Sick or in Trouble in Korea? The Calm Guide

Updated July 2026 · Written by a local team in Daegu, Korea

Good news first: Korea is one of the safest countries you'll ever visit, healthcare is excellent and cheap by Western standards, and every emergency line has interpreter support. Save these numbers now, read the rest when you need it.

The numbers that matter

NumberWhat it's for
119Fire, ambulance, medical emergency — say "English please"; interpreters connect quickly
112Police (crime, accidents, lost property) — interpreter support too
133024h tourist hotline — live English speakers who can interpret between you and a taxi driver, hospital desk, anyone. The most underrated number in Korea
1339Medical advice line — "is this ER-worthy or can it wait until morning?"
1345Immigration hotline (visa/ARC issues), English available
🚑 Ambulances (119) are free in Korea. Never hesitate to call over cost.

Mild symptoms? Start at a pharmacy

Korean pharmacies (약국, yakguk — green cross sign) handle colds, stomach trouble, allergies, minor injuries. Pharmacists often speak basic English, and pointing + Papago works fine. Painkillers and basic cold medicine are also sold at convenience stores after hours. Find nearby pharmacies with our pharmacy finder (Korean UI — type a neighborhood name like "이태원동", or ask your hotel to).

Seeing a doctor: cheaper and faster than you expect

Lost passport, lost phone, lost anything

Environmental heads-up: heat, dust, monsoon

Summers hit 33°C+ with heavy humidity — heat exhaustion sneaks up on travelers walking 20,000 steps a day. Check the UV index before long outdoor days, and on high fine-dust days a KF94 mask from any convenience store keeps sensitive lungs comfortable. During July monsoon downpours, avoid underpasses and streams — flash flooding is the one weather risk locals genuinely respect.

Disclaimer: this is general visitor information, not medical advice — for anything serious, call 119 or 1339 and follow professional guidance.

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