Korean Convenience Store Food: What to Grab at GS25, CU & 7-Eleven (2026)
Korea’s convenience stores beat most countries’ restaurants. A full meal for under $4, a microwave, a seat by the window, and a fridge full of stuff that goes viral on TikTok weekly. This is snackpacking HQ.
The stores: GS25 vs CU vs 7-Eleven
Three chains rule Korea, on basically every corner. GS25 and CU are the local giants with the best exclusive snacks; 7-Eleven and Emart24 round it out. They all have a microwave, a hot-water tap for instant noodles, and often a counter or window bar to eat at. Look for 1+1 and 2+1 deals (buy 1 get 1, buy 2 get 1) stickered on the shelf.
What to grab: the starter 8
| Item | What it is | ~Price |
|---|---|---|
| Samgak gimbap | Triangle rice ball — tuna mayo is the classic. The unwrapping has a trick (follow the numbers 1-2-3). | ₩1,000–1,500 |
| Instant ramyeon | Grab a cup or bowl, add hot water at the machine. Shin Ramyun = safe. Buldak = the fire-noodle challenge. | ₩1,000–1,800 |
| Dosirak | Full lunchbox (rice + meat + sides). Microwave it in-store. A real meal. | ₩3,500–4,500 |
| Hot bar / corn dog | Fish-cake sausage or a cheesy corn dog from the hot counter. | ₩1,500–2,500 |
| Banana milk | Binggrae banana milk — a national obsession. Non-negotiable. | ₩1,500 |
| Tteokbokki cup | Chewy rice cakes in sweet-spicy sauce, microwave-ready. | ₩2,000 |
| Honey butter chips | The chip that broke the internet in Korea. Still slaps. | ₩1,700 |
| Melona / World Cone | Freezer ice cream. Melon Melona is the move. | ₩1,000 |
The move: build a ₩5,000 combo
Dosirak + banana milk + a Melona = a full lunch for about ₩6,000–7,000 (~$5). Heat the dosirak, grab a window seat, done. This is how students and locals actually eat between meals.
Viral right now
- Buldak fire noodles — the spicy-challenge noodle that owns TikTok. Carbonara version if you’re scared.
- CU x brand collabs — limited-edition snacks drop constantly; the hype ones sell out.
- Dubai-style / trending desserts — convenience stores copy viral desserts within weeks.
How to actually do it
- Pay by card or tap — foreign cards usually work; keep small cash as backup.
- Hot water tap + microwave are free to use. Chopsticks and lids are by the counter.
- Trash sorting bins are by the seating — separate your rubbish.
- Say “bongtu juseyo” if you want a bag (usually a small charge).
New to eating in Korea in general? Start with our First-Timer’s Food Guide to South Korea. Want the whole region’s convenience-store scene? See Snackpacking Asia. More Korean food guides — every pick verified against real Google Maps ratings.