Quick Summary — How Much Do You Need?
A single person living modestly in Korea in 2026 needs roughly ₩1.4M to ₩2.8M per month (about US$1,050 to US$2,100) depending on city and lifestyle. Seoul is the most expensive, Busan sits mid-range, and smaller cities like Daegu, Daejeon, or Gwangju can be significantly cheaper. A couple should budget 1.5x to 1.7x the single-person figure — not double, because rent scales the slowest.
Rent is by far the biggest variable. A studio officetel in Gangnam can run ₩1M+ per month on top of a hefty deposit, while a similar place in suburban Daegu might be ₩400,000. Food and transport are remarkably consistent nationwide and both are cheap by Western standards.
All prices in this guide are in Korean Won (₩). Approximate USD conversions use 1 USD ≈ ₩1,340 (April 2026 rate).
Housing Costs — The Biggest Variable
Foreigners on short and mid-term contracts typically rent via wolse — a small deposit (₩5-20M) plus monthly rent. The traditional Korean jeonse system requires a huge lump-sum deposit (50-80% of property value) instead of monthly rent and is rarely practical for foreigners without long-term residency and local banking history.
| Type | Seoul | Busan | Daegu |
|---|
| Studio officetel (central) | ₩800K-₩1.3M | ₩500K-₩800K | ₩400K-₩650K |
| 1-bedroom apartment | ₩1.1M-₩2.0M | ₩650K-₩1.1M | ₩500K-₩850K |
| 2-bedroom apartment | ₩1.8M-₩3.5M | ₩1.0M-₩1.8M | ₩750K-₩1.3M |
| Typical deposit (wolse) | ₩10M-₩30M | ₩5M-₩15M | ₩5M-₩10M |
Use sites like Zigbang and Dabang (apps) or an English-speaking agent in expat-heavy districts like Itaewon, Haebangchon, or Seomyeon. Agency fees are capped at roughly 0.3-0.9% of the total deal value.
Food & Groceries
Eating out is cheaper and more common than in most Western countries. A Korean lunch set (kimbap, jjigae, or bibimbap) costs ₩7,000-₩12,000. A Korean BBQ dinner for two with drinks runs ₩40,000-₩70,000. Western chains and Western-style cafes are pricier — a Starbucks latte is around ₩5,500.
Groceries at Emart, Homeplus, or Lotte Mart are mid-priced. Fresh produce is seasonal and local vegetables are cheap; imported dairy, cheese, and beef are notably expensive. Traditional markets (sijang) and local supermarket chains offer the best value.
- Monthly groceries (single, cooking most meals): ₩350,000-₩550,000
- Mixed lifestyle (half eat-out, half home): ₩500,000-₩800,000
- Mostly eating out: ₩700,000-₩1,100,000
- Coffee shop habit: +₩100,000-₩200,000/month
Transport, Utilities & Internet
Public transport is world-class and cheap. A T-money card works on metro, bus, and most taxis. A single metro ride is ₩1,550 in Seoul, and a 30-day commuter habit is rarely more than ₩70,000. Taxis are reasonable — a 5km ride runs ₩6,000-₩9,000.
| Item | Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|
| Metro + bus | ₩60,000-₩90,000 | T-money rechargeable card |
| Electric + gas + water | ₩80,000-₩180,000 | Higher in winter (floor heating) |
| Internet (1 Gbps) | ₩25,000-₩40,000 | KT, SK, LG U+ |
| Mobile plan | ₩30,000-₩70,000 | MVNOs cheaper |
| Maintenance (apt) | ₩80,000-₩200,000 | Building management fee |
Healthcare & Insurance
Foreigners on D, E, or F visas are enrolled in the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) after six months of residency. Monthly premiums are roughly 7% of income, split with your employer if you are hired locally. Self-employed foreigners pay the full amount, typically ₩130,000-₩350,000 per month depending on income and assets.
NHIS covers 60-70% of most medical costs. A GP visit with NHIS is often under ₩5,000 out of pocket, and a specialist consultation is ₩15,000-₩30,000. Without NHIS, foreigners pay 2-3x these amounts and should carry private travel or expat insurance. See our healthcare guide for full details.
During your first six months in Korea, before NHIS enrollment is mandatory, carry private health insurance. Emergency care and hospitalization out of pocket can be very expensive.
Seoul vs Busan vs Daegu
Seoul offers the widest job market, the best international food scene, and the highest salaries — but also the highest rent. Busan is a coastal alternative with roughly 70-80% of Seoul's cost and a more relaxed pace. Daegu and smaller cities are cheaper still, with lower rent being the dominant factor.
| Category | Seoul | Busan | Daegu |
|---|
| Rent (1BR) | ₩1.1-2.0M | ₩650K-1.1M | ₩500K-850K |
| Food | ₩500-800K | ₩450-700K | ₩400-650K |
| Transport | ₩70-90K | ₩60-80K | ₩55-75K |
| Utilities | ₩120-200K | ₩100-180K | ₩95-170K |
| Total (modest) | ₩1.8-2.8M | ₩1.4-2.1M | ₩1.2-1.8M |
Salaries in Seoul are typically 10-25% higher than in Busan or Daegu, which partially offsets the higher cost of living for locally-employed expats.
Quick Summary — How Much Do You Need?
A single person living modestly in Korea in 2026 needs roughly ₩1.4M to ₩2.8M per month (about US$1,050 to US$2,100) depending on city and lifestyle. Seoul is the most expensive, Busan sits mid-range, and smaller cities like Daegu, Daejeon, or Gwangju can be significantly cheaper. A couple should budget 1.5x to 1.7x the single-person figure — not double, because rent scales the slowest.
Rent is by far the biggest variable. A studio officetel in Gangnam can run ₩1M+ per month on top of a hefty deposit, while a similar place in suburban Daegu might be ₩400,000. Food and transport are remarkably consistent nationwide and both are cheap by Western standards.
All prices in this guide are in Korean Won (₩). Approximate USD conversions use 1 USD ≈ ₩1,340 (April 2026 rate).
Housing Costs — The Biggest Variable
Foreigners on short and mid-term contracts typically rent via wolse — a small deposit (₩5-20M) plus monthly rent. The traditional Korean jeonse system requires a huge lump-sum deposit (50-80% of property value) instead of monthly rent and is rarely practical for foreigners without long-term residency and local banking history.
| Type | Seoul | Busan | Daegu |
|---|
| Studio officetel (central) | ₩800K-₩1.3M | ₩500K-₩800K | ₩400K-₩650K |
| 1-bedroom apartment | ₩1.1M-₩2.0M | ₩650K-₩1.1M | ₩500K-₩850K |
| 2-bedroom apartment | ₩1.8M-₩3.5M | ₩1.0M-₩1.8M | ₩750K-₩1.3M |
| Typical deposit (wolse) | ₩10M-₩30M | ₩5M-₩15M | ₩5M-₩10M |
Use sites like Zigbang and Dabang (apps) or an English-speaking agent in expat-heavy districts like Itaewon, Haebangchon, or Seomyeon. Agency fees are capped at roughly 0.3-0.9% of the total deal value.
Food & Groceries
Eating out is cheaper and more common than in most Western countries. A Korean lunch set (kimbap, jjigae, or bibimbap) costs ₩7,000-₩12,000. A Korean BBQ dinner for two with drinks runs ₩40,000-₩70,000. Western chains and Western-style cafes are pricier — a Starbucks latte is around ₩5,500.
Groceries at Emart, Homeplus, or Lotte Mart are mid-priced. Fresh produce is seasonal and local vegetables are cheap; imported dairy, cheese, and beef are notably expensive. Traditional markets (sijang) and local supermarket chains offer the best value.
- Monthly groceries (single, cooking most meals): ₩350,000-₩550,000
- Mixed lifestyle (half eat-out, half home): ₩500,000-₩800,000
- Mostly eating out: ₩700,000-₩1,100,000
- Coffee shop habit: +₩100,000-₩200,000/month
Transport, Utilities & Internet
Public transport is world-class and cheap. A T-money card works on metro, bus, and most taxis. A single metro ride is ₩1,550 in Seoul, and a 30-day commuter habit is rarely more than ₩70,000. Taxis are reasonable — a 5km ride runs ₩6,000-₩9,000.
| Item | Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|
| Metro + bus | ₩60,000-₩90,000 | T-money rechargeable card |
| Electric + gas + water | ₩80,000-₩180,000 | Higher in winter (floor heating) |
| Internet (1 Gbps) | ₩25,000-₩40,000 | KT, SK, LG U+ |
| Mobile plan | ₩30,000-₩70,000 | MVNOs cheaper |
| Maintenance (apt) | ₩80,000-₩200,000 | Building management fee |
Healthcare & Insurance
Foreigners on D, E, or F visas are enrolled in the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) after six months of residency. Monthly premiums are roughly 7% of income, split with your employer if you are hired locally. Self-employed foreigners pay the full amount, typically ₩130,000-₩350,000 per month depending on income and assets.
NHIS covers 60-70% of most medical costs. A GP visit with NHIS is often under ₩5,000 out of pocket, and a specialist consultation is ₩15,000-₩30,000. Without NHIS, foreigners pay 2-3x these amounts and should carry private travel or expat insurance. See our healthcare guide for full details.
During your first six months in Korea, before NHIS enrollment is mandatory, carry private health insurance. Emergency care and hospitalization out of pocket can be very expensive.
Seoul vs Busan vs Daegu
Seoul offers the widest job market, the best international food scene, and the highest salaries — but also the highest rent. Busan is a coastal alternative with roughly 70-80% of Seoul's cost and a more relaxed pace. Daegu and smaller cities are cheaper still, with lower rent being the dominant factor.
| Category | Seoul | Busan | Daegu |
|---|
| Rent (1BR) | ₩1.1-2.0M | ₩650K-1.1M | ₩500K-850K |
| Food | ₩500-800K | ₩450-700K | ₩400-650K |
| Transport | ₩70-90K | ₩60-80K | ₩55-75K |
| Utilities | ₩120-200K | ₩100-180K | ₩95-170K |
| Total (modest) | ₩1.8-2.8M | ₩1.4-2.1M | ₩1.2-1.8M |
Salaries in Seoul are typically 10-25% higher than in Busan or Daegu, which partially offsets the higher cost of living for locally-employed expats.