Seoul

Healthcare in Seoul (2026)

Everything you need to know about healthcare as an expat in Seoul, South Korea.

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Healthcare in Seoul for Expats (2026)

Understanding the healthcare system is crucial for any expat β€” it affects your daily peace of mind, your budget, and your visa eligibility. Here's a comprehensive guide based on real advisory experience.

South Korea's National Health Insurance (κ΅­λ―Όκ±΄κ°•λ³΄ν—˜) is mandatory and covers approximately 60-80% of medical costs. Monthly premiums are approximately 3.5% of salary. The system is highly efficient β€” you can see a specialist directly without a GP referral. Hospitals are modern and well-equipped. Many large hospitals in Seoul have international clinics with English-speaking staff (Samsung Medical Center, Asan Medical Center, Seoul National University Hospital). Dental care is partially covered. Prescription costs are low with insurance. South Korea is a major medical tourism destination, especially for cosmetic surgery and dental procedures. Mental health services are available but utilization is lower due to social stigma.

Public vs Private Healthcare

Most expats in Seoul use a combination of public and private healthcare. The public system provides baseline coverage (often through mandatory contributions), while private insurance offers faster specialist access, English-speaking doctors, modern facilities, and shorter waiting times.

Health Insurance Options for Expats

Your insurance needs depend on your visa status and employment situation:

  • Employed locally: Typically covered through employer-provided or mandatory social insurance
  • Freelancer/self-employed: Must arrange own insurance β€” private or mandatory public depending on country
  • Digital nomad/remote worker: International nomad insurance (SafetyWing, World Nomads) or local private insurance
  • EU citizens in EU countries: EHIC card provides emergency coverage; still need local registration for full access
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Finding English-Speaking Doctors

In Seoul's city center, most private clinics and international hospitals have English-speaking staff. For public healthcare, English availability varies. Facebook expat groups are the best resource for doctor recommendations β€” ask the community who they trust.

Emergency Services

In an emergency, go directly to the nearest hospital emergency room. Most countries have a universal emergency number (112 in the EU, 911 in North America). Hospital emergency departments will treat everyone regardless of insurance status β€” billing comes later.

Prescription Medications

If you take regular medication, research availability before moving. Some medications available over-the-counter in your home country may require prescriptions in Seoul, and vice versa. Bring a 3-month supply with you and get a letter from your doctor listing your medications by generic name.

Mental Health Services

Access to English-speaking mental health professionals varies by city. International counseling platforms (BetterHelp, Talkspace) work globally as a supplement. Expat-specific therapists understand the unique challenges of living abroad β€” loneliness, culture shock, identity shifts.