Compare student checklists and recent preparation tips, then verify immigration requirements through official sources.
Study in Korea community
Your first weeks as a student in Korea are easier with real local answers.
A student-first Inko landing page for international students preparing for Korea, covering arrival setup, ARC, housing, campus life, and safer social connections.

Ask about deposits, maintenance fees, commute, curfew, shared facilities, and neighborhood routines.
Start from public context, shared interests, campus life, and language exchange while keeping privacy controls close.
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The guide gives context first. The app carries the next step: ask, meet, chat, and keep safety controls visible.



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About this guide
Preparing to study in Korea quickly becomes a first-weeks checklist: arrival setup, ARC, phone number, banking, housing, campus routines, friends, and safety. Inko helps students ask practical community questions while official immigration, school, housing, employment, and legal decisions stay with official sources.
Arrival setup
Turn the first week into a clear student checklist: arrival records, ARC or residence-card appointments, a Korean phone number, banking, campus orientation, and the documents your school asks you to keep ready. Visa, ARC, part-time work permission, immigration, and school decisions must still be confirmed through official immigration and school sources.
- Save your Korean address and school contact before appointments
- Prepare ARC, phone, and bank questions before visiting offices
- Use community answers as preparation, not final official advice
ARC, phone, and banking
Students often need a phone number before banking, banking before rent, and a residence card before everything feels stable. Ask what other international students recently prepared for telecom shops, SIM options, bank branches, app verification, and appointment timing.
- Ask which documents a bank or telecom shop recently requested
- Compare prepaid, postpaid, and verification limits
- Confirm residence-card and immigration requirements officially
Housing and campus life
Compare dorms, goshiwons, one-rooms, deposits, maintenance fees, commute time, campus neighborhoods, and daily routines before you choose where to live. Community context can explain tradeoffs, but housing contracts, payments, and legal rights should be checked through official or qualified sources.
- Separate deposit, rent, utilities, and maintenance fees
- Ask about commute, curfew, shared facilities, and campus area routines
- Do not send money until terms and the property contact are clear
Friends and safer community
Making friends in Korea can start with campus interests, local questions, language exchange, and group context instead of private details. Keep public context first, avoid sharing exact addresses or schedules, and use report, block, support, privacy, and account deletion paths when needed.
- Start with shared student-life questions or group settings
- Avoid oversharing private routines, documents, or exact locations
- Keep report, block, support, and privacy controls visible
Ask your first student-life question
Use Inko to keep arrival setup, ARC, housing, campus routines, friends, and safer community questions in one Korea-first student community. Public safety, support, privacy, and account deletion pages are available before signup. Use Inko for community context; confirm immigration, visa, employment, housing, and legal decisions through official sources.
- Arrival setup and ARC
- Dorms, goshiwons, one-rooms, and campus life
- Friends, language exchange, and safer social discovery
Related Korea guides
FAQ
Can Inko help with student visa or ARC questions?
Inko can help international students prepare better community questions and checklists for visa or ARC topics, but official immigration and school sources are the final authority for requirements, appointments, and decisions.
What can international students ask before arriving in Korea?
Students can ask about arrival setup, residence cards, phone or SIM options, banking, dorms, goshiwons, one-rooms, campus life, part-time work rule preparation, and making friends in Korea.
Is Inko only for Korean language exchange?
No. Language exchange is one path, but Inko also supports broader student-life questions, Korea community context, housing, campus routines, safety, and local setup topics.
How does Inko keep student social discovery safer?
Inko encourages public context before private details, avoiding exact addresses or routines, and keeping report, block, support, privacy, and account deletion information visible before signup.
Continue in Inko
Read the guide first, then use Inko to ask local questions, meet people carefully, and continue the Korea community flow inside the app.



