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.
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.
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.
When Your plan already covers Korea (T-Mobile, EE, Vodafone, JP carriers, etc.). Quick trips, no friction.
Pros
Watch out
When Phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS+, Pixel 3+, Samsung S20+). Want zero airport faff.
Pros
Watch out
When Standard tourist visit, want full Korean number including SMS.
Pros
Watch out
When Phone is locked / cannot accept other SIMs. Group of 2 to 4 sharing one connection.
Pros
Watch out
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.
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.
Arrivals (1F), near the central plaza.
Same three carriers.
Quieter than T1 since fewer flights land here, often a faster pickup.
Domestic-international transfer.
KT counter on arrivals, smaller selection.
Most visitors will not arrive here unless connecting from Japan/China low-cost.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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