In a pinch
For when things get confusing
Unwritten rules, emergency prep, and a real neighbor to ask when you're stuck.
Culture
Things Koreans won't tell you
Unwritten rules that take expats years to figure out. Here's your shortcut.
눈치 (Nunchi)
Reading the room
Nunchi is the Korean art of sensing others' feelings without being told. Someone with "good nunchi" adjusts their behavior to the situation without explanation. If your Korean friend goes quiet mid-conversation, they might be communicating something without words. Pay attention.
나이 (Age)
Why they ask your age immediately
Koreans adjust speech (formal vs. informal) based on relative age. Asking your age right away isn't rude. It's practical. They need to know how to address you. If you're older, expect more formal speech directed at you. If younger, they may speak casually.
음주 문화 (Drinking)
The art of pouring
Never pour your own drink. Pour for others and let them pour for you. Accept with both hands when someone older pours for you. Turn slightly away from elders when drinking.
식당 예절 (Restaurants)
Calling 저기요 and the banchan rule
Call your server by saying '저기요!' (excuse me). Waving works too. Tipping is never practiced. Banchan (side dishes) are free and refillable. Just ask. Sharing main dishes from the same plate is completely normal and expected.
지하철 예절 (Subway)
The unspoken code underground
Priority seats (pink/blue) are genuinely reserved. Don't sit there even when empty. Phone calls are frowned upon; text instead. Eating is generally taboo. Pushing to exit crowded trains is expected, not rude.
신발 (Shoes)
Always take them off
Remove shoes before entering any Korean home, no exceptions. Many traditional restaurants require it too. Look for the step at the entrance or a shoe rack. Bring clean socks, always.
인사 (Bowing)
It's all in the angle
A 15-degree nod is fine for casual greetings. 45 degrees for someone much older or senior. Full 90-degree bows are for very formal situations. Don't bow and shake hands simultaneously. Bow first, then shake if they extend.
"밥 한번 먹자"
When it's not an invitation
"다음에 밥 한번 먹자" (let's eat sometime) is often a polite parting phrase, not a real invitation. If they mean it, they'll suggest a specific time. Don't follow up with "when?". Wait for them to initiate. This is different from actual plans.
빨리빨리 Culture
The culture of speed
Korea moves fast. Food arrives fast. Buses leave fast. Construction happens overnight. '빨리빨리' (hurry hurry) is a national operating mode. If a Korean seems to rush you, they're not being rude. They genuinely believe faster is better, and they're probably right.
공유 음식 (Sharing)
Food is a team sport
Korean meals are communal. Dishes are shared from the same plate; everyone takes from communal bowls with their own utensils. Finishing everything on a shared dish is polite. It signals you enjoyed it. Don't be shy about reaching in.
Emergency
Emergency lockscreen card
Save this to your phone. If you’re ever in trouble and can’t communicate, show it to someone.
Optional — appears on the card if filled.
Community
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