Republic of Korea passport


The Republic of Korea passport is issued to a South Korean citizen to facilitate their international travel. Like any other passport, South Korean passports serve as proof for passport holders' personal information, such as nationality and date of birth. South Korean passports also indicate the holder's resident registration number, unless the holder does not have one. South Korean passports are issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and have been printed by the Korea Minting and Security Printing Corporation since 1973.

Types

Ordinary passports are issued for one, five, or ten years of validity, depending on age of bearer.
South Korean passports are dark green, with the National Emblem of the Republic of Korea emblazoned in gold in the centre of the front cover. The word '대한민국' and 'REPUBLIC OF KOREA'
are inscribed above the Emblem whereas '여권', 'PASSPORT' and the international e-passport symbol are inscribed below the Emblem.

Difference with DPRK passport

In North Korea the word passport is spelled 려권, whereas in South Korea the same word is written 여권.

Identity Information Page

  • Photo of the passport holder
  • Type PM passports can be used for multiple entries while PS passports are valid for a single entry. PR passports are for Koreans who are permanent residents of countries other than Korea. However, the PR type passport has been abolished as of 21 December 2017 and permanent residents of other countries now get a normal passport
  • Issuing country code - KOR
  • Passport number
  • Surname -
  • Given names
  • Nationality - Republic of Korea
  • Date of birth
  • Date of issue
  • Date of expiry
  • Sex
  • Personal ID number ; however, prior to 2015, South Korean passports issued to Zainichi Koreans did not have resident registration numbers, reflecting their statutory exemption from taxation and conscription in South Korea.
  • Issuing authority - Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Hangul name

    Passport note

The note inside South Korean passports are written in both Korean and English. The message in the passport, written by the South Korea's Minister of Foreign Affairs, states:
In Korean:
In English:

Languages

The textual portions of passports is printed in both English and Korean.

New passport issued from 2020

From 2020 onwards, the ministry of foreign affairs will issue a new biometric passport. The passport will be redesigned entirely with some improvements in security. The identity information page will be made of polycarbonate making it much harder to forge. The colour of the cover of the ordinary passport will change from green to blue. Personal ID number will be removed from the passport for greater security. The new passport will be issued from June 2020 for diplomatic and official passports holders and December 2020 for those holding an ordinary passport.

Biometric passport

The South Korean government has been issuing biometric passports since February 2008 for diplomats and government officials. They have been issuing this type of passport to all of their citizens since 25 August 2008.
The South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs formed the "Committee for promoting e-passports" in April 2006, and it was scheduled to issue biometric passports in the second half of 2008. On 4 September 2007, the media reported that the South Korean government decided to revise its passport law to issue biometric passports which include fingerprint information, first to the diplomats in the first quarter of 2008, and the rest of the public in the second half of the year. Some civil liberties have caused some controversy over the fingerprinting requirement because the ICAO only requires a photograph be recorded on the chip.
On 26 February 2008, the South Korean legislature passed a revision of the passport law. A new biometric passport was issued to diplomats in March, and to the general public shortly thereafter. Fingerprinting measures would not be implemented immediately; however, they began 1 January 2010.
The appearance of the new biometric passports is almost identical to the former machine-readable versions, and they both have 48 pages. However, the space for visas was reduced by six pages. These pages are now reserved for identification purposes, notices and other information, as well as the bearer's contacts. In the new biometric passports, the main identification page has moved to the second page from inside the front cover. The note from the Foreign Affairs Minister is still shown on the front page and the signature is shown on the page after photo identification.
The new biometric passport incorporates many security features such as colour shifting ink, hologram, ghost image, infrared ink, intaglio, laser perforation of the passport number, latent image, microprinting, security thread, solvent sensitive ink, and steganography.
Inside the backcover, a caution for the biometric chip is written both in Korean,

"주의 – 이 여권에는 민감한 전자칩이 내장되어 있습니다. 접거나 구멍을 뚫는 행위 또는 극한 환경에의 노출로 여권이 손상될 수 있으니 취급에 주의하여 주시기 바랍니다."

and in English,

"This passport contains sensitive electronics, For best performance please do not bend, perforate or expose to extreme temperatures or excess moisture."

The passport holders' contact information that was originally held inside the backcover has also been moved to the last page of the new passport.

Production

As of January 2009, the Korea Minting and Security Printing Corporation takes eight hours to produce the new biometric passport and is capable of producing 26,500 passports per day.

Visa free travel

Visa requirements for South Korean citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Republic of Korea. As of 15 January 2019, South Korean citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 189 countries and territories, ranking the South Korean passport second in the world in terms of travel freedom according to the Henley Passport Index. Additionally, Arton Capital's Passport Index currently rank the South Korean passport third in the world in terms of travel freedom, with a visa-free score of 165, as of 15 January 2019.
As of October 2018, the passports of South Korea, Brunei and Chile are the only ones to provide visa-free access to all G8 countries.

Inter-Korea travel

The South Korean constitution considers North Korea as part of its territory, although under a different administration. In other words, the South does not view going to and from the North as breaking the continuity of a person's stay, as long as the traveler does not land on third country, i.e. non-Korean, territory.
However, because of the political situation between the South and the isolated socialist Juche government of North Korea, it is almost impossible to enter the North from the South across the Korean DMZ. Tourists wishing to enter North Korea have to pass through another country, and most enter from China, because most flights to/from Pyongyang serve Beijing.
South Koreans are generally not allowed to visit North Korea, except with special authorizations granted by the Ministry of Unification and North Korean authorities on a limited basis. South Koreans who are allowed to visit North Korea are issued a North Korean visa on a separate sheet of paper, not in the South Korean passport. The Republic of Korea passport can be used to enter North Korea, because passport is one of the government's approved identity documents, but it is being only to prove the bearer's identity, not to determine the bearer's legal residence. South Koreans can also use other government approved identity documents such as National ID Card and Driver's License, because the South Korean government treats North Korea as part of South Korea and expects South Korean IDs to be accepted.
In 1998, visa-free travel to the tourist resort of Mount Kumgang and the Kaesong Industrial Region was made possible under the "sunshine policy" orchestrated by South Korean President Kim Dae-jung. Those wishing to travel across the DMZ were given special travel certificates issued by the Ministry of Unification through Hyundai Asan. In July 2008, a female tourist named Park Wang-ja was shot to death by a North Korean guard on a beach near Mount Kumgang, which led to the suspension of the tours. As of March 2010 all travel across the DMZ has now been suspended due to increasing tensions between North and South Korea. However in 2018, Kim Jong-un and others went to South Korea through the DMZ and met up with South Korean officials. They discussed reunification.
There are four land border checkpoints in South Korea for inter-Korea travel.

Restricted nations

The South Korean government has banned Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen as travel destinations for safety reasons.