Apostille Korea
Academic · One-stop

One-stop certification and delivery for documents from 257 universitiesApostille Korea says it certifies and delivers academic documents from 257 universities in a single flow, so graduates submitting transcripts and degree certificates abroad can finish issuance, certification and shipping in one place.

Apostille Korea says it handles academic documents from 257 universities as a one-stop service, covering certification and delivery in a single flow, so graduates who need to submit transcripts, diplomas or degree certificates abroad can complete issuance, the matching certification and shipping through one provider rather than several offices.

Key points
  • The service covers academic documents from 257 universities.
  • Issuance, certification and delivery are handled together in one flow.
  • Certification follows the destination: apostille for Hague members, embassy legalization for non-members.
  • Graduates can prepare and ship documents online without visiting each office.

What a one-stop academic-document service covers

Transcripts, diplomas and degree certificates are core documents for overseas study, employment and immigration, and preparing them usually means several separate steps: obtaining the record from the university, translating and notarizing it, certifying it for the destination, and shipping it where it needs to go. Apostille Korea says it brings these together for documents from 257 universities, so a graduate does not have to request the record from the school, arrange certification elsewhere, and organize delivery on their own. Handling the chain as one flow is meant to keep an application on schedule and reduce the risk that a missing certification or a delivery delay sets it back.

How certification depends on the destination

The certification route for an academic document follows the country where it will be submitted. If that country belongs to the Hague Apostille Convention, the document is notarized, translated and apostilled, which member states recognize directly. If it is not a member, the document goes through foreign-ministry confirmation and then legalization at that country's embassy. A certified translation is typically attached. Apostille Korea says it identifies the correct route for each destination, completes the matching certification, and ships the finished document, so it arrives ready to submit to the receiving school or employer.

Frequently asked questions

Which documents are covered?

Academic records such as transcripts, diplomas and degree certificates from the 257 universities the service supports, prepared for submission abroad.

What certification will my document need?

It depends on the destination: an apostille for a Hague Convention member, or foreign-ministry and embassy legalization for a non-member, usually with a notarized translation.

Can issuance, certification and delivery be done together?

Yes. Apostille Korea coordinates them in one flow online and ships the finished document, so the steps are not spread across separate offices.

Source: KD프레스 (kdpress.co.kr) ↗

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