House Registration (Tor Ror 14) → South Korea citizenship 🇰🇷
Ministry of Justice (KIIP) · F-2 → F-5 → Naturalisation 5 yrs (KIIP test)
To file with Ministry of Justice (KIIP) in South Korea for a citizenship pathway, the House Registration (Tor Ror 14) is one of the required core documents — pathway: F-2 → F-5 → Naturalisation 5 yrs (KIIP test).
End-to-end accountability through to direct submission at destination embassies in Bangkok.
Why South Korea insists on this document: Dual allowed only at 65+ or special grounds — Apostille + Korean translation.
End-to-end route: file House Registration (Tor Ror 14) at the District Registrar (1-3 days) → Korean translation → MFA → Apostille → Ministry of Justice (KIIP).
Pathway: F-2 → F-5 → Naturalisation 5 yrs (KIIP test) · Residence requirement 5 yrs · Dual nationality: conditional.
First-pass acceptance: 94-96%.
Coverage
How it works
- 1
Destination checklist
Compare Ministry of Justice (KIIP) requirements against the current House Registration (Tor Ror 14) format.
- 2
Request House Registration (Tor Ror 14)
Filed at the District Registrar via power of attorney, 1-3 working days.
- 3
Korean translation
Registrar-listed translator with a citizenship/immigration glossary.
- 4
MFA legalisation
Chaeng Wattana — 2-3 working days.
- 5
Apostille
Fast Apostille route via MFA.
- 6
Submit to Ministry of Justice (KIIP)
Filed in person at the destination embassy in Bangkok or via DHL.
Frequently asked questions
Does South Korea accept Apostille?
Yes — MFA Apostille is sufficient.
Translation language?
Korean, by a translator accepted by the destination authority.
Citizenship pathway?
F-2 → F-5 → Naturalisation 5 yrs (KIIP test)
Residence requirement?
5 years — combined pre- and post-PR.
Is dual nationality allowed?
Conditional — depends on grounds.
Approximate total cost?
20 บาท + translation THB 800-1,500/page + MFA THB 200-400 + Apostille free + destination fees.
Total time in Thailand?
10-21 working days for a single document set; renunciation adds 4-12 months separately.