Apostille Korea has introduced a service that prepares parental travel consent and entry documents for primary, middle and high-school students travelling abroad, handling drafting, notarization, translation and the certification each destination requires so families can ready a student's paperwork online.
- The service covers parental consent and entry documents for K-12 students going abroad.
- It is aimed at study trips, exchanges, competitions and family travel.
- Documents are certified to the destination — apostille or embassy legalization.
- Drafting, notarization, translation and certification are handled online.
What documents a student traveller needs
A primary, middle or high-school student travelling without a parent often needs a parental travel consent, and depending on the program may also need entry-related documents such as proof of enrollment or a guardianship statement. Because a minor's paperwork is scrutinized closely at the border, families benefit from preparing it correctly and early. Apostille Korea drafts the consent, arranges notarization, and where the destination requires it, attaches an apostille for a Hague Convention member or embassy legalization for a non-member, usually with a certified translation.
How the service supports families
Rather than visiting a notary, government office or embassy, families submit the trip and student details online, and Apostille Korea prepares each document to the destination's standard, completes notarization and arranges the matching certification and translation. By bringing consent and entry documents into one online flow, the company aims to help students depart for study trips, exchanges or competitions without an in-person visit and without a document being rejected at check-in or immigration.
Frequently asked questions
Who is this service for?
Primary, middle and high-school students travelling abroad — for study trips, exchanges, competitions or family travel — who need a parental travel consent and related entry documents.
How are the documents certified?
To the destination's standard: an apostille for a Hague Convention member or embassy legalization for a non-member, usually with a certified translation.
Can it be done online?
Yes. Drafting, notarization, translation and certification are handled online, so no in-person visit is required.
Source: 이투데이 (etoday.co.kr) ↗
