Korea Mobile Phone Guide for Foreign Residents (2026): SIM Card, Plan, and Getting a Korean Number That Works for Banking

📋 Sources: Seoulstart Korea SIM Guide (April 2026), Kimchi Mobile (June 2026), kr-utils.com (May 2026)

A Korean phone number is not optional for residents — it’s infrastructure. Your bank OTP, government notifications, PASS app identity verification, and most Korean apps require an active Korean number registered under your own name. Getting the wrong plan at the wrong time wastes money and leaves you stuck. This guide covers the path for foreign residents, not tourists: what to get on arrival, when to switch, and how to avoid the PASS app problems that still affect many foreigners in 2026.

⚡ The three-stage path for foreign residents

Stage 1 (Day 1, no ARC): Airport prepaid SIM or eSIM — passport only, data first, Korean number possible

Stage 2 (after ARC, ~week 2–4): Switch to Big 3 postpaid or MVNO — ARC + Korean bank account required, proper Korean 010 number, banking verification enabled

Stage 3 (optional, settled): Move to MVNO (알뜰폰) for 50–70% cheaper monthly rates — same network, number portability, ARC + bank account required


Why a Korean Phone Number Matters Beyond Calls

Your Korean 010 number is tied to your identity. Every service that needs to verify you will send a one-time password (OTP) to your Korean number. Without it, you can’t:

  • Complete Korean bank account setup and OTP authentication
  • Set up the PASS app (carrier identity verification — required for most government and banking services)
  • Receive payroll-related government SMS notifications
  • Verify your identity on Kakao Pay, Naver Pay, and most Korean apps
  • Register for HiKorea or other immigration online services
📌 명의 (Name registration) — the law you need to know Korean law requires all SIM cards to be registered under the real name of the account holder (명의, myong-ui). Your phone line is legally tied to your identity — it must match your ARC or passport exactly. Using a SIM registered in someone else’s name is technically illegal and causes immediate problems with any identity verification system that cross-references your carrier account. Always register under your own name.

The Four Plan Types

📡 eSIM (Data only)
  • Passport only — no ARC needed
  • Activate online before you land
  • Data only — NO Korean phone number
  • Cannot receive OTP SMS
  • Price: ₩5,000–30,000/week
  • Providers: Airalo, Holafly, Klook
  • iPhone XS+, Galaxy S20+, most 2020+ phones
Stopgap only — not for residents
✈️ Airport / Tourist Prepaid SIM
  • Passport only — available on arrival at Incheon T1 & T2
  • KT, SKT, LG U+ booths in arrivals hall
  • Gives you a real Korean 010 number
  • Price: ₩33,000–60,000/30 days
  • Works for calls and SMS — but OTP verification may be limited until you switch to postpaid with ARC
  • Can keep same number when upgrading to postpaid
Best first SIM for new arrivals
📶 Big 3 Postpaid (SKT / KT / LG U+)
  • ARC + Korean bank account required
  • Full Korean 010 number with all features
  • PASS app fully supported (with caveats — see below)
  • English support at major branches
  • Price: ₩40,000–80,000/month
  • SKT: best nationwide coverage incl. rural
  • KT: strong foreigner onboarding, English app
  • LG U+: competitive pricing
Best for residents who want full English support
💰 MVNO (알뜰폰) Postpaid
  • ARC + Korean bank account required
  • Same network coverage as Big 3 (resells SKT/KT/LG U+)
  • 50–70% cheaper than Big 3
  • Price: ₩9,900–40,000/month
  • Sign up online or at CU/GS25 convenience stores
  • Activation: 1–2 business days (not instant)
  • English support: limited — mostly Korean
  • Compare plans at mvnohub.kr (government comparison site)
Best value once you’re settled with ARC + bank account

The Three Carriers: Which One?

📋 Source: Seoulstart Korea SIM Guide, April 2026; kr-utils.com, May 2026
CarrierCoverageEnglish supportMonthly rangeBest for
SK Telecom (SKT / T World) Best nationwide — strongest in rural areas and subway tunnels Good at T World stores, limited on app ₩40,000–80,000+ Workers in non-Seoul areas, rural workplaces
KT (Korea Telecom) Excellent — slightly weaker in extreme rural Best English — foreigner-specific plans and English app ₩40,000–80,000+ Most foreigners — easiest onboarding
LG U+ Good — slightly behind in very rural Moderate — improving ₩35,000–70,000 Price-conscious users in urban areas
💡 For most foreigners: KT first, then MVNO later KT has the most foreigner-friendly onboarding — English support, clearer process, and the T-money transportation function can be linked to some KT plans. Once you’re settled and comfortable with Korean apps, switch to an MVNO on the KT network for lower bills. Your 010 number stays the same when you port (번호이동).

Step-by-Step: What to Do When

  1. 1

    Incheon Airport — get a prepaid SIM immediately

    Look for KT, SKT, or LG U+ booths in the arrivals hall at Terminal 1 or Terminal 2. Open early morning to late evening. Bring your passport. Choose a 30-day tourist SIM (₩33,000–60,000). This gives you a real Korean 010 number from day one — important because you’ll need it for your ARC appointment booking and accommodation registration. Skip eSIM if you’re staying long-term: eSIM gives you data but no Korean number.

  2. 2

    After ARC arrives — upgrade to postpaid

    Once you have your ARC (typically 2–4 weeks after your appointment) and a Korean bank account, visit a carrier store and upgrade to a postpaid plan (후불요금제). Bring: ARC + passport + Korean bank account details. Ask to keep your existing 010 number (번호이동 or 번호유지). The upgrade takes 20–30 minutes at the store. This activates full banking OTP functionality and PASS app registration.

  3. 3

    Once settled — consider switching to MVNO to save money

    After 3–6 months, once you’re comfortable with Korean apps and your banking is set up, you can switch to an MVNO (알뜰폰) on the same network. Plans start at ₩9,900/month. Check mvnohub.kr (government comparison site) for current plans. Sign up online or at CU/GS25. Activation takes 1–2 business days. Your 010 number transfers. Most MVNO interfaces are Korean-only — have the Korean keyboard ready.


The PASS App: What It Is and the 2026 Problem

The PASS app (by your carrier — SKT, KT, or LG U+) is Korea’s primary identity verification system. Banks, government services, and many Korean apps use PASS to confirm your identity when logging in or authorizing transactions. It’s not optional for long-term residents.

⚠️ Known PASS app problem for foreign names (mid-2026) As of mid-2026, the PASS app has unresolved technical issues with foreign names containing hyphens, apostrophes, or special characters. Names like “O’Brien”, “Jean-Pierre”, or “Al-Hassan” may fail PASS registration due to a system error — not a documentation problem. If this happens to you, contact your carrier’s customer service directly and ask for manual name verification (실명 수동 확인). This is a known issue and carriers have a workaround process, but you may need to visit a store in person.
SituationWhat to do
Your name has a hyphen (e.g. Jean-Paul)Register at carrier store in person — ask for manual name verification. Do not try online first.
Your name has an apostrophe (e.g. O’Brien)Same — in-person manual verification. Some carriers accept the name without the apostrophe for PASS purposes.
PASS keeps failing even with a simple nameCheck that the name on PASS exactly matches your ARC — spacing, order of given/family name. Even one character difference causes failure.
PASS works but banking OTP still failsYour bank and carrier name must match. If your bank account is under a different name version than your carrier account, update one to match.

Price Comparison: What to Expect in 2026

📋 Source: kr-utils.com (May 2026), Seoulstart (April 2026). Prices change frequently — verify at carrier websites before purchasing.
Plan typeMonthly costARC required?Korean number?
eSIM (data only)₩5,000–30,000/week❌ No❌ No — data only
Airport / tourist prepaid SIM₩33,000–60,000/30 days❌ No (passport only)✅ Yes — 010 number
Big 3 postpaid (basic plan)₩30,000–40,000/month✅ Yes + bank account✅ Yes — full featured
Big 3 postpaid (full feature)₩40,000–80,000+/month✅ Yes + bank account✅ Yes + phone subsidy option
MVNO postpaid (알뜰폰)₩9,900–40,000/month✅ Yes + bank account✅ Yes — same as Big 3

Common Questions

Q: Can I use my foreign phone in Korea? Most modern smartphones (iPhone, Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel) work on Korean networks. Korea uses 4G LTE and 5G — as long as your phone supports these bands and is unlocked (not carrier-locked to your home country network), it will work. Check your phone’s LTE band compatibility before arrival if you’re unsure.
Q: Can I keep my Korean number when I leave Korea? Yes — with planning. Switch to a prepaid MVNO at minimum top-up (around ₩5,000–10,000/month) before you leave. This keeps your number active for KakaoTalk verification, bank 2FA, and Coupang access. Postpaid contracts typically end when your ARC expires or your Korean bank account closes. Numbers are recycled after a 60–90 day grace period if the SIM goes inactive.
Q: What is my Korean phone number format? All Korean mobile numbers use the prefix 010 followed by two four-digit groups: 010-XXXX-XXXX (11 digits total). This format is the same across SKT, KT, LG U+, and all MVNOs — you cannot identify the carrier from the number. Write it with hyphens when sharing with Korean contacts (this is the local convention).
Q: My bank keeps failing OTP verification — is it my phone plan? Usually yes. For banking OTP to work: (1) you need a postpaid plan with ARC registration, (2) the name on your carrier account must exactly match the name on your bank account, and (3) your PASS app must be set up and working. If any of these three don’t match, OTP fails. The most common cause is a name mismatch between carrier and bank.

Related: ARC Card Guide: Get This First →

Related: Korean Bank Account Guide: Why Your Phone Plan Matters for Banking →

Related: Transportation Card Guide: T-money, Climate Card, K-Pass →

Sources: Seoulstart Korea SIM Card Guide (April 2026), Kimchi Mobile Korea SIM and MVNO Guides (June 2026), kr-utils.com Korea SIM Guide (May 2026), myroami.com (November 2025). Phone plan prices, ARC requirements, and PASS app behavior change frequently. Always verify current plans and prices at carrier websites (tworld.co.kr, kt.com, lguplus.com) or the government MVNO comparison hub (mvnohub.kr) before purchasing. This guide does not constitute legal, financial, or telecommunications advice.

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