How to Introduce Yourself in Korean
Self-introduction (자기소개) is one of the first things you'll need in Korean — meeting new people, starting a class, job interviews, or even casual encounters. Here's exactly what to say.
The Basic Template
A Korean self-introduction follows a predictable structure:
- Greeting
- Name
- Nationality / Where you're from
- Occupation or status
- One personal detail (hobby, reason for learning Korean)
- Closing phrase
Formal Self-Introduction
Use this at work, school orientations, or when meeting someone older:
안녕하십니까. 저는 [Name]입니다. (annyeonghasimnikka. jeoneun [Name]-imnida.) Hello. I am [Name].
미국에서 왔습니다. (miguk-eseo watseumnida.) I came from America.
대학생입니다. / 회사원입니다. (daehaksaeng-imnida. / hoesawon-imnida.) I am a college student. / I am an office worker.
한국어를 공부하고 있습니다. (hangugeo-reul gongbuhago itseumnida.) I am studying Korean.
잘 부탁드립니다. (jal butakdeurimnida.) Please take care of me. (standard closing)
Casual Self-Introduction
Use with people around your age in informal settings:
안녕하세요! 저는 [Name]이에요/예요. (annyeonghaseyo! jeoneun [Name]-ieyo/yeyo.) Hi! I'm [Name].
미국에서 왔어요. (miguk-eseo wasseoyo.) I'm from America.
대학생이에요. / 직장인이에요. (daehaksaeng-ieyo. / jikjangin-ieyo.) I'm a college student. / I work at a company.
한국 드라마를 좋아해서 한국어를 배우고 있어요. (hanguk deurama-reul joahaeseo hangugeo-reul baeugo isseoyo.) I like Korean dramas so I'm learning Korean.
잘 부탁해요! (jal butakhaeyo!) Nice to meet you! (casual closing)
Key Vocabulary
Countries
| Korean | Romanization | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 미국 | miguk | America |
| 영국 | yeongguk | England |
| 캐나다 | kaenada | Canada |
| 호주 | hoju | Australia |
| 일본 | ilbon | Japan |
| 중국 | jungguk | China |
| 프랑스 | peurangseu | France |
| 독일 | dogil | Germany |
To say your nationality: Country + 사람 (saram = person)
- 미국 사람 (miguk saram) — American person
- 영국 사람 (yeongguk saram) — British person
Occupations
| Korean | Romanization | Occupation |
|---|---|---|
| 학생 | haksaeng | Student |
| 대학생 | daehaksaeng | College student |
| 회사원 | hoesawon | Office worker |
| 선생님 | seonsaengnim | Teacher |
| 의사 | uisa | Doctor |
| 엔지니어 | enjinieo | Engineer |
| 디자이너 | dijaineo | Designer |
| 프리랜서 | peurilaenseo | Freelancer |
Hobbies
| Korean | Romanization | Hobby |
|---|---|---|
| 운동 | undong | Exercise |
| 요리 | yori | Cooking |
| 여행 | yeohaeng | Travel |
| 음악 듣기 | eumak deutgi | Listening to music |
| 영화 보기 | yeonghwa bogi | Watching movies |
| 게임 | geim | Gaming |
| 독서 | dokseo | Reading |
| 사진 | sajin | Photography |
To say your hobby: [Hobby]을/를 좋아해요 (I like [hobby])
- 요리를 좋아해요 (I like cooking)
- 여행을 좋아해요 (I like traveling)
Common Mistakes
- Saying your name wrong — Korean doesn't have some English sounds. Practice how your name sounds in Korean
- Forgetting 잘 부탁합니다 — This closing phrase is culturally important. It roughly means "please be good to me" and shows humility
- Using 나 instead of 저 — 나 (na) is casual "I." Use 저 (jeo) in introductions unless it's very informal
- Overcomplicating it — A 30-second introduction is plenty. Don't try to say everything about yourself
Practice on Chamelingo
Self-introduction is covered in Chapter 2 on Chamelingo. You'll practice filling in introduction templates, recording your own self-introduction with audio comparison, and completing dialogue exercises where you introduce yourself in different social contexts.
Two grammar points power every self-introduction: the 이에요/예요 copula for saying "I am..." and the 은/는 topic marker for introducing a new topic about yourself. Master both with interactive exercises in our grammar reference.