South Korean football league system explained

Country:South Korea
Sport:Association football
Pr:Yes (for men)
No (for women)
Federation:Korea Football Association
Confederation:AFC
Second:K League 2
Cup:Korean FA Cup

The South Korean football league system contains two professional leagues, two semi-professional leagues, and various amateur leagues for Korean football clubs.

The highest level of football in South Korea is the K League 1, which was founded in 1983. K League 2 was founded in 2013 and is currently a second division. Below the level of the professional leagues are the semi-professional K3 League, which was founded in 2007 and refounded in 2020, and the K4 League, which was founded in 2020, and serve as the third division and fourth division, respectively.

There was no avenue for progression between any of the leagues until 2012, when the K League 2 was founded.

The highest level of women's football in South Korea is the WK League, which was founded in 2009.

System by period

Korean National Semi-Professional Football League was a semi-professional football league between corporate teams in South Korea from 1964 to 2002. In 1983, with the establishment of K League which is a professional league, the Semi-professional League became the second tier and remained so until it was replaced by the Korea National League in 2003. The third tier K3 League was founded as an amateur league in 2007, and became the fourth tier after K League 2, the second division of the professional league, was founded in 2013. In 2017, the K3 League was divided into two divisions, the K3 League Advanced and the K3 League Basic.[1] They were relaunched as semi-professional leagues with new names, K3 League and K4 League, in 2020. The National League was merged into the K3 League.[2]

Promotion and relegation takes place within each of three classes (professional, semi-professional and amateur) but at present there is no promotion and relegation between classes. The KFA has announced plans to unify the league system with promotion and relegation between all seven leagues starting from the 2027 season.[3]

Professional leagues (K League)
Semi-professional leagues
Amateur leagues
YearTier 1Tier 2Tier 3Tier 4Tier 5Tier 6Tier 7Tier 8 and under
1964–1982Semi-professional League
1983K LeagueKorean League Division 1Korean League Division 2[4]
1984–2002K LeagueSemi-professional League[5]
2003–2006K League
2007–2012K LeagueNational LeagueK3 League (amateur)
2013–2016K League 1K League 2National LeagueK3 League (amateur)
2017–2019K League 1K League 2National LeagueK3 League AdvancedK3 League Basicbgcolor=#ffcccc colspan="3"Under construction
2020–presentK League 1K League 2K3 LeagueK4 LeagueK5 LeagueK6 LeagueK7 LeagueRegional competitions

Current system

Outside this league structure, there are university, reserve and youth level competitions. University clubs' U-League and reserve teams' R League are operating independently from the league system. Relegation from K League 2 to K3 League and K4 League to K5 League from 2027 have been introduced.

LevelDivisionClass
1K League 1
12 clubs
↓ 1 relegation spot + 2 relegation playoff spot
Professional
2K League 2
13 clubs
↑ 1 promotion spot + 2 promotion playoff spot
No relegation
3K3 League
16 clubs
No promotion
↓ 2 relegation spots + 1 relegation playoff spot
Semi-professional
4K4 League
16 clubs
↑ 2 promotion spots + 1 promotion playoff spot
No relegation
5K5 League
84 clubs / 13 regions
No promotion
↓ 13 relegation spot
Amateur
6K6 League
192 clubs / 31 regions
↑ 13 promotion spot
↓ 31 relegation spot
7K7 League
1223 clubs / 187 regions
↑ 31 promotion spot
↓ relegation spot
8 and underRegional competitions
↑ promotion spot

Qualification for cups

Domestic cups

All K League, K3 League and K4 League sides qualify for the Korean FA Cup tournament. The top eleven sides from the K5 League gained qualification to the 2020 season's FA Cup tournament. The Korean League Cup competition was open to K League teams only, whilst sides from the National League could compete in the National League Championship, but both were abolished.

Continental competition

At present, four South Korean sides qualify automatically for the AFC Champions League. Three top teams from K League 1 automatically gains entry to the AFC Champions League. The Korean FA Cup winners also qualify for the AFC Champions League only. However, if the champions of Korean FA Cup are not members of K League, the fourth placed team of the K League 1 receive the entry spot.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Park . Joo-seong . December 23, 2015 . 아마추어리그, 디비전 시스템 추진...2020년까지 4부 리그 확대 . Amateur league introduced division system... Fourth division to be expanded by 2020 . April 22, 2024 . InterFootball . ko.
  2. Web site: December 19, 2019 . Breaking: K3 and K4 League Teams Confirmed . April 22, 2024 . K League United.
  3. News: Paik . Ji-hwan . March 28, 2024 . K League to unify promotion-relegation system across all 7 leagues . April 22, 2024 . Korea JoongAng Daily.
  4. News: https://newslibrary.naver.com/viewer/index.nhn?articleId=1982121500209208001&editNo=2&printCount=1&publishDate=1982-12-15&officeId=00020&pageNo=8&printNo=18831&publishType=00020 . ko:實業축구도 운영은 프로처럼… 본거지제도 채택 . ko . Dong-A Ilbo . Naver.com . 1982-12-15 . 2021-08-27.
  5. News: https://newslibrary.naver.com/viewer/index.nhn?articleId=1983111600329208029&editNo=2&printCount=1&publishDate=1983-11-16&officeId=00032&pageNo=8&printNo=11734&publishType=00020 . ko:實業축구 코리 안리그 1.2部制 1년만에 다시통합┈변덕行政 . ko . Kyunghyang . Naver.com . 1983-11-16 . 2021-08-27.