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How to Learn Korean for Beginners: A Step-by-Step Guide

By Miracle Team ·

Maybe it was a K-drama, a BTS song, or a trip to Seoul that brought you here — whatever it was, Korean is far more approachable than its reputation suggests. It has one of the most logical alphabets ever designed, a clear and consistent grammar, and no tones. The secret, as with any language, is doing things in the right order. Here’s a step-by-step path for absolute beginners.

Step 1: Learn Hangul first

Before anything else, learn Hangul, the Korean alphabet. Unlike Japanese or Chinese, Korean isn’t written with thousands of characters — it’s a true alphabet of 40 letters, deliberately built to be easy. Many learners can read basic Korean after just a few hours, and it pays off immediately. We walk through every letter in learn Hangul: a beginner’s guide to the Korean alphabet.

Step 2: Don’t rely on romanization

It’s tempting to read Korean in English letters (annyeonghaseyo), but romanization is inaccurate — several Korean sounds have no English equivalent — and leaning on it locks in a bad accent. Once you know Hangul (a weekend’s work), drop romanization as fast as you can.

Step 3: Build high-frequency vocabulary

With Hangul in hand, start stacking the words that appear most: greetings, numbers, food, travel, family. Learn each one with a picture and native audio instead of an English translation, so you recall it directly and remember it longer. A few hundred well-chosen words cover most everyday situations — start with the 100 most common Korean words.

Step 4: Get comfortable with the new sounds

Korean has a few sounds English doesn’t — the vowels eo (ㅓ) and eu (ㅡ), and three “flavours” of some consonants (plain, aspirated and tense, like ㅂ/ㅍ/ㅃ). They take a little practice, but Korean is consistent: once you learn a sound, it stays that sound. Always practise out loud with native audio.

Step 5: Learn phrases — and the politeness levels

Korean changes its endings depending on how formal you’re being. As a beginner, learn the polite “-yo” style (e.g., juseyo = “please give”), which is friendly and appropriate almost everywhere. Memorize ready-made phrases and use them from week one — locals genuinely appreciate the effort. Start with 30 common Korean phrases for beginners.

What about grammar?

Some of it is easy news: no grammatical gender, no articles (“a/the”), and verbs don’t change for person. The adjustments are word order — Korean puts the verb at the end (subject–object–verb) — and small particles that mark each word’s role. You’ll pick these up from real sentences much faster than from charts.

Turn your motivation into input

You have a secret weapon most learners don’t: you enjoy Korean media. Watch dramas and listen to music with intent — catch the words you’ve learned, repeat lines aloud. That steady, enjoyable input is exactly what builds an ear for the language.

A first-month plan

  • Week 1: learn Hangul; read simple words aloud daily.
  • Week 2: 5–7 everyday words a day with pictures and audio; core greetings.
  • Week 3: phrases for ordering and shopping; the polite “-yo” ending.
  • Week 4: build short sentences and review everything with spaced repetition.

The easiest way to start

The smoothest on-ramp combines Hangul, high-frequency vocabulary, native audio and daily review in one place. Korean For Kids And Beginners teaches Hangul from the very first lesson, pairs every word with a picture and crisp native audio, and keeps review fun with mini games. A few minutes a day add up to real, usable Korean.

Download Korean For Kids And Beginners free on Google Play and take your first real step into Korean.