South Korean football league system
| Country | South Korea |
|---|---|
| Sport | Association football |
| Promotion and relegation | Partial (for men) No (for women) |
| National system | |
| Federation | Korea Football Association |
| Confederation | AFC |
| Top division |
|
| Second division | K League 2 |
| Cup competition | Korea Cup |
| Association football in South Korea | |
The South Korean football league system contains two professional leagues, two semi-professional leagues, and various amateur leagues for South Korean football clubs.
The top-tier league of the system is the K League 1, which was founded in 1983. The second-tier professional league was founded in 2013 under the name of K League 2. Below the two professional leagues, there are two semi-professional leagues, namely the K3 League and the K4 League.
South Korean female footballers participate at the WK League, the sole semi-professional league founded in 2009.
System by period
The Korean National Semi-Professional Football League was the first-ever semi-professional football league in South Korea, and was contested between works teams and military teams from 1964 to 2002. It became the second-tier league after the K League was established in 1983, and was replaced by the Korea National League in 2003.
The first official amateur league, regarded as the third-tier league, was founded in 2007, and was named the K3 League. The National League and the amateur K3 League were demoted to the third and fourth-tier leagues after the K League 2 appeared in 2013.
In 2017, the amateur K3 League was divided into two divisions, the K3 League Advanced and the K3 League Basic.[1] They were renamed the K3 League and the K4 League respectively when being relaunched as semi-professional leagues in 2020. The National League was merged into the new K3 League at the same time.[2]
A system of promotion and relegation has been realised within each of three classes (professional, semi-professional and amateur) from the beginning, but there was no promotion and relegation between classes until 2025. The Korea Football Association (KFA) went over their plans to unify the league system including promotions and relegations between three classes for a long time.[3] Since 2026, the KFA are partially allowing a play-off between the K League 2 and the K3 League as well as promotion from the K5 League to the K4 League, according to the results of their examination.[4]
| Professional leagues (K League) |
| Semi-professional leagues |
| Amateur leagues |
| Year | Tier 1 | Tier 2 | Tier 3 | Tier 4 | Tier 5 | Tier 6 | Tier 7 | Tier 8 and under |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1964–1982 | National Semipro League | |||||||
| 1983 | K League[a] | Korean League Division 1 | Korean League Division 2[5] | |||||
| 1984–2002 | K League[a] | National Semipro League[6] | ||||||
| 2003–2006 | K League | National League | ||||||
| 2007–2012 | K League | National League | K3 League (amateur) | |||||
| 2013–2016 | K League 1[b] | K League 2[c] | National League | K3 League (amateur) | ||||
| 2017–2019 | K League 1[b] | K League 2[c] | National League | K3 League Advanced | K3 League Basic | Under construction | ||
| 2020–present | K League 1 | K League 2 | K3 League | K4 League | K5 League | K6 League | K7 League | Regional competitions |
- ^ a b Named "Super League" from 1983 to 1985, "Football Festival" in 1986, "Korean Professional Football League" from 1987 to 1993, "Korean League" from 1994 to 1995, "Professional Football League" from 1996 to 1997, "K League" since 1998.
- ^ a b Named "K League Classic" from 2013 to 2017, "K League 1" since 2018.
- ^ a b Named "K League Challenge" from 2013 to 2017, "K League 2" since 2018.
Current system
Outside this league structure, there are the U-League and the R League, contested by university teams and reserve teams respectively.
- As of 27 January 2026[7]
| Level | Division | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | K League 1 12 clubs ↓ 1 relegation spot[a] + 1 relegation play-off spot[b] |
Professional |
| 2 | K League 2 17 clubs ↑ 3 promotion spots[c] + 1 promotion play-off spot[b] ↓ 1 relegation play-off spot[d] | |
| 3 | K3 League 14 clubs ↑ 1 promotion play-off spot[d] ↓ 1 relegation spots + 1 relegation play-off spot[e] |
Semi-professional |
| 4 | K4 League 13 clubs ↑ 1 promotion spots + 1 promotion play-off spot[e] | |
| 5 | K5 League 84 clubs in 13 groups ↑ 2 promotion spots[f] ↓ 13 relegation spots |
Amateur |
| 6 | K6 League 192 clubs in 31 groups ↑ 13 promotion spots ↓ 31 relegation spots | |
| 7 | K7 League 1223 clubs in 187 groups ↑ 31 promotion spots | |
| 8 and under | Regional competitions |
- ^ Gimcheon Sangmu will be directly relegated to the K League 2 at the end of the 2026 season.
- ^ a b If Gimcheon Sangmu finish 12th at the 2026 K League 1, the promotion-relegation play-offs between the 12th-placed team of the K League 1 and runners-up of the K League 2 play-off will not be held.
- ^ The number of K League 1 teams will increase to 14 in the 2027 season.
- ^ a b If the K3 League champions do not get a license for professionalisation from the K League Federation, their promotion play-offs will not be held.
- ^ a b Before July, all K4 League teams have to choose whether to require promotion or not. If the team who do not want to be promoted become champions or runners-up, their promotion to the K3 League is nullified.[7]
- ^ The K5 League champions and runners-up can be promoted to the K4 League, if they get licenses for the K4 League from the Korea Football Association.[4]
Qualification for cups
Domestic cups
K League, K3 League, K4 League, and some K5 League clubs qualify for the Korea Cup.
The Korean League Cup was open to K League teams only, whilst National League teams could compete in the National League Championship. They were abolished in 2012 and 2020, respectively.
The K League Super Cup is contested between the K League 1 champions and the Korea Cup champions.
Continental competition
As of 2026, the top two K League 1 clubs and the Korea Cup champions qualify for the AFC Champions League Elite. If the Korea Cup champions finish outside the top four at the K League 1, they participate at the AFC Champions League Two instead of the third-placed team of the K League 1.
See also
References
- ^ Park, Joo-seong (23 December 2015). 아마추어리그, 디비전 시스템 추진...2020년까지 4부 리그 확대. InterFootball (in Korean). Retrieved 22 April 2024.
- ^ "Breaking: K3 and K4 League Teams Confirmed". K League United. 19 December 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
- ^ Paik, Ji-hwan (28 March 2024). "K League to unify promotion-relegation system across all 7 leagues". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
- ^ a b K리그2-K3리그+K4-K5리그간 승강제 2027년부터 실시→1~7부 디비전 시스템 구축[공식발표]. The Chosun Ilbo (in Korean). Osen. 28 March 2024. Retrieved 3 March 2026.
- ^ 實業축구도 운영은 프로처럼… 본거지제도 채택. Naver.com (in Korean). Dong-A Ilbo. 15 December 1982. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- ^ 實業축구 코리 안리그 1.2部制 1년만에 다시통합┈변덕行政. Naver.com (in Korean). Kyunghyang. 16 November 1983. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- ^ a b [보도자료] 대한축구협회 2026년 첫 이사회에서 승강제 전면 재정비 (in Korean). KFA. 27 January 2026. Retrieved 3 March 2026.
External links
- K League (in Korean)
- K5 K6 K7 - KFA (in English)
- Korea National League (in Korean)
- Challengers League (in Korean)
- ROKfootball (in English)