Seoul is an excellent destinations for digital nomads. Here's everything you need to work remotely from Seoul.
Why Nomads Love Seoul
- World's fastest internet — 200Mbps-1Gbps standard, even on subway
- Amazing food culture — Korean BBQ, street food, fried chicken, delivery culture
- Very safe city — low crime, safe to walk anywhere at night
- Excellent public transport — clean, efficient, cheap subway system
- K-pop and K-drama culture — if you're a fan, it's the ultimate destination
- Modern, high-tech infrastructure — everything has an app
Best Neighborhoods for Nomads
Itaewon/Yongsan
International district — diverse food, expat bars, LGBTQ+-friendly area.
Hongdae
Young, artsy, live music, nightlife. University area with creative energy.
Gangnam
Upscale business district. K-pop agencies, premium shopping, corporate life.
Coworking & WiFi
| Space | Price | Area |
|---|
| WeWork | ₩350,000/mo | Multiple |
| FastFive | ₩250,000/mo | Multiple |
| SparkPlus | ₩300,000/mo | Gangnam |
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Practical Tips for Your First Month
Your first month in Seoul sets the foundation for everything that follows. Based on advising hundreds of expats, here's a priority checklist:
- Week 1: Get a local SIM card, open a bank account (if possible on your visa type), register your address if required, and explore 2-3 neighborhoods on foot.
- Week 2: Set up your workspace — try 2-3 coworking spaces with day passes before committing to a monthly membership. Establish a daily routine.
- Week 3: Join social events — attend at least 2 meetups, coworking events, or language exchanges. The connections you make now become your support network.
- Week 4: Evaluate and adjust — assess your neighborhood, workspace, budget, and social life. Make changes while you're still flexible.
The biggest mistake new digital nomads make is trying to figure everything out before they arrive. The reality is that most practical questions are best answered on the ground, with the help of other expats who've already navigated the same challenges.
Timezone Considerations
Seoul is in the KST (UTC+9) timezone. This puts you 12-17 hours ahead of US Pacific time, making real-time collaboration with American teams challenging. Many nomads here work split schedules — mornings for focused work, evenings for US-timezone meetings. European overlap is more manageable at 5-7 hours difference.