How Much English Teachers Make in South Korea?

If you’ve ever typed “teach English in Korea salary” into Google, you’ve probably seen everything from “$2,000/month with free housing!” to “You’ll save $20,000 a year easily.” Both statements are… kinda true, depending on where you teach, how much you work, and how you live. English teaching in South Korea pays well compared to most … 더 읽기

How to Avoid Bad Hagwon Contracts

Almost every foreign teacher in Korea has a story that starts with: “My hagwon seemed great… at first.” Then comes the twist — unpaid overtime, canceled vacation, random fines for “electricity use,” or directors who vanish mid-payday. The sad truth? Some hagwon contracts look fine on paper but hide clauses that quietly wreck your sanity … 더 읽기

Understanding and Experiencing Korean Delivery Culture

If you’ve lived in Korea long enough, you’ve probably experienced that small moment of magic — the doorbell rings, and there’s a guy in a helmet holding steaming jjajangmyeon like it teleported straight from the kitchen. Ten minutes earlier, it was just a tap on your phone. No awkward calls, no “Where’s my food?” anxiety. … 더 읽기

Korea’s Public Health System for Foreign Residents: What I Wish I Knew Sooner

When I first moved to Korea, I thought healthcare would be this bureaucratic labyrinth guarded by forms in Hangul and stern hospital clerks. Not entirely wrong—but not impossible either. The truth is, Korea’s public health system is surprisingly efficient once you understand how the puzzle pieces fit. The problem is, no one really explains it … 더 읽기

The Real Cost of Living in Seoul vs Other Korean Cities

Seoul’s amazing. Until rent day hits, anyway. Everyone says it’s expensive. But how expensive? Well, that’s complicated. I met this guy from Busan once who told me his entire apartment costs less than those tiny officetels in Gangnam. Thought he was messing with me. Turns out he wasn’t even exaggerating. Here’s the thing about Seoul … 더 읽기

How Much Is Average Goshiwon Prices in Seoul These Days?

I used to think goshiwons were this ultra-cheap, ramen-fueled last resort for broke students. Turns out, that stereotype aged badly. These days, even the “budget” ones can cost as much as small studios in provincial cities. I went down a weird rabbit hole of Naver listings, YouTube tours, and Reddit threads to figure out what … 더 읽기

What NOT to Do in Korea Socially

There’s this unspoken rule in Korea: you can get away with being clueless once, maybe twice, but after that, people expect you to get it. Social mistakes aren’t always called out directly — you’ll just notice the air shift, or the smiles tighten. It’s subtle, but you feel it. When I first moved to Seoul, … 더 읽기

Can Two People Live in a Seoul Goshiwon?

It’s a question that pops up every semester when couples, friends, or budget travelers plan to move to Seoul: can two people actually live together in a goshiwon? I had that exact thought years ago when I first looked at those “tiny room” listings near Sinchon. I imagined squeezing two humans, two suitcases, and maybe … 더 읽기

Safety and Crime in Korea: What Expats Need to Know

When I first moved to Seoul, everyone told me, “It’s one of the safest cities in the world.” And they weren’t wrong — people really do leave laptops unattended in cafés and come back hours later. I once saw a kid nap alone at a subway station bench, and no one even blinked. But the … 더 읽기

Where to Find Budget-Friendly Markets in Seoul

I used to think Seoul was expensive everywhere — the cafés, the clothes, the rent. But one Saturday, wandering past Dongdaemun, I stumbled into a maze of stalls selling everything from vintage jeans to ₩1,000 socks. It hit me: Seoul hides its bargains in plain sight. You just have to know where to look. The … 더 읽기