Univext Univext TRY FOR FREE
Univext

Univext

July 8, 2026

Basic Korean Phrases for Travel: 50+ Essential Words (2026)

Basic Korean Phrases for Travel: 50+ Essential Words (2026)

Planning a trip to South Korea and feeling nervous about the language barrier? You're not alone. Whether you're wandering the buzzing streets of Hongdae, ordering Korean BBQ in Busan, or hiking up to a mountain temple outside Seoul, knowing a few basic Korean phrases can completely transform your travel experience.

Here's the reassuring part: Koreans are warm and genuinely appreciate visitors who make an effort — even a simple "gamsahamnida" instead of "thanks" can turn a routine transaction into a friendly moment. You don't need to be fluent. You don't even need to read every sign. You just need the right phrases at the right moment.

In this guide, we've compiled 50+ essential Korean phrases organized by real travel situations: greetings, restaurants, directions, subways, hotels, convenience stores, shopping, emergencies, and numbers. Every phrase is written in Hangul (the Korean alphabet) with romanization beside it so you can read it instantly, plus audio pronunciation so you can hear exactly how it should sound.


👋 Korean Greetings and Basic Courtesy

First impressions matter everywhere, but in Korea politeness is the foundation of every interaction. Starting with the right greeting shows respect and instantly warms up the conversation.

Korean Romanization English
annyeonghaseyo
Hello
annyeonghi gaseyo
Goodbye (to someone leaving)
annyeonghi gyeseyo
Goodbye (when you leave)
gamsahamnida
Thank you
joesonghamnida
I'm sorry
sillyehamnida
Excuse me
ne
Yes
aniyo
No
gwaenchanayo
It's okay / No problem
bangapseumnida
Nice to meet you

Important

The most useful word in Korea is "gamsahamnida" (thank you). Pair it with a small nod and you'll come across as polite and sincere in almost any situation — shops, taxis, restaurants, everywhere.


🍜 Restaurant and Food Phrases

Eating is one of the great joys of any trip to Korea. These phrases will help you get seated, order with confidence, and pay without confusion.

Korean Romanization English
menyu juseyo
The menu, please
igeo juseyo
I'll have this one
chucheon menyuga mwoyeyo
What do you recommend?
mul juseyo
Water, please
masisseoyo
It's delicious
jal meokgetseumnida
Said before eating
jal meogeotseumnida
Said after a meal
gyesanseo juseyo
The bill, please
kadeu dwaeyo
Can I pay by card?
an maepge haejuseyo
Please make it not spicy

Example

Korean food can be very spicy. If you're sensitive to heat, remember "an maepge haejuseyo" — "please make it not spicy." And "jal meokgetseumnida" before your meal shows real appreciation to your host.

Notes

Tipping is not customary in Korea. The price you see is the price you pay — no need to add anything extra at restaurants or in taxis.


Become bilingual in 30 days with Univext!

Start a lesson with our teacher for free and become bilingual like our 100,000 students!

🗺️ Asking for Directions

Even with a map app, Korea's dense neighborhoods and huge underground complexes can leave you turned around. These phrases get you help fast.

Korean Romanization English
sillyehamnida, hwajangsiri eodiyeyo
Excuse me, where is the bathroom?
jihacheollyeogi eodiyeyo
Where is the subway station?
jikjinhaseyo
Go straight
oreunjjogieyo
It's on the right
oenjjogieyo
It's on the left
gakkawoyo
It's near
meoreoyo
It's far
gireul ireosseoyo
I'm lost
jidoeseo boyeojuseyo
Please show me on the map

Example

Useful formula: "___ i eodiyeyo?" — "Where is ___?" Drop in any place: hwajangsil (bathroom), jihacheollyeok (subway station), pyeonuijeom (convenience store), byeongwon (hospital).


StudentStudentStudentStudentStudent

Join more than 100,000 students learning on Univext

🚇 Subway and Transportation

Korea's subway system is fast, cheap, and spotless — but the maps can be dizzying. These phrases smooth out ticket machines, transfers, and taxis.

Korean Romanization English
pyoneun eodiseo sayo
Where do I buy a ticket?
seoulkkaji eolmayeyo
How much to Seoul?
myeot beon chulguyeyo
Which exit is it?
i jihacheol gangname gayo
Does this subway go to Gangnam?
daeum yeogi eodiyeyo
What is the next station?
taeksireul bulleojuseyo
Please call a taxi
i jusoro gajuseyo
To this address, please
yeogiseo sewojuseyo
Please stop here

Notes

Get a T-money card at any convenience store — just tap it at subway gates, on buses, and even in some taxis. It saves you from buying single tickets and gives you a small discount on transfers.


🏨 Hotel and Accommodation

Check-in, check-out, and everything in between.

Korean Romanization English
yeyakhaesseoyo
I have a reservation
chekeuin haejuseyo
Check-in, please
achimeun myeot siyeyo
What time is breakfast?
waipai isseoyo
Is there Wi-Fi?
chekeuauseun myeot siyeyo
What time is check-out?
jimeul matgil su isseoyo
Can I leave my luggage?

Become bilingual in 30 days with Univext!

Start a lesson with our teacher for free and become bilingual like our 100,000 students!

🏪 Convenience Stores and Shopping

The Korean convenience store (pyeonuijeom) is a traveler's best friend — food, ATMs, T-money top-ups, and more. These phrases cover the store and shopping alike.

Korean Romanization English
eolmayeyo
How much is it?
bongtu juseyo
A bag, please
bongtu piryo eopseoyo
I don't need a bag
dewo juseyo
Please heat it up
ibeobwado dwaeyo
Can I try it on?
igeo juseyo
I'll take this
geunyang gugyeonghaneun geoyeyo
I'm just looking
kadeu dwaeyo
Do you accept cards?

Example

At the convenience store counter, the clerk may ask "bongtu deurilkkayo?" (Shall I give you a bag?). Just answer "ne, juseyo" (yes, please) or "aniyo, gwaenchanayo" (no, it's fine).


🚨 Emergency Phrases

Nobody plans for emergencies, but a few key phrases could genuinely matter.

Korean Romanization English
dowajuseyo
Please help me
uisareul bulleojuseyo
Call a doctor
gyeongchareul bulleojuseyo
Call the police
gugeupchareul bulleojuseyo
Call an ambulance
byeongwoni eodiyeyo
Where is the hospital?
momi an joayo
I don't feel well
yeogwoneul ireobeoryeosseoyo
I lost my passport

Important

In Korea, dial 112 for police and 119 for fire or ambulance. There's also a free travel helpline — dial 1330 for 24/7 tourist assistance with English interpretation.


StudentStudentStudentStudentStudent

Join more than 100,000 students learning on Univext

💬 Numbers and Useful Extras

Numbers come up constantly — prices, exits, quantities, room numbers.

Korean Romanization English
il, i, sam, sa, o
1, 2, 3, 4, 5
yuk, chil, pal, gu, sip
6, 7, 8, 9, 10
baek, cheon, man
100, 1000, 10000
yeongeo hal su isseoyo
Do you speak English?
hangugeo mothaeyo
I don't speak Korean
moreugesseoyo
I don't understand
dasi hanbeon malhaejuseyo
One more time, please
cheoncheonhi malhaejuseyo
Please speak slowly

Become bilingual in 30 days with Univext!

Start a lesson with our teacher for free and become bilingual like our 100,000 students!

🚀 How to Actually Learn These Phrases

Reading a phrase list is a great start — but if you can't pronounce the words or recall them under pressure, they won't help you at the BBQ counter in Busan.

Here's what actually works:

1. Listen and repeat. Korean has sounds that don't exist in English — the difference between plain, tense, and aspirated consonants can change a word's meaning entirely. Hearing native pronunciation is essential, so use the audio buttons above.

2. Practice in context. Don't memorize isolated words. Rehearse full sentences in realistic scenarios: ordering food, buying a subway ticket, checking into a guesthouse.

3. Use an AI tutor for conversation practice. Apps like Univext let you practice Korean conversations with Umi, an AI teacher who speaks native Korean and corrects your mistakes in real time. It's like having a patient Korean tutor available 24/7.

Important

Univext offers a 14-day free trial with 30 minutes per day — enough to practice every phrase in this guide before your trip. Start your free trial →

4. Focus on the 80/20 rule. The phrases in this guide cover roughly 80% of typical tourist interactions. You don't need to master grammar or honorific levels — just these practical phrases spoken with confidence.


📊 Phrasebook vs App vs AI Tutor

Not sure which tool to use for your trip prep? Here's how the options compare:

Feature Paper Phrasebook Translation App AI Tutor (Univext)
Pronunciation practice
Conversation simulation
Works offline
Corrects your mistakes
Adapts to your level
Available 24/7

Notes

A phrasebook gets you through basic transactions, but it can't teach you to understand what's said back to you. An AI tutor like Umi can simulate real conversations so you're not just speaking at people — you're speaking with them.


🇰🇷 Cultural Tips That Go With the Language

Knowing the phrases is half the battle. These cultural norms will help you use them well:

  • Use two hands. When giving or receiving money, a card, or a gift, use both hands (or your right hand supported by your left). It reads as respectful.
  • Bow a little. A small nod paired with "gamsahamnida" or "annyeonghaseyo" is warm and polite.
  • No tipping. Leaving money can confuse staff. Good service is simply the standard.
  • T-money is king. Load a T-money card for subways, buses, and taxis — it's faster and cheaper than cash for transit.
  • Shoes off. In guesthouses, temples, and many traditional restaurants, remove your shoes where you see a step up or a shoe rack.

Become bilingual in 30 days with Univext!

Start a lesson with our teacher for free and become bilingual like our 100,000 students!

🎯 Ready to Go Beyond Phrases?

These 50+ phrases will carry you through your trip to Korea. But if you want to actually have conversations — understand what people say back, chat with your guesthouse host, or make friends over Korean BBQ — you need real practice.

Univext gives you an AI Korean tutor named Umi who speaks native Korean, corrects your pronunciation, explains grammar when you need it, and adapts every lesson to your level. No textbooks, no rote drills — just real conversation practice.

Already studying another language too? Univext covers French, Spanish, Italian, German, Portuguese, Russian, Polish, Ukrainian, and English — one subscription unlocks them all.

Important

Try Univext free for 14 days → Practice these Korean phrases with Umi before your trip. 30 minutes a day is all you need.

Share this article: