Online Scams in South Korea: Complete Guide 2026
South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) reported voice phishing (보이스피싱) losses exceeding ₩700 billion (approximately $520 million) in 2025. South Korea's hyper-connected digital economy — with near-universal smartphone adoption, widespread use of KakaoTalk, and extensive digital banking — creates both convenience and vulnerability.
Voice Phishing (보이스피싱)
Voice phishing is South Korea's most damaging scam category. Organized crime groups operate call centers (often based outside Korea) impersonating police, prosecutors, the National Tax Service, and bank officials. They convince victims their accounts are linked to criminal activity and must be "secured" by transferring money to "safe accounts."
"This is Investigator Kim from Seoul Central Prosecutors' Office. Your bank account has been used in a money laundering case. To avoid arrest, you must transfer your funds to a government protection account. This is a classified investigation — do not inform anyone." — A voice phishing script. Korean prosecutors never call about investigations or request money transfers.
Korea has implemented aggressive countermeasures: delayed transfers for large amounts, cooling-off periods, and AI-powered detection. But scammers adapt with increasingly elaborate scenarios involving multiple callers playing different roles (detective, prosecutor, bank officer).
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Smishing (스미싱)
SMS phishing is particularly effective in Korea. Fake messages impersonate CJ Logistics (CJ대한통운), Hanjin, and Korea Post about deliveries, or the National Health Insurance Service (건강보험공단) about premium payments. Clicking links installs malware that intercepts banking authentication codes.
Korea's reliance on mobile banking makes smartphone malware especially dangerous. Never click links in unexpected delivery or government messages. Verify through the official app or website.
Messenger Piracy (메신저피싱)
KakaoTalk account takeover and impersonation scams target Korean users' primary messaging platform. Scammers hijack accounts or create clones, then message contacts requesting urgent money transfers. The conversational style of KakaoTalk makes these messages seem natural.
E-commerce and Investment Scams
Fake shopping sites, counterfeit goods on Coupang and Naver Shopping, and cryptocurrency investment scams (often promoted through KakaoTalk groups and Naver Café) are prevalent. Korea's FSC (Financial Services Commission) maintains a list of suspicious investment platforms.
Reporting Scams in South Korea
- Police: 112 (emergency) or 182 (cybercrime report)
- KISA: 118 (Korea Internet & Security Agency) or kisa.or.kr
- FSS: 1332 (Financial Supervisory Service consumer helpline)
- KAIT: Spam reporting — spam.kisa.or.kr
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