Thanks, thats what I had read would be involved, but its good to have the timelines confirmed. I'm from Toronto, I'm guessing you're in Toronto as well from your username? Anyways, congrats to you as well. Hope your application for sponsorship is going well if you are doing that.Rob_TO said:Hey, i just got married in Korea also a few months ago. Congrats!
First you need to go to the Canada consulate with $50 CDN (or around 50,000 won) and your passport. There you basically sign an affidavit that you're single, and you'll get a copy of that in English. Make sure you go in the morning (I think until 11:30am or so but best to check for sure yourself), as in the afternoons they close for this kind of service. Whole process here takes only a few minutes if there's no wait.
The problem now is that you need to get that english form translated into Korean so the Korean government can use it for the marriage. The translation doesn't have to be professional. In our case my wife's father did it for us.
Then with the affidavit in Korean, you go to the local government office to register the marriage. Your wife will do all the taking, and all you need to do is sign at the end. Whole process here with no wait was around 10-15 minutes.
After that, the marriage is registered and technically you're married. Any wedding ceremony/reception for family and friends is just for show afterwards.
After a week or 2, the official marriage certificate will be available for download from the government website. Your wife will need to login with some kind of internet ID code (she should know how to do), and then you can just print out the certificate to include in your application. Or you can pick it up in person again from the government office.
Overall i think doing everything in several hours is easily doable, just start at the embassy as soon as it opens, and be prepared to have someone translate/print out a nice looking Korean version of the affidavit you're going to get.
Hope this helps!
Cheers