Live SOL-KRW rate from Phemex spot, with USD-KRW foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. South Korea is one of the most active crypto markets globally, with retail volume frequently exceeding the country's stock market on busy days.
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 SOL = ₩124,280 KRW.
SOL-KRW is among the most actively-traded altcoin fiat pairs globally. Korean retail demand on Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone, Korbit drives consistent volume often comparable to ETH-KRW. The kimchi premium applies to SOL the same way it applies to BTC and ETH — Korean SOL typically trades 1-4% above international rates. Solana's prominence in memecoin and on-chain trading has driven particularly strong Korean retail engagement.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain that's become the dominant network for fast, cheap on-chain trading and a meaningful share of stablecoin transfers. SOL-fiat pairs are liquid on the larger exchanges but spreads can be a few basis points wider than BTC's on the same venue. The chain processes thousands of transactions per second at sub-cent fees — a structural difference from ETH that's reflected in the kind of activity SOL holders typically use it for (memecoins, perpetuals, NFT mints).
The current South Korean won was introduced in 1962, replacing the hwan at 10:1 as part of the country's industrial-modernisation programme. The Bank of Korea, founded 1950, runs an inflation-targeting framework with a current 2% midpoint. The won was managed against the dollar throughout much of the 20th century, with a major float and devaluation during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. The won has traded between roughly 1,100 and 1,400 to the dollar for most of the 2010s and 2020s, with 2024-25 levels around 1,300-1,400. South Korea's $400+ billion in foreign reserves provide substantial defensive capacity against speculative pressure.
Used in: South Korea exclusively. North Korea uses a separate North Korean won that has no convertibility relationship with the southern won and is essentially inaccessible for crypto purposes.
South Korea is one of the most active crypto markets globally, with retail volume frequently exceeding the country's stock market on busy days. KRW-pair liquidity is concentrated almost entirely on domestic exchanges — Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone, Korbit — which operate under strict bank-partnership requirements (real-name verified accounts only) and are the only legal channels for KRW fiat rails.
Major KRW-accessible exchanges are limited to four FSC-approved venues: Upbit (largest, partnered with K Bank), Bithumb (Nonghyup Bank), Coinone (Kakao Bank), and Korbit (Shinhan Bank). Foreign exchanges cannot legally onboard Korean residents for KRW fiat rails. The 'kimchi premium' — a price gap where Korean crypto trades a few percent above international prices — is a long-running feature, driven by capital controls that limit retail outbound foreign-exchange to USD 50,000 per year and create natural buy pressure in the local market. Tax treatment: a 20% tax on annual crypto gains over ₩2.5m was scheduled to take effect in 2025 but has been deferred multiple times; check current status before assuming. KRW deposits to exchanges settle in seconds via Bank of Korea's real-time payment system.
South Korea has one of the most active and emotionally-engaged retail crypto cultures globally. Around 20-25% of adults hold some crypto, with retail trading frequently rivaling the country's stock market in daily volume. The cultural pattern is distinctive: high-frequency trading, strong altcoin bias (XRP and SOL volumes are unusually elevated relative to global averages), and a recurring 'mania → crash → mania' cycle that produces the famous kimchi premium during peak phases. The capital-controls-induced premium is structural rather than incidental — Korea limits retail outbound foreign-exchange to USD 50,000 per year, which prevents arbitrageurs from closing the price gap with international markets. Bitcoin maximalism is muted; the dominant attitude is speculative-trading-as-portfolio-strategy. The 20% tax on gains over ₩2.5m has been deferred multiple times (2022, 2023, 2025) reflecting political uncertainty about how to treat what's become a meaningful retail behaviour. Real-name banking requirements at the four FSC-approved exchanges have been the dominant compliance enforcement tool — substantially harder to use crypto for tax evasion or off-the-books activity than in jurisdictions with looser KYC tying.
1 SOL is worth ₩124,280 KRW at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-KRW foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading Solana are legal in South Korea. South Korea has one of the most active and emotionally-engaged retail crypto cultures globally. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using SOL as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for SOL-KRW in South Korea is summarised in detail in the section above. Major KRW-accessible exchanges are limited to four FSC-approved venues: Upbit (largest, partnered with K Bank), Bithumb (Nonghyup Bank), Coinone (Kakao Bank), and Korbit (Shinhan Bank). Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.