The Koro Field Guide

Volume 02 · Driving Manual

How Korea drives.

Right-hand traffic, narrow alleys, mountain tunnels, and a road system that runs on apps. What no rental counter will explain before they hand you the keys.

Look it up

Reference manual.

Nine answers to the questions every first-time foreign driver in Korea ends up googling. Pages open in the same tab — bookmark this one and click through as you need it.

Road rules & speed limits

Speed limits range from 30 km/h in school zones to 110 km/h on expressways. Camera enforcement is automated and aggressive — fines arrive at your rental company first, then on your card.

Includes road sign categories

Speed cameras explained

Fixed cameras flash at a single point. Section-enforcement cameras measure your average speed over 1–4 km — the worst surprise for foreign drivers. NAVER Map narrates every one of them.

Fines: 70,000 – 120,000 KRW

Hi-Pass & expressway tolls

Hi-Pass lanes (blue, marked 하이패스) read your transponder at 80 km/h — most rentals come with one pre-installed. Cash lanes always work too. Seoul to Busan tolls run about 22,000 KRW.

Cash lanes work without a card

Charging an EV in Korea

Korea has 200,000+ public chargers, dense in cities and along expressways. Most accept the Hyundai E-pit or Kakao Mobility cards. Fast chargers sit at every other rest stop; slow chargers blanket apartment garages.

Fast charge: ~25,000 KRW for 80%

Parking & garage culture

Mechanical lifts can stack your car sideways into a slot two cars wide. Use T-Map Parking or Modu Parking apps to find lots near your destination. Street parking is mostly illegal in Seoul.

Average: 2,000 – 5,000 KRW/hour

Rest stops

Korean expressway rest stops are mini food courts — kimchi, pork cutlet, hand-pulled noodles, free Wi-Fi, real bathrooms, and a row of vending machines that take cash and cards. Locals plan trips around them.

Most are 30–60 km apart

Night driving in Korea

Mountain passes are darker than you expect, deer occasionally cross the highway, and city LED signs can disorient. Stick to expressways after midnight and pull into the nearest rest stop if you feel drowsy.

Free 30-min naps at 휴게소

Expressway driving

Left lane is for passing only — sit there too long and you'll get flashed. Tunnels are mandatory headlights. Fog on the Yeongdong line is common; slow down before the sign tells you to.

Speed limit: 100 – 110 km/h

NAVER Map vs Kakao Map

Google Maps does not give driving directions in Korea — a constant surprise for first-timers. NAVER Map is the standard; Kakao Map is the slightly faster alternative. Both have English UI options.

Both free, both work offline

If it goes wrong

Three numbers. Memorize them.

English support is real — 1330 is the tourism hotline, staffed 24/7. They will translate for police or ambulance if needed.