10 Korean Street Foods
You Must Try
Korean food culture does not happen at restaurants alone. It happens on sidewalks, under red tarps, at market stalls, and around plastic stools tucked into alleyways. This is where Koreans eat after work, after school, and after the last bus. For visitors, street food is the fastest way to taste the real Korea — affordable, unpretentious, and always steaming hot. Here are the ten foods to find first.
Three Markets Every First-Timer Should Visit
Street food stalls exist in almost every Seoul neighborhood, but three traditional markets concentrate the best variety in one walkable spot. These are the markets locals recommend when friends visit from out of town.
| Market | Best For | Nearest Subway |
|---|---|---|
| Gwangjang Market (광장시장) | Bindaetteok, mayak gimbap, raw beef tartare | Jongno 5-ga (Line 1), Exit 8 |
| Myeongdong Street | Touristy but excellent — hotteok, egg bread, lobster cheese | Myeongdong (Line 4), Exit 6 |
| Namdaemun Market (남대문시장) | Knife-cut noodles, galchi jorim, oldest market in Seoul | Hoehyeon (Line 4), Exit 5 |
The 10 Must-Try Korean Street Foods
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1Tteokbokki (떡볶이) — ₩3,000–5,000. Chewy rice cakes simmered in a bright-red gochujang sauce. Spicy, sweet, slightly smoky. The national comfort food. Ask for fish cakes and boiled egg on top.
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2Hotteok (호떡) — ₩2,000. A pan-fried pancake stuffed with brown sugar, cinnamon, and crushed peanuts. Best eaten in winter, standing in the cold, waiting for it to be cool enough to bite.
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3Gimbap (김밥) — ₩3,000–4,000. Seaweed-wrapped rice rolls with pickled radish, egg, spinach, and carrot. Perfect on-the-go snack. At Gwangjang Market, order “mayak gimbap” (마약김밥) — mini rolls with a mustard-soy dip.
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4Odeng / Eomuk (오뎅 / 어묵) — ₩1,000–2,000 per skewer. Fish-cake skewers simmered in a clear anchovy broth. Drink the broth from a paper cup alongside. The unofficial snack of every Seoul subway exit.
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5Bungeoppang (붕어빵) — ₩1,000 for 2. Fish-shaped pastries filled with sweet red bean paste. A winter street-corner classic. The fish shape is symbolic — there is no fish inside.
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6Gyeran-ppang (계란빵) — ₩2,000. Literally “egg bread.” A sweet mini-loaf with a whole egg baked into the top. Warm, filling, surprisingly not dessert-sweet.
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7Bindaetteok (빈대떡) — ₩5,000–8,000. Thick mung-bean pancakes pan-fried on huge round griddles. Best at Gwangjang Market where you can watch them being flipped. Pair with a small bowl of makgeolli (rice wine).
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8Sundae (순대) — ₩4,000–6,000. Korean-style blood sausage stuffed with glass noodles and barley. Served with a dipping salt. The name has nothing to do with ice cream. Adventurous but mild-flavored.
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9Kimbap Cheonguk-styled Korean fried chicken (치킨) — ₩6,000–10,000. At most markets you can find small portions of crispy garlic-soy chicken sold by the cup. The real deal — thin, shatter-crisp skin, tender meat.
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10Jjinppang / Mandu (찐빵 / 만두) — ₩3,000–5,000. Steamed buns and dumplings. Jjinppang are sweet red-bean filled; mandu come in meat, kimchi, or vegetable. Sold everywhere, always hot from the bamboo steamer.
You Don’t Really Need to Speak Korean
Most street vendors in Seoul have seen thousands of foreign customers. Pointing works. Smiling works even better. But if you want to try a few Korean phrases, these four cover almost every situation:
이거 주세요 (i-geo ju-se-yo) — “This one, please.” Point and say.
얼마예요? (eol-ma-ye-yo?) — “How much?”
맵지 않게요 (maep-ji an-ke-yo) — “Not spicy, please.”
포장해 주세요 (po-jang-hae ju-se-yo) — “To go, please.”
Almost every stall now accepts T-Money cards and credit cards. A few smaller ones are cash-only — carry ₩20,000–30,000 in small bills just in case. Prices are displayed on hand-written signs; the vendor will tell you the total after you point.
Yes, You Can Eat Here Safely
Korean street food has one of the best safety records in Asia. Stalls are licensed, inspected, and most use single-use paper cups, wooden skewers, and fresh oil that is changed daily. A few commonsense rules:
Look for busy stalls. The single best safety indicator is turnover. A queue means fresh ingredients. Empty stalls at 7pm on a Saturday are a mild warning sign. Also favor stalls with a roof or canopy — full sun exposure on raw ingredients is where most problems start.
Four Things Most Guides Get Wrong
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✓Gwangjang Market is best for lunch, not dinner. After 6pm the crowds get intense and some signature stalls sell out. Go between 11am–2pm on a weekday for the real experience.
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✓Avoid drinks from open jugs. Bottled water, canned drinks, and sealed cartons only. Makgeolli served in sealed bottles at bindaetteok stalls is perfectly safe.
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✓Myeongdong is pricier but English-friendly. Expect to pay 30–50% more than Gwangjang, but vendors there almost always speak basic English and display full menus in English.
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✓Save room. Your biggest enemy is portion size — everything looks small until the fourth stall. Share dishes. Move slowly. It’s a tasting, not a meal.
Want the Full Korean Food Guide?
Our Korean Food Discovery Guide covers 50+ must-try dishes with English menu names, how-to-order phrases, and neighborhood-by-neighborhood restaurant picks — all in one beautifully designed PDF guide.