If your language institute shuts down, suspends classes, or loses its ability to host foreign students, your stay becomes unstable quickly. The visa is tied to a specific educational institution and program. Once that institution stops operating properly, you need a replacement plan rather than assuming the remaining visa period stays safe.
Reviewed against
James Chae, 행정사 (Korean Licensed Administrative Attorney). License No. 220-06-06463 · 대한행정사회 (Korean Administrative Agents Association). Reviewed against the HiKorea 사증·체류업무 자격별 안내 매뉴얼 and cross-checked with Ministry of Justice issuances.
Last reviewed
April 22, 2026
Source references
Issuance-manual sections covering D-4 language and training visa issuance requirements.
Stay-manual sections covering D-4 registration, extension, attendance/compliance, and in-country filing rules.
Filing caution
Requirements can change by nationality, local immigration office, and filing channel. Confirm exact requirements with HiKorea, the responsible Korean consulate, or a licensed immigration specialist before filing.
A visa is not a free-standing permission to stay for language study anywhere in Korea. It is based on study at a named institution. If that institution closes or can no longer provide the program, immigration can conclude the purpose of stay has ended unless you transfer promptly to another qualifying school.
The priority order is usually:
A university language institute is often the cleanest transfer target if you need a more stable D-4-1 path.
Often yes, but it is not fully automatic. Immigration will want to see that the new school qualifies and that the break in study was caused by the institution's problem, not by your own non-attendance. If the closure happened suddenly, document the timeline carefully so there is no appearance of an unexplained study gap.
If you cannot secure a new school quickly, or if the original institution had compliance problems that trigger broader immigration scrutiny, you may be asked to leave Korea and reapply from abroad. That is more likely when the new course start date is far away or when the replacement school is not clearly equivalent.
Ask the old school for closure proof in writing before staff disappear or offices shut down.
Prefer a university-affiliated language institute if you need a stronger transfer case.
Keep all attendance and tuition records to prove the disruption was not your fault.
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Unfamiliar with a term?
Can I stay in Korea on my current D-4 until the printed expiry date if the school closes?
You should not rely on that. Once the school can no longer support the study program, immigration may treat the stay basis as broken unless you transfer quickly.
Will I automatically get to transfer because the closure was not my fault?
Not automatically, but the fact that the problem came from the school helps if you document it well and secure a legitimate new program quickly.
Should I move to another private academy or a university language institute?
A university language institute is usually the stronger option because it tends to be more stable and easier for immigration to evaluate.
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All agents on Mr. Visa Korea are certified immigration administrative agents (행정사) registered in Korea.
Browse specialistsWritten by James Chae — Co-Founder, Expert Sapiens
Platform expertise: Immigration consulting & visa services · Reviewed April 2026