Members
- Judges
- Court Officials
- Law Clerks
- Relevant Professions
The Constitution of Korea stipulates that the qualifications for judges shall be determined by law. The Court Organization Act classifies judges into the Chief Justice, Justices, and judges, and defines their qualifications as follows:
Chief Justices and Justices are appointed from those who have been in one of the following professions for at least 20 years and are at least 45 years old:
Chief Justices and Justices are appointed from those who have been in one of the following professions for at least 20 years and are at least 45 years old:
A judge, public prosecutor, or lawyer;
¡© A qualified lawyer who has engaged in legal affairs at a government agency, local government, national or public enterprise, government-invested institution, or other legal entity; or
¡© A qualified lawyer with a position higher than an assistant professor in jurisprudence at an accredited college or university.
Judges are appointed from individuals who have served in the above positions for at least five years. Additionally, judges who handle specific judicial matters may be appointed from those who have served in these positions for over 20 years.

The Chief Justice and justices of the Supreme Court are appointed by the President of the nation with the consent of the National Assembly. As for justices, the Chief Justice has to first submit recommendations for appointment to the President.
Judges are appointed by the Chief Justice after deliberation by the Judges Personnel Committee and with the consent of the Council of Supreme Court Justices. The judges are assigned to their respective posts by the Chief Justice.
The Judges Personnel Committee was established as an advisory group to the Chief Justice to plan and coordinate personnel issues. The Chief Justice can evaluate the service of judges and the outcome may be reflected in personnel management.
The term of office of justices, including the Chief Justice, is six years. Whereas the Chief Justice can only serve a single term, justices can serve additional terms. Judges have a 10-year service term and may be reappointed.
Judges must leave office when they reach retirement age, even if their term remains. The retirement age is 70 for Supreme Court Justices, including the Chief Justice, and 65 for lower court judges.
For the independence of the judiciary to be guaranteed, the status of judges must be guaranteed. No judge is subject to involuntary dismissal from office except by an impeachment or a sentence of imprisonment or heavier.
A judge cannot be subjected to suspension from office, a reduction in remuneration, or unfavorable treatment except by disciplinary measures.
If a judge is unable to perform their duties due to a serious mental disorder or physical disability, the procedure for resignation varies depending on their position. For a justice of the Supreme Court, the President may require them to resign upon the recommendation of the Chief Justice.
For other judges, the Chief Justice has the authority to order their resignation. Remuneration of judges is to be appropriate to the judges' duties and dignity. During the term of office, a judge cannot become a member of the National Assembly or a local council,
or a public official in any administrative agency, participate in political activities, engage in a paid job without the permission of the Chief Justice, or hold a job for the purpose of any pecuniary profit, assume any post, regardless of its reward, as an advisor,
officer or employee of a corporation or organization, other than government agencies, without the permission of the Chief Justice.
When another government agency requests the secondment of a judge to the Chief Justice, permission may be granted if it is deemed proper in light of the nature of the service and with the judge's consent. Currently, judges are seconded to the Constitutional Court, the National Assembly,
the International Criminal Court (ICC), the Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH), and other institutions as required.
The Supreme Court has implemented overseas training programs to strengthen the capabilities of judges and provide opportunities for academic and mental rejuvenation. Through these programs, substantial research on foreign judicial systems and foreign law has been accumulated,
enhancing the professional expertise of judges. At the same time, these programs have laid the foundation for judges to perform their duties with broader perspectives, thereby strengthening both the individual capabilities of judges and the court as a whole.
Through sponsorship of the Supreme Court, participants in this program receive training or participate in research at a university, an educational institution or a research center overseas. In general, the training period is ten months to one year. This program was launched in 1982.
Today, overseas studies are conducted in the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Austria, Japan, China, Canada, the Netherlands, Italy, Australia, Spain, Switzerland, and Belgium. The number of participants reaches up to 70 persons each year.
This program aims to enhance understanding of various foreign cultures and different judicial systems by offering short-term training, which includes visits to overseas judicial institutions. The training period is approximately 1 to 2 weeks.
As of April 10, 2025, the total number of judges, including the Chief Justice and Justices of the Supreme Court and those in special positions such as professors of the JRTI, stands at 3,172.
Number of Judges within the Korean Judiciary
Court | Position | Number |
---|---|---|
Supreme Court | Chief Justice | 1 |
Justice | 13 | |
Lead Research Judge | 2 | |
Research Judge | 99 | |
High Court | Chief Judge | 7 |
Presiding Judge | 52 | |
High Court Judge | 227 | |
Judge | 79 | |
District Court | Chief Judge | 30 |
Presiding Judge | 1,348 | |
Judge | 1,282 | |
National Court Administration | Vice Minister | 1 |
JRTI | President | 1 |
Professor | 28 | |
New Judges before Official Appointment | 2 | |
Total | 3,172 |

Court officials work in various fields including judicial administration, technical examination, library, interpretation, facilities, industrial management, and health. Judicial administration field can further be divided into subfields such as court affairs, registration affairs, information technology, statistics, stenography, and bailiff duties. Like officials of administrative branches, court officials working in subfields of court affairs range from grade I through grade IX.
Court officials dealing with court affairs are appointed after passing an open competitive examination. They can be promoted to higher posts if they serve at one post for a fixed period of time, with the exception of posts in grade V and grade VII, which require passing an examination for promotion thereto. In general, the court officials are appointed by the Chief Justice. However, a portion of the Chief Justice's power to appoint court officials is delegated to the chiefs of the institutions to which the court officials belong.
Court officials engaged in court affairs assist judges with court proceedings. They take charge of recording court activities, keeping court records, issuing various certificates proving litigious matters, and serving documents. They also handle non-litigious matters including registration of real property, commercial and corporation, family registration, deposit, etc.
The Court Organization Act permits each level of court to appoint law clerks among persons who are qualified as attorneys-at-law. Law clerks are hired on a contract basis and their tenure is limited to three years. However, temporarily, the term in office of law clerks is two years until Dec. 31, 2017.
A person who has a power to appoint law clerks is the Chief Justice. However, following the policy of dispersion and transfer of executive powers, the Chief Justice delegates the power to select and place law clerks to each chief judge of high courts. Currently, the prescribed number is 200 persons, and it cannot be modified until 2022. However, after 2022, increase in the number of law clerks is possible in accordance with the Supreme Court Regulations.
Law clerks are assigned to each court and examine cases as well as conduct judicial research under the direction of the Chief Judge of the court they belong to.
Public prosecutors are representatives of the public interest who investigate crimes, indict suspects and direct and supervise the police in the crime investigation process. It is also the public prosecutors that supervise the execution of criminal judgments after such judgments become final and conclusive.
The qualifications for public prosecutors are the same as those for judges. They are appointed among those who completed training program at the JRTI or those who are certified as lawyers.
Public prosecutors are subject to direct order and supervision of their superiors within the public prosecution circles headed by the Prosecutor General. Each Public Prosecutors' Office is established corresponding to each level of court.
Lawyers participate in judicial proceedings as representatives of parties in civil or administrative cases or as defense counsels in criminal cases. Though the lawyers represent the parties who retain them, they also bear responsibility to the courts in ensuring fairness in adjudications.
Qualifications for lawyers include any person falling under any of the following criteria : a person who has completed the required curriculum of the JRTI after passing the National Judicial Examination or a person who is qualified as a judge or a public prosecutor. A person who passes the Recruitment Test for military judicial officer and works more than 10 years as a military judicial officer is also admitted to the bar.
The duties of notaries public include preparation of notarial deeds on juristic acts or facts concerning any other public right and authentication on deeds signed by a private person or an electronic document. A notary public may prepare a notarial deed stating the intention to accept the compulsory execution attached to a bill or check.
Notaries public are appointed by the Minister of Justice from among persons who are qualified as judges, public prosecutors, or lawyers. Each notary public belongs to the district public prosecutors' office. The Minister of Justice may also grant authorization for authentication to any person who meets the following: a law firm, a law firm with limited liability, or judicial association established under the Attorney-at-Law Act. No less than two of the constituent attorney-at-law of the relevant law firm, etc. may be qualified as an attorney-at-law in charge of authentication.
Judicial scriveners perform such duties as preparation of documents to present to a court or the public prosecutor's office, preparation of documents necessary for registration or application for registration or deposit. A judicial scrivener is under the supervision of a local Certified Judicial Scriveners Association, the Korean Certified Judicial Scriveners Association and the Chief Judge of the district court under jurisdiction.
A person who has passed the Judicial Scrivener Examination is qualified as a certified judicial scrivener. Also, a person who has served as a public official for not less than 10 years, engaging in court affairs, registration affairs, prosecutory affairs, the Constitutional Court, or Public Prosecutors' Offices, and who is deemed by the Chief Justice to have knowledge in law as well as competence required for performance of the duties of judicial scrivener may be qualified.
Enforcement officers are independent, extra-judicial officers who are engaged in the execution of judgment rulings and the service of documents under the command of district courts. They are not public officials but under the supervision of the chief judge of a competent district court. However, enforcement officers receive fees not from the court, but from the party concerned.
The chief judge of a district court appoints enforcement officers among persons who have served for a certain period of time as public officials of grade VII in the courts, registry offices, public prosecutors' offices, or drug enforcement agencies. The term of office is four years with no consecutive appointment.