Korean convenience stores are a meal, a 24-hour pharmacy stand-in, and a survival kit, all in one.
Four big chains: CU, GS25, 7-Eleven, Emart24.
What to buy, from K-pop idol-endorsed snacks and banana milk to the famous ramyeon counter with hot water and a microwave.
Pick the use case, get the move that fits.
Use case
Examples
All stock the basics. Differences live in PB snacks, beer/wine selection, and interior polish.
The cheapest hot meal in Seoul, ~₩1,500. The workflow trips up first-timers; here it is.
Pick your noodle cup
Cup ramyun shelves are usually near the entrance. Shin Ramyun (red, classic), Buldak (black, very spicy), Jin Ramyun (mild). Cup is ~₩1,300 to ₩2,000.
Pay first, then assemble
Take cup to register, tap card, then bring it to the eat-in counter. Some stores have a tray microwave; cup ramyun goes to the hot water dispenser, not the microwave.
Open lid, pull seasoning, pour water
Peel back the lid to the dotted line. Tear the seasoning packet (분말 스프) on top, dump in. Place cup under the dispenser. Press the button labeled "라면" or "온수". Water fills to the inside line.
Cover, wait 3 minutes
Close the lid back, weight it down with chopsticks (the dispenser counter often has a small jar of chopsticks). Wait 3 minutes for noodles to bloom.
Eat at the counter, dump tray
Stand or sit at the counter. After eating, dump cup into the trash, chopsticks in the chopstick bin. Wipe the counter if it's splashed, that's the etiquette.
Updated May 2026. Store counts are approximate and rounded; chain ownership is accurate. Item prices fluctuate; ranges shown above are typical 2026 levels.