How to Use the Seoul Subway: A Complete Beginner's Guide
Seoul's subway is one of the best in the world β but it can look intimidating at first. This beginner's guide covers everything from buying a T-money card to reading the maps.
How to Use the Seoul Subway: A Complete Beginner's Guide
Seoul's subway system is massive β 9 main lines, 300+ stations, and coverage across the entire Greater Seoul area. It can look overwhelming on a map. But once you understand the basics, it's one of the easiest and cheapest ways to navigate the city.
This guide will have you moving like a local within the first hour.
Step 1: Get a T-money Card
Before you ride, you need a T-money card (ν°λ¨Έλ μΉ΄λ) β a rechargeable transit card that works across all Seoul public transport.
Where to Buy
- Any convenience store (CU, GS25, 7-Eleven) near the subway station
- At the T-money vending machines inside major stations
- Some stations have airport-side counters on arrival
Cost
- Card purchase: β©2,500
- Minimum load: β©1,000 (load as much as you need β reloadable at any convenience store or subway machine)
Why T-money Instead of Single-Use Tickets?
- Cheaper per ride: β©150 discount vs. single-use ticket
- No need to buy tickets every time
- Works on buses, subways, some taxis, and convenience stores
- Unused balance is refundable at CU/GS25
Step 2: Understand the Lines
Seoul has 9 main subway lines plus several branch lines, the AREX airport line, and the Sinbundang Line.
The Lines You'll Use Most
| Line | Color | Key Stops |
|---|---|---|
| Line 1 (1νΈμ ) | Dark Blue | Seoul Station, Incheon |
| Line 2 (2νΈμ ) | Green | Hongdae, Gangnam, Sinchon, COEX |
| Line 3 (3νΈμ ) | Orange | Gyeongbokgung, Apgujeong |
| Line 4 (4νΈμ ) | Sky Blue | Myeongdong, Seoul Station, Dongdaemun |
| Line 5 (5νΈμ ) | Purple | Itaewon area, Yeouido |
| Line 6 (6νΈμ ) | Brown | Itaewon, Noksapyeong |
| Line 9 (9νΈμ ) | Gold | Gimpo Airport, COEX, Gangnam |
Line 2 (Green) is the circular line β most travelers end up using it the most. It connects Hongdae, Sinchon, City Hall, Gangnam, and dozens of popular areas.
Step 3: Find Your Route
Using Naver Map
- Open Naver Map β tap the directions icon
- Enter your start and destination (English works)
- Select "Subway" or "Transit" mode
- The app shows you which line to take, where to transfer, and the exact exit number
Using the Subway App
- Subway Korea (offline) or KakaoMetro (live updates)
- Search start station β end station
- Shows estimated time and transfer points
Reading Station Signs
Inside stations, signs are in Korean + English + Chinese + Japanese. Look for:
- Line number (colored circle with number)
- Exit numbers (numbered 1, 2, 3... sometimes up to 15+)
- Transfer signs (νμΉ, hwan-seung) pointing to connecting lines
Step 4: Ride the Subway
Tap In
- Touch your T-money card to the yellow reader at the turnstile
- You'll hear a beep and the gate opens
- The reader shows your remaining balance
On the Platform
- Yellow safety lines mark where to stand (don't cross until the train arrives)
- Doors open and close automatically β don't hold them
- Priority seats (pink/light blue seats at the ends) are for elderly, pregnant, and disabled passengers β don't sit there even if the train is empty
- Trains announce stations in Korean + English
Tap Out
- Touch your T-money card to the exit reader when leaving
- The system calculates the fare based on distance
Fare Structure
| Distance | Fare (with T-money) |
|---|---|
| 0β10 km | β©1,400 |
| 10β50 km | β©1,400 + β©100 per 5 km |
| 50+ km | β©1,400 + additional |
Most trips within central Seoul cost β©1,400β1,800.
Free transfers: Within 30 minutes of tapping out, transfer to a bus costs nothing extra (the fare counts as one journey).
Key Stations to Know
| Station | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Seoul Station (μμΈμ) | KTX, AREX, Lines 1 & 4 hub |
| Hongdae (νλμ ꡬ) | AREX, Line 2 β youth culture hub |
| Gangnam (κ°λ¨) | Lines 2 & 7 β upscale shopping area |
| Myeongdong (λͺ λ) | Line 4 β shopping, food, tourists |
| Dongdaemun (λλλ¬Έ) | Lines 1, 4 β 24-hour market |
| Gyeongbokgung (경볡κΆ) | Line 3 β palace, Bukchon |
| Itaewon (μ΄νμ) | Line 6 β international food, nightlife |
| Insadong (μΈμ¬λ) | Line 3 β traditional culture |
| COEX (μ½μμ€) | Lines 2 & 9 β mall, exhibitions |
Subway Etiquette (Don't Do These)
- Don't eat or drink on the subway β it's considered rude
- Don't talk loudly on the phone β Koreans are very quiet on transit
- Don't block the doors when boarding or exiting
- Do give up your seat to the elderly β Korean subway culture is strict about this
- Stand to the right on escalators β left lane is for walking
Hours and Night Transport
Seoul subway runs approximately:
- First train: 5:30 AM
- Last train: 12:00β1:00 AM (varies by line and direction)
After the last train, your options are:
- Night bus (μ¬μΌλ²μ€): Runs until 5:00 AM on major routes, Blue buses starting with "N"
- Taxi: Plentiful but prices surge on Friday/Saturday nights
- Walk or wait: If your destination is close
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Wrong exit: Each station has many exits β always check which exit number before leaving (it can save a 10-minute walk)
- Wrong direction: Check the end-of-line station name to confirm you're going the right direction
- Forgetting to tap out: You'll be charged maximum fare if you don't tap out at exit
Final Thoughts
Seoul's subway is genuinely one of the best transit systems in the world. It's clean, punctual, affordable, and almost entirely navigable in English. Once you've done two or three trips, you'll feel confident enough to go anywhere.
The golden rule: check which exit you need before you go up the escalator. Wrong exits at big stations can mean a 15-minute surface detour.