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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 Herald

time01-05-2025

  • Business
  • Korea Herald

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

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.

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