South Korean Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in South Korea — KOROAD written test (40 MCQ, 40 min), driving school (학원) costs, penalty points system (벌점제도), speed limits, traffic fines, and the Yoon Chang-ho Law BAC limit.
2,551
Road deaths in South Korea (2023)
~5.0 per 100K — improving but above OECD average — TAAS
~5.0
Deaths per 100,000 population
Improving rapidly — lower than USA (12.2), above Germany (3.3), UK (2.5)
₩500K–1M
Total cost for Type 1 Ordinary licence
~$370–740 USD — includes driving school, education, tests, and fees
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Download InfographicKey Findings
40 multiple-choice questions completed in 40 minutes. 28/40 correct to pass (70%). Administered by KOROAD (도로교통공단, Korea Road Traffic Authority) at driver's licence examination centres nationwide. Fee: KRW 10,000. Covers traffic laws, road signs, vehicle maintenance, and driving ethics.
Approximately KRW 500,000–1,000,000 (~$370–740 USD) total: driving school (학원) tuition KRW 400,000–800,000, written test KRW 10,000, skills test KRW 25,000, road driving test KRW 30,000, licence issuance KRW 10,000, and mandatory education hours included in school tuition.
2,551 fatalities in 2023 (~5.0 per 100K). Significant improvement from 3,349 in 2019. Government target to reduce road deaths to below 2,000 by 2027 through stricter enforcement, smart infrastructure, and the 'Safe Speed 5030' campaign.
0.03% — reduced from 0.05% in June 2019 under the 'Yoon Chang-ho Law' (윤창호법), named after a 22-year-old KATUSA soldier killed by a drunk driver while on military leave. Penalties significantly increased: up to 5 years imprisonment and KRW 20 million fine for drink driving causing injury.
Nationwide speed limit reform implemented in April 2021 — urban speed limits reduced from 60 km/h to 50 km/h, and school/residential zones to 30 km/h. This 'Safe Speed 5030' (안전속도 5030) policy aims to reduce pedestrian fatalities, which account for a disproportionately high share of Korean road deaths.
Death rate ~5.0/100K vs USA 12.2, Germany 3.3, UK 2.5, Japan 2.1. Uses a penalty points system (벌점제도) — 40 points in 1 year triggers licence suspension. One of the highest vehicle ownership rates in Asia. Dashcam usage is near-universal.
South Korea Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)
According to TAAS (Traffic Accident Analysis System), road fatalities have been declining steadily — from 3,349 in 2019 to 2,551 in 2023, a 23.8% reduction over five years. The 2023 figure of {deaths} reflects the cumulative impact of the Yoon Chang-ho Law (stricter BAC limits), Safe Speed 5030 (reduced urban speed limits), and expanded enforcement in school zones. Preliminary 2024 data shows approximately 2,400 deaths, continuing the downward trend.
2019→2020
-8.0%
2020→2021
-5.4%
2021→2022
-6.2%
2022→2023
-6.7%
2023→2024
-5.9%
Deaths per 100,000 Population
Source: WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, TAAS. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.
South Korean Theory Test Format#
The computerized written test is administered at KOROAD driver's licence examination centres across South Korea
The South Korean driving written test (학과시험) for Type 1 Ordinary licence consists of 40 multiple-choice questions. You have 40 minutes to complete the test. To pass, you must answer at least 28 of the 40 questions correctly — a 70% pass rate. The test is conducted on a computer at a KOROAD driver's licence examination centre (운전면허시험장). Topics include traffic laws and regulations, road signs and signals, vehicle maintenance and safety, driving ethics and courtesy, and emergency response procedures. The test fee is KRW 10,000. The test is available in Korean, English, Chinese, and several other languages for foreign residents.
Questions
40 MCQ
All questions scored
Duration
40 Min
~60 sec per question
Pass Mark
28/40
70% correct answers
Test Fee
₩10,000
~$7.50 USD
What the Written Test Covers
- Traffic signals, road signs (교통표지), and road markings
- Right of way rules at intersections and roundabouts
- Speed limits by road type (Safe Speed 5030)
- Parking and stopping regulations
- Pedestrian crossing rules and school zone regulations
- Vehicle inspection (차량검사) requirements
- Mandatory insurance (의무보험) requirements
- Seat belt and child restraint regulations
- Vehicle maintenance and safety equipment
- Dashcam usage and evidence in accidents
- Drink driving laws and BAC limits (Yoon Chang-ho Law)
- Highway and expressway driving rules
- Emergency response and accident procedures
- Adverse weather driving (rain, snow, fog)
- Driving ethics and courtesy (운전예절)
How to Get Your South Korean Driving Licence#
From enrolment to licence issuance — the complete 6-step process
Enrol at a Driving School (학원 등록)
Register at a KOROAD-certified driving school (운전학원) and submit required documents
Cost: KRW 400,000–800,000 for the complete package. Bring ID, passport-size photos, and health certificate. Driving schools handle the full process including education, practice, and test scheduling.
Complete Mandatory Classroom Education (학과교육)
Attend required hours of classroom instruction on traffic laws, road safety, and driving ethics
Minimum 1 hour of traffic safety education at a KOROAD examination centre (or 3 hours at a driving school, which exempts the 1-hour requirement). Covers traffic laws, road signs, accident prevention, and driving ethics.
Pass the Written Test (학과시험)
Take and pass the computerized multiple-choice exam at a KOROAD examination centre
40 MCQ, 40 min, 28/40 to pass (70%). Fee: KRW 10,000. Available in Korean, English, Chinese, and other languages. Can be taken at the driving school or at a KOROAD test centre.
Pass the Driving Course Test (장내기능시험)
Demonstrate basic vehicle control skills on a designated driving course at the test centre
Fee: KRW 25,000. Tests include starting on a slope, navigating curves, parallel parking, and emergency stop. Minimum 4 hours of course driving practice required before the test. Pass mark: 80/100 points.
Pass the Road Driving Test (도로주행시험)
Pass the on-road driving test on a designated route in real traffic conditions
Fee: KRW 30,000. Minimum 6 hours of road driving practice required. Test lasts approximately 15–20 minutes on a designated route. Pass mark: 70/100 points. Evaluated on lane keeping, signalling, speed control, and hazard awareness.
Licence Issuance (면허 발급)
Receive your driving licence after passing all tests — issued same day at the examination centre
Fee: KRW 10,000. Licence issued on the spot at the KOROAD examination centre. Photo taken at the centre. New drivers receive a Type 1 Ordinary licence with a 2-year probationary period. Licence valid for 10 years.
South Korean Driving Licence Fees#
Total cost typically KRW 500,000–1,000,000 (~$370–740 USD) — driving school package is the largest expense
Costs vary by city and driving school. Seoul and major metropolitan areas tend to be more expensive. Government test fees are fixed nationwide. Taking additional road driving lessons beyond the minimum hours increases the total cost. Exchange rate: approximately $1 USD = KRW 1,350. Total in USD: approximately $370–740.
Licence Categories & Minimum Age
Motorized Bicycle (원동기장치자전거) — 125cc or less
16 years
16
years
Type 2 Small (2종 소형) — Motorcycles up to 260cc
18 years
18
years
Type 2 Ordinary (2종 보통) — Cars, vans up to 10 passengers
18 years — most common licence category
18
years
Type 1 Ordinary (1종 보통) — Cars, vans up to 15 passengers, trucks up to 12t
18 years — manual or automatic
18
years
Type 1 Large (1종 대형) — Buses, large trucks
19 years, 1+ year Type 1 Ordinary experience
19
years
Type 1 Special (1종 특수) — Tow trucks, cranes, special vehicles
19 years, 1+ year Type 1 Ordinary experience
19
years
Motorized Bicycle (원동기) — 50cc or less
16 years
16
years
Licence Validity Periods
Standard renewal period
Standard renewal period
Aptitude test required at renewal
Aptitude test and cognitive screening required
New Driver Restrictions (초보운전)
- 2-year probationary period after obtaining licence
- Must display '초보운전' (new driver) sticker on vehicle
- Penalty points doubled during probationary period for certain violations
- Licence revoked if accumulating 40+ penalty points during probation (vs 40 in 1 year for regular drivers)
- Must complete additional safety education if involved in an accident during probation
Penalty Points System (벌점제도)
- South Korea uses a penalty points system (벌점제도) administered by the Korean National Police Agency
- Points are accumulated for traffic violations — severity determines points assigned (10–100 points per violation)
- 40 points accumulated in 1 year = licence suspension (40일 면허정지)
- Licence revocation at 121 points in 1 year, 201 points in 2 years, or 271 points in 3 years
- Points can be reduced through safe driving education courses (특별교통안전교육)
- Penalty points are reset after the suspension period has been served
Speed Limits in South Korea#
As per Korean Road Traffic Act — all speeds in km/h — Safe Speed 5030 in effect since April 2021
South Korea implemented the 'Safe Speed 5030' (안전속도 5030) policy in April 2021, reducing urban speed limits from 60 km/h to 50 km/h and school/residential zones to 30 km/h. Rural roads allow 60–80 km/h depending on the road class. Highways (고속도로) allow 100–110 km/h, while expressways (자동차전용도로) allow 80–90 km/h. School zones (어린이보호구역) are strictly enforced at 30 km/h with enhanced penalties — double fines and penalty points for violations in these zones. Speed cameras are widespread, and the TOPIS traffic management system monitors traffic flow in real time.
| Road Type | Cars | Trucks >3.5t | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urban (도심) | 50 | 50 | Reduced from 60 km/h in 2021 |
| Rural (지방도로) | 80 | 60 | 60–80 km/h depending on road class |
| Highway (고속도로) | 90 | 80 | Minimum speed 50 km/h |
| Expressway (자동차전용도로) | 100-110 | 80 | Urban expressways 80 km/h |
| School Zone (어린이보호구역) | 30 | 30 | Double penalties for violations |
Urban (도심)
50
Cars
50
Trucks
Reduced from 60 km/h in 2021
Rural (지방도로)
80
Cars
60
Trucks
60–80 km/h depending on road class
Highway (고속도로)
90
Cars
80
Trucks
Minimum speed 50 km/h
Expressway (자동차전용도로)
100-110
Cars
80
Trucks
Urban expressways 80 km/h
School Zone (어린이보호구역)
30
Cars
30
Trucks
Double penalties for violations
The Safe Speed 5030 policy (April 2021) reduced urban limits to 50 km/h and school zones to 30 km/h. School zone violations carry double fines and penalty points. The 'Minsik's Law' (민식이법, March 2020) introduced criminal penalties for drivers who injure children in school zones — 3 years or more imprisonment for causing death (up to life imprisonment); 1–15 years or KRW 5–30 million fine for causing injury. Speed cameras and unmanned enforcement devices are widespread.
Traffic Fines & Penalties#
Fixed fines (범칙금) for common violations — severe cases involve criminal penalties and licence suspension
South Korea uses a system of fixed fines (범칙금) for common traffic violations combined with a penalty points system (벌점제도). Fines vary based on vehicle type — passenger cars, vans, and commercial vehicles have different fine amounts. Running a red light incurs a KRW 60,000 fine and 15 penalty points. Drink driving under the Yoon Chang-ho Law (BAC 0.03%+) results in licence revocation and criminal penalties. School zone violations carry double fines and penalty points under Minsik's Law.
| Violation | Fine (KRW) | Penalty Points | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding 20 km/h or less over | KRW 30,000–40,000 | 15 | — |
| Speeding 20–40 km/h over | KRW 60,000–70,000 | 30 | — |
| Speeding 40–60 km/h over | KRW 90,000–100,000 | 60 | — |
| Speeding 60+ km/h over | KRW 120,000–130,000 | 120 | — |
| Running a red light | KRW 60,000 | License suspension | — |
| Drink driving (BAC 0.03–0.08%) | Criminal penalty | License revocation | Criminal penalty |
| Drink driving (BAC 0.08%+) | Criminal penalty | 15 | — |
| No seatbelt | KRW 30,000 | 0 | — |
| Handheld phone use while driving | KRW 60,000 | 15 | — |
| School zone speeding (20+ km/h over) | KRW 120,000 | Double | — |
| Hit-and-run (도주운전) | Criminal penalty | License revocation | Criminal penalty |
| Illegal parking | KRW 40,000–50,000 | 0 | — |
Speeding 20 km/h or less over
Speeding 20–40 km/h over
Speeding 40–60 km/h over
Speeding 60+ km/h over
Running a red light
Drink driving (BAC 0.03–0.08%)
Drink driving (BAC 0.08%+)
No seatbelt
Handheld phone use while driving
School zone speeding (20+ km/h over)
Hit-and-run (도주운전)
Illegal parking
Fines shown are for passenger cars (승용차). Vans and commercial vehicles have higher fines. Drink driving (BAC 0.03%+): licence suspension or revocation, up to 5 years imprisonment, fines up to KRW 20 million. Hit-and-run (특가법 적용): severe criminal penalties including up to life imprisonment if causing death. School zone violations under Minsik's Law carry double fines and penalty points. Penalty points accumulation: 40 points in 1 year = suspension, Revocation at 121+ points/1yr, 201+/2yr, or 271+/3yr.
Know These Rules Before Your Written Test
Traffic fines, speed limits, BAC laws, and school zone rules are heavily tested in the Korean written test. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practicing for FreeImportant Driving Rules in South Korea
Drive on the Right
South Korea drives on the right side. Overtake only on the left. At unmarked intersections, yield to vehicles coming from the right. Left turns at major intersections require a green arrow signal.
Dashcam Culture (블랙박스)
South Korea has one of the highest dashcam adoption rates in the world. Most vehicles are equipped with front and rear dashcams (블랙박스). Dashcam footage is widely accepted as evidence in insurance claims and legal proceedings.
BAC 0.03% — Yoon Chang-ho Law (윤창호법)
Blood alcohol limit is 0.03% — reduced from 0.05% in June 2019. BAC 0.03–0.08%: licence suspension, up to 1 year imprisonment or fine up to KRW 5 million. BAC 0.08–0.2%: licence revocation, 1–2 years imprisonment or KRW 5–10 million fine. BAC 0.2%+: 2–5 years imprisonment or KRW 10–20 million fine. Refusing a breathalyzer: treated as BAC 0.08%+.
School Zones — Minsik's Law (민식이법)
Speed limit of 30 km/h in all school zones (어린이보호구역). Double fines and penalty points for violations. Criminal penalties for injuring children: 3 years or more imprisonment for causing death (up to life imprisonment); 1–15 years or KRW 5–30 million fine for causing injury. Effective since March 2020.
Mandatory Insurance (의무보험)
Third-party liability insurance (의무보험) is mandatory for all registered vehicles. Minimum coverage includes bodily injury liability. Driving without insurance: up to 1 year imprisonment or fine up to KRW 10 million.
Phone Ban — Handheld Prohibited
Using a handheld phone while driving is prohibited. Fine: KRW 60,000 and penalty points. Hands-free devices and Bluetooth are permitted. Navigation use is allowed only with a mount.
Hit-and-Run — Severe Penalties (특가법)
Hit-and-run (도주운전) carries severe criminal penalties under the Act on Aggravated Punishment (특가법). Causing death: up to life imprisonment. Causing injury and fleeing: 1–30 years imprisonment. Stopping and rendering aid is legally required.
Child Safety
Children under 6 must be in an approved child restraint system. Children under 13 must wear a seatbelt. The driver is responsible for ensuring all passengers under 13 are properly restrained. Violation fine: KRW 60,000.
Headlights at Night & in Tunnels
Headlights are mandatory from sunset to sunrise and in tunnels. Daytime running lights are recommended but not mandatory. High beams must be dimmed within 100m of oncoming traffic or 50m when following another vehicle.
Common Road Hazards in South Korea
2,551 road fatalities in 2023 — know these hazards to stay safe on Korean roads
Motorcycle & Scooter Deliveries (배달 오토바이)
South Korea's massive delivery culture means thousands of delivery scooters and motorcycles operate aggressively in urban areas. They frequently weave between lanes, run red lights, and ride on sidewalks. Be especially vigilant near restaurants and commercial districts.
Narrow Alleys (골목길)
Many Korean cities have extremely narrow alleyways (골목길) in older residential and commercial areas. Two-way traffic in single-lane alleys is common. Pedestrians, cyclists, and vehicles share the space. Drive slowly and use your horn at blind corners.
Aggressive Driving Culture
Korean urban driving can be aggressive — frequent lane changes, tailgating, and last-second merges are common. Bus and taxi drivers are known for assertive driving. Maintain safe following distance and stay calm. Dashcam footage is your best protection.
Heavy Rain & Typhoons (장마/태풍)
The summer monsoon season (장마, June–July) brings intense rainfall causing flooding and reduced visibility. Typhoons from August to October can bring destructive winds and flash flooding. Avoid underpasses during heavy rain and check weather advisories.
Winter Ice in Northern Regions
Northern provinces (Gangwon-do, Gyeonggi-do) experience freezing temperatures and black ice from November to March. Mountain passes can be particularly dangerous. Winter tires are recommended but not legally mandated. Use chains on designated mountain roads.
Elderly Pedestrians (고령 보행자)
South Korea has one of the fastest-ageing populations globally. Elderly pedestrians account for a disproportionately high share of road fatalities — over 50% of pedestrian deaths. Exercise extreme caution near traditional markets, parks, and residential areas.
South Korea's 17 Administrative Divisions
Driving licence administration is handled by KOROAD examination centres across all divisions
| Region (시/도) | Capital | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Seoul | Seoul | 9.4M |
| Busan | Busan | 3.3M |
| Daegu | Daegu | 2.4M |
| Incheon | Incheon | 3.0M |
| Gwangju | Gwangju | 1.4M |
| Daejeon | Daejeon | 1.5M |
| Ulsan | Ulsan | 1.1M |
| Sejong | Sejong | 0.4M |
| Gyeonggi-do | Suwon | 13.6M |
| Gangwon-do | Chuncheon | 1.5M |
| Chungcheongbuk-do | Cheongju | 1.6M |
| Chungcheongnam-do | Daejeon | 2.1M |
| Jeollabuk-do | Jeonju | 1.8M |
| Jeollanam-do | Muan | 1.8M |
| Gyeongsangbuk-do | Andong | 2.6M |
| Gyeongsangnam-do | Changwon | 3.3M |
| Jeju | Jeju City | 0.7M |
Seoul
Seoul · 9.4M
Busan
Busan · 3.3M
Daegu
Daegu · 2.4M
Incheon
Incheon · 3.0M
Gwangju
Gwangju · 1.4M
Daejeon
Daejeon · 1.5M
Ulsan
Ulsan · 1.1M
Sejong
Sejong · 0.4M
Gyeonggi-do
Suwon · 13.6M
Gangwon-do
Chuncheon · 1.5M
Chungcheongbuk-do
Cheongju · 1.6M
Chungcheongnam-do
Daejeon · 2.1M
Jeollabuk-do
Jeonju · 1.8M
Jeollanam-do
Muan · 1.8M
Gyeongsangbuk-do
Andong · 2.6M
Gyeongsangnam-do
Changwon · 3.3M
Jeju
Jeju City · 0.7M
Traffic laws are national (도로교통법), applying uniformly across all 17 administrative divisions. KOROAD operates driver's licence examination centres in all major cities. Seoul, Busan, and other metropolitan cities have multiple examination centres.
Emergency Numbers
All available 24/7. {number} is the police emergency number.
112
Police Emergency (경찰)
119
Fire & Ambulance (소방/구급)
1588-2504
Road Rescue (도로구원)
120
Government Hotline (정부민원)
Common Misconceptions About Driving in South Korea#
Myth: You can turn right on red freely in South Korea
Fact: Since July 2022, right turns on red are restricted at intersections with pedestrian signals. You must stop completely and yield to all pedestrians before proceeding. Fines of KRW 60,000 and 15 penalty points apply for violations. Previously, right on red was broadly permitted.
Myth: The written test is very difficult and most people fail
Fact: The pass mark for Type 1 is 70% (28/40) and Type 2 is 60% (24/40). Pass rates are over 90%. The test was made easier in 2011 to encourage more people to get licences through official channels rather than unlicensed driving.
Myth: International Driving Permits work indefinitely in South Korea
Fact: IDPs are valid for 1 year for tourists and short-term visitors. Long-term residents (with an Alien Registration Card) must obtain a Korean licence — either by exchange (for qualifying countries) or by taking the tests. Some countries have reciprocal exchange agreements.
Myth: Korea doesn't have strict drink driving laws
Fact: Korea has one of the strictest BAC limits in the world at 0.03% (Yoon Chang-ho Law, 2019). Penalties include up to 5 years imprisonment and KRW 20 million in fines for drink driving causing injury. Refusal to take a breathalyzer is treated as BAC 0.08%+ and results in licence revocation.
Myth: Dashcams are optional luxury accessories
Fact: Dashcams (블랙박스) are essentially standard equipment in South Korea. An estimated 80%+ of vehicles have them. They are crucial for insurance claims and legal disputes. Many newer vehicles come with factory-installed dashcams. Parking mode dashcams are also extremely popular.
Myth: Speed limits haven't changed in South Korea recently
Fact: Major changes occurred in April 2021 with the 'Safe Speed 5030' policy, reducing urban limits from 60 km/h to 50 km/h and school zones to 30 km/h. Additionally, Minsik's Law (March 2020) introduced criminal penalties for drivers who injure children in school zones.
Recent Changes to South Korean Driving Laws#
Key regulatory updates affecting drivers in South Korea
Elderly driver safety measures & autonomous vehicle regulations
Enhanced cognitive testing requirements for elderly licence renewals (75+). New regulations for Level 3 autonomous vehicles on designated roads. Expanded TOPIS smart traffic management system coverage.
Right-turn enforcement strengthened & electric vehicle rules
Increased enforcement of the 2022 right-turn-on-red restrictions at pedestrian crossings. New charging infrastructure requirements for EVs. Updated penalty point schedule for distracted driving.
Right turn on red restricted at pedestrian signals
Starting July 2022, drivers must stop completely at red lights before turning right and yield to all pedestrians at crosswalks with pedestrian signals. Previously, right turns on red were broadly permitted.
Safe Speed 5030 — urban speed limits reduced
Nationwide implementation of 'Safe Speed 5030' (안전속도 5030) in April 2021: urban speed limits reduced from 60 km/h to 50 km/h, school and residential zones to 30 km/h. Aimed at reducing pedestrian fatalities.
Yoon Chang-ho Law — BAC limit reduced to 0.03%
In June 2019, the BAC limit was reduced from 0.05% to 0.03% under the Yoon Chang-ho Law (윤창호법), named after a 22-year-old KATUSA soldier killed by a drunk driver while on military leave. Penalties for drink driving were also significantly increased.
How South Korea Compares Globally#
South Korea's driving regulations compared to other major countries — data compiled from official government sources
| Parameter | South Korea | Germany | USA | UK | Japan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.03% | 0.05% | 0.08% | 0.08% | 0.03% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 18 | 18 | 16 | 17 | 18 |
| Driving Side | Right | Right | Right | Left | Left |
| Highway Speed | 100–110 | No limit* | 105–137 | 112 | 100–120 |
| Test Questions | 40 MCQ | 30 MCQ | 20–50 | 50 | 50 |
| Licence Cost | ₩50–100만 | €2,000–3,500 | $30–90 | £200–1,500 | ¥300K+ |
| Road Deaths/yr | 2,551 | 2,770 | 40,901 | 1,695 | 2,678 |
| Deaths/100K | ~5.0 | ~3.3 | 12.2 | 2.5 | 2.1 |
Among the strictest globally (Yoon Chang-ho Law, 2019). Germany 0.05%, USA/UK 0.08%, Japan 0.03%. Reduced from 0.05%.
Same as Germany and Japan. USA allows from 16, UK from 17. Mopeds from 16.
Highways 100–110 km/h. Germany has no general limit.
~$370–740 USD. Much cheaper than Germany (€2–3.5K) and comparable to Japan. Far more than USA ($30–90).
~5.0 per 100K — improving rapidly. Down from 3,349 in 2019. USA: 12.2, Germany: 3.3, UK: 2.5, Japan: 2.1.
Road deaths: South Korea 2,551 (TAAS 2023), Germany 2,770 (Destatis 2024), USA 40,901 (NHTSA 2023), UK 1,695 (DfT 2023), Japan 2,678 (NPA 2023). Per-100K rates calculated from national population data. UK BAC is 0.08% for England/Wales; Scotland is 0.05%. South Korea and Japan share the strictest BAC limit at 0.03%.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- KOROAD — Driving test and licence information — Korea Road Traffic Authority (도로교통공단)
- Korean National Police Agency — Traffic enforcement and regulations — 경찰청 (Korean National Police Agency)
- TAAS — Road accident statistics — Traffic Accident Analysis System (교통사고분석시스템)
- Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport — Road and vehicle regulations — 국토교통부 (MOLIT)
- Korea Transportation Safety Authority — Vehicle inspection and safety — 한국교통안전공단 (TS)
- WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety — World Health Organization
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official Korean legislation and government portals
- Cross-verified against TAAS publications, KOROAD data, and Korean National Police Agency resources
- National regulations apply uniformly — no regional variations noted
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on {date}
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a South Korean driving licence cost?
What is the South Korean written test format?
What are the speed limits in South Korea?
What is the BAC limit in South Korea?
What is the Yoon Chang-ho Law?
What is Minsik's Law?
Do I need a dashcam in South Korea?
How does the penalty points system work?
Can I use an International Driving Permit in South Korea?
What is Safe Speed 5030?
Are right turns on red allowed?
What happens in a hit-and-run in South Korea?
What is the minimum age for driving in South Korea?
How long is a South Korean driving licence valid?
What are the emergency numbers in South Korea?
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Use the following citations when referencing this article in academic papers, journalism, or reports.
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Pawan Priyadarshi
Founder & Chief Engineer
Data sourced from KOROAD, Korean National Police Agency, TAAS, Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport, and official South Korean government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy.
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