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Education

Learning Korean

Practical ways to learn Korean — from free classes to apps and the TOPIK exam.

6 min read

You can survive in Korea with very little Korean, but you will thrive with even a basic command of it. Reading signs, ordering food, talking to neighbours, handling officials, and building real friendships all get dramatically easier. Learning Korean is also useful — sometimes required — for jobs, study and long-term visas. Here is how to actually do it.

Start with the alphabet — it is easier than you think

Hangul, the Korean alphabet, was designed to be easy to learn, and most people can read it (slowly) after just a few days of practice. Reading Hangul instantly helps you with signs, menus, app and place names. Do this first — it is the highest-value step.

Ways to learn

Free and low-cost classes

  • Multicultural Family Support Centres and community centres offer free or cheap Korean classes to foreign residents — one of the best-kept secrets for newcomers
  • Local government and volunteer programs run beginner courses
  • Some universities and churches offer community classes

University language programs

For serious, structured study, university language institutes offer intensive courses (these are also the basis of the D-4 student visa). They are the fastest route to fluency if you can commit the time.

Apps and self-study

  • Talk To Me In Korean (TTMIK) — excellent, friendly lessons for all levels
  • Duolingo and Memrise — good for daily habit and vocabulary
  • Anki — flashcards for memorising words efficiently
  • Papago — not a teacher, but a superb translator for daily life

Practice with people

  • Language exchange (you teach English, they teach Korean) is free and effective
  • KakaoTalk open chats and meetup groups connect learners
  • Your everyday errands are practice — order, greet and ask in Korean even when nervous

The TOPIK exam

The Test of Proficiency in Korean (TOPIK) is the official standard, with levels 1 to 6. It matters because it is used for:

  • University admission
  • Some jobs
  • Visa changes and points toward F-2 and F-5

If permanent residency is your goal, work toward the TOPIK level (or KIIP completion) your route requires — start early, as language takes time.

A realistic plan for a busy person

  1. Week 1: learn to read Hangul (TTMIK or a free guide)
  2. Weeks 2 to 8: a daily app habit (15 minutes) plus survival phrases — greetings, numbers, directions, ordering, money
  3. Ongoing: join a free local class for structure, and practise with real people weekly
  4. When ready: target a TOPIK level if you need it for work, study or your visa

Tips that make it stick

  • Little and often beats occasional cramming
  • Learn what you actually use first — your neighbourhood, your job, your errands
  • Do not fear mistakes; Koreans appreciate any effort to speak their language
  • Lean on the community — fellow members can recommend the best local class and practise with you

Read Hangul this week, build a 15-minute daily app habit, and grab a free class at your local multicultural centre. Even basic Korean transforms daily life — and if F-5 is the goal, start working toward your TOPIK level now.

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