Moving to South Korea from the UK: The Practical Guide

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Important information you need to know when moving to South Korea

Last updated: May 2026

Moving to South Korea is rarely a spontaneous decision. By the time most people start planning the removal, they have already spent months researching visas, housing, and schools. What they often haven’t researched, because no guide explains it clearly, is the one requirement that controls the timing of everything else: the Alien Registration Card.

Your household shipment cannot clear Korean customs without an Alien Registration Card (ARC). The ARC takes 14–21 days to process after you arrive in South Korea and apply in person at an immigration office. Which means if your shipment arrives before your ARC is ready, it will sit at the destination until you have the card; and that is a very common outcome when move timing isn’t planned around this specifically.

This guide explains how a UK-to-South Korea move actually works, with enough operational detail to plan yours accurately.

seoul-tower-with-gyeongbokgung-roof-red-autumn-maple-leaves-namsan-mountain-south-korea
Beautiful reflection of autumn season on Naejangsan Lake, South Korea
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How Your Belongings Travel from the UK to South Korea

Sea freight is the standard method for UK-to-South Korea household moves. There is no road route and the distances involved make air freight viable only for small volumes or genuinely urgent shipments.

Shared container (groupage / LCL): Your goods travel alongside other customers’ shipments in a shared container. This is typically the most cost-effective option for anything up to two rooms of furniture. Transit time: 8–10 weeks from collection to delivery.

Full container (FCL): A container dedicated to your move alone. More expensive, but faster and more controlled. Transit time: 6–8 weeks. Typically, the right choice for a 3-bedroom household or larger.

Air freight: Transit time of 5–7 days. Used for small volumes, essential items that need to arrive quickly, or situations where sea freight timing doesn’t work. The cost per cubic metre or kilogram is several times higher than sea freight. For most UK families moving to South Korea, air freight for a few priority items alongside sea freight for the main shipment is a practical combination.

Cost ranges:

  • Groupage, 1-bedroom volume: from £2,500
  • FCL, 3-bedroom household: £5,000–£8,000
  • Air freight: from approximately £200 per 10kg, depending on carrier and route
ice-han-river-cityscape-winter-seoul-south-korea

The ARC Requirement: Plan Your Shipment Around This

The Alien Registration Card (ARC) is South Korea’s official residence document for foreign nationals who intend to stay for more than 90 days. Almost everyone moving to South Korea for work, education, or family reasons will need one.

The requirement that affects your removal is this: Korean customs authorities require your ARC number before they will release a household goods shipment for delivery. Without it, the shipment clears Busan port but cannot proceed to your address.

The Timeline

  • You arrive in South Korea
  • You apply for your ARC at the nearest immigration office or via the Hi Korea online system (depending on your visa type)
  • Processing takes 14–21 days in most cases; longer during peak periods
  • Once your ARC is issued, your move manager provides the number to the in-country partner, who submits it to customs
  • Customs clearance proceeds and delivery is scheduled

The practical implication: if your sea freight shipment arrives at Busan 9 weeks after collection and you arrived in South Korea 8 weeks after collection, you may be waiting 1–2 weeks after arrival for your ARC before your belongings can be delivered. This is normal and manageable; but you need to know about it before you plan your departure date.

What to do: When you book your removal, tell your move manager your planned arrival date in South Korea. They will work backwards from that date to advise on the shipment departure window that minimises the wait time at the Korean end.

What You Need for Customs Clearance

South Korea allows the duty-free import of used personal effects and household goods under the personal effects exemption, provided:

  • Items were owned and in personal use before the move (not purchased new for shipment)
  • You hold a valid Korean visa or residence permit
  • You have an Alien Registration Card (ARC) or ARC application reference

Documents typically required:

  • Valid passport
  • Korean visa or proof of entry status
  • ARC number (or ARC application confirmation)
  • Detailed packing list / inventory; every item listed individually, with an estimated value
  • Bill of Lading (provided by the shipping company)

Your removal company’s in-country partner at Busan handles the customs submission. The documentation required can vary slightly depending on your visa type; your move manager will confirm the specific requirements for your situation when you book.

Busan Port and Getting Your Belongings to Your Address

All sea freight household goods entering South Korea for residential delivery pass through Busan Port; the main commercial and residential import hub on South Korea’s south-eastern coast.

From Busan, the in-country partner organises inland delivery to your address. The distances involved:

Destination

Road distance from Busan

Typical delivery window after customs clearance

Seoul (Gangnam, Itaewon, Mapo)

~325 km

1–2 days after clearance

Incheon

~340 km

1–2 days after clearance

Daejeon

~180 km

1 day after clearance

Daegu

~90 km

Same day or 1 day

Busan delivery

At port

Same day as clearance

 

Seoul is home to the majority of UK expats in South Korea and is a 4–5 hour drive from Busan. The in-country partner manages this leg; it is coordinated as part of the full door-to-door service.

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Visa Routes to South Korea for UK Nationals

The visa you hold determines some aspects of the customs clearance process, so it is worth understanding which category applies to your move. The main routes for UK nationals relocating to South Korea:

D-7 / D-8 (Corporate Transfer / Business): For employees transferred to a Korean company or a Korean subsidiary of a UK company. Requires sponsorship from the Korean employer.

E-2 (English Language Teaching): Common among UK nationals. Requires a contract with a school or language institute and a criminal background check.

F-2 (거주, Long-term Resident): Available to people who have been in South Korea on other visa types for a qualifying period, or who are married to a Korean national.

D-10 (Job Seeker): Allows qualified individuals to enter South Korea to look for work. Not an employment visa; it permits presence while seeking a job.

Retirement or long-term stay: South Korea does not have a specific retirement visa. Options depend on family ties, investment, or other qualifying factors.

The Korean consulate in London processes most visa applications. Apply well in advance of your move; several visa types require employer sponsorship paperwork, background checks, and medical certificates that take time to compile.

Living in Seoul vs Other South Korean Cities

Most UK nationals in South Korea are based in Seoul, but a significant number live in Busan, Daejeon, Incheon, and the surrounding regions. Here is a brief orientation:

Seoul: The capital and largest city. Home to the majority of international companies and English-language schools. Neighbourhoods with the largest expat communities include Itaewon (historic international area), Gangnam, Mapo, and Yongsan. Housing costs are high; a two-bedroom apartment in a central neighbourhood will typically cost £1,800–£3,500 per month to rent.

Busan: South Korea’s second city and a port city with a more relaxed atmosphere than Seoul. Smaller international community but a strong expat presence, particularly in Haeundae and Nampo. Housing costs are lower than Seoul.

Daejeon and Daegu: Mid-sized cities with lower costs. Less common for UK expats but home to universities and some international employers.

Incheon: Adjacent to Seoul and home to Incheon International Airport; effectively part of the Seoul metropolitan area for most practical purposes. Many families live in Incheon and commute to Seoul.

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What Your Move Manager Does During a South Korea Move

Before departure from the UK: Coordinates documentation; packing list, inventory format for Korean customs, timing of shipment relative to your arrival date in South Korea. Confirms ARC timing requirements for your specific visa type.

During transit (8–10 weeks): Your move manager is the point of contact for progress updates. If there is a delay at any point in the sea freight chain, they will communicate this.

At Busan: The in-country partner receives the shipment at the port and holds it until the ARC number is confirmed. Once confirmed, they submit the customs declaration and manage clearance.

Delivery: After customs clearance, the in-country partner delivers to your Korean address. Your move manager follows up to confirm completion.

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Additional Services for your move to South Korea

Moving Your Money

If you’re moving to South Korea, it’s very likely you’ll need to exchange a significant amount of currency. Many people lose out by using their bank, assuming it’s the only option. However, there are specialist currency exchange providers that offer more competitive rates and can help you save thousands. To find out how to make your money go further during your move, speak to one of our move managers, click here, or give us a call: +44 20 7097 5335.

Get Move Liability Cover for your international removal to South Korea

We always advise taking out move protection liability cover with us on every move. Although we like to think we’re the best in the industry, the odd accident can occasionally happen. For added peace of mind, make sure to speak to one of our move managers about this.

Discover Our GMS Xtra Value Services

Gerson Moving Services goes beyond standard removals, offering a full range of relocation solutions to make your move seamless. Our value-added services include international currency transfer, home and school search, visa and immigration support, health insurance, container tracking, car purchase and leasing, and temporary accommodation. We also provide expert packing, secure storage, customs clearance, and pet relocation, ensuring a smooth transition whether you’re moving locally or internationally. With our end-to-end relocation management, you can trust Gerson for a stress-free, efficient move.

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Moving Your Car or Motorcycle to South Korea

South Korea drives on the right, meaning Korean roads are built for left-hand drive (LHD) vehicles. UK cars are right-hand drive (RHD). RHD vehicles are not permitted for standard road use under South Korean traffic law, which requires LHD registration for privately used vehicles.

In practice, the vast majority of UK expats moving to South Korea do not ship their personal vehicle. The practical recommendation is to sell your UK car before leaving and purchase locally in South Korea.

motorbike-crating for shipment

If you have a specialist, collector, or high-value vehicle you want to ship for personal use, your move manager can arrange vehicle transport by container. Korean customs duty on imported vehicles is 8% of the declared value, plus individual consumption tax and VAT; the combined import tax burden typically runs to 20–30% of vehicle value. A formal customs valuation will be required, and only approved inspection centres can certify the vehicle for Korean registration.

Motorcycles are subject to the same import framework, with duty rates varying by engine size.

Relocating Your Pets to South Korea

South Korea’s pet import process is managed by the Korean Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency (QIAP). The process for dogs in particular requires several months of preparation; start well before any other aspect of the move.

Requirements for dogs:

  • ISO-standard microchip
  • Rabies vaccination (primary series completed)
  • FAVN (Fluorescent Antibody Virus Neutralisation) rabies antibody titer test; result must be ≥0.5 IU/mL, carried out at a QIAP-approved laboratory. Allow 4–8 weeks for the test process and result.
  • UK health certificate issued by an Official Veterinarian (OV) within 10 days of travel
  • Dogs from the UK may be subject to a quarantine inspection period of up to 10 days at a designated Korean quarantine facility on arrival. Confirm the current UK quarantine classification with QIAP before booking.

Requirements for cats:

  • ISO-standard microchip
  • Rabies vaccination
  • UK health certificate from an Official Veterinarian
  • Cats from the UK may have different quarantine requirements to dogs; verify with QIAP.

Because the FAVN titer test process takes several months from start to finish, pet relocation should be planned before almost anything else on this move. Specialist pet relocators handle the documentation, QIAP quarantine coordination, and air transport. Your move manager can connect you with operators experienced on this route.

Dogs traveling by airplane. Boxes with live animals at the airport

What You Can and Can't Ship to South Korea

Generally permitted

Used household goods, furniture, clothing, kitchenware, books, and personal electronics ship under the personal effects duty-free exemption, provided items have been owned and used for at least 6 months.

Restricted; subject to inspection or additional requirements

  • Audio-visual media: DVDs, books, CDs, and digital storage media may be inspected for content compliance with Korean law. Declare all media on the inventory.
  • Prescription medications: carry valid prescriptions and keep quantities to a personal supply. Controlled substances require an import permit from Korean authorities.
  • New items: not covered by the personal effects exemption; subject to Korean customs duty and VAT.
  • Alcohol above personal import limits.
  • Electronic items in quantities that suggest commercial use may be assessed separately.

 

Prohibited

  • Narcotics and controlled substances
  • Firearms and weapons without permits
  • Counterfeit goods
  • Items infringing Korean intellectual property or broadcasting standards

A complete, accurate inventory, every item listed individually, is the most effective way to avoid delays at Korean customs.

Moving to South Korea – FAQs

Sea freight groupage takes approximately 8–10 weeks from collection to delivery at your Korean address. Full container load (FCL) is 6–8 weeks. Air freight is 5–7 days and is typically used for small volumes or urgent items.

The ARC is South Korea’s official residence document for foreign nationals staying more than 90 days. Korean customs will not release your household shipment without your ARC number. The ARC takes 14–21 days to process after you arrive and apply. Plan your shipment departure date so that your ARC is ready around the time your shipment arrives.

Groupage for a one-bedroom volume costs from approximately £2,500. FCL for a three-bedroom household is £5,000–£8,000. A proper survey gives you an accurate figure based on your specific move.

Valid passport, Korean visa or entry confirmation, ARC number (or application reference), and a detailed inventory of all items. Your removal company’s in-country partner handles the customs submission using these documents.

Busan Port, on South Korea’s south-eastern coast. From Busan, goods are transported inland to your delivery address; Seoul is approximately 4–5 hours by road.

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Your move manager can advise on the ARC timing and the exact shipment window for your planned departure date. Getting this coordination right at the start prevents the most common source of delay on this route.

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“Relocating to South Korea felt like a big step, but the entire process was handled with great care and efficiency. Communication was clear throughout, and everything arrived safely and on time. It made settling in so much easier.”

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“Our move to Asia was organised and stress-free from start to finish. The team kept us informed at every stage, and everything arrived in excellent condition. It gave us real confidence throughout the relocation.”

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