Seoul has 25 districts (gu) and more neighborhoods than most expats can keep track of. The good news: foreign residents tend to cluster in a handful of areas, and the patterns are predictable once you understand what drives them. This guide covers the five neighborhoods where expats actually live — not just where the internet says they should.
For each area we've included typical rent ranges (2026), commute context, and an honest take on who it actually suits. Prices are monthly wolse unless otherwise noted.
1. Hannam-dong (Yongsan-gu) — The Classic Expat Hub
Hannam-dong is where Seoul's expat scene started and where it remains densest. Embassies, high-end apartment complexes, and international schools cluster here. If someone has been in Seoul for a decade and lives well, there's a reasonable chance they're in Hannam.
The neighborhood sits on a hillside above the Han River, which keeps it quieter than most of central Seoul. You'll find English menus without asking, independent coffee shops that would hold their own in any major city, and a weekly rhythm shaped more by the foreign resident community than by Korean domestic trends.
Best for: Corporate expats on company housing allowances, diplomats, long-term residents who prioritize quality of life over novelty.
- Subway: Hangangjin (Line 6), Itaewon (Line 6) — both walkable depending on where in Hannam you land
- International schools nearby: Korea Foreign School (KFS)
- Vibe: Quiet residential, upscale, international without being touristy
- Watch out for: The price. Hannam is one of Seoul's most expensive rental markets, and housing stock is weighted toward larger apartments — finding a small unit here at a reasonable price takes work.
| Unit type | Deposit (wolse) | Monthly rent |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Officetel | ₩10M–₩30M | ₩1.3M–₩2.0M |
| 2–3 bedroom apartment | ₩30M–₩50M | ₩2.5M–₩4.0M |
2. Mapo-gu (Hapjeong · Mangwon · Yeonnam-dong) — For the Younger Crowd
Mapo is where younger expats — language school students, early-career professionals, digital nomads — tend to end up. It's cheaper than Hannam by a significant margin, and the tradeoff is a neighborhood that actually has energy. The Gyeongui Line Forest Path (경의선 숲길) runs through it. Mangwon Han River Park is at the end of the street. The coffee shops are better than they need to be.
Yeonnam-dong specifically has become one of the densest concentrations of independent restaurants in the city. You can eat well here every night for a week without repeating a cuisine. Hapjeong is slightly more residential, Mangwon quieter still — useful to know because they're all within a 15-minute walk of each other.
Best for: Language learners, startup workers, people who want to actually live in Seoul rather than in an expat bubble.
- Subway: Hapjeong (Lines 2 & 6), Mangwon (Line 6), Sinchon (Line 2) — excellent coverage
- Vibe: Young, local, café-dense, walkable
- Watch out for: Noise on weekends near Hongdae. The further you get from Hongik University station, the quieter it gets — Mangwon is noticeably more residential.
| Unit type | Deposit (wolse) | Monthly rent |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Officetel | ₩5M–₩15M | ₩700K–₩1.2M |
| 2–3 bedroom apartment | ₩20M–₩40M | ₩1.5M–₩2.5M |
3. Seongsu-dong (Seongdong-gu) — Seoul's Brooklyn Moment
Seongsu has had its "up-and-coming" moment, and the moment has arrived. What was an industrial district of leather workshops and small factories five years ago is now one of the most photographed neighborhoods in the city. The conversion has been real: old factory buildings housing specialty coffee shops and independent design studios sit alongside the original businesses that never left.
For expats, Seongsu offers something the older expat hubs don't: a neighborhood that feels like it's changing in real time. Seoul Forest is two stops away. The Han River is accessible on a bike. And you're on Line 2, which means you can get almost anywhere in the city in 30 minutes.
Best for: Creative professionals, designers, people in tech or fashion, expats who want to feel like they're living in Seoul rather than in an international enclave.
- Subway: Seongsu (Line 2), Ttukseom (Line 2), Seoul Forest (Bundang Line)
- Vibe: Trendy, evolving, design-forward, mix of industrial and polished
- Watch out for: Rents have risen fast and will probably keep rising. What was affordable three years ago isn't anymore. Lock in a longer lease if you find something good.
| Unit type | Deposit (wolse) | Monthly rent |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Officetel | ₩5M–₩20M | ₩800K–₩1.4M |
| 2–3 bedroom apartment | ₩20M–₩50M | ₩1.8M–₩3.0M |
4. Gangnam-gu (Seocho · Daechi-dong) — The International School Belt
If you have school-age children, Gangnam-gu is where the calculus changes. Seoul International School (SIS) and Korea International School (KIS) are both here, along with a network of smaller international programs. The school bus routes from this district cover most of the private international options in Seoul — which is why expat families with kids end up here even when they'd otherwise choose a different neighborhood.
Gangnam is expensive, polished, and efficient. It's not the most interesting part of Seoul to explore, but it functions extremely well as a base: excellent hospitals with English-speaking staff, large supermarkets stocked with imported goods, and the kind of infrastructure that makes daily life easy when you're managing a family in a foreign country.
Best for: Families with school-age children, corporate expats whose companies cover housing costs, anyone who prioritizes convenience and services over neighborhood character.
- Subway: Gangnam (Line 2), Express Bus Terminal (Lines 3, 7, 9), Yangjae (Line 3, Sinbundang)
- International schools: SIS, KIS, Yonsei International School (YISS)
- Vibe: Polished, commercial, family-oriented, high-end
- Watch out for: It's the most expensive rental market in Seoul for family-sized units. If your employer isn't contributing to housing, it can be a stretch.
| Unit type | Deposit (wolse) | Monthly rent |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Officetel | ₩10M–₩30M | ₩1.2M–₩2.0M |
| 3–4 bedroom apartment | ₩50M–₩100M | ₩3.0M–₩6.0M |
5. Songpa-gu (Jamsil · Bangi-dong) — The Family-Friendly Alternative
Songpa is what you look at after you've seen the Gangnam price tags. It offers much of the same family infrastructure — large apartment complexes, parks, school bus access to major international programs — at a noticeably lower price point. Lotte World and Seokchon Lake are here. Olympic Park is a 10-minute walk from several residential areas. It's a genuinely livable district that doesn't ask you to pay a premium just for proximity to the name "Gangnam."
The trade-off is commute. Getting to Mapo or Yongsan from Songpa takes time — you're on the southeast edge of the city. If your office is in Gangnam or the COEX area, it's fine. If you're commuting to the north, factor in an extra 20–30 minutes each way.
Best for: Families who want Gangnam-adjacent infrastructure at a lower cost, expats on a fixed budget who need space, anyone working in Gangnam or southern Seoul.
- Subway: Jamsil (Lines 2 & 8), Bangi (Line 5), Olympic Park (Line 5)
- Vibe: Residential, spacious, quiet, park-heavy
- Watch out for: The commute to northern Seoul districts (Mapo, Yongsan, Jongno) is long. Check your actual commute time before committing.
| Unit type | Deposit (wolse) | Monthly rent |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / Officetel | ₩5M–₩20M | ₩800K–₩1.3M |
| 3–4 bedroom apartment | ₩30M–₩70M | ₩2.0M–₩3.5M |
Quick Comparison
| Neighborhood | Best for | Rent level | Vibe |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hannam-dong | Corporate expats, diplomats | ★★★★★ | Quiet, international, upscale |
| Mapo-gu | Young expats, nomads | ★★★ | Lively, local, affordable |
| Seongsu-dong | Creatives, tech workers | ★★★★ | Trendy, fast-changing |
| Gangnam-gu | Families with children | ★★★★★ | Polished, convenient, expensive |
| Songpa-gu | Budget-conscious families | ★★★★ | Spacious, quiet, park-heavy |
One More Thing: Search by Subway, Not by Neighborhood Name
Seoul's neighborhood names can be misleading — the boundaries aren't always obvious, and a unit listed as "Hannam-dong" might be a 20-minute uphill walk from the nearest subway. When you're searching, use the subway station as your anchor. Seoul Homes lets you filter by line and station, so you can see exactly what's available within walking distance of the stop you actually care about.
Browse listings by neighborhood and subway station — and connect with a licensed realtor who knows the area you're targeting.