & registration
The E-2 is employer-sponsored: it is tied to the school or academy on your contract, so changing jobs usually requires immigration approval rather than a free move. After you arrive, E-2 holders are commonly required to complete a medical/health check (including drug screening) and, if staying over 90 days, to register and obtain a Residence Card (ARC) through HiKorea. The exact tests and steps are set officially — confirm them after arrival.
Changing employers or visa type later
If you want to switch employers, you generally report or apply through immigration rather than simply moving. If you later move into a different role, you may need a change of visa status — for example into an E-7 professional role or a family/residency status. Confirm the current rules with immigration before making any change.
Frequently asked questions
Who is eligible for the E-2?
For English, commonly citizens of the USA, UK, Canada, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa, plus a bachelor's degree and a clean apostilled background check. The list is set officially and can change.
Do I need a teaching degree or TEFL?
Generally a bachelor's in any subject is the standard, not an education degree. TEFL/TESOL is usually not a legal visa requirement but many employers require it. Confirm officially and with your employer.
Do I need a criminal background check?
Yes — a national-level check, generally apostilled, with a clean result, commonly valid ~6 months. The apostille can take weeks, so plan ahead.
Who sponsors the visa?
An employer — a public-school program or private academy/hagwon — sponsors the E-2. It's tied to that employer, so changing jobs needs immigration approval.
Is a health check required?
Generally yes — a medical/health check including drug screening, usually as part of registering in Korea. Confirm the current requirement on HiKorea and with your employer.