은행 · Chapter
Banking
A Korean bank account makes everything else easier — rent transfers, phone bills, NHIS, salary. Here's how to open one and what to expect.
What you need to open an account
- Alien Registration Card (ARC) — see the Visa & Legal section
- Passport
- Korean phone number (carriers require ARC too)
- A local address
- Proof of purpose (work contract, school enrollment) if asked
Tourists and short-term visitors can sometimes open a limited "non-resident" account, but functionality is restricted (no online banking, no transfers abroad).
Big traditional banks
The big five: KB Kookmin, Shinhan, Woori, Hana, and NH NongHyup. All offer English-language services to varying degrees — Shinhan and KB are generally easiest for foreigners. The designated "Global" or "Foreigner" branches always have English speakers.
Internet-only banks
Kakao Bank, Toss Bank, and K-Bank are excellent if you can navigate Korean — better rates, no branch visits, slick apps. Most require a Korean phone in your own name and ARC. Some now offer partial English UI.
Sending money home (and getting paid)
- Bank wire (SWIFT) — reliable but slow and pricey.
- Wise / Remitly / WireBarley / SentBe — much cheaper for typical amounts.
- Korea has reporting requirements above certain thresholds (currently USD $50,000/year for personal outbound). Ask your bank before large transfers.
Official sources
KB Kookmin Bank (English)— One of the most foreigner-friendly traditional banks↗
Shinhan Bank — Global— English-speaking 'global' branches in Seoul and Busan↗
Woori Bank — Foreigner Service— Long-running expat banking service↗
Hana Bank— Strong international remittance options↗
Wise (international transfers)— Common third-party tool for moving money in/out of Korea↗
Last reviewed — confirm details on the source before acting.