First-time visitors to South Korea almost always ask the same nervous question at the end of a meal: how much do I tip? If you are coming from the US, the honest answer is freeing — you do not tip in Korea, and nobody expects you to.
The price you see is the price you pay
Korea simply does not have a tipping culture. Restaurants, cafes, taxis, hair salons, and hotels all quote a final price that already includes service. There is no tip line on the card terminal, no jar by the register at most places, and no awkward 18/20/22% prompt. Staff are paid a wage, not a tip-dependent income, so leaving extra cash is not the norm — and in some cases it can even create confusion.
What about a service charge?
The one place you may see something added is at upscale hotels and some fine-dining restaurants, which can apply a service charge (and VAT) directly to the bill. That is not a tip — it is a line item that is already calculated for you. You do not add anything on top.
The handful of optional exceptions
There are a few situations where a small gratuity is welcomed rather than expected:
- Private tour guides or drivers you have hired for a full day — a modest thank-you is a kind gesture.
- Hotel bellhops at international-brand properties, where the habit has crept in from foreign guests.
- Exceptional, personalized service where you genuinely want to say thanks.
Even then, it is optional and modest. Leaving 20% on a dinner bill will more likely puzzle the server than please them.
How to avoid the awkward mistake
The classic error is chasing a server to hand them cash, or fumbling at the card machine looking for a tip option that isn't there. Relax — when the meal is done, you pay the stated amount and leave. A simple "잘 먹었습니다" (jal meogeotseumnida, "I ate well / thank you for the meal") is worth far more than money.
Bottom line
In 2026, tipping in Korea is not expected at restaurants, taxis, cafes, or hotels. Keep your small bills for the night market and street food instead.
For the full breakdown — including the exact wording on hotel service charges and a quick scenario-by-scenario etiquette table — see the complete guide here: Do You Tip in Korea? An Honest 2026 Guide.
This is general travel information, not formal etiquette or legal advice. Customs vary by venue — when in doubt, follow the lead of locals around you.
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