Apostille Korea says its online service for issuing, notarizing and certifying civil documents is now supported on Korea's K-Untact (non-face-to-face) Voucher platform, letting eligible businesses use the government voucher to adopt remote document preparation instead of handling each step through in-person visits.
- Apostille Korea's document-certification service is offered on the K-Untact Voucher platform.
- The service covers issuance, notarization and certification of civil documents.
- Eligible businesses can adopt it using the government voucher.
- It lets document workflows be handled online instead of in person.
What the K-Untact Voucher platform offers
The K-Untact Voucher is a government program that helps eligible businesses adopt non-face-to-face (online) services by supporting part of the cost through a voucher. Demand companies browse registered suppliers on the platform and apply the voucher to the services they choose. With Apostille Korea registered as a supplier, businesses can select its online document service and use the voucher toward the issuance, notarization and certification of the civil documents they need.
What the service covers for businesses
Apostille Korea's service handles the issuance, translation, notarization and certification of documents online, so a company can prepare submission-ready records — including those bound for overseas use — without repeated visits to issuing and certifying offices. For documents going abroad, the route depends on the destination: an apostille for a Hague Apostille Convention member, or foreign-ministry and embassy legalization for a non-member. Businesses are advised to confirm each destination's exact requirement before they begin.
Frequently asked questions
What is the K-Untact Voucher platform?
A government program where eligible businesses adopt non-face-to-face online services from registered suppliers, with part of the cost supported through a voucher.
What does Apostille Korea offer there?
An online service for the issuance, translation, notarization and certification of civil documents, including those needed for overseas use.
How is a document certified for use abroad?
By apostille for a Hague Convention member, or foreign-ministry and embassy legalization for a non-member, usually with a certified translation.
Source: Segye Biz (segyebiz.com) ↗
