Getting Glasses in Korea as a Tourist: The Complete 2026 Guide

Short answer: yes, and it's easier than you think. Walk into almost any optical shop in Seoul, get a free eye exam on the spot, pick your frames, and walk out with a finished pair of prescription glasses — usually within 30 minutes to 2 hours, for roughly $40–100 USD all-in. No appointment, no doctor's referral, no prescription from home required.

If you've ever paid $300+ and waited two weeks for glasses in the US, this will feel like a glitch in the matrix. This guide covers exactly how it works, what it costs, where to go, and the few things that can trip you up (like progressive lenses — more on that below).

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Why Korea Is So Fast and Cheap for Glasses

In the US, glasses are a medical pipeline: optometrist appointment, separate exam fee, a prescription you carry to a retailer, then days or weeks of waiting while lenses are made off-site.

In Korea, the entire pipeline lives inside one shop. Licensed opticians perform the eye exam in-store for free, lens-cutting machines sit in the back room, and most common single-vision lenses are stocked on site. The exam, the fitting, and the manufacturing all happen while you wait — often while you drink the coffee they hand you.

US vs. Korea: The Numbers

🇺🇸 United States 🇰🇷 Korea
Eye exam $50–250, separate appointment Free, done in-store, walk-in
Prescription needed? Yes, from an optometrist No — they test you (or scan your current glasses)
Typical total (frames + lenses) $200–600+ $40–100
Time to finished glasses Days to 2–3 weeks 30 min – 2 hours (single vision)
Booking Appointment required Walk-ins are the norm

Who Should Get Glasses in Korea

This is worth a spot on your itinerary if any of these sound like you:

  • You leave in a day or two and want glasses ready the same afternoon
  • Your glasses broke or got lost mid-trip — shops can scan your old lenses (even cracked ones) to copy your prescription
  • You wear prescription sunglasses — same process, same speed, huge savings vs. home
  • You've been putting off new glasses because of US prices — this is your excuse
  • You're just curious — honestly, the in-store exam tech is a tourist attraction by itself

The Process, Step by Step

Step 1 — Walk in. No appointment. Tell the staff "eye exam + new glasses." In tourist-heavy areas (Hongdae, Myeongdong, Gangnam), shops see foreign customers daily.

Step 2 — Eye exam (10–15 min, free). A series of automated machines measures your prescription — typically more machines than a US exam, and you don't pay for any of it. If you already wear glasses, they can also just scan your current pair and match it.

Step 3 — Pick frames. House-brand frames start cheap; designer and premium Korean brands go up from there. The frame price tag is usually the frame only — lens price comes next.

Step 4 — Choose lenses. Standard single-vision lenses are usually affordable. Upgrades (high-index for strong prescriptions, blue light, photochromic) add cost — ask for the total price before they start cutting.

Step 5 — Wait, then walk out. Single-vision: usually 30 minutes to 2 hours. They'll adjust the fit on your face before you leave, free.

⚠️ The one big exception: progressive (multifocal) and photochromic lenses often take 3–7 days because they're custom-ordered. If you need progressives, do this on day one of your trip, not the day before you fly out.


Where to Go: Hongdae vs. Myeongdong vs. Gangnam

Area Best for Vibe
Hongdae Trendy frames, student prices Young, busy, most affordable
Myeongdong First-timers, maximum English support Tourist-central, staff used to foreigners
Gangnam Premium brands, precision fitting Upscale, more tech (3D facial scanning at some shops)

All three neighborhoods are packed with optical shops within walking distance of the subway, so you don't need to commit to one shop in advance — browse a few, compare frames, and pick where you feel comfortable.

🗺 Tip: Piglemaps partners with optical shops, so you can get your glasses made quickly and with confidence — browse optical shops →


FAQ

Do I need a prescription from my home country?
No. Korean optical shops perform the exam themselves, free, on the spot. If you have a prescription, bring it — but you don't need it.

Can I really walk in without an appointment?
Yes, walk-ins are how locals do it. Weekday mornings are quietest; weekend afternoons in Hongdae can mean a short wait.

How long do progressive lenses take?
Usually 3–7 days — they're custom-ordered, not cut in-store. Plan accordingly.

Can I get prescription sunglasses?
Yes — same process. Pick sunglass frames, and they'll cut prescription tinted lenses. Single-vision tinted lenses are often same-day, but confirm at the shop.

Is the exam quality actually trustworthy?
The exam is performed by licensed opticians (angyeongsa), a nationally certified profession in Korea, using the same class of equipment used for refraction tests in the US.

How much Korean do I need?
For the big shopping districts: essentially none. Pointing at frames, a phone translator, and the staff's working English get the job done.


Glasses Are Just One Stop

Want to hit an optical shop and the rest of your Seoul must-sees? That's what Piglemaps is for: add the places you want to visit, tap one button, and your route is done.

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