The hillside street running up to the mosque.
Densest cluster of halal-leaning restaurants in Korea: Pakistani, Turkish, Uzbek, Indonesian, Egyptian, Indian, and Korean-halal kitchens.
Korea's main mosque, built 1976.
Friday Jumu'ah prayer ~12:30-13:00 KST.
Wudu facilities open to visitors.
Walk down the hill afterward for lunch on Muslim Street.
Foreign-friendly neighborhood around the mosque.
Several embassies + foreign-supermarket scene.
More halal-friendly restaurants than central Itaewon.
Hongik / Konkuk / Korea University clusters have a few halal-friendly student-budget options.
Less density than Itaewon but useful if you're already there.
Audited by KMF.
Halal meat, halal kitchen, no alcohol, no pork.
Highest tier. usually Muslim-owned.
Owner is Muslim, prepares halal in-house, but not formally KMF-audited.
Generally trusted within the community.
Halal meat used, but the kitchen also serves non-halal food.
Cross-contamination possible.
Confirm with staff if it matters to you.
No pork on the menu, but meat may not be halal-certified slaughtered.
The lowest tier; treat as "vegetarian + no-pork" effectively.
No sticker = unrated.
Don't assume. ask.
The Korean phrase "할랄 인증됐어요?" (hallal injeungdwaesseo-yo?) means “is this halal-certified?”
Frequently splashed into stews, marinades, and bulgogi seasoning.
Ask “술 들어가요?” (sul deureoga-yo?. does it contain alcohol?).
Many noodle soups, kimchi-jjigae, and sundae use pork bone broth even if no pork meat is visible.
Not haram, but worth noting for strict pescatarian-halal preferences.
Sweet rice wine; Korean-style fried chicken almost universally uses it.
Some Korean BBQ houses serve a complimentary "bossam" or warm side that contains pork.
A safer non-halal-but-no-meat-no-alcohol option (사찰음식 / sachal-eumsik). check Insadong + Gyeongbokgung-area temple cuisine restaurants.
The closest subway exit.
Walk south toward the river, then take the first major right onto Usadan-ro.
The hill rises ~10-12 minutes' walk to the mosque.
Slightly longer walk (~15 min) but flatter.
Useful if combining with the War Memorial of Korea or Yongsan Park.
For Friday Jumu'ah, arrive 30-45 min early at the mosque, then descend to Muslim Street for ~13:30 lunch. busiest hour.
Weekday lunches 12:00-14:00 are calmer.
On Muslim Street.
Stocks halal-certified meat (chicken, lamb, beef) and South / Central Asian pantry items.
Further down the hill.
Carries broader international + halal lines.
Deliver halal-tagged items but volume + variety is limited; physical stores are still better.
E-Mart / Lotte Mart / Homeplus carry imported halal certified frozen items in larger branches; smaller stores rarely.
서울중앙성원.
Hannam-dong.
5 daily prayers + Friday Jumu'ah ~12:30-13:00.
Open to visitors outside prayer.
Several restaurants on Muslim Street have a small prayer room upstairs; ask staff.
Incheon T1 + T2 each have prayer rooms.
T1: Gate 24 area.
T2: Gate 234.
Lotte World Tower (Jamsil) and Shinsegae Gangnam have a prayer room for foreign visitors.
Hongik, Yonsei, KAIST all have international student musallahs available to visitors during weekdays.
Densest segment on Muslim Street.
Biryani, kebabs, curries, tandoori.
Most are HC or SC tier.
Doner kebab + lahmacun + Turkish breakfasts.
A few are family-run from owners who emigrated decades ago.
Plov, manti, samsa.
Korea has a substantial Uzbek diaspora. the cooking is authentic.
Nasi padang, rendang, mee goreng.
Smaller cluster, often student-budget pricing.
Koshari, falafel, shawarma.
A few specialist places near the mosque.
A small number of Korean-style kitchens have rebuilt their menu with halal meat (bulgogi, samgyetang minus alcohol).
Look for KMF stickers. these places tend to be HC/SC.
Most Muslim Street restaurants take card, but a few small shops are cash-only.
Bring ₩30,000.
Many Muslim Street restaurants run iftar specials.
Confirm hours during Ramadan. some open only after Maghrib.
The mosque has indoor + outdoor wudu stations; arrive a bit early in summer.
Not required outside the mosque, but restaurants on Muslim Street are mixed local + Muslim. comfortable smart-casual fits in.
Use Naver Map / Kakao Map.
Google Maps is unreliable for walking in Korea.
Verified June 2026. The KMF certification list and specific restaurants change; check stickers on the day. We're actively sourcing a verified halal-restaurant list for /eats. if you know reliable spots, email contact@dealseoul.com.
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