Cost of Living in Seoul (2026)
Understanding the real cost of living in Seoul is essential before making your move. Based on years of advising expats, here's a comprehensive breakdown of what you'll actually spend at three lifestyle levels.
Seoul has a cost index of approximately 65/100 (NYC = 100), making it moderately priced.
Monthly Budget Breakdown by Lifestyle
| Category | Budget | Comfortable | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR apartment) | $700 | $1000 | $1600 |
| Food & Dining | $180 | $300 | $600 |
| Transportation | $55 | $83 | $220 |
| Utilities + Internet | $108 | $144 | $180 |
| Entertainment & Social | $90 | $216 | $450 |
| Health Insurance | $90 | $144 | $216 |
| Total Monthly | $1170 | $1800 | $2700 |
Housing Costs in Detail
Housing is typically 40-50% of your budget in Seoul. A furnished one-bedroom apartment in a popular expat neighborhood costs approximately $1000/month. Outside the city center, expect to pay 20-35% less. Shared apartments can cut housing costs by 40-50%. Short-term rentals (Airbnb-style) cost 30-50% more than long-term leases.
Tip from our experience: Always negotiate — in many cities, listed prices for apartments are starting points. Offering to pay several months upfront or signing a longer lease can reduce monthly costs by 10-20%.
Food & Grocery Costs
Monthly grocery costs for one person range from $150-300 depending on whether you buy local or imported products. A meal at a local restaurant typically costs $15-30. Mid-range restaurant meals run $30-60 per person.
Money-saving tip: Eat where locals eat. Tourist-area restaurants charge 2-3x what you'd pay at neighborhood spots. Ask expat groups for recommendations — the best food is almost never on the main tourist streets.
Hidden Costs Most Expats Miss
Budget an additional 15-20% above your calculated costs for expenses most expats underestimate:
- Visa fees and renewals: $200-1,000/year depending on country and visa type
- Health insurance: $100-400/month — required for most visas and essential for peace of mind
- Currency exchange losses: 2-5% if using traditional banks (use Wise to minimize this)
- Flights home: $500-2,000/year depending on distance
- Initial setup costs: Security deposits (typically 2 months rent), furniture, SIM card, basic supplies — budget $1,000-3,000 for the first month
- VPN subscription: $5-10/month if you need to access services from your home country
- Tax preparation: $200-1,000/year for professional tax advice (essential for most expats)
Wise offers the real exchange rate with transparent, low fees. Trusted by 16M+ people — the #1 tool we recommend to every expat client.
Try Wise Free →How Seoul Compares to Other Cities
To put Seoul's costs in perspective: it is moderately priced — more expensive than Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe, but still affordable compared to London, New York, or Sydney.
Frequently Asked Questions
SafetyWing offers affordable travel & health insurance from $45/mo — designed for digital nomads and remote workers in 195+ countries.
Get Covered →