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    Essential Korean Apps Every Tourist Needs in 2026

    12 must-have apps for traveling in Korea. Naver Map, Papago, Kakao T, and more — with setup guides and tips from a Korean local.
    Apr 06, 2026
    Essential Korean Apps Every Tourist Needs in 2026
    Contents
    Your Phone Is Your Most Important Travel Tool in KoreaThe Must-Have Apps (Download These First)1. Naver Map — Navigation2. Papago — Translation3. Kakao T — Taxis & RidesVery Useful Apps (Highly Recommended)4. KakaoMap — Alternative Navigation5. Subway Korea (지하철) — Dedicated Subway App6. KorailTalk — Train Tickets7. MangoPlate or Catchtable — Restaurant DiscoveryNice-to-Have Apps8. T-money Balance Check9. XE Currency Converter10. Google Lens11. Coupang — Delivery & Shopping12. Airalo or eSIM Go — eSIM ManagementApps You Do NOT NeedQuick Setup Checklist

    Your Phone Is Your Most Important Travel Tool in Korea

    Korea is one of the most digitally connected countries in the world. Koreans use their phones for everything — navigation, payments, ordering food, hailing taxis, translating menus, even unlocking their front doors. As a tourist, having the right apps on your phone will make your trip dramatically easier.

    Here are the apps I recommend to every friend visiting Korea. I've tested all 12 of these apps over the past year while helping dozens of foreign visitors navigate Seoul and beyond. Download them before your trip while you still have WiFi — some need initial setup that's easier to do at home. You'll also want to get a Korean eSIM or SIM card sorted before arrival so these apps work from the moment you land.

    The Must-Have Apps (Download These First)

    1. Naver Map — Navigation

    Detail

    Info

    What it does

    Maps, navigation, transit directions, walking routes

    Why not Google Maps?

    Google Maps is limited in Korea — missing transit details, no walking directions

    Language

    English supported (toggle in settings)

    Works offline?

    Partially — download maps in advance

    This is the single most important app for your Korea trip. Naver Map is what Koreans use daily — it has accurate transit directions, real-time bus/subway arrivals, walking routes, and even tells you which subway exit to use. Google Maps works for basic orientation in Korea, but it's missing walking directions and detailed transit info due to Korean government restrictions on map data exports. You can download Naver Map from the App Store or Google Play.

    Key Features for Tourists

    • Transit directions — shows subway, bus, and walking combinations with real-time arrival info

    • Exit number recommendations — tells you which subway exit is closest to your destination

    • Restaurant/cafe search — find highly-rated places near you with photos and reviews

    • Street view — preview your destination before you go

    • English search — you can search for places in English, though Korean names sometimes work better

    Pro tip: When searching for a specific restaurant or shop, try searching the Korean name if the English search doesn't work. You can copy-paste Korean text from other apps or websites. Naver Map's results are more accurate with Korean input.

    Person holding a smartphone displaying a map navigation app, useful for finding directions while traveling in Korea

    2. Papago — Translation

    Detail

    Info

    What it does

    Text, voice, image, and conversation translation

    Best feature

    Camera translation — point at Korean text and see instant English

    Language

    Korean ↔ English (plus 12 other languages)

    Works offline?

    Yes — download the Korean language pack

    Papago is made by Naver (Korea's Google) and is significantly better than Google Translate for Korean. It understands Korean grammar and context better, producing more natural and accurate translations. The camera translation feature is a lifesaver for reading menus, signs, and subway announcements. Papago will be especially handy when you're ordering Korean food at local restaurants where menus are only in Korean.

    How to Use It

    • Camera mode — point your phone camera at Korean text (menus, signs, instructions) and get instant English translation overlaid on the screen

    • Conversation mode — speak in English, it translates to Korean (and vice versa). Great for communicating with taxi drivers or restaurant staff

    • Text mode — type or paste Korean text for translation

    • Image mode — take a photo of Korean text and translate it

    Download the offline language pack before your trip! Open Papago → Settings → Offline Translation → Download Korean. This way, translation works even without data — essential for those first minutes after landing before your eSIM activates.

    Seoul street with Korean text signs and storefronts, the kind of signage Papago can instantly translate with its camera feature

    3. Kakao T — Taxis & Rides

    Detail

    Info

    What it does

    Hail taxis, estimate fares, pay by card

    Korea's Uber?

    Essentially, yes — but way more popular than Uber in Korea

    Language

    English supported

    Payment

    International credit cards accepted

    Uber exists in Korea but is rarely used. Kakao T is the dominant ride-hailing app — it's how most Koreans call taxis. The app shows fare estimates, tracks your ride in real-time, and lets you pay by card through the app so you never need to worry about cash or communication with the driver.

    Why It's Better Than Street Hailing

    • No communication needed — you set your destination in the app, the driver follows GPS

    • Fare estimate upfront — no surprises

    • Card payment — pay through the app, no cash exchange needed

    • Safe — ride is tracked, driver info is recorded

    • Available late night — when subways stop running (after midnight)

    Setup

    1. Download Kakao T

    2. Sign up with your phone number (your home number works)

    3. Add a credit card for payment

    4. Set your pickup and drop-off locations → request a ride

    Orange taxi cab on a Seoul street, the type of taxi you can easily hail through the Kakao T app

    Very Useful Apps (Highly Recommended)

    4. KakaoMap — Alternative Navigation

    Similar to Naver Map but made by Kakao (Korea's other tech giant). Some tourists find the English interface slightly more intuitive than Naver Map. It's a good backup — if Naver Map can't find a place, try KakaoMap, and vice versa.

    5. Subway Korea (지하철) — Dedicated Subway App

    Detail

    Info

    What it does

    Subway map, route planning, fare calculation, timetables

    Best feature

    Works completely offline

    Language

    English supported

    While Naver Map handles subway navigation, this dedicated subway app is great as a quick-reference tool. It shows the full subway map, calculates routes between any two stations, estimates travel time and cost, and displays first/last train times. Most importantly, it works completely offline — handy when you're underground with no signal. For a deeper dive into mastering Seoul's subway system, check out our complete Seoul subway guide.

    6. KorailTalk — Train Tickets

    Detail

    Info

    What it does

    Book KTX and other train tickets

    Best feature

    Mobile tickets — no printing needed

    Language

    English available

    Payment

    International credit cards accepted

    If you're planning day trips from Seoul by train, this app lets you search, book, and store train tickets on your phone. No need to visit a ticket counter or print anything. Essential for KTX bullet train trips to places like Busan, Jeonju, and Gangneung. You can also book through the official Korail English website, but the app is more convenient for managing your tickets on the go.

    7. MangoPlate or Catchtable — Restaurant Discovery

    Detail

    Info

    MangoPlate

    Korean restaurant review app (like Korean Yelp). Reviews are in Korean but photos help

    Catchtable

    Restaurant reservation app — book popular restaurants in advance

    Language

    Mostly Korean, but usable with photos and Papago

    Naver Map has restaurant reviews built in, but MangoPlate and Catchtable are dedicated food apps with more detailed reviews. Catchtable is especially useful for booking popular restaurants that don't accept walk-ins — many trendy Seoul restaurants require reservations.

    Nice-to-Have Apps

    8. T-money Balance Check

    Check your T-money transit card balance by holding the card against your phone's NFC sensor. Only works with Android phones with NFC. iPhone users can check balance at subway station machines.

    9. XE Currency Converter

    Quick currency conversion between KRW and your home currency. Useful when shopping or eating out to quickly understand prices. As of April 2026, 1 USD is roughly 1,350-1,400 KRW. Set up KRW as one of your default currencies before your trip.

    10. Google Lens

    While Papago is better for Korean text translation, Google Lens is useful for identifying objects, plants, and products. Point your camera at something and Google will tell you what it is — handy when you see an unfamiliar Korean dish or product.

    11. Coupang — Delivery & Shopping

    Korea's Amazon equivalent. If you're staying for more than a few days and need anything delivered to your accommodation — snacks, toiletries, adapters, umbrellas — Coupang delivers most items within 24 hours, often for free. The app has English support.

    12. Airalo or eSIM Go — eSIM Management

    If you're using an eSIM for mobile data, these apps let you purchase and manage your data plan directly from your phone. Buy extra data if you run low without visiting a store. We compare the best eSIM options in our Korea SIM card vs eSIM guide.

    Apps You Do NOT Need

    Some apps frequently recommended for Korea aren't actually that useful:

    App

    Why You Don't Need It

    Uber

    Barely used in Korea. Kakao T is the standard

    Google Maps (as primary)

    Missing walking directions and detailed transit in Korea. Use Naver Map instead

    Google Translate (for Korean)

    Papago is significantly better for Korean translation

    KakaoTalk

    Korea's messaging app, but as a tourist you won't need it unless making Korean friends

    VPN

    Korea doesn't block any major international websites or apps

    Quick Setup Checklist

    Do this before your flight while you have WiFi:

    1. Download — Naver Map, Papago, Kakao T, Subway Korea

    2. Set language — switch each app to English in its settings

    3. Create accounts — sign up for Kakao T and add your credit card

    4. Download offline data — Papago Korean language pack, Naver Map area download

    5. Save key locations — bookmark your hotel, the airport, and must-visit spots in Naver Map

    6. Save your hotel address in Korean — screenshot it or save it in your notes app. You'll need it for taxis and delivery

    The absolute minimum: If you only download three apps, make them Naver Map, Papago, and Kakao T. These three will handle 90% of your daily needs in Korea — navigation, translation, and transportation.

    I've watched countless tourists struggle with wrong buses, miscommunicated taxi destinations, and unreadable menus — all problems that disappear once you have these apps set up. Spend 15 minutes before your flight downloading and configuring them, and you'll save hours of frustration during your trip. Once you arrive, check out our Incheon Airport to Seoul transport guide so you know exactly how to get into the city.

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