Seeing a Doctor in Korea:
A Foreigner’s Hospital Guide
Korean healthcare is, by global standards, extremely good and extremely cheap. A clinic visit costs under ₩15,000 with insurance. A hospital emergency room runs ₩50,000–100,000. The quality is world-class — Korea is a major medical tourism destination. The problem for foreigners is not quality or cost; it is figuring out where to go and what to say. Here is what to do when you get sick.
How Korean Healthcare Works
Korea has a single-payer system called NHIS (National Health Insurance Service, 건강보험). It covers all citizens and legal long-term foreign residents. After six months of residency, foreigners are automatically enrolled and deducted premiums from salary or invoiced directly.
With NHIS, you pay only 20–30% of the total cost at the clinic counter. Without it — or if you are a short-term visitor — you pay the full amount, which is still moderate by international standards.
When to Go Where
Korea has a clear two-tier outpatient system. Minor issues go to a neighborhood 의원 (clinic). Serious issues go to a 병원 (hospital).
| Issue | Where to go | Typical cost (with NHIS) |
|---|---|---|
| Cold, flu, sore throat | 내과의원 (Internal Medicine Clinic) | ₩5,000–10,000 + ₩3,000 meds |
| Cut, sprain, skin issue | 정형외과 (Orthopedics) or 피부과 (Dermatology) | ₩7,000–15,000 |
| Eye, ear, dental pain | Specialty clinic (안과/이비인후과/치과) | ₩8,000–20,000 |
| Chest pain, breathing trouble | 큰 병원 (Large hospital) ER | ₩50,000–100,000 |
| Chronic condition, surgery | University hospital referral | Varies |
ER without a referral is expensive. Going to Severance or Samsung Medical ER for a sore throat will cost you ₩70,000+. Clinics first, hospitals only when needed.
What Happens in a Korean Clinic
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1Walk in — no appointment needed at most clinics. Korean clinics are walk-in by default and open 9am–1pm, 3pm–7pm weekdays.
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2Receptionist (접수) — hand over ARC card (or passport + visa). If enrolled in NHIS, they swipe the card. Tell them your symptom in simple Korean or English: ‘Sore throat / 목 아파요’.
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3Wait briefly — 10–30 minutes is normal, sometimes zero.
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4See the doctor (진료) — 3–10 minute consultation. Doctors in Seoul typically understand English at clinic level, even if they respond in Korean.
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5Get a prescription (처방전) — printed slip you take to a pharmacy.
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6Pay at the counter. They will hand back your ARC and a pink receipt.
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7Pharmacy (약국) — usually right next door. Hand over the prescription. Wait 3–5 minutes. Pay ₩3,000–8,000.
Four Hospitals with Full English Service
For more serious issues, or when you need certainty of English communication, these four hospitals have dedicated International Health Service centers with English-speaking coordinators, translators, and dedicated foreign patient wings.
| Hospital | Location | Strengths | International Center |
|---|---|---|---|
| Severance (연세의료원) | Sinchon Station, Line 2 | General, cardiology, cancer | 02-2228-5810 |
| Samsung Medical Center | Irwon Station, Line 3 | Oncology, emergency, high-tech | 02-3410-0200 |
| Asan Medical Center | Olympic Park Station, Line 5 | Cardiology, transplant, GI | 1688-7575 |
| Seoul St. Mary’s | Express Bus Terminal Station | Obstetrics, general, English ER | 02-1588-1511 |
The international center numbers above connect you to an English-speaking coordinator who can book the right specialist, explain what to bring, and tell you likely costs. Call them before showing up — it will save you hours.
What You Will Actually Pay
Costs vary by insurance status and provider. Below are realistic ranges for common visits. All prices assume NHIS enrollment at the 20% co-pay rate. Without insurance, multiply by 4–5x.
| Service | With NHIS (co-pay) | Without insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Clinic visit (internal med) | ₩5,000–10,000 | ₩25,000–50,000 |
| Prescription (3-day supply) | ₩3,000–8,000 | ₩15,000–40,000 |
| X-ray | ₩10,000–20,000 | ₩50,000–100,000 |
| Blood test panel | ₩15,000–40,000 | ₩80,000–200,000 |
| ER visit (no admission) | ₩50,000–100,000 | ₩250,000–500,000 |
| ER with overnight | ₩200,000–500,000 | ₩1M+ |
What to Do in a Crisis
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119119 — Korea’s emergency number for ambulance and fire. Operators can transfer to English within ~30 seconds. Ambulance is free.
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13391339 — Korean Medical Information Hotline. 24/7 English line for non-emergency medical questions, interpreter help, and nearest-hospital lookups.
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13301330 — Korea Travel Helpline, not strictly medical but staffed with English speakers who can help translate in a crisis.
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AppNaver Map — search ‘응급실’ to find nearest ER. Filters by which hospital is currently accepting patients.
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PrepBefore anything happens: screenshot your ARC, NHIS card, and blood type. Store them in your phone. Most Koreans can read them even without translating.
Don’t drive yourself. If you are unsure whether it is a real emergency, call 1339 first. If it is chest pain, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or breathing trouble, dial 119. An ambulance is free and legally required to take you to the nearest capable hospital.
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