Republic of Korea Admissions Brief — June 7, 2026
As 2027 college entrance prep intensifies, students are now strategizing after the June mock exam. The Korean Council for University Education confirmed that four-year universities will recruit 69,331 students through regular admission (jeongsi) in 2026. With major universities reshaping their entrance formats, past year admissions data has limited utility. Success hinges on carefully analyzing each university's SAT-equivalent score weighting, specific subject combination requirements, and conversion methods.
Republic of Korea Admissions Brief — June 7, 2026
Key Education Policies & Admissions Changes
1. 2026 Regular Admission Quota Confirmed — 69,331 Students
According to the 2026 University Admissions Plan released by the Korean Council for University Education, four-year universities will recruit 69,331 students through regular admission (jeongsi). However, after early-admission (sunsee) closes on December 24, unfilled spots are expected to roll over to regular admission, so the actual number will likely be higher.

2. Science vs. Social Studies Subject Score Gap Narrowed, Leveling the Playing Field
In the 2026 SAT-equivalent exam, the gap between the highest standard scores in social studies versus science subjects has narrowed significantly compared to last year, easing the one-sided advantage/disadvantage dynamic. However, because each university applies its own percentile-to-standard-score conversion method differently by field, the subject advantage landscape is being redrawn. As a result, simply copying 2025 admission thresholds directly into 2026 strategy is now essentially impossible.

3. 2026 Regular Admission Strategy Basics
Universities employ different SAT score weighting methods, varying subject combination requirements, and divergent score-conversion approaches for social vs. science subjects—all layered together. Students must therefore master each university's bonus-point system precisely, then systematically build a three-tier strategy: reach schools, target schools, and safety schools.
College Admissions Strategy & Analysis
1. Entering the Golden Window After June Mock Exam
With the June mock exam—the dress rehearsal for the 2027 SAT-equivalent—now concluded, students have begun seriously plotting their college strategy. The critical task right now is using mock results to gauge where you stand and map out which universities to target.

2. Tighter Competition as Regular Admission Shrinks
The key risk for 2026 regular admission applicants: the regular admission percentage keeps falling, and recruitment numbers are declining overall. This means competition will intensify, so students must craft more careful, precise strategies than ever before.
3. Reassessing Past Results as Universities Overhaul Formats
In 2026, many top universities are restructuring their entrance processes, making it risky to simply transplant last year's cutoffs onto this year's choices. You must understand each university's specific format changes, then rebuild your strategy from scratch.
High School Admissions & Study Information
Currently, available search results do not contain recent official announcements (within the last 24 hours) about high school selection, selective/independent schools admissions info, or middle school prep strategies. For concrete high school admissions policy changes or briefing schedules, we recommend checking your regional education office's official website.
Next Week's Admissions Calendar & Summary
Available search results do not specify concrete timelines for upcoming announcements on college entrance plans or high school admissions briefings within the next seven days. Students should monitor official websites from the Korean Institute for Curriculum and Evaluation, the Ministry of Education, individual university admissions offices, and the Korean Council for University Education for the latest updates.
Editor's Note: This briefing includes only information released on or after Thursday, June 6, 2026. Always verify admissions details through official sources—the Ministry of Education, university admissions offices, and the College Admissions Information Center.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.