Korean Food 101: What to Order, Spice Levels & Dining Rules
Korean food is one of the best reasons to visit — but menus can be intimidating when everything is in Hangul and half the dishes arrive uninvited. Here's how eating in Korea actually works.
The side dishes are free (yes, really)
When small plates of kimchi, pickled radish, seasoned spinach and mystery vegetables appear before your order — those are banchan, and they're free, refillable side dishes that come with every Korean meal. You don't pay extra, and asking for refills is completely normal. This is the single most confusing thing for first-time visitors, so: eat the banchan.
Beginner-friendly dishes to start with
| Dish | What it is | Spice |
|---|---|---|
| Bibimbap 비빔밥 | Rice bowl with vegetables, egg & gochujang (add as much as you want) | You control it |
| Bulgogi 불고기 | Sweet soy-marinated grilled beef | None |
| Samgyeopsal 삼겹살 | Grill-it-yourself pork belly — the social meal | None |
| Kimbap 김밥 | Seaweed rice rolls, ₩3,000–5,000 anywhere | None |
| Samgyetang 삼계탕 | Whole young chicken ginseng soup | None |
| Tteokbokki 떡볶이 | Chewy rice cakes in sweet-spicy sauce — street food icon | Medium-hot |
| Kimchi jjigae 김치찌개 | Kimchi stew — the everyday comfort food | Medium |
| Buldak 불닭 | "Fire chicken." The name is a warning | 🔥🔥🔥 |
How spicy is "spicy"?
Korean "mild" is real-world medium. If you're spice-sensitive, learn one phrase: "an maepge juseyo" (안 맵게 주세요 — not spicy, please). Red color doesn't always mean pain — bibimbap's gochujang is mild-sweet — but anything with buldak (fire chicken) or maeun (매운, spicy) in the name is serious. Convenience-store milk or a cup of sikhye (sweet rice drink) kills the burn better than water.
Ordering and paying, the Korean way
- Call the staff — say "yogiyo!" (over here!) or press the table bell. Waiting silently gets you nothing; calling out is polite here, not rude.
- Many restaurants are one-dish places — a samgyetang restaurant serves samgyetang. If the menu has 5 items, that's a specialist, and that's a good sign.
- Some grill/stew places require 2+ portions — solo diners: look for "1인" (one person) menus, or hit food courts and kimbap shops.
- Pay at the counter on your way out, not at the table. No tipping — ever.
- Water is self-serve — look for the water cooler and metal cups.
Finding good places to eat
Skip the tourist-trap rows near big attractions. Two local tricks: places that are crowded at 12:05pm on a weekday are where office workers actually eat, and restaurants with a long history sign (since 19XX) survived for a reason. You can also browse restaurants by region in our Explore Korea tool — it uses the official Korea Tourism Organization database.