Malaysia Digital Arrival Card guide travelers at international airport

Malaysia Digital Arrival Card for Korean Citizens (2026): Visa-Free 90 Days, KLIA Autogate Eligibility & MDAC Registration for South Korean Passport Holders

South Korean citizens must submit the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC) before every trip to Malaysia — it is free (RM 0), takes under 10 minutes, and must be completed within 72 hours before arrival at imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main. South Korea holds a significant entry privilege: Korean passport holders qualify for the KLIA autogate eGate and enjoy 90-day visa-free access without a separate Malaysian visa. This guide covers the MDAC requirement, autogate eligibility, K-ETA vs MDAC comparison, and step-by-step registration for Korean nationals.

Submit MDAC as a Korean Citizen — Free

Do South Korean Citizens Need MDAC for Malaysia?

South Korean citizens must complete the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC) before every trip to Malaysia — there are no exemptions for Korean passport holders, regardless of visit purpose, trip frequency, or length of stay.

The MDAC became mandatory for all foreign nationals on 1 January 2024, when Jabatan Imigresen Malaysia (JIM) replaced the paper disembarkation card with a fully digital system. Korean passport holders do not appear on any published exemption list — unlike citizens of Singapore and Brunei, who are exempt. The MDAC requirement applies whether you arrive by air at KLIA or KLIA2, by sea at Penang Port or Port Klang, or across a land border at Johor Bahru or Rantau Panjang.

Key Rules for Korean Passport Holders

  • One MDAC per person per trip — previous submissions cannot be reused for a new entry
  • Children require their own MDAC — every traveler including infants needs a separate submission with their own passport details
  • No age or frequency exemption — frequent fliers and senior travelers must register for every entry
  • MDAC ≠ visa — it is an immigration pre-registration, not a visa; South Korean citizens do not need a separate Malaysian visa
  • Arriving without MDAC may result in additional screening, delays, or denial of eGate access
  • Cost: RM 0 — any website charging a fee is not the official channel

For a full overview of the MDAC system, see our Malaysia Digital Arrival Card guide.

Submit MDAC Now — It's Free
South Korean family submitting Malaysia MDAC digital arrival card before travel to Kuala Lumpur
🇰🇷 MDAC for South Korean Citizens — Quick Summary:
MDAC required? Yes — mandatory for all Korean travelers
Fee? RM 0 — completely free
Submission window: Within 72 hours before arrival
Visa required? No — 90-day visa-free entry
KLIA autogate eligible?Yes — Korean passport holders can use eGate
Official portal: imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main
South Korean passport holder at Malaysia immigration counter visa-free 90 days Social Visit Pass

South Korea–Malaysia Visa-Free Entry: 90 Days Without a Visa

South Korean passport holders enter Malaysia visa-free for up to 90 days per entry — but the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC) remains mandatory even though no visa is required.

South Korea and Malaysia maintain a bilateral visa-exemption agreement that grants Korean tourists, business travelers, and transit passengers a Social Visit Pass valid for 90 days per entry — one of the most generous visa-free allowances in Southeast Asia. No visa sticker, no eVisa, and no pre-approval at a Malaysian embassy or consulate is required for Korean citizens.

Key Facts About South Korean Visa-Free Access to Malaysia

  • 90 days per single entry — the clock resets with each new arrival from abroad
  • Covers: tourism, business meetings, family visits, transit, and short-term relocation preparation
  • Extension: South Korean citizens can apply to extend the Social Visit Pass by up to 30 additional days at any Jabatan Imigresen Malaysia (JIM) office
  • Passport validity: your Korean passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond your intended departure date from Malaysia
  • MDAC is separate from visa status — visa-free entry does not mean MDAC-free; both privileges exist independently

For full details on Malaysian entry rules by nationality, see our Malaysia visa requirements guide.

South Korea KLIA Autogate Eligibility: eGate Access for Korean Passport Holders

South Korean passport holders are eligible to use the KLIA autogate eGate at Kuala Lumpur International Airport — enabling immigration clearance in under 60 seconds by scanning their biometric passport and MDAC QR code.

This is a meaningful operational advantage. Korean citizens can proceed directly to the biometric eGate lanes at KLIA Terminal 1 and KLIA2, bypassing standard immigration queues that can run 30–60 minutes during peak hours. The eGate uses facial recognition and e-passport chip reading, completing the entire clearance process in approximately 45–60 seconds.

Country KLIA Autogate Eligible Notes
🇰🇷 South Korea YES (eGate) Biometric passport + MDAC QR required
🇯🇵 Japan✅ YesBiometric passport required
🇺🇸 United States✅ YesBiometric passport required
🇬🇧 United Kingdom✅ YesPost-Brexit eligible
🇩🇪 Germany✅ YesOnly EU country eligible
🇦🇺 Australia✅ YesBiometric passport required
🇫🇷 France❌ NoStandard counter required
🇮🇹 Italy❌ NoStandard counter required
🇪🇸 Spain❌ NoStandard counter required
All other EU countries❌ NoStandard counter required

How the KLIA eGate Works for Korean Citizens

Using the KLIA autogate with a South Korean passport requires your MDAC QR code — the eGate will not function without it:

1
Complete your MDAC first

Submit at imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main within 72 hours before arrival — without this, you cannot use the eGate

2
Follow signs to the eGate lane

At KLIA or KLIA2, follow signs for eGate / Autogate — separate from manual immigration counters

3
Scan your South Korean passport

Place your biometric e-passport on the reader — the embedded chip is read automatically

4
Scan your MDAC QR code

Show your phone screen or printed QR code at the scanner

5
Facial biometric check

Look at the camera — facial recognition takes approximately 3–5 seconds

6
Gate opens — you are cleared

Total eGate process from approach to clearance: typically under 60 seconds

KLIA autogate eGate biometric immigration clearance South Korean passport holder eligible 2026
⚠️ Important for Korean travelers: The MDAC and the KLIA autogate are separate systems. Even though South Korea is eGate eligible, you must still complete MDAC before arrival — the eGate cannot process you without a valid pre-submitted MDAC on record.
🇰🇷 Korea eGate Status:
Autogate eligible? ✅ YES — Korean passport holders
Passport requirement: Biometric e-passport (chip)
MDAC still required? ✅ Yes — submitted within 72h
Typical clearance time: Under 60 seconds
Most EU countries: ❌ Standard counter only

For comparison across all nationalities, see our MDAC requirements by country, MDAC for Japanese citizens, and MDAC for European citizens guides.

K-ETA vs MDAC: What South Korean Travelers Need to Know

K-ETA (Korea Electronic Travel Authorization) is South Korea's own system requiring foreign visitors to obtain entry approval before traveling to Korea — it has no connection to the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC), which Korean citizens must submit before entering Malaysia.

Many South Korean travelers confuse these two systems because both are digital pre-arrival registrations. The confusion is understandable — but they are entirely separate government systems with no relationship to each other.

Feature K-ETA MDAC
Issued by Republic of Korea Malaysia (JIM)
Who needs it Foreigners traveling to Korea All foreigners traveling to Malaysia
Do Korean citizens need it? ❌ No — K-ETA is for foreigners ✅ Yes — required for Malaysia entry
Cost KRW 10,000 (~USD 7.50) RM 0 (free)
Official website k-eta.go.kr imigresen-online.imi.gov.my

Bottom line: Korean citizens do not need K-ETA to visit Malaysia. They do need MDAC. These are two different governments' systems with no connection to each other.

South Korean traveler understanding K-ETA vs MDAC difference before traveling to Malaysia
💡 Confused about K-ETA vs MDAC?
You only need MDAC to enter Malaysia as a South Korean citizen.
K-ETA is Korea's own system for foreigners entering Korea — it does not apply to Korean citizens traveling abroad.

How to Register MDAC with a Korean Passport: Step-by-Step

Registering the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC) with a South Korean passport takes under 10 minutes at imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main — complete all steps within the 72-hour window before your scheduled arrival in Malaysia.

The MDAC portal is operated by Jabatan Imigresen Malaysia (JIM) and works on desktop, tablet, and mobile browsers. No app download is required — it is web-based. No account or login is required. Submit as close to your departure as practical, but no earlier than 72 hours in advance.

What You Need Before Starting MDAC Registration

  • Valid South Korean passport — at least 6 months validity remaining from your entry date to Malaysia
  • Travel details — flight number or transport mode (air/sea/land), arrival date
  • Port of entry — e.g., KLIA, KLIA2, Penang International Airport, Johor Bahru land crossing
  • Malaysia accommodation address — full hotel name and street address for your first night; required field
  • Internet-connected device — smartphone, tablet, or laptop; no account creation required

For a detailed walkthrough with screenshots, see our MDAC registration guide.

Start MDAC Registration — Free

MDAC Registration Steps for Korean Passport Holders

1
Go to the official portal

Open imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main — this is the only free official portal; no payment will be requested

2
Select "Proceed as Individual"

No account creation or login required — the form is guest-access only

3
Enter passport details

Korean passport number exactly as printed, expiry date, nationality: South Korea / Republic of Korea

4
Enter travel information

Arrival date, mode of travel (air / sea / land), port of entry (e.g., KLIA, Penang, Johor Bahru)

5
Enter accommodation address

Full hotel or rental address for your first night in Malaysia — required field

6
Review all details carefully

Double-check your passport number and arrival date — these are the most common error points

7
Submit and save your MDAC QR code

Screenshot or download the QR code PDF — show it at the eGate scanner or to immigration officers on request

Traveling as a family? Each member — including children and infants — needs a separate MDAC submitted with their own passport details.

Common MDAC Mistakes Made by Korean Travelers

The most common MDAC mistakes by South Korean passport holders are submitting outside the 72-hour window, entering an incorrect passport number, and failing to register a new MDAC for each return trip to Malaysia.

Avoid these errors before your next flight to Kuala Lumpur:

  1. Submitting too early — MDAC only accepts submissions within 72 hours before arrival; submitting more than 3 days in advance results in a rejected or invalid submission
  2. Wrong passport number — enter your Korean passport number exactly as printed, including any letters and leading zeros; a single character error requires a completely new submission
  3. Not resubmitting for each trip — the MDAC is single-use only; every entry to Malaysia requires a fresh submission, even if you visited days earlier
  4. Using paid third-party websites — MDAC costs RM 0; websites charging fees are not the official channel and should be avoided
  5. Wrong accommodation address — entering a hotel name without a full street address, or listing accommodation you are not staying at, can cause border complications
  6. Not registering MDAC for children — every traveler, including infants, requires their own MDAC with their own passport details
  7. No offline copy of QR code — save your QR code offline before departure; network connectivity at the eGate lane may not allow you to reload it in real-time

For transit, exemption, and edge-case scenarios, see our MDAC exemptions and special cases guide.

South Korean traveler completing Malaysia MDAC digital arrival card registration correctly avoiding common mistakes
⚠️ Most common mistake: Submitting MDAC before the 72-hour window opens. Calculate your window from your scheduled arrival time in Malaysia — not your departure time.

Related MDAC Guides

🇯🇵 Japanese Citizens

MDAC guide for Japanese passport holders — eGate eligibility, visa-free access, and registration steps.

Japan Guide →

🇪🇺 European Citizens

Full MDAC guide for all EU/EEA nationalities with country-by-country table and autogate comparison.

European Guide →

🌍 By Country

MDAC requirements and autogate eligibility for all nationalities — comprehensive country table.

All Countries →

📋 Registration Guide

Step-by-step MDAC registration with screenshots, QR code guide, and troubleshooting tips.

Registration →

FAQs About MDAC for South Korean Citizens

South Korean travelers most frequently ask whether MDAC is required, how KLIA autogate works for Korean passport holders, and whether K-ETA replaces MDAC — direct answers below.

Yes — the Malaysia Digital Arrival Card (MDAC) is mandatory for all South Korean passport holders before every trip to Malaysia. There are no exemptions for Korean citizens. The MDAC has been required since 1 January 2024 and applies to air, sea, and land border entries.

Yes — South Korea has a bilateral visa-exemption agreement with Malaysia. Korean citizens receive a Social Visit Pass granting up to 90 days per entry with no visa required for tourism, business, or transit. However, MDAC is still mandatory even without a visa requirement.

Yes — South Korean passport holders are eligible for the KLIA autogate biometric eGate at KLIA and KLIA2. Korean travelers can clear immigration in under 60 seconds — but they must have completed MDAC before arrival to access the eGate lane. Without a valid MDAC QR code, the eGate will not process you.

At KLIA or KLIA2, proceed to the eGate / Autogate lane. Place your biometric South Korean passport on the reader, scan your MDAC QR code, then look at the camera for facial biometric verification. The gate opens in approximately 45–60 seconds. You must have completed MDAC before arrival to use the eGate.

Yes — MDAC costs RM 0 (zero) for all nationalities, including South Korean citizens. The official portal at imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main does not request any payment. Third-party websites that charge a fee are not official and should be avoided.

MDAC must be submitted within 72 hours (3 days) before your scheduled arrival in Malaysia. Submissions attempted more than 72 hours in advance will be rejected. Submitting 24–48 hours in advance is recommended to avoid last-minute issues while staying within the window.

Yes — every traveler, including children and infants, requires a separately submitted MDAC using their own passport details. A parent's or guardian's MDAC does not cover dependents. There is no family group option and no minimum age exemption.

No — the MDAC is single-use only. Each entry to Malaysia requires a fresh submission, even if you visited days earlier. There is no multi-trip or annual MDAC option for Korean nationals. Korean citizens who leave and re-enter Malaysia must register a new MDAC for the return trip.

K-ETA is South Korea's own electronic travel authorization — it requires foreign visitors to obtain approval before entering Korea. It has no connection to Malaysia. Korean citizens traveling to Malaysia must submit MDAC at imigresen-online.imi.gov.my/mdac/main — K-ETA does not replace or substitute MDAC.

Immigration officers may direct you to additional screening, causing significant delays. If you planned to use the KLIA eGate, arriving without MDAC prevents eGate access — you must use the standard immigration counter. For special case scenarios, see our MDAC exemptions guide.

Ready to Submit Your MDAC Before Flying to Malaysia?

All South Korean citizens must register before departure — it takes under 10 minutes, costs nothing, and unlocks KLIA autogate access for faster immigration clearance.

Submit MDAC Now — RM 0 Free