The Korea Immigration and Integration Program (KIIP / 사회통합프로그램) is a Ministry of Justice program teaching expats the Korean language, culture, and society. Completing KIIP Level 5 is the most common way to satisfy the language requirement for the F-5 permanent residency visa.
The Ministry of Justice prefers KIIP over TOPIK for F-5 applications because it proves familiarity with Korean laws, history, and social norms in addition to the language.
Why busy professionals choose KIIP over TOPIK
Despite the heavy classroom commitment, KIIP has three big advantages over TOPIK:
- It never expires. TOPIK scores are valid for 2 years; if a visa application is delayed, the test must be retaken. KIIP Level 5, once passed, is valid for life.
- It’s predictable. KIIP tests what’s in the textbooks. Show up to class, study the book, pass. TOPIK is a general academic test with no fixed syllabus.
- No academic essay. The final KIIP exam is multiple-choice plus a short writing section and brief spoken interview. TOPIK requires a structured 600-word academic essay in advanced written Korean.
Structure
| Level | Focus | Mandatory hours |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Beginner / Hangul | 15 |
| 1 | Beginner 1 | 100 |
| 2 | Beginner 2 | 100 |
| 3 | Intermediate 1 | 100 |
| 4 | Intermediate 2 | 100 |
| 5 | Korean Society (F-5 track) | 70 |
Starting from absolute beginner means roughly 470 hours of mandatory class attendance, plus exam preparation.
Scheduling reality
KIIP classes are not flexible. They are not self-paced, not on-demand, and not transferable between sessions. Once registered for a class slot, the attendee is locked into that schedule.
Standard options:
- Weeknight classes — typically 2–3 evenings per week, ~3 hours per session.
- Weekend classes — often a single 8-hour block (e.g. Saturday 9am to 6pm).
The 80% attendance rule is hard. Miss more than 20% of scheduled hours and the entire level must be retaken from scratch.
Online classes are still live
KIIP offers online classes but they are live broadcasts. Webcam must be on the entire time, clearly showing the attendee’s face. Driving, commuting, or visibly working on other things during class results in being marked absent.
Breaks follow Korean university style: 50 minutes of instruction, 10 minutes break. Toilet breaks happen during the 10-minute intervals. Long weekend classes include a 1-hour lunch break.
Registration
The portal is at socnet.go.kr (Korea Immigration Service’s social integration site).
Class registration is notoriously competitive — slots open at midnight on specific dates and nationwide fill within seconds. Treat it like buying tickets to a popular concert. Class fees are nominal (around 1,000 KRW per class hour).
The pre-assessment shortcut
The KIIP Pre-Assessment Test (사전평가) determines placement level. A higher placement skips earlier levels and saves hundreds of hours.
The test is 100 points total:
| Section | Format | Points | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Written | 50 questions (48 MCQ + 2 short answer) | 75 | 60 minutes |
| Oral | 5 questions (in-person interview) | 25 | ~10 minutes |
There is no separate listening section.
What the oral test actually looks like
Not a debate. Highly structured and brief (~10 minutes):
- Read a short paragraph aloud (pronunciation check)
- Answer 1–2 comprehension questions about the paragraph
- Answer 1–2 personal questions: “Why did you come to Korea?”, “What is your favorite Korean food?”, “What is your job?”
The questions are predictable enough that they can be effectively scripted in advance. Hiring a tutor for 6–12 months specifically to grind the pre-assessment can plausibly bump someone from Level 1 to Level 3 or Level 4, saving 200–300 hours of mandatory class time.
How long does it actually take
For a beginner spending 5 hours per week:
- Self-study to TOPIK Level 5: ~1,500 hours total. At 5 hr/week, roughly 5–6 years.
- KIIP from Level 1, attending faithfully: ~470 class hours plus exam prep. At weekend 8-hour blocks, roughly 1.5–2 years of continuous attendance.
- Pre-assessment to skip into Level 4 or 5, then attend remaining levels: 6–12 months of focused tutoring + 70–170 hours of class attendance + exam prep.