Ahead of the 2026 first-half qualification exam (GED equivalency test), Apostille Korea is offering an online service for the civil documents applicants must submit, issuing and preparing each record to the relevant education office's standard so candidates can register without an in-person visit.
- The service targets civil documents required to register for the first-half GED exam.
- Applicants request and receive the records online, without visiting an office.
- Documents are prepared to the receiving education office's stated standard.
- For overseas-issued records, translation and certification can be added.
What documents a GED applicant must submit
Registering for the qualification (GED equivalency) exam generally requires civil and academic records — such as a basic certificate, proof of prior schooling, or a record of completed grades — submitted to the supervising education office by the deadline. Requirements differ slightly between offices, and a missing or incorrectly issued document can delay a registration. Apostille Korea issues the needed civil documents online and prepares them to each office's standard; where a record was issued abroad, it adds a certified translation and the matching authentication.
Preparing online before the registration deadline
Instead of visiting in person, applicants submit their details online and Apostille Korea obtains the civil documents and assembles them to the office's requirement, in time for the registration window. For a foreign-issued record the company arranges authentication in the issuing country — an apostille for a Hague Convention member or embassy legalization for a non-member — usually with a certified translation. Consolidating issuance, translation and certification reduces the risk of a rejected packet close to the deadline.
Frequently asked questions
Who is this service for?
People registering for the first-half qualification (GED equivalency) exam who must attach civil or academic records to their application.
Can I prepare the documents without visiting?
Yes. The civil documents are requested, issued and assembled online to the relevant education office's standard, with no in-person visit required.
What if a record was issued abroad?
It is authenticated in the issuing country — an apostille for a Hague Convention member or embassy legalization for a non-member — usually with a certified translation.
Source: 이투데이 (etoday.co.kr) ↗
