How to find a sauna/bathhouse in Korea that allows customers with tattoos?

How to find a sauna/bathhouse in Korea that allows customers with tattoos? - Free stock photo of adult, americano, barista

Apparently here in Korea there is a similar common rule to in Japan forbidding people with tattoos from using public bath houses.

I was telling a couple of traveller friends in my hostel here about Korean jjimjilbangs and they really want to visit one, but they both have tattoos.

Korea is still very conservative but individuality is gaining momentum. There are places doing tattooing and piercing in the student/nightclub zone not far from where I'm staying but "normal people" definitely don't have tattoos yet, even much less so than in Japan, where western cultural trends are picked up a few years before Korea.

I've heard in Japan that the reason is because traditionally only gangsters have tattoos and a solution is to find the places owned by yakuza. But Korea is not Japan and I don't think there's an equivalent to yakuza here. (It turns out there is, "Kkangpae".)

If some saunas accept tattooed patrons in Korea, how would one locate them? At least in cosmopolitan Seoul it should be possible.



Best Answer

There is a well-established system of organized crime in Korea. Korean organized crime operates in secret and many dislike being considered a gang and would rather be called a business, an organization, a clan, etc. similar to the few Tongs in china that are behind the organized crime and give direction and finance the various triads. The Korean mob was once more public, however in the early '90s the government declared war on them.

In Korea, it is illegal to give a tattoo unless you are a doctor, which means they are very expensive. thus people in Korea will believe if you have a tattoo, you got it from someone who is willing to risk life in prison for some money, this also means that you have connections to the underground in some way, and thus may bring trouble to a business.

Depending on which neighborhood you are in, tattoos can be a fashion statement or it can be a sign of gang or mob affiliation. Currently many mobs are transitioning to smaller tattoos that are less of a tell that a person is involved in a mob. This is happening all over the world as well.




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Can you go to a Korean bathhouse with tattoos?

Actually, the size of tattoo is very important. Even if big one, they will not prohibit you to use it. I found out Some public bath noticed "A man who have big tattoos refrain from using this." at internet news, even though they will not refuse you. Just enjoy it with some great care.

Does Korea have public bathhouses?

A jjimjilbang (Korean pronunciation: [t\u0348\u0255imd\u0291ilba\u014b]; Korean: \ucc1c\uc9c8\ubc29; Hanja: \ucc1c\uc9c8\u623f; MR: tchimjilbang) is a large, sex-segregated public bathhouse in South Korea, furnished with hot tubs, showers, Korean traditional kiln saunas and massage tables.

Are Korean bathhouses unisex?

The baths. Most jjimjilbang have two distinct areas: the baths, which are same-sex only, and the sauna areas, which are communal. Whichever you want to visit is up to you, but most people prefer to wash up before sweating it out (and then wash up again).

What do you wear to a Korean spa?

Be sure to wear comfortable clothing - nothing is worse than shimmying into skinny jeans after a day of relaxing! If you're a person that shaves, try to skip doing so the day before to avoid irritating your skin.



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Images: Pavel Danilyuk, Pavel Danilyuk, Aldrich, Pixabay