If you live in Korea and regularly send money back home, there’s a high chance you’re losing money every single time without realizing it.
Not because you’re careless.
Not because you chose a “bad” service.
But because the remittance system in Korea is designed in a way that makes losses hard to see.
Let’s break down why this happens.
1. The Amount You Send Is Not the Amount They Receive
Most expats focus on one number when sending money from Korea:
“How much am I sending?”
But that’s the wrong number to look at.
What actually matters is:
“How much does my family receive?”
Between those two numbers, several things quietly happen:
- Exchange rates are adjusted
- Fees are applied in different ways
- Some costs are hidden inside the rate itself
Two people can send the same amount from Korea on the same day — and their families can receive very different amounts.
2. Exchange Rates in Korea Are Not What You Think
Many expats assume exchange rates are universal.
They’re not.
The rate you see on Google is usually:
- A mid-market rate
- Not the rate used by remittance services
In Korea, many services advertise:
- “Low fees”
but compensate with - Worse exchange rates
Others do the opposite.
The problem is that most people never see both numbers clearly in one place.
3. Fees Are Structured to Be Hard to Compare
Some services in Korea charge:
- A flat fee
- A percentage fee
- No visible fee at all
“No fee” sounds great — until you realize the cost is hidden elsewhere.
Because each service presents costs differently, expats often compare the wrong thing:
- Fee vs fee
instead of - Final amount received
That’s where most money quietly disappears.
4. Expats in Korea Rarely Compare — and Here’s Why
Even people who want to compare usually don’t.
Common reasons:
- Websites are mostly in Korean
- Each service requires separate sign-ups
- You often need to input the same information again and again
- The process takes time — and payday is already stressful
So most expats in Korea do what feels reasonable:
They stick with the service they already know.
Over time, that convenience turns into a recurring cost.
5. Small Differences Add Up Faster Than You Expect
Let’s say you lose the equivalent of:
- 20 to 30 USD per transfer
That doesn’t sound dramatic.
But if you send money every month from Korea:
- That’s hundreds of dollars a year
- Money that could have gone directly to your family
And because the loss is spread out and invisible, most people never notice it.
The Real Issue Isn’t the Service — It’s Visibility
This isn’t about blaming any specific remittance company in Korea.
The real problem is simple:
Expats don’t get a clear, side-by-side view of what actually arrives.
Without that visibility, it’s almost impossible to know whether you’re making a good decision or not.
And when you’re busy living and working in Korea, that lack of clarity quietly costs you money.
Coming next
In the next post, we’ll look at real examples of how the same transfer amount from Korea can lead to very different results — and why most people never notice the difference.
Living in Korea? This Is Why Your Family Receives Less Money Than You Expect
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