SIM & WiFi

SIM, eSIM & WiFi

How long are you here?

1, 3 days Quick visit, layover, weekend trip

Roam with your home carrier if your plan includes Korea (T-Mobile, Verizon, EE, Vodafone, etc. usually do). For most others, an eSIM bought online before arrival (Airalo / Holafly / Ubigi, ~$10 to $20 for 3 days) is the lowest-friction option. Skip the airport queue.

1, 2 weeks Standard tourist trip

Prepaid physical SIM at Incheon (ICN) airport from KT / SKT / LG U+ counters in arrivals. Unlimited 5G data is typically around ₩30,000 to ₩50,000 for 5 to 15 days. eSIM is the same price range and saves the swap. Pocket WiFi only makes sense if your phone is locked.

1 month or more Long stay, exchange student, digital nomad

30-day prepaid SIM from KT / SKT / LG U+ (around ₩50,000 to ₩70,000). For 60 days or more, consider a postpaid plan, but most carriers require an Alien Registration Card (ARC) for postpaid. Without ARC, stick to renewing prepaid or use a SIM-with-USIM service like Chingu Mobile.

Quick facts

Major carriers 3
ICN SIM counters T1 + T2
Passport rule Required by law
eSIM support iPhone XS+, recent Android

Four options compared

Home-carrier roaming Plan already covers Korea

When Your plan already covers Korea (T-Mobile, EE, Vodafone, JP carriers, etc.). Quick trips, no friction.

Pros

  • Zero setup. Plane lands and you have signal.
  • Keep your number for SMS verification at home.

Watch out

  • Often slower (throttled to 256kbps to 5Mbps after a fair-use cap).
  • Sometimes blocks tethering.
  • Expensive if not included in plan (₩15,000 to ₩30,000 per day).
Full setup guide
eSIM online (before arrival) Recent iPhone or Pixel

When Phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS+, Pixel 3+, Samsung S20+). Want zero airport faff.

Pros

  • Activate before you board. Internet works the moment you land.
  • No counter queue, no SIM swap.
  • Keep your home SIM in for receiving SMS.

Watch out

  • Most are data-only (no Korean number, no SMS receive).
  • Cannot verify Korean apps that need SMS (KakaoTalk, Naver, Coupang).
Full setup guide
Prepaid SIM at airport Full Korean number + SMS

When Standard tourist visit, want full Korean number including SMS.

Pros

  • Unlimited 5G/LTE data.
  • Comes with a Korean number for SMS (verify Korean apps).
  • KT counter staff speaks English.

Watch out

  • Counter queue can be 20+ minutes during peak arrivals.
  • Need to swap your physical SIM in.
  • Passport required for activation by Korean law.
Full setup guide
Pocket WiFi rental Locked phone, or sharing

When Phone is locked / cannot accept other SIMs. Group of 2 to 4 sharing one connection.

Pros

  • Connect up to 5 devices at once (iPad + laptop + phone).
  • No SIM swap, no eSIM compatibility check.
  • Often cheaper for small groups vs. multiple SIMs.

Watch out

  • Extra device to carry, charge, and not lose.
  • Battery dies mid-day; need to charge.
  • Round-trip pickup + return at airport.
Full setup guide

Fastest path: pre-arrival eSIM

Get a Korea eSIM on Airalo Plans from a few days to 30 days. Activate before boarding.

Data-only eSIM, no Korean phone number. If you need SMS verification for KakaoTalk / Naver, also get a prepaid physical SIM at the airport. See Watch-outs below.

Where to pick up

Incheon Airport (ICN), Terminal 1

Arrivals floor (1F), between Gates 5 and 10.
KT, SKT, LG U+ all have counters.
KT Roaming Center is the most foreigner-staffed (English on hand).
Open ~6am to ~10pm, late arrivals can be tight.

Incheon Airport (ICN), Terminal 2

Arrivals (1F), near the central plaza.
Same three carriers.
Quieter than T1 since fewer flights land here, often a faster pickup.

Gimpo Airport (GMP)

Domestic-international transfer.
KT counter on arrivals, smaller selection.
Most visitors will not arrive here unless connecting from Japan/China low-cost.

Online (before arrival)

eSIMs from Airalo, Holafly, Ubigi.
Physical-SIM-by-mail is also offered by Klook / Trazy with airport pickup vouchers.

Watch out for

Passport, every time

Korean law requires passport ID for any SIM activation, even tourist prepaid.
Counters cannot bend this.
Bring it to the airport counter, not in checked luggage.

Data-only vs voice

eSIMs from Airalo / Holafly / Ubigi are data-only by default.
They do not give you a Korean phone number, so you cannot receive SMS.
KakaoTalk, Naver, and Coupang verification will fail.
If you need a Korean number, get a physical prepaid SIM at the airport.

Check 5G coverage

All three carriers have decent 5G in Seoul / Busan / major cities.
Outside metro areas (rural day trips), coverage drops to LTE.
Not a problem for most visitors but matters if you are heading to remote DMZ tours or hiking far from Seoul.

Watch the daily cap

Some "unlimited" prepaid plans throttle after a daily cap (e.g. 5GB/day full speed, then 1Mbps).
Fine for maps + messaging, painful for video calls.
Read the plan card at the counter.

Public WiFi exists

Most subway stations, cafes, and tourist areas have free WiFi (KT_GiGA_WiFi, SK_WiFi, etc.) but they often need a Korean phone number to authenticate.
Cafes are easier, just ask staff for the password.

Updated June 2026. Carrier prepaid pricing is reviewed quarterly; ranges shown above.

Back to first-time guide
Was this page helpful? Tell us what to fix. We read every note.