Korea E-3 Research Visa Guide (2026)
The E-3 is the visa for foreign researchers — scientists, engineers, and academic researchers invited to work at a Korean university department or recognized research institute. The thing that surprises people most is the degree bar: it is generally built for doctorate holders, or master's holders with several years of research experience, and the inviting institution has to be an eligible research body. This page explains who qualifies, the degree and experience standard, which institutions can sponsor you, and how long you can stay — honestly, with the official sources that decide each case.
Who the E-3 visa is for
The E-3 (research) is for people doing research at a Korean college department or recognized research institute. The core gates below are widely reported, but immigration sets the exact rules, so treat this as orientation.
1. An eligible research field
2. The degree / experience standard
3. An eligible inviting institution
4. Standard personal & institutional documents
The degree bar & documents that take longest
Two things catch applicants out: the degree/experience standard, and proving the host institution is eligible. The table summarizes them — all set officially and subject to change.
| Item | What to know (verify officially) |
|---|---|
| Degree / experience | Doctorate (held or definitely expected), or master's + ~3 years research experience; domestic master's holders are commonly exempt from the experience rule. Doctorate candidates may get a shorter conditional stay (often cited ~6 months) on proof of definite completion. |
| Institution eligibility | Proof the host is an eligible research body (university department or recognized institute). Confirming this can take time. |
| Degree authentication | Degree certificates may need translation and legalization/apostille depending on the issuing country. |
The eligibility, degree standard, required documents, and validity windows are set officially and change. Confirm the current list on HiKorea, via 1345, and with your Korean embassy before you start gathering documents.
Duration, registration & extensions
The E-3 period of stay is widely reported as up to 5 years per grant, and it is extendable while the research continues — the actual length depends on your contract, documents, and the officer's decision. After arrival, E-3 holders staying over 90 days generally must register and obtain a Residence Card (ARC) through HiKorea. To stay longer, you apply through the extension process. Confirm the current duration and steps officially.
How the E-3 differs from the E-1 professor visa
The E-3 is for research roles, while the E-1 professor visa is for teaching/research appointments at higher-education institutions. If your role changes, you may need a change of visa status. Confirm the right category with immigration.
Frequently asked questions
Who is eligible for the E-3?
Foreigners conducting research at a Korean college department or recognized research institute in natural/social sciences, humanities, performing arts, or advanced industrial technology, meeting the degree standard. Eligibility centers on your degree and an eligible host. Verify officially.
What degree do I need?
Commonly a doctorate (held or definitely expected), or a master's plus ~3 years of research experience — with a common exemption from the experience rule for domestic master's holders. Confirm the current standard on HiKorea.
What institutions can sponsor an E-3?
An eligible research body — a college/university department or a research institute recognized under the relevant Korean laws. Confirm whether your host qualifies before applying.
How long is the E-3 valid?
Commonly up to 5 years per grant, extendable while the research continues. The actual length depends on your contract, documents, and the officer's decision. Confirm on HiKorea.
Do E-3 holders need to register?
Yes — staying over 90 days generally requires registering and obtaining a Residence Card (ARC) through HiKorea within the deadline. Confirm the steps officially after you arrive.