Why Learning a Few Phrases Matters
South Korea is one of the easier Asian countries to navigate without the local language — signs in Seoul and Busan are often bilingual, and younger Koreans study English in school. That said, a handful of Korean phrases will transform your trip. Shop owners light up when you say annyeonghaseyo, taxi drivers appreciate a kamsahamnida, and a polite juseyo at the end of a request signals respect.
Korean is a highly hierarchical language with multiple politeness levels. The good news for travelers: you only need the polite form (ending in -yo or -mnida) to get by. Avoid the casual forms unless you are speaking with close friends — using casual speech with strangers or elders is considered rude.
Korean is written in Hangul, a phonetic alphabet invented in 1443 by King Sejong the Great. Unlike Chinese or Japanese, you can learn to read basic Hangul in a weekend.
Greetings & Basic Courtesy
These are the phrases you will use dozens of times a day. A slight bow (about 15 degrees) while saying hello or thank you is the standard courtesy, especially when interacting with older people or service staff. You do not need to bow deeply like in Japan — a small head nod is enough.
| English | Korean (Romanized) | Hangul |
|---|
| Hello (formal) | Annyeonghaseyo | 안녕하세요 |
| Hi (casual, friends only) | Annyeong | 안녕 |
| Thank you (formal) | Kamsahamnida | 감사합니다 |
| Thanks (casual) | Gomawoyo | 고마워요 |
| Sorry / Excuse me | Mianhaeyo | 미안해요 |
| Yes | Ne | 네 |
| No | Anio | 아니오 |
| Goodbye (to someone leaving) | Annyeonghi gaseyo | 안녕히 가세요 |
| Goodbye (when you are leaving) | Annyeonghi gyeseyo | 안녕히 계세요 |
When receiving anything — a business card, a receipt, a gift — use both hands or support your right forearm with your left hand. This small gesture marks you as someone who respects Korean etiquette.
Ordering Food & Drinks
Korean restaurants usually bring water, side dishes (banchan), and menus automatically. To call a server in most casual spots, you say jeogiyo (excuse me / over here). In pricier restaurants there is often a call button on the table. Pointing at pictures on the menu is completely acceptable, and many places now have tablet ordering.
- Jeogiyo! — Excuse me / Over here (to call a server)
- Igeo juseyo — This one please (while pointing)
- Menyu juseyo — Menu please
- Mul juseyo — Water please
- Mat-isseoyo — It is delicious
- Jal meokkessumnida — Said before eating (like bon appétit)
- Jal meogeotseumnida — Said after eating (thank you for the meal)
- Gyesanseo juseyo — The bill, please
- Maewoyo — It is spicy
- Geonbae! — Cheers!
Never stick your chopsticks upright into a bowl of rice — this resembles incense at a funeral and is deeply taboo. Lay them across the bowl or on the chopstick rest instead.
When drinking with Koreans, there are rituals worth knowing. You pour for others, not yourself. Receive the pour with both hands and turn your head slightly away from elders when taking your first sip. Saying geonbae (cheers) before the first drink is standard, and soju is typically downed as a small shot.
Prices in Korea are generally fixed and bargaining is uncommon, except at traditional markets like Namdaemun or Dongdaemun where a small discount for cash or multiple items is possible. Most places accept credit cards, but it helps to know the numbers for small vendors, taxis, and street food stalls.
- Eolma-eyo? — How much is it?
- Bissayo — It is expensive
- Ssayo — It is cheap
- Kadu doeyo? — Do you take card?
- Hyungeum — Cash
- Eodi-eyo? — Where is it?
- Hwajangsil eodi-eyo? — Where is the toilet?
- Jihacheol-yeok eodi-eyo? — Where is the subway station?
- Oreunjjok — Right
- Wenjjok — Left
- Ttokbaro — Straight ahead
Save a screenshot of your hotel address in Korean Hangul. Showing it to a taxi driver is far more reliable than attempting to pronounce the name in English.
Emergencies & Help
South Korea is one of the safest countries in the world for travelers, but it still pays to know a handful of emergency phrases. The nationwide emergency number is 112 for police and 119 for fire and ambulance. Many operators speak some English, and 1330 is the 24-hour Korea Travel Helpline which offers free multilingual assistance.
- Doh-wah juseyo! — Please help me!
- Gyeongchal bulleo juseyo — Call the police
- Byeongwon-e gago sipeoyo — I want to go to the hospital
- Apayo — It hurts / I am in pain
- Gireul ireobeoryeosseoyo — I am lost
- Yeongeo halsu isseoyo? — Do you speak English?
- Ihaehae mot haeyo — I do not understand
- Cheoncheonhi malhaejuseyo — Please speak slowly
The Korea Travel Helpline (1330) is free from any Korean phone, operates 24/7, and provides interpretation in English, Japanese, Chinese, Russian, Vietnamese, Thai, Malay, and Indonesian.
A Quick Guide to Hangul
Hangul looks intimidating but is surprisingly logical. There are 14 basic consonants and 10 basic vowels, and characters are grouped into syllable blocks of 2-4 letters. Once you learn the shapes, you can sound out signs, menus, and subway stops within a few days of practice. Even reading slowly is incredibly useful when ordering at a restaurant with no English menu.
Most travelers find that learning Hangul is more practical than trying to memorize phrases in romanization, because romanized Korean is inconsistent across different systems. Free apps like Duolingo and Drops have solid Hangul intro courses, and there are YouTube walkthroughs that teach the alphabet in under an hour.
Start with the subway. Seoul metro stations are labeled in Hangul, romanization, and English, so you can match what you see to what you know and reinforce the alphabet as you travel.
Why Learning a Few Phrases Matters
South Korea is one of the easier Asian countries to navigate without the local language — signs in Seoul and Busan are often bilingual, and younger Koreans study English in school. That said, a handful of Korean phrases will transform your trip. Shop owners light up when you say annyeonghaseyo, taxi drivers appreciate a kamsahamnida, and a polite juseyo at the end of a request signals respect.
Korean is a highly hierarchical language with multiple politeness levels. The good news for travelers: you only need the polite form (ending in -yo or -mnida) to get by. Avoid the casual forms unless you are speaking with close friends — using casual speech with strangers or elders is considered rude.
Korean is written in Hangul, a phonetic alphabet invented in 1443 by King Sejong the Great. Unlike Chinese or Japanese, you can learn to read basic Hangul in a weekend.
Greetings & Basic Courtesy
These are the phrases you will use dozens of times a day. A slight bow (about 15 degrees) while saying hello or thank you is the standard courtesy, especially when interacting with older people or service staff. You do not need to bow deeply like in Japan — a small head nod is enough.
| English | Korean (Romanized) | Hangul |
|---|
| Hello (formal) | Annyeonghaseyo | 안녕하세요 |
| Hi (casual, friends only) | Annyeong | 안녕 |
| Thank you (formal) | Kamsahamnida | 감사합니다 |
| Thanks (casual) | Gomawoyo | 고마워요 |
| Sorry / Excuse me | Mianhaeyo | 미안해요 |
| Yes | Ne | 네 |
| No | Anio | 아니오 |
| Goodbye (to someone leaving) | Annyeonghi gaseyo | 안녕히 가세요 |
| Goodbye (when you are leaving) | Annyeonghi gyeseyo | 안녕히 계세요 |
When receiving anything — a business card, a receipt, a gift — use both hands or support your right forearm with your left hand. This small gesture marks you as someone who respects Korean etiquette.
Ordering Food & Drinks
Korean restaurants usually bring water, side dishes (banchan), and menus automatically. To call a server in most casual spots, you say jeogiyo (excuse me / over here). In pricier restaurants there is often a call button on the table. Pointing at pictures on the menu is completely acceptable, and many places now have tablet ordering.
- Jeogiyo! — Excuse me / Over here (to call a server)
- Igeo juseyo — This one please (while pointing)
- Menyu juseyo — Menu please
- Mul juseyo — Water please
- Mat-isseoyo — It is delicious
- Jal meokkessumnida — Said before eating (like bon appétit)
- Jal meogeotseumnida — Said after eating (thank you for the meal)
- Gyesanseo juseyo — The bill, please
- Maewoyo — It is spicy
- Geonbae! — Cheers!
Never stick your chopsticks upright into a bowl of rice — this resembles incense at a funeral and is deeply taboo. Lay them across the bowl or on the chopstick rest instead.
When drinking with Koreans, there are rituals worth knowing. You pour for others, not yourself. Receive the pour with both hands and turn your head slightly away from elders when taking your first sip. Saying geonbae (cheers) before the first drink is standard, and soju is typically downed as a small shot.
Prices in Korea are generally fixed and bargaining is uncommon, except at traditional markets like Namdaemun or Dongdaemun where a small discount for cash or multiple items is possible. Most places accept credit cards, but it helps to know the numbers for small vendors, taxis, and street food stalls.
- Eolma-eyo? — How much is it?
- Bissayo — It is expensive
- Ssayo — It is cheap
- Kadu doeyo? — Do you take card?
- Hyungeum — Cash
- Eodi-eyo? — Where is it?
- Hwajangsil eodi-eyo? — Where is the toilet?
- Jihacheol-yeok eodi-eyo? — Where is the subway station?
- Oreunjjok — Right
- Wenjjok — Left
- Ttokbaro — Straight ahead
Save a screenshot of your hotel address in Korean Hangul. Showing it to a taxi driver is far more reliable than attempting to pronounce the name in English.
Emergencies & Help
South Korea is one of the safest countries in the world for travelers, but it still pays to know a handful of emergency phrases. The nationwide emergency number is 112 for police and 119 for fire and ambulance. Many operators speak some English, and 1330 is the 24-hour Korea Travel Helpline which offers free multilingual assistance.
- Doh-wah juseyo! — Please help me!
- Gyeongchal bulleo juseyo — Call the police
- Byeongwon-e gago sipeoyo — I want to go to the hospital
- Apayo — It hurts / I am in pain
- Gireul ireobeoryeosseoyo — I am lost
- Yeongeo halsu isseoyo? — Do you speak English?
- Ihaehae mot haeyo — I do not understand
- Cheoncheonhi malhaejuseyo — Please speak slowly
The Korea Travel Helpline (1330) is free from any Korean phone, operates 24/7, and provides interpretation in English, Japanese, Chinese, Russian, Vietnamese, Thai, Malay, and Indonesian.
A Quick Guide to Hangul
Hangul looks intimidating but is surprisingly logical. There are 14 basic consonants and 10 basic vowels, and characters are grouped into syllable blocks of 2-4 letters. Once you learn the shapes, you can sound out signs, menus, and subway stops within a few days of practice. Even reading slowly is incredibly useful when ordering at a restaurant with no English menu.
Most travelers find that learning Hangul is more practical than trying to memorize phrases in romanization, because romanized Korean is inconsistent across different systems. Free apps like Duolingo and Drops have solid Hangul intro courses, and there are YouTube walkthroughs that teach the alphabet in under an hour.
Start with the subway. Seoul metro stations are labeled in Hangul, romanization, and English, so you can match what you see to what you know and reinforce the alphabet as you travel.