Korean IME with Romanization Tool

Type in Korean (Hangul) in your browser. Includes a romanization tool and an on-screen keyboard.

As of June 2026, Korean IME with Romanization Tool has 3,000 users and a 3.39/5 rating from 92 reviews in the Productivity category.

Usersup 50.0 percent+50.0%
3.0K
3,000
Ratingno change0%
3.39
92 reviews
Reviewsno change0%
92
Version
2.7.0
Manifest V3
90-day change · In the last 90 days this extension gained 1.0K users, 2 version updates.

History

3 snapshots

Tracking since Jun 2, 2026.

3.1K2.5K1.9KJun 2, 2026Jun 21, 2026
View as table
DateUsersRatingReviewsVersion
Jun 2, 20262.0K3.39922.3.0
Jun 10, 20262.0K3.39922.3.0
Jun 21, 20263.0K3.39922.5.0
Now3.0K3.39922.7.0

Changelog

  • Jun 21, 2026
    description
    Type Korean (Hangul) in your browser — no system-wide IME or admin rights needed.
    
    Korean IME lets you type Hangul on any computer, even one where you can't install the operating system's Korean input method (a work, school, or shared machine). It uses the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout and works no matter what your physical keyboard is set to (QWERTY, Dvorak, AZERTY, Russian, and so on).
    
    
    HOW TO USE
    
    • Click the extension icon (the "a / 한" button) or press the right-hand Alt key to switch between Latin and Hangul input.
    • Start typing — for example, "dkssudgktpdy" becomes "안녕하세요".
    
    
    FEATURES
    
    • Type Hangul in standard text boxes, text areas, and many online rich-text editors.
    • On-screen keyboard — a floating keyboard showing both the Latin and Hangul keys. Turn it on or off from the extension's right-click menu.
    • Romanize — select Hangul text, right-click, and choose "Romanize" to convert it to the Latin alphabet (Revised Romanization; a few rare edge cases aren't handled).
    • Re-edit a finished syllable — put the cursor immediately after it and press Shift+Backspace to resume composing that block.
    
    
    KEYBOARD LAYOUT
    
    This is the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout, the same as a physical Korean keyboard — for example, the QWERTY "A" key produces "ㅁ". If you're new to the layout, search "Korean keyboard layout" for a map.
    
    
    WHAT'S NOT SUPPORTED
    
    • Google Docs — it renders text on a canvas and uses a private editor that doesn't accept input from extensions like this one, so Hangul typing won't work there.
    • Microsoft Word for the Web — for the same reasons.
    • Your browser's own pages (chrome://…, about:…), the extension/add-on store, and other extensions' pages — browsers block every extension from running on these.
    
    
    PRIVACY
    
    Works entirely offline and does not collect, store, or transmit any of your data.
    
    Open source — report issues or contribute at https://github.com/vmcnabb/korean-ime
    Type Korean (Hangul) in your browser — no system-wide IME or admin rights needed.
    
    Korean IME lets you type Hangul on any computer, even one where you can't install the operating system's Korean input method (a work, school, or shared machine). It uses the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout and works no matter what your physical keyboard is set to (QWERTY, Dvorak, AZERTY, Russian, and so on).
    
    
    HOW TO USE
    
    • Click the extension icon — it shows "a" in Latin mode and "한" in Hangul mode — or press the right-hand Alt key (you can change this key in Options) to switch between Latin and Hangul input.
    • Start typing — for example, "dkssudgktpdy" becomes "안녕하세요".
    
    
    FEATURES
    
    • Type Hangul in standard text boxes, text areas, many online rich-text editors, and Microsoft Word for the Web.
    • On-screen keyboard — a floating keyboard showing both the Latin and Hangul keys. Turn it on or off from the extension's right-click menu.
    • Romanize — select Hangul text, right-click, and choose a "Romanize" option to convert it to the Latin alphabet (Revised Romanization; a few rare edge cases aren't handled).
    • Re-edit a finished syllable — put the cursor immediately after it and press Shift+Backspace to resume composing that block.
    
    
    KEYBOARD LAYOUT
    
    This is the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout, the same as a physical Korean keyboard — for example, the QWERTY "A" key produces "ㅁ". If you're new to the layout, search "Korean keyboard layout" for a map.
    
    
    WHAT'S NOT SUPPORTED
    
    • Google Docs — it renders text on a canvas and uses a private editor that doesn't accept input from extensions like this one, so Hangul typing won't work there.
    • Your browser's own pages (chrome://…, about:…), the extension/add-on store, and other extensions' pages — browsers block every extension from running on these.
    
    
    PRIVACY
    
    Works entirely offline and does not collect, store, or transmit any of your data.
    
    Open source — report issues or contribute at https://github.com/vmcnabb/korean-ime
  • Jun 10, 2026
    description
    Type Korean (Hangul) in your browser — no system-wide IME or admin rights needed.
    
    Korean IME lets you type Hangul on any computer, even one where you can't install the operating system's Korean input method (a work, school, or shared machine). It uses the standard Korean 2-Beolsik layout and works no matter what your physical keyboard is set to (QWERTY, Dvorak, AZERTY, Russian, and so on).
    
    
    HOW TO USE
    
    • Click the extension icon (the "a / 한" button) or press the right-hand Alt key to switch between Latin and Hangul input.
    • Start typing — for example, "dkssudgktpdy" becomes "안녕하세요".
    
    
    FEATURES
    
    • Type Hangul in standard text boxes, text areas, and many online rich-text editors (such as CKEditor).
    • On-screen keyboard — a floating keyboard showing both the Latin and Hangul keys. Turn it on or off from the extension's right-click menu.
    • Romanize — select Hangul text, right-click, and choose "Romanize" to convert it to the Latin alphabet (based on the Revised Romanization rules, without some of the more complex edge cases).
    • Re-edit a finished syllable — put the cursor immediately after it and press Shift+Backspace to resume composing that block.
    
    
    KEYBOARD LAYOUT
    
    This is the standard Korean 2-Beolsik layout, the same as a physical Korean keyboard — for example, the QWERTY "A" key produces "ㅁ". If you're new to the layout, search "Korean keyboard layout" for a map.
    
    
    WHAT'S NOT SUPPORTED
    
    • Google Docs — it renders text on a canvas and uses a private editor that doesn't accept input from extensions like this one, so Hangul typing won't work there.
    • Microsoft Word online - for similar reasons
    • Chrome's own pages (chrome://…), the Chrome Web Store, and other extensions' pages — browsers block every extension from running on these.
    
    
    PRIVACY
    
    Works entirely offline and does not collect, store, or transmit any of your data.
    
    Open source — report issues or contribute at https://github.com/vmcnabb/korean-ime
    Type Korean (Hangul) in your browser — no system-wide IME or admin rights needed.
    
    Korean IME lets you type Hangul on any computer, even one where you can't install the operating system's Korean input method (a work, school, or shared machine). It uses the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout and works no matter what your physical keyboard is set to (QWERTY, Dvorak, AZERTY, Russian, and so on).
    
    
    HOW TO USE
    
    • Click the extension icon (the "a / 한" button) or press the right-hand Alt key to switch between Latin and Hangul input.
    • Start typing — for example, "dkssudgktpdy" becomes "안녕하세요".
    
    
    FEATURES
    
    • Type Hangul in standard text boxes, text areas, and many online rich-text editors.
    • On-screen keyboard — a floating keyboard showing both the Latin and Hangul keys. Turn it on or off from the extension's right-click menu.
    • Romanize — select Hangul text, right-click, and choose "Romanize" to convert it to the Latin alphabet (Revised Romanization; a few rare edge cases aren't handled).
    • Re-edit a finished syllable — put the cursor immediately after it and press Shift+Backspace to resume composing that block.
    
    
    KEYBOARD LAYOUT
    
    This is the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout, the same as a physical Korean keyboard — for example, the QWERTY "A" key produces "ㅁ". If you're new to the layout, search "Korean keyboard layout" for a map.
    
    
    WHAT'S NOT SUPPORTED
    
    • Google Docs — it renders text on a canvas and uses a private editor that doesn't accept input from extensions like this one, so Hangul typing won't work there.
    • Microsoft Word for the Web — for the same reasons.
    • Your browser's own pages (chrome://…, about:…), the extension/add-on store, and other extensions' pages — browsers block every extension from running on these.
    
    
    PRIVACY
    
    Works entirely offline and does not collect, store, or transmit any of your data.
    
    Open source — report issues or contribute at https://github.com/vmcnabb/korean-ime
  • Jun 10, 2026
    short_description
    Allows one to type in Korean Hangul and includes a romanization tool.
    Type in Korean (Hangul) in your browser. Includes a romanization tool and an on-screen keyboard.

Permissions & access

Permissions
contextMenusstorage
Host access
None declared

Screenshots

Korean IME with Romanization Tool screenshot 1Korean IME with Romanization Tool screenshot 2

About

Type Korean (Hangul) in your browser — no system-wide IME or admin rights needed.

Korean IME lets you type Hangul on any computer, even one where you can't install the operating system's Korean input method (a work, school, or shared machine). It uses the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout and works no matter what your physical keyboard is set to (QWERTY, Dvorak, AZERTY, Russian, and so on).


HOW TO USE

• Click the extension icon — it shows "a" in Latin mode and "한" in Hangul mode — or press the right-hand Alt key (you can change this key in Options) to switch between Latin and Hangul input.
• Start typing — for example, "dkssudgktpdy" becomes "안녕하세요".


FEATURES

• Type Hangul in standard text boxes, text areas, many online rich-text editors, and Microsoft Word for the Web.
• On-screen keyboard — a floating keyboard showing both the Latin and Hangul keys. Turn it on or off from the extension's right-click menu.
• Romanize — select Hangul text, right-click, and choose a "Romanize" option to convert it to the Latin alphabet (Revised Romanization; a few rare edge cases aren't handled).
• Re-edit a finished syllable — put the cursor immediately after it and press Shift+Backspace to resume composing that block.


KEYBOARD LAYOUT

This is the standard Korean Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout, the same as a physical Korean keyboard — for example, the QWERTY "A" key produces "ㅁ". If you're new to the layout, search "Korean keyboard layout" for a map.


WHAT'S NOT SUPPORTED

• Google Docs — it renders text on a canvas and uses a private editor that doesn't accept input from extensions like this one, so Hangul typing won't work there.
• Your browser's own pages (chrome://…, about:…), the extension/add-on store, and other extensions' pages — browsers block every extension from running on these.


PRIVACY

Works entirely offline and does not collect, store, or transmit any of your data.

Open source — report issues or contribute at https://github.com/vmcnabb/korean-ime

Technical

Version
2.7.0
Manifest
V3
Size
3.47MiB
Min Chrome
102
Languages
7
Featured
No

Metadata

ID
cimmbifnciobjhchpimjekibbndgmkfk
Developer ID
u0cc01b1b6efa73f42d3ed67dc7159107
Developer Email
[email protected]
Created
Apr 9, 2012
Last Updated (Store)
Jun 13, 2026
Last Scraped
Jun 21, 2026
Website
Support URL
Privacy Policy

Data sourced from the Chrome Web Store · last verified Jun 21, 2026.