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Study in Korea in English: English-Taught Degrees and TOPIK, Explained

The most common worry we hear is "but I do not speak Korean." Good news: you can earn a full degree in Korea entirely in English. Here is how, and when Korean still matters.

Sans Bhatia
Written by
Sans BhatiaFounder, KoreaAdmit11 min read · Updated Jun 13, 2026
An open English-language dictionary beside a printed map
For an English-taught degree, your English score matters far more than your Korean.

Yes, you can study in Korea without speaking Korean. Over the past decade Korean universities have built out complete bachelor's and master's degrees taught entirely in English, especially in business, engineering, computer science, international studies, and the sciences. For those programs you submit an English test score, not a Korean one.

TL;DR
  • You can earn a full degree in English. Many programs are 100 percent English-taught and require no Korean to enroll.
  • TOPIK is the Korean proficiency test, scored Level 1 to 6. English-track students usually do not need it to start.
  • When Korean is required depends on your track. Korean-taught admission needs TOPIK Level 3 up front; English-taught needs none to enter but often TOPIK Level 4 to graduate; funded routes like GKS include a year of Korean before your degree.
  • English-taught programs ask for English proof instead: typically TOEFL iBT 80+ or IELTS 6.0+, with some schools accepting the Duolingo English Test.
  • KAIST and POSTECH teach almost entirely in English. SNU, Yonsei, Korea University, and others offer many English-taught tracks.
  • Learning some Korean still pays off for daily life, part-time work, and graduation requirements at a few schools.

Can you really study in Korea without Korean?

For an English-taught degree, yes. Admission is based on your academic record and an English proficiency score. Lectures, readings, assignments, and exams in these programs are in English. Plenty of international students graduate from Korean universities with only survival-level Korean.

Where Korean becomes necessary is if you choose a Korean-taught program, or a program with a graduation-language requirement, or a fully funded route like GKS that includes a Korean language year. More on that below. And if you would rather learn Korean first and then apply, that is a well-paved road too: the language year to degree guide shows how a year at a university language institute leads into a Korean-taught degree.

What is TOPIK, and when do you need it?

TOPIK, the Test of Proficiency in Korean, is the standard measure of Korean ability. It has two versions and six levels:

TOPIK levels
TestLevelsRoughly means
TOPIK ILevel 1 to 2Beginner, basic survival Korean
TOPIK IILevel 3 to 4Intermediate, can handle daily and some academic life
TOPIK IILevel 5 to 6Advanced, near-academic and professional fluency

You generally need TOPIK in three situations: you are applying to a Korean-taught program, your English-taught program has a Korean graduation requirement, or you take a funded route like GKS that asks for TOPIK Level 3 after its language year. For a standard English-taught admission, you usually do not need TOPIK at all.

Here is the part that gets buried: for a Korean-taught program, you need that Korean score before you apply, not later. Most departments ask for TOPIK Level 3, and competitive ones ask for Level 4. For an English-taught program you need no Korean to get in, but many universities still require TOPIK Level 4 to graduate. It varies by university and department, so confirm both the admission and the graduation rule with your target school.

When you actually need Korean, by track
Your trackKorean at admissionKorean to graduate
Korean-taught programTOPIK Level 3, sometimes 4Often TOPIK Level 4
English-taught programNone, an English score insteadOften TOPIK Level 4, varies by school
GKS or similar funded routeNone to applyA funded year of Korean first, then reach TOPIK Level 3 to start your degree

Which English tests do Korean universities accept?

Instead of TOPIK, English-taught programs ask for proof of English. Exact cutoffs vary by university and program, but the common baseline looks like this:

Typical English requirements for English-taught programs
TestCommon minimumNotes
TOEFL iBT80 and upMost widely accepted
IELTS Academic6.0 and upWidely accepted
Duolingo English TestAccepted at some schoolsCheck the specific program
Native or prior English-medium studySometimes a waiverOften needs documentation

Always confirm the exact threshold on the program page, since competitive programs ask for higher scores.

Which universities teach in English?

English-taught options have expanded a lot, but they are not evenly spread. A few anchors:

  • KAIST and POSTECH. Korea's two leading science and technology institutes conduct nearly all instruction in English and require only English proficiency. They are a natural fit if you do not speak Korean and want STEM.
  • Seoul National University, Yonsei, and Korea University. The largest research universities offer many English-taught tracks across business, social sciences, engineering, and the humanities.
  • Dedicated international colleges, such as Yonsei's Underwood International College, are built around English-medium study.

To see which schools offer English-taught programs in your field, filter the universities directory.

What if you do not have the score yet?

Many universities offer conditional admission. You are accepted on the condition that you reach the required score, or you enroll first in the university's Korean Language Institute for one to four semesters of intensive study before starting your degree. This is also how the GKS language year works.

Funded scholarships often bundle this in. GKS pays for a full year of Korean before your degree, and you must reach TOPIK Level 3 to move on to it. In other words, a scholarship can be how you learn the Korean you need, paid for, rather than a reason you cannot apply.

Daily life without Korean

In Seoul and other big cities you can manage day to day with English, translation apps, and a little effort. Campus offices that serve international students operate in English, and younger Koreans often speak some. That said, learning the Korean alphabet, Hangul, takes only a few days and instantly makes signs, menus, and transit readable. A few hundred words of Korean changes your daily experience more than almost anything else.

What to do next

  1. Run the KoreaAdmit quiz to find English-taught programs and scholarships that fit your profile.
  2. Filter the universities directory for English-taught programs in your field.
  3. If you want full funding, the GKS guide explains the Korean language year.
  4. Once you are admitted, plan your D-2 student visa.
  5. For the full process end to end, read How to Study in Korea.

Frequently asked questions

Can I study in Korea without speaking Korean?
Yes. Many Korean universities offer complete bachelor's and master's degrees taught entirely in English, especially in business, engineering, computer science, international studies, and the sciences. For these programs you submit an English test score rather than a Korean one, and you can graduate with only survival-level Korean.
Do I need TOPIK to study in Korea?
Not for most English-taught programs. You generally need TOPIK only if you apply to a Korean-taught program, your program has a Korean graduation requirement, or you take a funded route like GKS that asks for TOPIK Level 3 after its language year.
Do I need to learn Korean before I apply?
It depends on your track. For a Korean-taught program, yes: you usually need TOPIK Level 3 (sometimes Level 4) at the time you apply, so you learn Korean first. For an English-taught program you can apply with zero Korean and an English score instead, though many universities still require TOPIK Level 4 to graduate. Requirements vary by university and department, so confirm both rules with your target school.
Which scholarships include Korean language training?
The Global Korea Scholarship (GKS) is the main one: it funds a full year of Korean before your degree begins, and you must reach TOPIK Level 3 to proceed to your program. Holders of TOPIK Level 5 or 6 and some research scholars are exempt from the language year. So a scholarship can be how you pick up the Korean you need, paid for, rather than a barrier to applying.
What English score do Korean universities require?
Exact cutoffs vary, but a common baseline for English-taught programs is TOEFL iBT 80 or higher, or IELTS Academic 6.0 or higher. Some universities accept the Duolingo English Test or waive the requirement for native speakers and prior English-medium study. Competitive programs ask for higher scores.
Which universities in Korea teach in English?
KAIST and POSTECH, the leading science and technology institutes, conduct nearly all instruction in English. Seoul National University, Yonsei, and Korea University offer many English-taught tracks, and Yonsei's Underwood International College is built around English-medium study. Always confirm that your specific major is English-taught.
Should I still learn Korean?
It helps a lot, even when it is not required. Korean makes part-time work, internships, housing, and daily life easier, and a few programs ask for a Korean score to graduate. Learning Hangul, the alphabet, takes only a few days and makes signs and menus readable right away.