Short-Term Visit Visa
단기방문 (C-3) — C-3 Short-Term Visit (up to 90 days, no work)
At a glance
Foreign nationals who want to stay in Korea for 90 days or less for a short-term purpose without working for pay.
Up to 90 days per entry.
No. Employment or any paid activity is not allowed on a C-3 visa. It is for short visits only, not for work or long-term study.
None. No TOPIK or Korean-language level is required for a C-3 short-term visit.
Fee: Visa issuance fee (paid to the Korean mission, charged in USD-equivalent): single entry (stay 90 days or less) about USD 40; double entry about USD 70; multiple entry about USD 90. Fees are non-refundable even if the visa is refused. Separately, K-ETA (for visa-exempt travelers who choose to apply) costs KRW 10,000. The C-3 visa fee is not fixed in a single KRW amount because it is set in USD and varies with the exchange rate and any bilateral fee-waiver agreements. · Time: Varies by mission, commonly a few business days to about 1-2 weeks.
Where this fits in your journey
Before arrival
Get admitted, prepare documents, apply.
During study
ARC, extensions, permits while in Korea.
After graduation
Job-seeking and work visas.
Settlement
Long-term residence and PR.
Who can apply
- ✓Foreign nationals who want to stay in Korea for 90 days or less for a short-term purpose without working for pay.
- ✓Common reasons: tourism, visiting family or friends, attending events/conferences/seminars, market research or short business meetings, medical treatment, religious or cultural activities, collecting academic materials, and short-term study such as a language course under 90 days.
- ✓Student-relevant uses: (1) a short (under 90 days) Korean language course when the student does not need a full D-4 study visa; (2) parents or family visiting Korea for a student’s entrance ceremony (입학식) or graduation ceremony (졸업식).
- ✓Note: many nationalities can enter for short visits visa-free (visa waiver) and do not need a C-3 visa at all; a C-3 visa is mainly for nationals who are not visa-exempt or who want a longer/repeatable short-term stay.
Documents you'll need
- Visa application form (electronic application via the Korea Visa Portal is recommended as of 1 May 2025)
- passport valid at least 6 months
- passport photo
- application fee
- proof of funds / bank statement (typically 6 months)
- for C-3-1 (events/general) and C-3-4 (business): invitation letter and/or sponsor guarantee, employment or business registration certificate (with English translation) and tax payment certificate
- for C-3-9 (tourism): travel itinerary, round-trip flight and accommodation booking, and (if the applicant is a student) a school enrollment/recommendation letter
- for a short-term language course: an admission/enrollment letter from the accepting institution
- for family visits: proof of relationship and the inviter’s Korean ID/ARC copy. Exact documents vary by the Korean embassy/consulate and the applicant’s nationality.
How to apply
- Overseas embassy visa (사증) from a Korean mission abroad, normally via the Korea Visa Portal (visa.go.kr).
- Visa-exempt nationals need no C-3 and enter visa-free; C-3 is a short-stay category not usually changed in-country.
- Apply at the Korean embassy or consulate in your home country (or the mission covering your country of residence), in most cases through the Korea Visa Portal (www.visa.go.kr).
- Visa-exempt nationals do not apply for a C-3 visa; they simply enter under the visa-waiver rules for stays up to 90 days.
- Because C-3 is a short-stay category, it is normally issued abroad rather than changed to inside Korea.
Stay & extension
Up to 90 days per entry. Typical formats: single-entry visa = stay up to 90 days, visa valid 3 months; double-entry visa = stay up to 30 days per entry, visa valid 6 months; multiple-entry visa = stay up to 90 days per entry, visa valid 1, 5, or 10 years depending on eligibility.
As a short-term category, C-3 is generally NOT extended beyond 90 days except for limited unavoidable reasons (e.g. illness, humanitarian grounds) approved by an immigration office. A student who entered on C-3-1 for a short language course and wants to keep studying can register for the next semester and apply at a Korean immigration office to change status to a study visa (D-4) instead of extending C-3.
Working on this visa
No. Employment or any paid activity is not allowed on a C-3 visa.
It is for short visits only, not for work or long-term study.
Requirements in detail
None. No TOPIK or Korean-language level is required for a C-3 short-term visit.
Applies to visa-exempt travelers who enter without a C-3: K-ETA before boarding (KRW 10,000, valid 3 years), 67 countries/regions exempt through 31 Dec 2026, ages 17-under and 65-over exempt; no valid K-ETA means an e-Arrival Card is required. C-3 visa holders enter on the visa, not K-ETA.
Sub-types
C-3-1general (단기일반) (events/seminars, language course <90d)C-3-2group tour (단체관광)C-3-3medical tourism (의료관광)C-3-4short-term business (단기상용)C-3-8overseas-Korean visit (동포방문)C-3-9general tourism (관광) / visiting family or friends.No dependent status; each visitor applies for their own C-3 (or enters visa-free).
2025–2026 policy updates
- K-ETA temporary exemption extended: visitors from 67 visa-waiver countries/regions can enter Korea for stays of up to 90 days WITHOUT applying for K-ETA.
- The Ministry of Justice extended this temporary exemption through 31 December 2026 (KST) (in force 1 Jan 2026 – 31 Dec 2026; originally introduced for the 2023-2024 ‘Visit Korea Year’ and repeatedly extended).
- Exempt travelers may still choose to apply for K-ETA voluntarily (e.g. to skip the paper arrival card), in which case the KRW 10,000 fee applies.
- K-ETA validity is 3 years from issue (or until passport expiry, whichever comes first), and travelers aged 17 or under and 65 or over are exempt from the K-ETA requirement.
- Electronic visa application via the Korea Visa Portal became the recommended method as of 1 May 2025.
Common mistakes
- Thinking C-3 lets you work or take up full-time long-term study – it does not.
- Assuming everyone needs a C-3 visa when many nationalities are visa-exempt for up to 90 days (they should check visa-waiver rules and K-ETA instead).
- Overstaying past 90 days – C-3 is rarely extendable.
- Booking a language course longer than 90 days on C-3 (that needs a D-4 study visa).
- Forgetting K-ETA for non-exempt travelers, or wrongly applying/paying for K-ETA when your nationality is currently exempt.
- Parents coming for a ceremony sometimes forget to carry proof (invitation, student’s enrollment proof) that customs/immigration may ask for.
Where this leads
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