Living in Daejeon as an expat
Daejeon sits at the geographic center of Korea — equidistant from Seoul, Busan, and the coasts — and that central position shaped the city's character. It is Korea's de facto capital of science and research. KAIST (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), ETRI (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute), and hundreds of government-funded research centers are concentrated in the Daedeok Innopolis (대덕연구개발특구) zone in the northern part of the city.
For the expats who end up here — researchers, academics, faculty, and their families — Daejeon often becomes unexpectedly comfortable. Rents are low, the city is clean and quiet by Korean standards, nature is accessible, and the KTX to Seoul takes under an hour when you need the city.
Daejeon's neighborhoods for expats
Yuseong-gu (유성구) — the KAIST district Home to KAIST, ETRI, and the Daedeok Innopolis cluster. The most international neighborhood in Daejeon, with a significant population of foreign researchers, professors, and graduate students. Yuseong has a relaxed university-town feel, hot spring spas (유성온천), and decent restaurant and café options catering to the academic community. International families with children often settle here for access to Daejeon International School (대전외국인학교).
Seo-gu / Dunsan (서구 / 둔산) Daejeon's main commercial and administrative hub. Wide boulevards, large apartment complexes, government buildings, and the highest concentration of shopping and restaurants in the city. The city government offices are here. A practical choice for those who want urban amenities over proximity to the research zone.
Jung-gu (중구) — the old city Daejeon's historic center, with older markets (Jungang Market), traditional architecture, and cheaper rents. Less suited for foreigners needing English services but interesting for those who want authentic non-tourist Korea.
Getting around Daejeon
Daejeon has a single metro line (1호선) running east-west through the city. It covers key areas including Dunsan and connects to Daejeon station. Coverage is decent but not comprehensive.
To Seoul: KTX from Daejeon Station to Seoul Station takes 50–60 minutes. SRT from Daejeon Seodaejeon Station reaches Suseo (Gangnam-gu) in about 55 minutes. This proximity to Seoul is one of Daejeon's biggest practical advantages — Seoul is genuinely accessible for day trips or urgent travel.
Within Daejeon: The metro is useful but the city is sprawling enough that a bicycle, car, or regular taxi use is common among residents. Bus routes supplement the metro.
Cost of living
Daejeon is one of Korea's most affordable major cities. Housing costs are roughly half of equivalent Seoul neighborhoods.
| Category | Daejeon (Yuseong) | Seoul (typical expat area) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio (wolse monthly) | ₩300K–₩550K | ₩800K–₩1.5M |
| 2-bedroom apartment | ₩500K–₩900K | ₩1.4M–₩2.5M |
| Restaurant meal | ₩7,000–₩13,000 | ₩10,000–₩20,000 |
| Coffee | ₩4,000–₩5,500 | ₩5,000–₩7,000 |
The savings are significant for multi-year stays. A researcher on a postdoc or KAIST faculty salary can live very comfortably in Daejeon on an income that would feel tight in Seoul.
English-language services
What's available:
- KAIST campus has extensive English-language infrastructure — courses taught in English, international student offices, English-speaking medical staff on campus
- Daejeon International School (대전외국인학교) in Yuseong-gu
- Chungnam National University Hospital — some English-speaking medical staff
- Daejeon Global Center, city-run support for foreign residents
- Daejeon Expats Facebook group (active, several thousand members)
- Some English-friendly restaurants and cafés concentrated around KAIST and Yuseong
What's limited:
- Outside Yuseong-gu, English services are minimal
- Social scene is quieter than Seoul or Busan — this is a research city, not a nightlife destination
- International food variety is limited (Seoul-level selection not available)
- Specialist medical care for serious conditions: Seoul is recommended
Honest tradeoffs
Why Daejeon works:
- Affordable rents that make academic and research salaries go much further
- Extremely fast KTX access to Seoul (under 1 hour)
- Yuseong-gu has a genuine international academic community
- Outdoor activities nearby: Gyeryongsan National Park, Daecheong Lake, hiking trails throughout
- Quieter, less stressful pace of life than Seoul
- KAIST's English infrastructure means many day-to-day needs can be handled in English
Why Daejeon might not be right:
- Very limited expat community outside the KAIST/research zone
- Social options are academic in character — not the city for nightlife or diverse cultural programming
- Career opportunities outside research, academia, and English teaching are minimal
- Korean required for most city services outside the university area
The verdict: Daejeon is a great fit if you have a reason to be there — a KAIST position, a government research role, or a teaching post. It's not a destination you'd choose randomly. But for the people it fits, it consistently surprises: the KTX makes Seoul feel nearby, the rents are low, and the academic community is internationally-minded in a way you don't find in most Korean cities outside Seoul.