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Short Description: A complete guide to South Korea’s F-2-2 visa for underage children of Korean nationals, including eligibility, documents, process, rights, limits, and renewal.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country South Korea
Visa name Underage Child of Korean National
Visa short name F-2-2
Category Family / residence status
Main purpose Long-term residence in Korea as a minor child of a Korean national
Typical applicant A foreign-national minor child of a Korean citizen
Validity Varies by issuance and immigration decision
Stay duration Varies; typically tied to granted period of stay shown on visa/status records
Entries allowed Can vary by visa issuance and re-entry status
Extension possible? Yes, in many cases, if eligibility continues and immigration approves
Work allowed? Limited / generally not the core purpose; separate permission and age/labor rules may apply
Study allowed? Yes, generally compatible with residence as a child, subject to school admission rules
Family allowed? Not usually the purpose of this status; this status itself is for the child
PR path? Possible indirectly in limited circumstances; not a simple direct PR route by itself
Citizenship path? Indirect; depends on nationality law, parentage, and separate naturalization/nationality rules

The F-2-2 status is a South Korean family-based residence status for a minor foreign-national child of a Korean national.

In plain English, it exists so that a Korean citizen’s underage child who is not already recognized as Korean can legally live in South Korea on a medium- to long-term basis.

This route fits into Korea’s broader status of stay system under the Immigration Control Act and Ministry of Justice / Korea Immigration Service administration. In practice, people often call it a “visa,” but legally it can involve:

  • an entry visa issued overseas by a Korean embassy or consulate, and/or
  • a status of stay granted or changed inside Korea by immigration

So this is best understood as a family residence status rather than only a simple tourist-style visa sticker.

Official naming

Common official naming includes:

  • F-2-2
  • Underage Child of Korean National
  • In Korean immigration materials, F-series statuses are family/residence-related categories

Why it exists

It exists to protect family unity and allow a Korean national’s minor child to reside in Korea lawfully, attend school, and live with family.

Who it is meant for

It is meant for:

  • a child under the age of majority/minor status
  • who is not a Korean national
  • and who has a Korean-national parent

Warning: Whether a child should use F-2-2 or instead pursue Korean nationality registration/confirmation can be a critical legal issue. Some children born to Korean parents may already have or may be eligible to confirm Korean nationality, and in those cases the immigration route may not be the right long-term solution.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

This visa is best for:

  • Minor children/dependents of Korean nationals who need to live in Korea
  • Families relocating to Korea with a foreign-national child
  • Children who need a lawful long-term status for school, residence, and daily life in Korea

Who this visa is not for

This is generally not the right visa for:

Applicant type Should they use F-2-2? Better alternative
Tourists No Short-stay visitor status or visa waiver, if eligible
Business visitors No C-3 short-stay business/visitor category as applicable
Job seekers No Relevant work-seeking or employment status
Employees No E-series work visa or other suitable status
University students Usually no D-2 student visa
Language students Usually no D-4 training/study status
Spouses of Koreans No F-6 marriage migrant status
Foreign spouses of foreign residents No Dependent/family route matching sponsor
Founders/entrepreneurs No D-8 or other investment/business route
Investors No D-8 / investor category
Medical travelers No Short-stay medical/visitor route as applicable
Transit passengers No Transit/entry permission rules

Special note

If the child may already be entitled to Korean nationality by descent, the family should first verify that with:

  • a Korean embassy/consulate, or
  • the nationality/civil registration authorities

Because if the child is Korean under nationality law, an F-2-2 may be unnecessary or inappropriate.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

The F-2-2 is used primarily for:

  • Long-term residence
  • Family reunion / living with a Korean parent
  • Attending school in Korea
  • Ordinary daily life as a resident child

Usually compatible activities

These are usually consistent with the status:

  • living with parent/family in Korea
  • primary or secondary schooling
  • domestic travel in Korea
  • receiving family support
  • routine medical treatment
  • departing and re-entering Korea subject to valid status/re-entry rules

Activities that are not the core purpose

These may be restricted, need separate permission, or raise issues:

  • employment
  • self-employment
  • freelance work
  • paid online work
  • internships for pay
  • business setup
  • journalism
  • religious work
  • paid performance

Prohibited or risky uses

Do not treat F-2-2 as a general-purpose visa for:

  • adult employment
  • unauthorized work
  • using a child status to bypass the proper work or study category
  • sham custody or false parentage claims

Common Mistake: Assuming “family visa” means unrestricted work rights. Family-based statuses in Korea differ significantly by subtype. F-2-2 is for the child’s residence, not a general work authorization route.

Grey areas

Remote work

For a minor child, this is not usually the relevant issue. But for older teens, paid remote work can still raise immigration and labor compliance issues. Official public guidance is limited on this exact scenario for F-2-2, so families should confirm directly with immigration before relying on any work income.

Volunteering

Unpaid school/community volunteering is generally less problematic than compensated activity, but if it resembles regular labor, prior immigration confirmation is wise.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official classification

  • Series: F
  • Subclass: F-2-2
  • Program type: Resident / family-related stay status

Long name

  • Underage Child of Korean National

Related categories people confuse it with

Category Who it is for Key difference
F-6 Spouse of Korean national Marriage-based, not child-based
F-1 Visiting/cohabitation family categories Different factual basis and rights
F-3 Dependents of many long-term foreign residents Based on foreign sponsor, not Korean-national parent
D-2 / D-4 Students Study-based, not family-rights based
Korean nationality route Children who may already be Korean citizens Not an immigration status at all

Old vs current naming

Public-facing English naming may vary slightly by source. The core code F-2-2 is the most important identifier.

5. Eligibility criteria

Because this category is narrower and less publicly explained in detail than some major visa classes, applicants should rely heavily on the specific embassy/consulate or immigration office instructions for their case.

Core eligibility

Generally, the applicant must show:

  • they are a minor / underage child
  • they are a foreign national
  • they are the child of a Korean national
  • they genuinely intend to reside in Korea for family reasons
  • they meet documentary, identity, and admissibility requirements

Nationality rules

There is no general public rule that limits F-2-2 to only certain foreign nationalities. However:

  • document requirements,
  • visa issuance procedures,
  • apostille/legalization rules,
  • and local consular practice

may vary by country of application.

Passport validity

The child generally needs:

  • a valid passport
  • with sufficient remaining validity for visa issuance and travel

Embassies may require a minimum passport validity buffer. If not clearly stated, verify directly.

Age

This status is for an underage child. Exact age cutoffs are linked to Korean legal treatment of minors and immigration practice.

Warning: “Underage” should not be assumed loosely. If the child is close to age-out, check immediately with immigration or the consulate how age is assessed: at application date, visa issuance date, or entry/date of status grant.

Education, language, work experience

Not generally core criteria for this visa.

  • No standard education threshold
  • No standard Korean-language requirement for the child at initial application
  • No work experience requirement

Sponsorship / parent relationship

The Korean-national parent is usually central to the application. Immigration may require proof such as:

  • family relation certificate
  • birth certificate
  • Korean parent’s ID / passport
  • resident registration documents
  • custody/consent documents where applicable

Invitation

Some consulates may want an invitation or explanation letter from the Korean parent. This is common in practice even where not always stated as mandatory in a simple summary.

Job offer / points / quotas

Not applicable for this visa.

Relationship proof

This is one of the most important parts. Families may need:

  • birth certificate showing parentage
  • Korean family relation certificate if recorded
  • basic certificate/civil registry documents
  • custody documents for separated/divorced parents
  • consent from non-traveling parent if required

Maintenance funds

There is no widely published universal F-2-2-specific fund threshold in the same way as some student/investor visas. But officers may still require proof that:

  • the child will be supported,
  • housed,
  • and not become destitute.

Accommodation proof

Often useful and sometimes requested:

  • resident registration showing parent’s address
  • lease contract
  • host accommodation letter

Onward travel

For long-term family residence, onward ticket proof is less central than for visitor visas, but some posts may still ask for travel details.

Health, character, criminality

Children may still be subject to:

  • communicable disease/public health review
  • immigration admissibility checks
  • security/criminal concerns in serious cases

For minors, police certificates are not always required in the same way as adults, but this varies.

Insurance

There is no universal publicly stated overseas private insurance rule unique to F-2-2 in all cases. After residence in Korea, national health insurance issues may arise depending on residence registration and household situation.

Biometrics

Biometrics requirements can vary by post and age. See section 15.

Intent requirements

The intent should match the visa:

  • family residence with Korean parent
  • not disguised work or study-only intent

Residency outside Korea / place of application

Some posts require applicants to apply:

  • in their country of nationality, or
  • in their country of lawful residence

Applying from a third country may be possible in some cases, but is not guaranteed.

Local registration rules

After arrival, long-term residents generally need Residence Card / registration through immigration if staying beyond the threshold requiring registration.

Quotas, cap, ballot

Not applicable for this visa.

Embassy-specific rules

This is important. Korean embassies and consulates can differ on:

  • exact forms
  • whether originals must be shown
  • whether apostille is required
  • translation requirements
  • interview requirements
  • mailing vs in-person submission

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Not eligible

A person is generally not eligible if:

  • they are not actually the child of a Korean national
  • they are no longer underage under the applicable rule
  • the relationship cannot be proven
  • they are already a Korean national and should not use an immigration status
  • they are inadmissible for serious immigration/security reasons

Common refusal triggers

  • wrong visa category selected
  • incomplete family relationship evidence
  • mismatch between birth records and Korean registry documents
  • missing custody papers for divorced/separated parents
  • inconsistent names, dates, or passport details
  • unverifiable foreign civil documents
  • no apostille/legalization where required
  • weak explanation of who will support and house the child
  • prior overstay or immigration violations
  • fraud concerns
  • applying at the wrong consular post

Red flags

  • parent’s Korean nationality unclear or unproven
  • child’s nationality status unresolved
  • recent large unexplained deposits in support account
  • fake or poorly translated birth records
  • no consent from other legal guardian when needed

Common Mistake: Families often focus only on the child’s passport and birth certificate but forget that immigration may want the Korean parent’s civil registry documents and, in custody cases, legally valid evidence of parental authority.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • allows a minor child of a Korean national to live in Korea legally
  • supports family unity
  • generally compatible with school attendance
  • may allow extensions while eligibility continues
  • can provide a more stable status than repeated short visits

Family benefits

  • child can reside with Korean parent
  • easier day-to-day life than cycling short-term entries
  • better alignment with school enrollment and local registration

Travel flexibility

Potentially allows re-entry and continued residence, but this depends on current re-entry and residence card rules.

Longer-term benefit

For some families, this status provides a lawful bridge while they sort out:

  • nationality status
  • custody
  • schooling
  • later immigration or residency options

8. Limitations and restrictions

Key restrictions

  • it is not a general open work visa
  • the child remains dependent on the qualifying family relationship
  • immigration reporting duties may apply after address changes or document changes
  • residence period is not necessarily indefinite
  • age-out can become a major issue

Registration and reporting obligations

Long-term residents in Korea generally must comply with:

  • Residence Card registration timelines
  • address reporting/change of address rules
  • passport update reporting
  • status extension before expiry

Sponsor dependence

If the qualifying relationship basis changes or can no longer be evidenced, the status may be affected.

Re-entry limits

Do not assume unlimited travel freedom. Always verify:

  • whether the current status is active
  • whether re-entry is preserved
  • whether a new visa is needed after long absence

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity vs period of stay

In Korea, two different concepts matter:

  • visa validity: how long you have to use the visa to enter
  • period of stay: how long you may remain once admitted or once the status is granted

These are not the same.

How long is F-2-2 granted for?

This varies. Public official summaries do not always state one uniform F-2-2 stay period across all posts/cases.

Typical duration depends on:

  • immigration discretion
  • the child’s age
  • parental circumstances
  • document strength
  • whether granted overseas or by change/extension in Korea

Single or multiple entry

This can vary by:

  • visa label issued by the consulate
  • current re-entry rules
  • whether the person already holds a Residence Card

When the clock starts

Usually:

  • the visa validity starts from issuance
  • the period of stay starts from entry or status grant date

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • fines
  • extension difficulties
  • loss of status
  • deportation/removal risk
  • future visa refusals

Renewal timing

Apply for extension before the period of stay expires. In Korea, waiting until the last minute is risky, especially if more documents are requested.

10. Complete document checklist

Because exact lists vary by post and case, this section combines common official requirements and practical family-case essentials.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official application form Starts the case Old form version, missing signature
Passport Child’s travel document Identity and travel authority Expired or damaged passport
Photo Passport-style photo Visa issuance Wrong size/background
Fee payment proof Receipt if required Confirms payment Wrong fee amount

B. Identity/travel documents

  • child’s passport
  • copies of passport bio page
  • any previous Korean visas or stay records if applicable
  • possibly parent’s passport and Korean ID/resident record

C. Financial documents

Possible supporting items:

  • Korean parent’s bank statements
  • proof of employment/income
  • tax records if requested
  • support letter

Why needed: – to show the child will be maintained in Korea

D. Employment/business documents

For the Korean parent or supporting parent, possibly:

  • certificate of employment
  • business registration certificate
  • income proof

E. Education documents

Usually not central at initial visa stage, but school-related materials may help if relevant:

  • school enrollment plan
  • transfer letter
  • confirmation of intended schooling in Korea

F. Relationship/family documents

This is the most important set.

  • birth certificate naming the Korean parent
  • Korean parent’s family relation certificate
  • Korean parent’s basic certificate if requested
  • marriage certificate of parents, if relevant
  • custody order / divorce judgment / parental agreement if relevant
  • consent letter from non-accompanying parent if required

G. Accommodation/travel documents

Possible items:

  • lease agreement
  • certificate of residence / resident registration
  • host address statement
  • flight itinerary if requested

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • invitation letter from Korean parent
  • copy of Korean passport or Korean ID
  • proof of address in Korea
  • proof of ability to support

I. Health/insurance documents

Only where required:

  • medical certificate
  • vaccination/health records for school
  • insurance proof if a post specifically requests it

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or post:

  • apostille
  • consular legalization
  • local criminal/background certificate
  • local residency permit in third country of application

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate
  • guardianship documents
  • custody proof
  • parental consent
  • adoption record if adopted
  • death certificate of parent if relevant

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Foreign civil documents may need:

  • Korean translation or English translation, depending on post/office
  • notarization
  • apostille under the Hague system, if the issuing country participates
  • consular legalization if not apostilled

Warning: Do not assume that an English birth certificate alone is enough everywhere. Some offices require apostille and/or Korean translation.

M. Photo specifications

Use the latest consular specification. Korean missions often require:

  • recent color photo
  • passport-style format
  • plain background

Always check the exact dimensions for the applying post.

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

No widely published, universal F-2-2-specific minimum fund threshold is consistently available across all official public sources.

That means families should not assume there is “no financial requirement.” Instead, they should be prepared to prove that:

  • the child will be supported
  • housing is available
  • daily living is covered

Who can sponsor?

Usually:

  • the Korean-national parent
  • in some cases another legal guardian, if recognized and accepted

Acceptable proof of funds

  • recent bank statements
  • employment certificate
  • income certificate
  • tax payment records
  • business income documents
  • support statement from the Korean parent

Seasoning rules

No universal public F-2-2 rule is clearly published, but as a practical matter:

  • stable balances are stronger than sudden deposits
  • unexplained large transfers may trigger questions

Hidden costs

Families often overlook:

  • apostille fees
  • certified translation fees
  • courier charges
  • repeated document issuance fees
  • Residence Card fees after arrival
  • school setup costs

12. Fees and total cost

Fees vary by nationality, visa type format, consular post, and later in-country immigration filings.

Fee table

Cost item Typical official status
Overseas visa application fee Varies by nationality/reciprocity and entry type
In-country extension/change fee Varies by immigration filing type
Residence Card/registration fee May apply
Biometrics fee May be included or separately handled depending on process
Health exam fee Only if required
Translation/notary/apostille Variable third-party cost
Courier/postage Variable
Optional legal help Not government fee; private cost

Warning: Check the latest official fee page for the embassy/consulate where you apply and the Hi Korea immigration fee schedule for in-country filings.

Because official fees change and may differ by mission, this guide does not state unsupported exact figures.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct category

First confirm whether the child:

  • actually needs F-2-2, or
  • may instead qualify as a Korean national

2. Gather family and civil documents

Collect:

  • birth certificate
  • Korean parent’s registry/family documents
  • custody/consent documents if needed
  • identity and address proofs

3. Check the correct filing route

There may be two broad routes:

  • Overseas visa application through a Korean embassy/consulate
  • In-country change/extension of status through Korean immigration

4. Complete the form

Use the current official form required by the post or immigration office.

5. Pay fees

Pay the applicable consular or immigration fee.

6. Book appointment if needed

Some posts require in-person submission or appointment.

7. Submit the application

Submit all documents, originals/copies as instructed.

8. Provide biometrics/interview if required

Not all applicants will be treated identically; minors may have different procedures.

9. Track the application

Follow the consulate’s or immigration office’s tracking method if available.

10. Respond to additional document requests

If asked, submit supplementary items quickly, especially:

  • corrected translations
  • better custody proof
  • additional proof of Korean parent’s status

11. Receive decision

If approved:

  • visa is placed in passport or issued in another official format
  • or status is changed/extended in Korea

12. Travel to Korea

Carry key original documents when traveling.

13. Arrival steps

Enter before visa validity expires.

14. Post-arrival registration

If required, apply for a Residence Card within the legal timeline for foreign residents staying long-term.

15. Maintain status

Track:

  • expiry date
  • address updates
  • passport renewals
  • age-related changes

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Processing times vary significantly by:

  • consular post
  • nationality
  • whether document verification is needed
  • whether the case is straightforward
  • whether the application is overseas or in Korea

There is no single public official global processing standard consistently published for F-2-2.

What affects timing

  • incomplete applications
  • civil document verification
  • name discrepancies
  • custody issues
  • nationality clarification issues
  • peak seasons
  • security checks

Practical expectation

Simple family cases with complete records can move much faster than cases involving:

  • divorce
  • adoption
  • late birth registration
  • third-country application
  • unclear nationality/citizenship status

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Biometrics requirements can vary based on:

  • age
  • place of application
  • whether applying overseas or in Korea

Check the post-specific instructions.

Interview

An interview may or may not be required.

Typical topics if asked:

  • relationship to Korean parent
  • where the child will live
  • who has custody
  • why the child is relocating now
  • whether documents are genuine

Medical checks

Not universally required for every F-2-2 applicant, but may arise in:

  • public health screening contexts
  • school enrollment contexts
  • immigration circumstances requiring health review

Police checks

For underage children, police certificates are often less central than for adults, but requirements can vary.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

No widely published official public approval-rate dataset specific to F-2-2 was identified in the source set below.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals or delays are tied to:

  • unclear legal relationship
  • incomplete custody evidence
  • mismatch between foreign and Korean civil records
  • missing legalization/apostille
  • applying in the wrong category
  • unresolved nationality issue

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Strong legal strategies

  • Provide a clear relationship evidence chain
  • Include a short explanation of the child’s family situation
  • Explain any name changes with supporting documents
  • Explain any late birth registration
  • Submit custody and consent papers early, not only if asked
  • Use certified translations
  • Organize documents in logical order
  • Include proof of the Korean parent’s residence and support capacity

Helpful cover note topics

  • who the Korean parent is
  • why the child needs to live in Korea
  • where the child will live
  • schooling plan
  • custody/guardianship summary
  • document list/index

Pro Tip: If there are large deposits in the parent’s bank account, explain them in one sentence and attach evidence. Silent large deposits often slow review.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

  • Apply well before school start dates and family relocation dates.
  • Put civil documents in a timeline order: birth, parents’ marriage/divorce, custody order, Korean registry, passport issuance.
  • If the child and parent have different surnames, include a one-page explanation and the documents proving why.
  • Bring originals plus copies even when the checklist seems copy-only.
  • If the Korean parent recently regained or confirmed Korean nationality, include the proof clearly.
  • If a non-traveling parent exists, handle consent carefully and lawfully.
  • Use the embassy checklist, but also prepare for “unstated but common” relationship clarifications.
  • Contact the embassy or immigration office only when:
  • rules are unclear,
  • a document format is unusual,
  • or the child is close to aging out.
  • Do not flood the office with daily follow-ups; that rarely helps.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

A cover letter is not always formally mandatory, but it is often very useful.

What to include

  • child’s full name, DOB, passport number
  • Korean parent’s full name and Korean ID/passport details
  • summary of relationship
  • reason for residence in Korea
  • address in Korea
  • who will support the child
  • note on custody/consent if relevant
  • list of attached documents

What not to say

  • do not speculate on legal rights you are unsure about
  • do not hide custody disputes
  • do not describe work plans if not permitted
  • do not submit emotional claims without evidence

Sample outline

  1. Introduction
  2. Relationship and nationality facts
  3. Purpose of residence in Korea
  4. Living/support arrangements
  5. Custody and consent explanation
  6. Attached documents list
  7. Closing request

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor?

Usually the Korean-national parent.

Useful sponsor documents

  • Korean passport copy or ID
  • family relation certificate
  • resident registration / address proof
  • employment/income proof
  • invitation/support letter

Invitation letter structure

  • sponsor identity
  • relationship to child
  • reason child will reside in Korea
  • accommodation details
  • financial support statement
  • contact details
  • signature/date

Sponsor mistakes

  • forgetting to sign
  • giving an address different from registry/lease
  • not explaining custody situation
  • omitting proof of support ability

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

This visa itself is a status for the child. It is not generally used as a base for the child to sponsor others.

Separate applications

If multiple children are applying, each child usually needs a separate application, though family submissions may be bundled administratively.

Custody and consent issues

These are critical for minors.

Possible required evidence:

  • sole custody judgment
  • joint custody papers
  • notarized parental consent
  • death certificate of absent parent
  • proof parent is unreachable only if officially recognized/legalized

Age-out rules

A child may lose eligibility once no longer considered underage for this status. Families with teens should plan early.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

This status is not primarily a work visa.

General position

  • Work is limited and should not be assumed freely allowed.
  • Minors are also subject to Korean labor law age restrictions.
  • For any paid work, immigration confirmation is strongly recommended.

Study rights

Study is generally consistent with the purpose of this status.

  • primary school
  • middle school
  • high school
  • possibly other age-appropriate education

School admission rules are separate from immigration rules.

Business activity

Not the intended purpose.

Remote work / side income

For minors, these situations are fact-specific and not clearly covered in broad public guidance. Confirm before engaging in paid activity.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Final admission is at the border

A visa does not guarantee entry. Immigration officers at the airport/port make final admission decisions.

Carry these documents

  • child’s passport
  • copy of visa approval/issuance details if applicable
  • birth certificate copy
  • Korean parent’s contact details
  • address in Korea
  • custody/consent papers if one parent is traveling alone with the child

Border questions may include

  • who is the Korean parent
  • where will the child stay
  • who will meet the child
  • is the other parent aware/consenting

Re-entry after travel

If living in Korea, always confirm re-entry implications before long trips abroad.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, often if the underlying eligibility continues.

Where to extend

Usually in Korea through the immigration system before expiry.

Can it be switched?

Possibly, depending on the facts. Later life changes may support another status, but not automatically.

Potential later routes could involve:

  • student status
  • work status
  • another family status
  • nationality resolution instead of immigration status

Risks

  • waiting until after expiry
  • aging out
  • family relationship changes
  • loss of supporting documents

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

PR path

F-2-2 is not best understood as a straightforward direct PR visa.

However, lawful residence in Korea can matter later depending on:

  • subsequent status changes
  • total residence history
  • family/nationality circumstances
  • later eligibility under permanent residence rules

Citizenship path

This status itself does not grant Korean citizenship.

But for some children, the more important issue is whether they:

  • already have Korean nationality,
  • can confirm it,
  • or may later naturalize or pursue a nationality-related process.

Warning: Immigration status and nationality law are different systems. A child of a Korean national may have options under nationality law that are more important than F-2-2.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Core obligations

  • maintain valid status
  • register as required
  • report address changes
  • renew before expiry
  • avoid unauthorized work

Tax residence

For a minor child, tax issues usually depend on actual income and residence facts. If the child has income or assets, professional tax advice may be needed.

Health insurance

Long-term residents may later fall into Korea’s health insurance system depending on registration and household circumstances.

Overstays and violations

Violations can damage future immigration options significantly.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waiver issue

Being from a visa-waiver country does not replace the need for the correct long-term family status if the child will reside in Korea.

Nationality-specific differences

Requirements may differ for:

  • apostille vs legalization
  • accepted civil document formats
  • local criminal certificate rules
  • where application must be lodged

Special passport cases

Diplomatic/official/service passports may have different short-entry rules, but that does not usually replace the need for the proper residence status for a child relocating to Korea.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors with divorced/separated parents

A high-risk documentation area. Immigration may want:

  • custody judgment
  • consent from non-custodial parent
  • proof of legal authority to relocate child

Adopted children

Adoption must be legally documented and recognized. Additional scrutiny is possible.

Same-sex parents/spouses

Because this visa is based on parent-child relationship rather than spouse recognition, the central issue is legal parentage and documentation. Recognition can be complex if foreign records and Korean systems differ.

Stateless persons / refugees

Possible but highly case-specific. Expect extra documentation review.

Dual nationals

If the child may have Korean nationality, confirm that before using F-2-2.

Previous refusals / overstays / deportation

These do not always make approval impossible, but they must be disclosed and explained honestly.

Gender marker or name mismatch

Attach:

  • legal name-change order
  • amended birth certificate
  • passport explanation
  • medical/legal identity documentation if relevant

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“F-2-2 is just a tourist visa for a Korean’s child.” No. It is a residence-related family status.
“Any child of a Korean can use F-2-2 automatically.” No. Relationship, nationality, age, and documents must be verified.
“No financial documents are needed.” Often support/housing evidence is still important.
“If one parent is Korean, custody papers never matter.” False. They matter greatly if parents are separated or one parent is not traveling.
“The visa guarantees entry.” No. Final admission is always at the border.
“This visa automatically leads to permanent residence.” Not automatically.
“A child can freely work because it’s an F visa.” Not safely assumeable; work rights are limited and fact-specific.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You should receive a refusal notice or explanation, though detail levels vary.

Is there an appeal?

Formal appeal/reconsideration options depend on:

  • whether refusal occurred overseas at a consulate
  • whether refusal occurred in-country at immigration
  • the legal basis and procedure available in that context

These procedures are not always explained in simple public consular pages.

Reapplication

Often possible if the refusal reason is fixable.

Examples:

  • missing apostille
  • inadequate custody documents
  • poor translation
  • wrong category used

No refund?

Visa fees are often non-refundable after processing starts, but verify with the relevant post.

Best reapplication strategy

  • address every refusal point directly
  • add a short cover note explaining what changed
  • do not simply resubmit the same pack unchanged

31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?

At immigration

The officer may check:

  • passport
  • visa/status basis
  • family relationship
  • address in Korea
  • contact details of the Korean parent

After arrival

If staying long-term, the child will generally need:

  • foreigner/residence registration
  • a Residence Card if required by law
  • address registration compliance

Early timeline

First 7–14 days

  • settle housing
  • gather registration documents
  • check school requirements

Within the registration deadline

  • apply for Residence Card/registration if required

First 30–90 days

  • school enrollment steps
  • health insurance and family administrative setup as applicable

32. Real-world timeline examples

Example 1: Child applying from abroad with Korean mother

  • Week 1–3: Gather birth certificate, mother’s Korean registry documents, lease, passport copies
  • Week 3–5: Apostille and translation
  • Week 5: Submit at consulate
  • Week 6–10: Processing and supplemental request
  • Week 11: Visa issued
  • Week 12: Travel to Korea
  • After arrival: Residence registration

Example 2: Child of divorced parents

  • Week 1–4: Collect custody judgment and consent papers
  • Week 4–6: Translate/legalize foreign court orders
  • Week 6: Submit
  • Week 7–12+: Additional review due to custody/legal documents
  • Approval if documentation is clear

Example 3: Child already in Korea needing extension

  • 1–2 months before expiry: Gather updated parent income/address documents
  • Before expiry: File extension at immigration
  • Await decision
  • Continue compliance

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Application form
  2. Document index
  3. Child passport copy
  4. Photo
  5. Korean parent ID/passport copy
  6. Birth certificate
  7. Korean family relation/basic certificate
  8. Marriage/divorce/custody documents
  9. Consent documents
  10. Address proof
  11. Financial support proof
  12. Cover letter
  13. Translations
  14. Apostille/legalization pages

Naming convention

  • 01_Application_Form.pdf
  • 02_Document_Index.pdf
  • 03_Child_Passport.pdf
  • 04_Birth_Certificate_Apostilled.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • full edges visible
  • one PDF per document category
  • no blurry mobile screenshots
  • keep names consistent

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm F-2-2 is the correct category
  • Check whether the child may be Korean already
  • Confirm the correct embassy/consulate or immigration office
  • Confirm apostille/legalization rules
  • Confirm age/custody requirements
  • Prepare translations

Submission-day checklist

  • Application form signed
  • Passport valid
  • Photos correct
  • All civil documents included
  • Fee ready
  • Originals and copies packed
  • Parent contact details included

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Appointment confirmation
  • Passport
  • Originals
  • Parent/guardian attendance if required
  • Custody/consent originals
  • Clear explanation of family situation

Arrival checklist

  • Passport and visa
  • Address in Korea
  • Parent contact info
  • Birth/custody copies in hand luggage
  • Check registration deadline

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Apply before expiry
  • Updated address proof
  • Updated parent support/income proof
  • Current passport
  • Current Residence Card
  • Any changed family-status documents

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reason carefully
  • Identify missing/weak document
  • Correct translation/legalization problems
  • Add explanation letter
  • Reapply only after fixing the issue

35. FAQs

1. Is F-2-2 only for biological children?

Usually it centers on legally recognized parent-child relationships. Adopted children may qualify if the adoption is legally recognized and documented.

2. Can an adult child apply for F-2-2?

Generally no. This category is for underage/minor children.

3. What if my child may already be Korean?

Check nationality status first. F-2-2 may not be the right route.

4. Does the Korean parent have to live in Korea already?

Often that helps and may be expected in practice, but exact requirements can vary by case and post.

5. Can we apply from a third country?

Sometimes, but many posts prefer nationality or lawful residence jurisdiction. Verify first.

6. Is a birth certificate enough to prove the relationship?

Not always. Korean registry documents and other family records are often also needed.

7. Do we need apostille on the birth certificate?

Often yes if it is a foreign civil document, but requirements vary by post and country.

8. Do all documents need Korean translation?

Not always all, but many foreign documents may need Korean or accepted official translation. Check the filing office’s rules.

9. Can the child attend school on F-2-2?

Generally yes, that is usually compatible with the status.

10. Can the child work part-time?

Do not assume yes. Work rights are limited and age/labor laws also apply.

11. Does one Korean parent automatically guarantee approval?

No. Documentation, admissibility, and legal parentage/custody still matter.

12. What if the parents are divorced?

Expect to provide custody and consent documents.

13. If the non-Korean parent refuses consent, can the child still get the visa?

Possibly only if the Korean parent has sufficient legal custody authority under applicable law. This is case-specific.

14. Can the child sponsor siblings or parents later on F-2-2?

Generally no; this status is not designed as a family sponsorship base for others.

15. How long is the visa valid?

It varies by case, post, and immigration decision.

16. Is F-2-2 multiple entry?

Not always. Check the visa issuance details and re-entry rules.

17. Can F-2-2 be extended inside Korea?

Often yes, if eligibility continues.

18. What happens when the child turns adult?

Eligibility under F-2-2 may end or need reassessment. Plan early for the next status.

19. Do we need bank statements?

Often support evidence is useful or requested, even if no fixed threshold is published.

20. Can the Korean parent write the invitation letter in English?

Some posts may accept English, others may prefer Korean. Verify with the post.

21. Is an interview common?

It depends on the post and the complexity of the case.

22. What if names differ across documents?

Include legal proof of the name difference and a short explanation.

23. Can we use F-2-2 instead of a student visa for boarding school?

If the child genuinely qualifies as the minor child of a Korean national, possibly yes, but school and immigration facts should align.

24. What if the child previously overstayed in Korea?

Disclose it honestly; it may affect approval.

25. Do we need health insurance before applying?

Not universally stated for all F-2-2 cases, but later Korean health insurance obligations may arise.

26. Can a stepchild qualify?

Only if the legal parent-child relationship is recognized in a way immigration accepts. This is fact-specific.

27. Can same-sex parent families apply?

Possibly where legal parentage is clearly documented, but recognition issues can be complex.

28. If the Korean parent recently naturalized, does that matter?

Yes. Include proof of current Korean nationality and any documents showing the parent-child relationship through the transition.

29. Can we enter visa-free first and sort it out later?

Do not assume that is possible or wise. Long-term residence should use the correct status.

30. If the passport expires, does the F-2-2 status expire too?

The passport and immigration status are related but not identical. Update immigration records promptly after passport renewal.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to South Korea visas, immigration status, overseas applications, and family-related residence matters. Because embassy pages and immigration menu paths change, verify the latest page structure before filing.

  • Korea Visa Portal: https://www.visa.go.kr/
  • Hi Korea e-Government for Foreigners: https://www.hikorea.go.kr/
  • Ministry of Justice, Republic of Korea: https://www.moj.go.kr/
  • Korea Immigration Service (Ministry of Justice immigration information): https://www.immigration.go.kr/
  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Korea: https://www.mofa.go.kr/
  • Overseas Korean Missions directory (to find the correct embassy/consulate): https://www.mofa.go.kr/eng/wpge/m_4906/contents.do
  • Korea Visa Portal, visa navigator/search: https://www.visa.go.kr/openPage.do?MENU_ID=10106
  • Hi Korea civil petition / stay extension / status services entry: https://www.hikorea.go.kr/Main.pt
  • Immigration Control Act page via Korea legislation portal: https://www.law.go.kr/
  • National Health Insurance Service: https://www.nhis.or.kr/

37. Final verdict

The F-2-2 visa/status is best for a foreign minor child of a Korean national who genuinely needs to live in South Korea with family.

Biggest benefits

  • supports family unity
  • allows lawful long-term residence
  • generally compatible with schooling
  • often extendable while the child remains eligible

Biggest risks

  • unresolved nationality issues
  • weak proof of parent-child relationship
  • custody/consent problems
  • aging out
  • assuming work rights that do not clearly exist

Top preparation advice

  1. Confirm whether the child may already be Korean.
  2. Build a clean relationship-document chain.
  3. Handle custody and consent documents early.
  4. Use apostilles/translations correctly.
  5. Apply well before travel or school deadlines.

When to consider another visa

Consider another route if:

  • the applicant is already an adult
  • the real purpose is work or university study
  • the child may already qualify as a Korean citizen
  • the relationship basis does not fit this category

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact age definition and age-out timing for F-2-2 in your case
  • Whether the child may already have or be entitled to Korean nationality
  • Embassy/consulate-specific document checklist
  • Whether apostille or consular legalization is required for each civil document
  • Whether Korean translations are mandatory for your filing office
  • Whether the application must be filed in country of nationality or lawful residence
  • Exact visa fee at your embassy/consulate
  • Current in-country extension/change fee on Hi Korea
  • Whether biometrics/interview apply to the child’s age group
  • Whether a police certificate or medical certificate is required in your jurisdiction
  • Whether multiple entry is granted or if re-entry conditions apply
  • Post-arrival Residence Card registration deadline applicable to the child
  • Whether school enrollment requires extra immigration or local education documents
  • Whether custody or parental consent documents need notarization or court certification
  • Whether recent policy changes affect family-status processing times or documentary rules

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