South Korea has one of the most sophisticated waste management systems in the world — and one of the most strictly enforced. For foreigners arriving in Korea, figuring out which bag to use, where to put it, and when to leave it out can feel unexpectedly complicated. Get it wrong, and your trash gets left on the street. Get it very wrong, and you get a fine.
This guide covers everything you need to know to handle waste correctly from your first day in Korea — the system, the bags, the sorting rules, and the fines.
📑 In this guide
- The 종량제 System: Why Korea Charges for Trash
- The 4 Types of Waste — and What Goes Where
- How to Buy the Right Bags
- Recycling Rules: What Counts as Recyclable
- Food Waste: The Most Common Mistake
- Large Item Disposal (Bulky Trash)
- Rules by Housing Type
- When and Where to Put Your Trash Out
- Fines: How Much and When They Apply
- 7 Most Common Mistakes Foreigners Make
1. The 종량제 System: Why Korea Charges for Trash
Korea’s waste system is built on a concept called 종량제 (jongnyangje) — literally “volume-rate system.” Unlike many countries where trash collection is a flat-fee utility included in rent or taxes, Korea charges you based on how much general waste you produce. The more you throw away, the more you pay.
You pay for general waste through the purchase of official government-approved trash bags. The price of the bag is the trash fee. This system, introduced in 1995, has made Korea one of the world’s highest-performing countries for waste reduction — recycling rates now exceed 60% nationally. The incentive is simple: the less general waste you produce, the less you spend on bags.
The system applies to everyone in Korea — Korean nationals, long-term foreign residents, and even short-term visitors staying in Airbnbs or one-rooms. If you create waste in Korea, you are legally required to dispose of it correctly.
2. The 4 Types of Waste — and What Goes Where
Every piece of trash you generate in Korea falls into one of four categories. Getting these right is the foundation of the entire system.
Everything that can’t be recycled or composted. Must go in an official district-issued 종량제 봉투 bag.
- ✅ Tissues and wet wipes
- ✅ Hygiene products (diapers, pads)
- ✅ Contaminated packaging (greasy boxes)
- ✅ Rubber, leather, styrofoam (if no recycling symbol)
- ✅ Non-recyclable mixed materials
- ❌ Food waste (separate bag)
- ❌ Clean recyclables
All food scraps that animals can consume. Must never go in the general waste bag.
- ✅ Vegetable and fruit peels
- ✅ Cooked food leftovers
- ✅ Eggshells (some areas vary)
- ❌ Bones (chicken, pork, beef)
- ❌ Shellfish shells (clams, oysters)
- ❌ Fruit pits (peach, mango)
- ❌ Tea bags, coffee grounds with filter
- ❌ Excess liquid — drain before disposing
Clean recyclables sorted by material type. No official bag required — goes directly into designated recycling bins.
- ✅ Paper, cardboard (flattened)
- ✅ Clear PET bottles (label removed)
- ✅ Glass bottles (caps removed)
- ✅ Cans (aluminum, steel)
- ✅ Plastics with recycling symbol
- ❌ Items must be rinsed clean
- ❌ Labels must be removed from PET bottles
Furniture, appliances, and bulky items. Cannot be left out with regular trash — require a special disposal sticker purchased in advance.
- 📺 TVs, monitors, appliances
- 🛏️ Mattresses, sofas, furniture
- 🚲 Bicycles, exercise equipment
- 💼 Large suitcases
- → Purchase sticker at 주민센터 or online
- → Write your name + date on sticker
- → Leave item at designated spot on pickup day
3. How to Buy the Right Bags
This is the part most foreigners get wrong first. Korea’s general waste bags are district-specific — a bag from Mapo-gu cannot legally be used in Gangnam-gu. The bag sold at your local convenience store is already the correct one for your district, so as long as you buy locally, you’re fine.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Where to buy | Any convenience store (CU, GS25, 7-Eleven, Emart24) or supermarket near your home. The store stocks the correct district bags automatically. |
| Sizes available | 3L, 5L, 10L, 20L, 30L, 50L, 75L, 100L — buy the size that matches your weekly waste output |
| Price (approximate) | 20L bag ≈ KRW 490–600 depending on district. Larger bags are proportionally priced. |
| Food waste bags | Separate dedicated food waste bags (음식물 쓰레기 봉투) — also sold at convenience stores. Yellow or other colors depending on district. |
| If you move districts | Take leftover bags to your new 주민센터 (community center). They will give you a certification sticker (증지) to make old bags legal in the new district — don’t throw them away. |
| Bag color | Varies by district — white, yellow, green, and blue all appear. Color doesn’t indicate content type — it just indicates the district. |
4. Recycling Rules: What Counts as Recyclable
Korea’s recycling system is material-based — items must be sorted by what they are made of, not just whether they look recyclable. The key rule: clean, empty, and label-free.
Paper / Cardboard
Plastic
Glass
Metal Cans
PET Bottles
Batteries / Electronics
- Empty: Remove all contents completely
- Rinse: Wash off any food residue
- Separate: Remove labels, caps, and parts made of different materials
- Sort: Place in the correct bin — paper with paper, plastic with plastic
5. Food Waste: The Most Common Mistake
Mixing food waste with general trash is the single most common violation by foreigners — and one of the easiest fines to get. Korea processes food waste separately (into animal feed or fertilizer), so contamination with bones, shells, or inedible materials causes major problems.
The test: Can an animal eat it? If yes — food waste bag. If no — general waste bag.
| Item | Category | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Rice, noodles, bread | ✅ Food waste | Animals can eat it |
| Vegetable and fruit peels | ✅ Food waste | Animals can eat it |
| Cooked meat (no bone) | ✅ Food waste | Animals can eat it |
| Chicken / pork bones | ❌ General waste | Too hard — cannot be processed |
| Shellfish shells (clam, oyster) | ❌ General waste | Cannot be processed as feed |
| Fruit pits (peach, plum, avocado) | ❌ General waste | Too hard |
| Onion skin, garlic skin | ❌ General waste | Too dry — interferes with processing |
| Tea bags (with filter paper) | ❌ General waste | Mixed material |
| Coffee grounds only | ✅ Food waste | Compostable |
| Eggshells | ⚠️ Area-dependent | Check with your building manager — rules vary by district |
Food waste disposal methods by housing type
- Apartments (아파트): Usually have RFID-chipped bins in the basement or waste room — swipe your card, dump, and it charges by weight (typically KRW 50–100 per kg)
- Villas / officetels / one-rooms: Use dedicated food waste bags (음식물 쓰레기 봉투) — purchase at convenience stores, tie and leave at designated spot
6. Large Item Disposal (Bulky Trash)
Mattresses, sofas, TVs, bicycles — these cannot go in a regular trash bag or recycling area. Korea requires you to register large items for pickup and purchase a disposal sticker before leaving them out.
| Step | How to do it |
|---|---|
| 1. Get a sticker | Visit your local 주민센터 (community center) in person, or use your district’s online portal. Tell them what you’re disposing of — the fee varies by item size and type (KRW 1,000–20,000 typically). |
| 2. Fill out the sticker | Write your name, address, and date on the sticker as instructed |
| 3. Attach and leave | Stick it visibly on the item and leave it at the designated pickup spot outside your building on the correct day |
| Online option | Seoul residents can use the 여기로 (Yeogiro) app to schedule large item pickup online — available in multiple languages |
7. Rules by Housing Type
🏢 Apartment (아파트)
- Designated waste room in building
- RFID food waste bins (weight-based charge)
- Recycling bins sorted by material
- General waste bags left in designated area
- Disposal times often set by building rules
- CCTV typically installed
🏠 Villa / Officetel
- Typically manage waste yourself
- Food waste bags required (no RFID)
- Designated spot outside building
- Check with landlord for specific rules
- Disposal times vary by district
- Most CCTV-monitored now
🛏️ Goshiwon / Gositel
- Usually managed by building staff
- Often have shared food waste container
- Ask management for specific instructions
- Some buildings provide general waste bags
- Recycling area usually shared
8. When and Where to Put Your Trash Out
Disposal timing is strictly regulated in most districts. Putting trash out too early — even in a correct bag — can result in a fine. The general rule:
- Evening disposal: Most districts allow disposal after 9:00 PM the night before collection. Some allow after 6:00 PM.
- Collection days: Varies by district and sometimes by street. Check with your landlord or the 주민센터 for your specific schedule.
- Location: Place bags at the designated spot in front of your building — not in the middle of the sidewalk or against someone else’s building.
- Recycling: Designated recycling areas are usually available any time, but check your building’s hours.
9. Fines: How Much and When They Apply
| Violation | Fine amount |
|---|---|
| Using non-official bag for general waste | Up to KRW 1,000,000 |
| Illegal dumping / leaving trash without a bag | KRW 100,000 (1st) → KRW 300,000 (3rd+) |
| Disposing before allowed time | KRW 100,000+ |
| Mixing food waste into general waste bag | KRW 50,000–100,000 |
| Leaving large items without a sticker | KRW 100,000+ |
| Disposing in another district’s designated area | KRW 100,000+ |
Enforcement is real. Most disposal areas in Korea have CCTV, and district officers do check. Fines are mailed to your registered address — as a registered foreign resident, you are fully subject to them. There is no foreigner exemption.
10. Seven Most Common Mistakes Foreigners Make
- ☐ Buy 종량제 봉투 general waste bags at the nearest convenience store
- ☐ Buy food waste bags (음식물 쓰레기 봉투) separately if no RFID bin in your building
- ☐ Ask your landlord where the disposal area is and what time to put trash out
- ☐ Find your building’s recycling bins and learn which materials go where
- ☐ Save your 주민센터 address for large item disposal questions
- ☐ Download the 여기로 app if you’re in Seoul — useful for large item pickup scheduling