Inbound Tourism Surges, Led by China

Since early 2026, South Korea is experiencing a powerful rebound in inbound tourism, and Chinese travelers are once again leading the momentum.

In Q1 2026, Korea welcomed 4.76 million international visitors (+23% YoY), with approximately 1.45 million Chinese tourists (+29%), confirming China’s return as the #1 source market. March alone recorded over 2 million arrivals, marking one of the strongest monthly performances in recent years.

Several structural factors explain this sharp rebound:

  • Temporary visa-free policy for Chinese group tours (extended until June 2026)
  • Return of group travel and cruise tourism
  • Continued global appeal of K-culture (music, fashion, beauty)

As a result, we can tell that foot traffic has clearly returned across major shopping districts such as Myeongdong, Apgujeong, and duty-free zones.

A Structural Shift in Luxury Consumption

The Volume vs. Value Disconnect

Despite the strong recovery in visitor numbers, luxury spending has not followed at the same pace.

  • Duty-free sales declined –3.8% YoY in February 2026
  • Overall sales remain below pre-pandemic levels

So, more tourists, but lower spending per capita.

From Bulk Buyers to Selective Consumers

Before COVID-19, Chinese tourists dominated Korea’s luxury retail landscape:

  • Represented ~70% of duty-free sales
  • Engaged heavily in bulk purchasing, often for resale (“daigou” model)

What’s Different Today
Chinese tourists now:

  • Spend less per trip
  • Avoid bulk resale purchases
  • Travel more independently
  • Combine shopping with lifestyle experiences

The model has shifted from “daigou-driven consumption” → “experience-led purchasing”.

Rising Competition from China

Another key factor reshaping spending behavior is increased domestic competition. China has actively developed its own duty-free ecosystem, notably through Hainan, aiming to retain luxury consumption within its borders.

This new model puts Korea in disadvantage in terms of duty-free shopping.

Korea’s Response: Price and Promotion Strategies

Aggressive Pricing Adjustments

To regain competitiveness, Korean duty-free operators are adapting pricing strategies:

  • Adjusting USD pricing via exchange rates
  • Offering more competitive positioning vs. Japan and China

Large-Scale Promotional Campaigns

The country is also deploying nationwide campaigns such as:

  • Duty-Free FESTA 2026, featuring discounts of up to 60%

These efforts signal a clear objective: re-attract Chinese luxury spending through price incentives

What are Chinese Tourists Buying in 2026?

Declining Categories

  • Bulk cosmetics purchases for resale
  • High-volume luxury items (bags, watches)

Growing Categories

  • Selective luxury pieces (iconic, statement items)
  • K-beauty products (still a major driver)
  • Experience-driven purchases (pop-ups, flagship stores)
  • Fashion influenced by K-culture trends

A New Purchase Journey

The consumer journey has evolved significantly:

Before (Pre-2020):
List → Bulk purchase → Resale

Now (2026):
Inspiration → Experience → Selective purchase

Shopping is no longer transactional since it becomes emotional and experiential.

Strategic Implications for Luxury Brands

Korea Is Becoming an Experience Hub
Korea is no longer just a duty-free shopping destination. It is evolving into:

  • A brand experience hub
  • A content-driven retail environment

Chinese Tourists Are No Longer the Sole Growth Engine

While still important, Chinese consumers are:

  • Less dominant in total revenue contribution
  • Complemented by Korean domestic and regional Asian tourists

Winning Strategies in 2026

To succeed in this new landscape, brands should prioritize:

1. Retail Experience

  • Flagship stores
  • Pop-ups and immersive activations

2. Social & KOL Amplification

  • Chinese platforms (WeChat, RED/Xiaohongshu)
  • Korean ecosystem (Kakao, Naver)

3. Omnichannel Integration

  • Seamless journey from digital inspiration to offline purchase

What no longer works alone:

  • Pure discount strategies
  • Over-reliance on duty-free channels

Conclusion: A New Era of Chinese Tourism in Korea

In 2026, Chinese tourists have undeniably returned to Korea—but their role has evolved.

The market has shifted from:

A mass luxury buying destination (pre-2020) to an experience-driven, selective luxury consumption market (2026).

These days, the challenge for brands is no longer just to attract traffic but now to convert attention into meaningful, experience-led purchases.