logo
Credit card spending by foreign residents in Korea jumps 65% in 4 years, hitting W56tr

Credit card spending by foreign residents in Korea jumps 65% in 4 years, hitting W56tr

Korea Herald01-05-2025
Foreign nationals living in South Korea are a growing force in the country's consumer economy, spending 56.3 trillion won ($39.3 billion) on locally issued credit cards in 2023, according to a December 2024 report from the Migration Research and Training Center based on Shinhan Card data.
That's a 65 percent increase from 34.1 trillion won in 2019.
The figure only includes transactions made by foreign nationals living in Korea who hold credit cards issued by Shinhan, one of South Korea's largest card providers by market share (18.6 percent as of Q1 2025). It excludes those using overseas cards, meaning actual foreign resident spending is likely significantly higher.
As of 2024, foreign residents make up roughly 5 percent of the country's population. On average, each foreign cardholder spent 5.15 million won in 2023, up from 4.6 million won in 2021 — though still behind the 7.05 million won spent by the average Korean credit card holder.
One of the most notable shifts is in how foreign residents are spending. The share of card purchases made via e-commerce more than doubled in just four years — from 9.7 percent in 2019 to 19.3 percent in 2023. Though traditional offline retail still leads (27.3 percent), this rapid growth in digital transactions reflects broader post-pandemic changes in consumer behavior — and a growing reliance on online platforms among foreigners navigating daily life in Korea, the report explained.
This consumption surge is being driven by a demographic transformation. As of 2024, there were 2.65 million foreign residents in South Korea, up 690,000 from three years earlier, according to the Ministry of Justice. Many are no longer short-term workers; today's foreign population increasingly includes long-term residents — such as international students, permanent residents and marriage migrants. Between 2010 and 2023, the share of foreigners on low-skilled labor visas fell from 54.4 percent to 29.7 percent, while more stable visa categories such as marriage migrants (10.3 percent) and education-related residents (16.6 percent) have steadily expanded.
Korean businesses are taking notice. Major banks like Shinhan and Hana have moved beyond remittance services to offer tailored savings products, loans, and even Korean language education, lifestyle content and community platforms. 'From currency exchange to home loans, this is one of the few areas where firms can generate immediate revenue by serving foreign residents,' a Shinhan Bank official said in the report.
Still, retaining these customers long-term isn't guaranteed. The MRTC report points out that many foreigners face persistent hurdles in everyday services. 'This isn't just about more foreigners living in Korea. It's about a shift in the economy itself. For Korean businesses, foreign residents aren't just a market segment — they should be considered a structural part of the country's future,' an MRTC researcher said in the report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OutSystems Appoints Sei-joon Ahn as New Country Manager for South Korea
OutSystems Appoints Sei-joon Ahn as New Country Manager for South Korea

Korea Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

OutSystems Appoints Sei-joon Ahn as New Country Manager for South Korea

The appointment marks the company's continued expansion in South Korea, with a focus on strengthening domestic channels and partner ecosystem. SEOUL, South Korea, Aug. 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- OutSystems, a leading AI-powered low-code development platform, today announced the appointment of Sei-joon Ahn as the new Country Manager for South Korea. Following the company's expansion into South Korea in September 2024 to meet rising demand for AI solutions, Ahn will spearhead local business development and deepen customer and partner ecosystem ties to accelerate AI-powered low-code digital transformation across various industries. "The strong momentum for low-code and AI adoption in South Korea reflects the increasing pressure organizations are feeling to accelerate innovation and digital transformation. Establishing local operations has allowed us to deliver more tailored, on-the-ground support for our customers, empowering them to respond to business needs with greater agility and speed," said Mark Weaser, Vice President of OutSystems APAC. "Ahn's deep expertise in enterprise software, cloud, and go-to-market execution for AI-powered solutions, together with his knowledge of the local Korean market, positions him to lead our next phase of growth and strengthen our impact in Korea's fast-evolving digital landscape." With over two decades of leadership experience in the IT industry, Ahn brings a proven track record of driving market expansion strategies and building strong channel networks. Prior to joining OutSystems, Ahn held key positions in leading global software and cloud companies, including Splunk, Oracle, Cato Networks, Zinier, TIBCO, GXS, MicroStrategy, and PGi. "South Korea is one of Asia's most dynamic markets for low-code and AI adoption, particularly in sectors like manufacturing, finance, and telecommunications, where rapid, scalable agent and application development is key to driving digital transformation strategies and security and governance are critical," said Ahn. "With Korean enterprises actively seeking more agile and cost-effective approaches to innovation, we remain committed to enabling customers to unlock long-term business value with our AI-powered low-code solutions by investing in local talent, strengthening collaboration with the domestic technology ecosystem, and expanding strategic partnerships with key players. I look forward to working with the team to build a thriving community of Korean developers and system integrators across the country." In July 2025, OutSystems unveiled the Early Access Program for OutSystems Agent Workbench enabling enterprises to create and orchestrate intelligent agents for any use case—and across any department, workflow, or data—with enterprise-grade security and control. OutSystems has also been named a Leader in the Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Enterprise Low-Code Application Platforms (LCAP) for the ninth year, paving the way for agentic AI innovation. About OutSystems OutSystems is a leading AI-powered low-code development platform, empowering IT leaders with a better way to build the software that matters most. The OutSystems platform helps companies develop, deploy, and maintain mission-critical applications by unifying and automating the entire software lifecycle. With OutSystems, organizations leverage gen AI to deliver software instantaneously, adapt faster to changing requirements, and reduce technical debt by building on a future-proof platform. Helping customers achieve their business goals by addressing key strategic initiatives, OutSystems delivers software up to 10x faster than traditional development. Recognized as a leader by analysts, IT executives, business leaders, and developers around the world, global brands trust OutSystems to tackle their impossible projects and turn their big ideas into software that moves their business, people, and the world forward. Founded in 2001, the company's network spans more than 850,000 community members, over 500 partners, and active customers in 75+ countries across 20+ industries. Learn more at

New cultural hub opens in Seoul to strengthen ties between Korea and ASEAN
New cultural hub opens in Seoul to strengthen ties between Korea and ASEAN

Korea Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

New cultural hub opens in Seoul to strengthen ties between Korea and ASEAN

The ASEAN-Korea Center has officially opened the Seoul ASEAN Hall, a new cultural hub for ASEAN-Korea exchange, on Friday, with an inaugural exhibition titled 'Fruity Fruit: Colorful Days in Southeast Asia.' The opening coincides with ASEAN Day, marking the 58th anniversary of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Located on the first floor of the Korea Press Center, the Seoul ASEAN Hall is designed as a multipurpose exhibition venue. It aims to highlight cooperation across culture, tourism and economy between Korea and the ASEAN member states: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Since 2009, the ASEAN-Korea Center has maintained a small information corner on the eighth floor. The newly relocated and expanded space on the more accessible first floor signals a push to increase public visibility and greater access for all, said the ASEAN-Korea Center Secretary-General Kim Jae-shin during the opening remarks. 'The Seoul ASEAN Hall is an open space designed to introduce the rich cultures of the ASEAN region to the Korean public and to foster future-oriented cooperation based on mutual understanding," said Kim. According to the ASEAN-Korea Center, all 10 ASEAN member states took part in planning and executing the exhibitions and programs. 'I hope this space will serve as a key platform for ASEAN-Korea collaboration,' said Kim. 'Through visits to the Seoul ASEAN Hall, I also hope the Korean public will engage more closely with Southeast Asia's rich cultural resources and deepen their understanding of the region.' The Seoul ASEAN Hall is divided into a permanent exhibition area showcasing cultural and tourism assets from the ASEAN countries and a special zone dedicated to thematic exhibits. Running through Feb. 13, 'Fruity Fruit: Colorful Days in Southeast Asia' offers a sensory exploration of daily life in Southeast Asia and the region's heritage through the motif of tropical fruit. Once viewed as exotic and rare, Southeast Asian fruits have become commonplace in Korea, reflecting the growing trade and cultural exchange between the regions. The exhibition uses fruit as a metaphor for bridging tradition and modernity, locality and universality, through artworks, crafts, lifestyle items and digital media sourced from across ASEAN, according to the ASEAN-Korea Center. Senior officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, ambassadors and other representatives from ASEAN member states and leading figures from the cultural and business sectors attended the opening ceremony. The Seoul ASEAN Hall is open to the public Monday through Friday, from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. It is closed on national holidays. ASEAN-Korea Center also operates Jeju ASEAN Hall at the Jeju International Peace Center, which opened in 2022.

Seoul shares finish lower on profit taking, decline in defense stocks
Seoul shares finish lower on profit taking, decline in defense stocks

Korea Herald

time10 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Seoul shares finish lower on profit taking, decline in defense stocks

Seoul shares closed lower Friday as investors offloaded defense and other major stocks on profit-taking amid lingering concerns over US President Donald Trump's import tariffs. The Korean won also fell against the US dollar. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index fell 17.67 points, or 0.55 percent, to close at 3,210.01. Despite the decline, the main index rose 2.9 percent this week. Trade volume was moderate at 334.19 million shares worth 11.2 trillion won ($8.06 billion). Decliners outnumbered gainers 487 to 384. Overnight, US stocks ended mixed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.51 percent, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 0.35 percent. In Seoul, institutions and foreign investors sold a net 131.9 billion won and 157.2 billion won worth of stocks, respectively, while individual investors bought a net 183 billion won. "In particular, investors dumped some defense stocks on profit-taking amid expectations that the planned US-Russia summit next week may bring an end to the Russia-Ukraine war," Hwang Jun-ho, an analyst at Sangsangin Investment & Securities Co., said over the phone. Defense industry stocks led the KOSPI's decline. Hanwha Aerospace Industries plunged 5.47 percent to 881,000 won, Hyundai Rotem fell 4.87 percent to 183,500 won, and LIG Nex1 tumbled 14.9 percent to 513,000 won. Chipmaker SK hynix dropped 2.1 percent to 256,500 won, while leading shipbuilder HD Hyundai Heavy Industries shed 1.79 percent to 466,500 won. LG Chem declined 5.47 percent to 276,500 won, and major steelmaker POSCO Holdings slipped 0.67 percent to 295,500 won. Among gainers, market bellwether Samsung Electronics rose 1.84 percent to 71,800 won, and Hanwha Ocean, the shipbuilding unit of Hanwha Group, climbed 0.6 percent to 117,700 won. Samsung Electronics extended gains for a second straight session on news that the company will manufacture Apple Inc.'s next-generation processor at its foundry in Austin, Texas. KT&G, the country's dominant tobacco company, jumped 6.28 percent to 147,200 won. The local currency was quoted at 1,389.60 won against the greenback at 3:30 p.m., down 8.4 won from the previous session. (Yonhap)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store