The hollowness of one’s soul cannot be filled with junk from ebay. — Rubber Chicken

Korean DSLR Camera Buying Guide

Warning: This tutorial makes use of some Korean char­ac­ters. if your com­puter can­not dis­play the Korean, it might be help­ful if you install the Korean lan­guage fonts. Otherwise, the Korean char­ac­ters will appear as crazy sym­bols which will be illegible. If you have Korean fonts installed and you still can’t see the char­ac­ters, go view -> encod­ing -> Korean … that will work if your browser is set to detect west­ern fonts.

Let’s get started …

So, the his­tory of this ‘how to’ is that I made a few posts on esl­cafe about cam­eras. As a res­ult, I get emails every week from people ask­ing how to get a good, cheap digital cam­era. I get a lot of requests for help, espe­cially from people who are try­ing to move into the DSLR mar­ket. So, I’ve decided to make this guide … ’cause I’m tired of repeat­ing myself! Just kid­ding … I’m happy to make this guide to help other people out.

Caveat: My exper­i­ences relate mainly to DSLR cam­eras. However, a lot of this inform­a­tion is also use­ful for point and shoots or any digital cam­era tech­no­logy. In fact, much of this guide could be use­ful when shop­ping for any elec­tronic equipment.

This is a guide only and is based on my exper­i­ence. I don’t know everything! This is an accu­mu­la­tion of what I have done over the past 6 years. Others are wel­come to dis­agree with my opin­ions, and I’d wel­come com­ments. Constructive dis­cus­sion will help make buy­ing digital cam­eras (or other elec­tronic equip­ment) a lot easier for everyone.

I provide this inform­a­tion as a pub­lic ser­vice. So I accept no respons­ib­il­ity if you don’t have the com­mon sense to ensure you don’t get ripped off! Caveat Emptor!

Where to go …

First, there are three com­mon places around Seoul where tech­no­logy is pur­portedly cheap.

Yongsan - A very pop­u­lar place and prices are indeed cheap. A smart shop­per can get good bar­gains there. Yongsan is an older area and many stores can keep their over­heads low. Shopping with cash is recom­men­ded. However, Yongsan is also the place where unwary shop­pers are more likely to be ripped off. It’s more com­mon with com­puters than cam­eras, but there are a lot of stor­ies about knock­off gear being sold as genu­ine. Popular stor­ies are of people buy­ing gear that has had the internal com­pon­ents stripped and replaced with cheap junk. Personally, I rarely go to Yongsan … unless it’s to buy com­puter parts. Yongsan how­ever, is a great one stop shop­ping place. Depending which build­ings you go to, you can get just about any­thing. I think Yongsan is bet­ter for com­puter and con­sole bar­gains, than for cam­eras and other elec­tron­ics. There’s less hawk­ing here too!

Technomart - I like TM a lot. However, it’s harder to haggle here. I think it’s because their over­heads are higher (cost of rent, etc). You can still get good prices if you haggle and have cash. But I’ve rarely been offered rock bot­tom prices. Many sellers will become angry if you try to push prices down. They’d rather pro­tect their profits than do busi­ness. I’ve never heard of knock­off gear in TM, and store own­ers are usu­ally going to be there long term. So it’s an easy place to deal with if you learn to work your way around. Btw, TM has EVERYTHING you could ever need in elec­tron­ics. Like Yongsan, it’s a one stop shop­ping mall. The biggest down­side is that used shops are less com­mon and it’s harder to find elec­tronic items that are a year or two old. Usually, once it’s no longer the new­est gear, TM won’t sell it. Hawking has become quite pop­u­lar here, espe­cially on the phone floors. So be pre­pared for people try­ing to ‘lure’ you to their stores. The gen­eral rule of thumb is that the higher floors and stores away from the escal­at­ors have bet­ter deals. Stores with lots of foot traffic won’t haggle as much, because they know that they can wait for a cus­tomer who will offer bet­ter prices. So if you want to shop at TM, get away from the front stores and wander around into the back areas.

Namdaemun - These are reg­u­lar stores, how­ever the streets near Namdaemun Gate are crowded with cam­era shops. Wandering amongst the shops is fun and many of them will let you haggle them down to rock bot­tom prices. There’s a par­tic­u­lar shop in Namdaemun that I fre­quent often. I recom­mend it to any­one … but we’ll get to that later. There’s a few small tech­no­logy malls in Namdaemun. These cater to ignor­ant tour­ists and their prices are higher. Steer clear of these mini-malls and stick to the store­fronts which are inde­pend­ently owned.

Those are the most pop­u­lar places. Of course, every mall and many streets have elec­tron­ics shops. But it’s the places with a con­cen­tra­tion of the same products that drive prices down … don’t expect the same deals at your local store or in places like COEX.

Another factor is the ‘import’ issue. Unbeknownst to many for­eign­ers, there’s two ways to import elec­tron­ics into Korea.

Genuine Imports — These imports are bought leg­ally and all import taxes, cus­toms and stamp duties are paid. This is what you expect to buy.

Grey Market Imports — These are imports which are shipped to Hong Kong (usu­ally) but are bought and re-shipped to Korea. They avoid the import taxes and duties, and are there­fore cheaper. However, of course, there’s a catch. The catch is war­ranty. Companies which rep­res­ent their mar­kets (eg Nikon and Canon) don’t like grey mar­ket (d’uh!). So, any product that you buy which comes from a non-genuine importer will not have its war­ranty recog­nized in Korea. This is weird, because the war­ranty is valid world wide, regard­less of where you bought it. But Korean after ser­vice cen­ters will not hon­our war­ranties if you didn’t buy it from an author­ised seller!

How do they know it’s not genu­ine? Simple, the serial num­ber! Manufacturers record serial num­bers and know where the cam­era was destined to be sold. If it was destined for Hong Kong, chances are it’s an unau­thor­ised import.

This is the rule, but it’s not a hard and fast rule. Nikon Korea has ser­viced and cleaned grey mar­ket cam­eras. In fact, a friend of mine had a dead pixel repaired on his camera’s sensor … even though the cam­era was grey mar­ket. I think that a smil­ing for­eigner is prob­ably bound to get away with more than many Koreans! The other fact to con­sider is that in 6 years I’ve never needed war­ranty repairs. Dropping a cam­era, los­ing it or hav­ing it stolen doesn’t come under war­ranty. So, for me, the risk of need­ing my war­ranty is low. Also, my war­ranty is still valid out­side Korea. If I need war­ranty repairs, I can ship my cam­era to Japan for a small fee, have it repaired, and ship it back.

Keep in mind that the dif­fer­ence between ori­ginal import and grey mar­ket is 100,000 won or more, depend­ing on the value of the item. Spending thou­sands of dol­lars on digital gear would mean a sav­ing of a few hun­dred dol­lars by buy­ing grey mar­ket goods.

Finally, all grey mar­ket goods are IDENTICAL to ori­ginal imports. They’re just products man­u­fac­tured by the com­pany which are destined for other markets.

Obviously grey mar­ket is not legal … how­ever, I don’t think it’s illegal. Hence, grey mar­ket. And since very few laws are ser­i­ously enforced in Korea, this is a nice loop­hole that can be exploited by savvy purchasers.

Do some research …

So, that’s the back­ground inform­a­tion. Let’s get down to actu­ally pur­chas­ing something.

If I make a pur­chase, my first stop is the inter­net: www.danawa.com. Another good site, which is some­what newer, is www.enuri.com. Although these sites are Korean, You can search in English and the prices are quite obvi­ous. Searching for your equip­ment, cam­era, whatever, will bring up a list of what’s avail­able. You’ll also see a vast array of prices. The cheaper prices will be from private sellers (often based in Yongsan, TM or Namdaemun). The more expens­ive ones are the big chain mar­kets (GMarket and CJMall) who jack up their prices and pander to ignor­ant, lazy people.

word of warn­ing: never use auction.co.kr … even though some of the res­ults at danawa and enuri show auc­tion items. auction.co.kr is owned by ebay, but it’s the korean ver­sion. there’s one fun­da­mental dif­fer­ence between auction.co.kr and ebay: auc­tion is NEVER cheaper. auction.co.kr is basic­ally online stores pre­tend­ing to be cheap. again, this is where the ignor­ant koreans go who ‘think’ that auc­tion is the cheapest, without ever doing any real research. stay away from auction!

Search for the item you want … usu­ally English is ok, because the brand names are often in English anyway.

Hint: To make things easier, after you search press 낮은가격순and it will sort your search res­ults from low­est price to highest price (like ebay does). The low­est priced item will now be at the top and you can quickly see which prices are the cheapest!

Once you see the item you want, take note of whether it’s grey mar­ket or ori­ginal (yes, they actu­ally TELL YOU, right there on the page).

This is an ori­ginal item — (정품) — look for these Korean char­ac­ters (Jong Poom), they mean ori­ginal import.

This is a grey mar­ket item — (내수) — look for these Korean char­ac­ters (Nae Soo), they mean grey market.

UPDATE — Recently danawa changed their sys­tem slightly. In some cases they write 비정품 (bee jong poom) mean­ing non ori­ginal import. 비정품 means the same as 내수.

Compare the low­est ori­ginal price and the low­est grey mar­ket. You’ll see quite a dif­fer­ence. Now you have a very good guide for prices. You know the best price you can expect. Very few stores will give you that EXACT price, but most will come within a few dol­lars. Danawa offers the best price guides in Korea. I’ve never seen cheaper deals. The whole point of using Danawa is to become aware of what the price SHOULD be. This is how you guar­an­tee that you don’t get ripped off.

Your research is done. See! It took about 5 minutes. Take your time to com­pare brands, mod­els, prices, etc. Also, con­sider other brands. Use sites like www.amazon.com to get a bench­mark for west­ern prices, and also use www.amazon.com to read reviews or user feed­back about the items you’re look­ing at. This should give you a guide to what you’re buy­ing and whether it suits your needs.

Final stage, the leg work …

Ok. I’m going to provide dir­ec­tions to a store in Namdaemun that I fre­quent reg­u­larly. I’ve poin­ted a num­ber of friends towards this store too, and every­one has had good exper­i­ences. The owner speaks decent English and his prices are good. The best part is that when buy­ing cam­era gear, he often throws in a lot of little extras in for free — such as UV fil­ters, cloth bags, etc.

Disclaimer: I have NO affil­i­ation with this store. I make NO money from your pur­chases and there is NO bene­fit to me when you shop there. I like the store and I like the owner. So I’m happy to throw some busi­ness in his dir­ec­tion … ulti­mately, it’s all good karma!

How to get there -> Jump on the sub­way and head to HoeHyun Station (회현 — blue line, next to Seoul Station). Get out and head for Exit 5.

When you reach street level at Exit 5, turn right and walk down the street (it’s down hill).

This is the top of nam­daemun mar­ket. It’s nearly 100 meters to the bot­tom of the street.

Over half way … keep walking!

Keep going until you can see the end of the mar­ket street.

Once you reach the corner (Gate 2), turn left.

When you turn left, you’ll be on the cam­era street. There are lots of stores, so it’s worth your while to check a few stores and see if you can get any good prices.

Three or four stores from the corner you’ll see a small cam­era shop. It’s called YesDica.

That’s your des­tin­a­tion, walk in and say ‘hi’. The owner’s name is Mr Choi. He will be very help­ful if you know what you want. He likes cash and he’s happy to haggle, but don’t haggle too much if he’s already offer­ing good prices, that would be rude!

His store is online, but he doesn’t update it often. You can see it at www.yesdica.co.kr … and actu­ally, I don’t buy all my stuff from him. Sometimes he doesn’t match the best price. However, his prices are usu­ally good. So it’s worth your while to have a look, check some prices and look around fur­ther if you want.

Afterthoughts …

Armed with this inform­a­tion, you can get good deals in Yongsan and Technomart too. In fact, if you print out the danawa prices, you can use it to haggle in most places (if you take cash). If you use a credit card, don’t expect great dis­counts. There are fees for credit cards, and store own­ers have to declare their sales. If you deal in cash, store own­ers can avoid taxes and such. Yeah, it’s dis­hon­est, but it’ll save you money too!

So, choose what you want to buy … and decide whether you need a war­ranty in Korea or if you’d rather get cheaper gear. Then decide where you’re going to buy your stuff.

I thor­oughly recom­mend YesDica in Namdaemun. It’s a cam­era store (not much use for com­puter equip­ment), but if you get over there, then you’ll get a good deal. But I know that some people will want to shop a little closer to home, which is one good point about Namdaemun, Yongsan and TM. They’re spread all over Seoul, so one of those places shouldn’t be too far away.

As I said at the start, com­ments and con­struct­ive dis­cus­sion are wel­come. I don’t know everything about Korea, but the advice above has served me and many people (to whom I’ve given recom­mend­a­tions) very well.

If you go to YesDica, tell him you read the ‘how to’ guide made by David (it’ll make him happy) … and let me know how it works out!

Good luck …

PS. If you stop by and read this guide, please take a second to leave a com­ment … it’d be nice to know how many vis­it­ors i get! :)


51 Comments

You can use pricegrabber.com and pricescan.com for bench­mark pri­cing too. Also my favor­ite site dpreview.com they have some pri­cing info there also. They are cur­rently two months behind, because they stopped oper­a­tions to move into a new office.

Posted by Charlie on 11 October 2007 @ 10am

Thanks for the lay­mans guide, exactly what I needed to know. Wish there was one of these for everything I needed to do, would make life so much easier.……

Posted by Emma on 4 November 2007 @ 7pm

DOes any­one know where to find a repair shop that can fix Nikon’s? My cam­era was dropped and I took it to yong­san but they told me they couldn’t fix it there so to take it to nam­daemun. Any sug­ges­tions as to where in namdaemun?

Posted by jon farinelli on 15 November 2007 @ 11am

Thanks for the guide! My old point and shoot is on it’s last legs. I used an SLR back in High School and I’m kind of think­ing of get­ting back into it, espe­cially for pho­to­graphy for SeoulSteves.com

Posted by SkinnySteve on 28 November 2007 @ 4pm

Thank you so much for the guide and for shar­ing your guy with us. I’m going to head up to Seoul next week and will buy my first DSLR from Mr Choi. Cheers!!

Posted by naomi on 28 November 2007 @ 10pm

Went to YesDica. Not much hag­gling to be done but they came to the low­est price that could be found on danawa. I’m so happy with my canon 40D. Though I do think the tri­pods are a bit expens­ive there. Still great place to pick stuff up!

Posted by Andres on 29 June 2008 @ 2pm

Checked out TM and Yesdica yes­ter­day. The prices at Yesdica were much bet­ter than what I was offered at TM. I didn’t have enough cash with me because I was just brows­ing around cause I wanted to know how much I needed to bring. I’ll go back to Yesdica next week to pur­chase my Nikon D300 (and some other stuff). Thanks Dave for the guide :)

Posted by Rurik on 30 June 2008 @ 1am

Yesdica is highly dis­liked in cam­era row at Namdaemun. They have a repu­ta­tion for selling bad gear, one shop (the canon offi­cial shop canon-ci.co.kr) went as far to say “YESDICA? I hate you!(meaning ‘them’)”. My girl­friend bought a lens there with fungus grow­ing on it and he neg­lected to even men­tion it. We asked him if the lens was good and if there was any­thing wrong with it and he said yes the lens was good and noth­ing was wrong with it. We later found out that all the cam­era shops there work with each other; if you haven’t noticed, if you are in one shop and they don’t have some­thing you need they will call down the row to another shop to see if they have it. They have all said bad things about Yesdica after we men­tioned the store.

You men­tion that the guy at Yesdica speaks good English and will give you clean­ing cloths and fil­ters but what you fail to men­tion is that all the other shops give you those items as well and that he gives out TRASH fil­ters such as ARONA brand(that cause hor­rendous ghost images and flares)
Not to men­tion that they all speak English REALLY WELL in that area.

It may seem like I’m bash­ing Yesdica but after spend­ing a month in Korea and vis­it­ing those cam­era shops thor­oughly (my girl­friend and I walked to EVERY shop one after another) we dis­covered that Yesdica wasn’t the best shop there (even though it was the first one we pur­chased from and thought it was pretty good until we dis­covered the fungus and other bet­ter shops).

I think it would be unfor­tu­nate if people read your guide and only went to Yesdica because there are far bet­ter shops in that area than them.

Posted by mike on 18 August 2008 @ 6pm

hi mike … thanks for your feedback.

regard­ing nam­daemun, i have to say that i’m not the ‘doyen’ of cam­era shop­ping know­ledge. so it’s pos­sible that there may be other places out there with good deals.

how­ever, i’ve dealt with yes­dica a lot, and so have a num­ber of people i recom­men­ded, and you’re the first i’ve heard in 2 years that has any­thing neg­at­ive to say about the store.

also, i only ever buy new equip­ment. actu­ally, i did buy a used 105mm nikkor macro lens, and it was in fant­astic con­di­tion. a few weeks ago i looked at buy­ing a 70-200mm f2.8 VR (which was in mint con­di­tion), but even though the price was good, it’s still too much for me to justify.

with new gear, i can’t see that there would be a prob­lem … and as you said, they all work together. a few times i’ve entered yes­dica and he didn’t have the gear i wanted, but 2 minutes later it arrived in the door (usu­ally from another shop).

in yesdica’s defense, i also have to say that he’s matched every best price i can find … some­times at his own loss.

i do think it’s wise to shop around and it’s def­in­itely smart to carry cash. but the most import­ant thing, espe­cially with second hand gear, is to be very cau­tious. “caveat emptor” def­in­itely applies.

the cam­era stores keep so many lenses and old bod­ies, that i’ve no doubt many of them are broken or con­tain fungus behind the lens, due to mois­ture build up.

i’ll con­tinue to recom­mend yes­dica until i see for myself any reason not to. i’ve been going there for 2 years and i’ve had noth­ing but good res­ults … and so have the people i’ve sent there.

thanks again for your com­ments … and i’m sure there are many great stores in nam­daemun and other places around seoul. so it def­in­itely pays to do the leg­work and find the best deals.

peace!

david

Posted by David on 19 August 2008 @ 11am

Hey thanks for the tips on good cam­era prices. I’m an amer­ican who just moved to Korea to teach eng­lish and i badly need a DLR cam­era. Thankyou Kamsahmnida

Posted by Mike Olsen on 9 September 2008 @ 4pm

Excellent guide. Thanks for all the tips, Dave.

Posted by Jose on 12 September 2008 @ 7am

hey Dave,

I emailed you a few months back about buy­ing a DSLR. Thanks so much for all your advice!! I’m happy to say I’ve finally got a cam­era — a Nikon D60. I got it from Yesdica.
I went to all of the shops along from him to check prices and he matched the prices I found on Danawa. He was help­ful and threw in a few extras as well as a good price on a memory card and bag.
Thanks again

Posted by Bridget Backhurst on 16 September 2008 @ 10pm

hi brid­get

i remem­ber our con­ver­sa­tion … i never heard from you, so i wondered whether you were still look­ing or gave up.

i’m glad you found the guide use­ful. con­grats on the cam­era, D60 is a nice rig!

happy shoot­ing

cheers

david

Posted by David on 17 September 2008 @ 3pm

Thanks for your help Dave,

I’ll be head­ing down to Namdaemun next week­end after I get paid to pick up a D60. I’ve already vis­ited yes­dica among some other stores in that area so I’ll def­in­itely head back that way when I go look­ing to buy in a weeks time.

Cheers

Tim

Posted by Timmeh on 19 September 2008 @ 9am

hey dave, thanks for all your altru­istic work! know that you’re really appre­ci­ated :) i’m newly in the mar­ket for a nikon d40 thanks to your great tips. i’ll let you know how it goes!

Posted by hanna on 22 September 2008 @ 11am

I just got back from Yesdica with my brand new Nikon D60 VR kit. haha I think Mr. Choi was a little thrown off that I already knew his name. I told him that I had heard he was the go to man in Seoul for cam­eras. Overall, he made buy­ing a cam­era very easy and threw in a bunch of extras. I’ll def­in­itely go back!

Posted by Tim on 26 September 2008 @ 8pm

hi dave, thank you so much for this art­icle! im here in seoul for hol­i­day and went to yong­sang to buy a cam­era — and would have been ripped off!
now i will visit mr. choi, and with all the inform­a­tion you’ve given im sure i can make a nice deal.

great work, thanks again, you’ll saved my day (and prob­ably many many bucks)

J

Posted by J on 29 September 2008 @ 2pm

Hey Dave, awe­some art­icle thanks.
I’m in S Korea right now for work for 4 months. I’m look­ing at buy­ing a D90.
About the grey mar­ket stuff. If I bought it grey mar­ket would the war­ranty be honored when I return to Canada should I need to make use of it?

Anyone else read­ing this know the answer to that?

Ryan

Posted by Ryan on 1 October 2008 @ 9pm

hi ryan

if you put your email address in when you leave a com­ment, i can con­tact you directly.

how­ever, the answer to your questin is yes, your war­ranty is valid and hon­oured out­side korea. this ‘gray’ mar­ket restric­tion only applies in korea where the ori­ginal import­ers are try­ing to stop the import of good through unof­fi­cial channels.

your war­ranty is very real and very valid … out­side korea.

cheers

david

Posted by David on 2 October 2008 @ 7am

Thanks again, this is all great inform­a­tion.
I think I’m going to get the Canon 450D. I really want a Nikon D90 but it’s just a little out­side my price range for now.

Anyways, thanks!

Posted by Ryan on 2 October 2008 @ 8am

hi again,
i went shop­ping and bought a Oly E-520 Double Zoom (14-42mm + 40 — 150mm) with 35mm macro lens at yes­dica. 1.000.000Won with 8GB-CF Card, Oly-Bag, cardreader, add. bat­ter and addi­tional stuff thrown in (crappy arona uv-filters, hoods, a wobbly stat­ive(?)).
the price was ok i think, although i could’ve bartered a litte bit more.
yet, i dont know what to think of this shop.

the bat­tery he gave me was faulty, shutoff at abeout a half day, the Oly-battery still run­ning. i exchanged it at the shop. test­ing the new one today.
this morn­ing i had a lock-up, i think it was the “Jaba”-brand 8GB CF-Card. at first, there were only 200 pics of 400 avail­able on the cam­era, then i had a lockup, so i reform­ated the card.
now its work­ing again, but if the stuff he gave me keeps fall­ing apart i’ll get ser­i­ously angry. this sucks as i am to leave in a few days.

so, when you go to this shop you might want to insist on him giv­ing you only brand wares.

i also dis­liked that he didn’t give me the bill (i had to return and ask for it) and that he had to be asked to stamp the war­ranty card. also he threw away all the packageing

after all, it might have been bad luck on my side, but you should’nt rush into things like i did and check out the other shops as well…
ill keep you informed…

Posted by J on 3 October 2008 @ 12pm

Dave,

Thanks for the great inform­a­tion. I will be buy­ing my first digital SLR in the next couple of months and your inform­a­tion and links are great!

Thanks again!

Posted by jason on 4 October 2008 @ 5pm

Hey Dave,

Thanks for tak­ing the time to write your DSLR buy­ing guide and for answer­ing my email questions.

I went to YesDica, tak­ing care to leave early so I’d be sure to be the first cus­tomer of the morn­ing. Mr. Choi was VERY happy to start the day with a cash sale!

I picked up a D40 body and the 18-200mm VR. To under­state things, it’s a rad­ic­ally dif­fer­ent cam­era from my Pentax K1000, but I’m look­ing for­ward to learn­ing the ropes over the next few months.

Thanks again for your help. Take care,

Mike

Posted by Mike on 30 November 2008 @ 8am

Hi Dave and thanks so much for your clear & com­pre­hens­ive advice! I’ve been research­ing what kind of cam­era I’d love to get and am now all set for an SLR (Nikon D60). I’ve been look­ing around for buy­ing tips and this site is sweeeeet!
Will be head­ing off to the big city tomor­row and hope to find a good deal. Will include Mr Choi in my itin­eary. Fingers crossed!
So thanks again for tak­ing your time to make this SUCH an easy guide to fol­low. You’ve def­in­itely bumfed up my know­ledge no end. If ever you’re in Jeonju, I’d be happy to get ya a drink or two ;)

Posted by Patricia Dillon on 4 December 2008 @ 6pm

Halo again,

I went to Namdaemun earlier today and am now the beam­ingly proud owner of my 1st SLR, a Nikon 60. Mr Choi was *so* pleased when I men­tioned your site and gave me a good deal for tons of stuff (bag, 2 cards, spare ori­ginal bat­tery, card reader, UV lens, screen pro­tector, NX Nikkor VR lens and Nikon 60 of course for 800,000W — cash). I’m very happy. Hum, I guess that already came across :D

Well, time for me to play with my new toy now!

Thanks again for all your advice. Your site was the enorm­ous cherry on my cake!

Posted by Patricia Dillon on 5 December 2008 @ 10pm

thanks again every­one. i’m glad you found this info useful.

patri­cia — con­grats on your new cam­era. it sounds like you got a good deal … and of course, i’m happy to have helped!

enjoy your new gear and take lots of photos!!

cheers

david :)

Posted by David on 6 December 2008 @ 11am

Hi Dave, thanks for the advice.

I went to Yes Dica last Monday to buy a Canon EOS 5D Mark 2. Yes Dica was actu­ally the most expens­ive of the seven or so shops I tried and although Mr. Choi was sorta/kinda/maybe OK, he would only budge 20,000 off his price. This is a cam­era that retails for 3.5 mil­lion won, mind. I quoted http://www.ori.co.kr and danawa but it didn’t impress our man in the least. Too bad for him. I had cash burn­ing a hole in my pocket.

You are right about shop­ping around, of course. About 100 yards along the road I found another (much tidier) store who beat Yes Dica’s price by 200,000 won on the cam­era body, plus 70,000 on the BG-E6 grip. That’s without any nego­ti­ation too — they threw in an LCD fil­ter and some other mis­cel­lany as a sweetener.

I came away with a much lighter wal­let but very happy with my fully Canon-warrantied, box-fresh DSLR.

Cheers again,

~ smw

Posted by Stewart on 10 December 2008 @ 9pm

Hi Dave,
Thank you very much for use­full guide.

I once bought a ball­head online through Gmarket, and it is very good service.

Now I want to buy 5D and lens online, how­ever, the prices on Gmarket are not good enough.

I searched on http://blog.danawa.com/prod/117351/C/842/843/1190/0
and found some good price of 1750000.

Could you please tell me that it is safe to buy from these online shops?

Thanks again for your guides.

Posted by Bridge on 10 December 2008 @ 10pm

Hi Dave,

Great blog. I actu­ally bought a Canon 30D in Yongsan in 2006, only to find out about this grey mar­ket stuff after. Now I’m look­ing to pick up a 5D Mark II and I’ve been down to Namdemun 3 times now. I read your info and it’s very use­ful. Not sure if I missed it, but if you’re in the store, how can you dis­tin­guish between a grey mar­ket cam­era and a legit one? You men­tion how to do it on the web­sites, but not actu­ally in the store (or did I miss that part?).

I’ve noticed some places will tell you it has a “Korea Warranty” and oth­ers will say “World Wide”, but I don’t see a con­sist­ent dif­fer­ence in price for either. One shop keeper showed me the Canon Korea Warranty card from the box and said it was Korea only–that it had to say “International Warranty” at the top in order to be world-wide.

I used to think that “Korea Warranty” meant grey mar­ket and “International Warranty” meant legit. But from read­ing above, am I to under­stand that the Korean war­ranty is international?

So, I’m con­fused. Any light you can shed on the mat­ter would be great.

Posted by Jeremiah Hill on 17 January 2009 @ 4pm

Dave,

Thank you so much for put­ting this together! I’ve been doing tons of research before buy­ing my first DSLR and hav­ing a guide as simple as this is so refresh­ing! I espe­cially like the photo-directions.… I’m ter­rible at find­ing my way around those mar­kets (I don’t live in Seoul, so I’ve only been to Namdaemoon once), and that will be so help­ful. I will def­in­itely say hello to Mr. Choi when I buy my cam­era next weekend!

Lisa

Posted by Lisa on 18 January 2009 @ 11pm

Hi Dave,

Good tips. How can I buy if I’m not in Korea. Does any shop offers to ship internationally?

I think Manfrotto tri­pods are cheap in here. I saw in Danawa.com.

Posted by Zul on 23 January 2009 @ 1pm

brid­get — most online sellers also have stores. and you can use danawa prices to get a feel for nam­daemun prices. i think you can prob­ably trust the online stores, but if you don’t feel that it’s safe, head to nam­daemun and shop around — armed with the danawa prices as your research.

jeremiah — korean war­ranty is the inter­na­tional war­ranty. basic­ally, when you buy a nikon from an approved dealer, “nikon korea” gets a cut of the profits. that’s offi­cial imports. how­ever, if you buy a gray mar­ket nikon, then it’s not done through “nikon korea”. as such, they wont hon­our the war­ranty because they didn’t get their slice of the profit pie.

simply put, the war­ranty is the same in korea as it is inter­na­tion­ally … how­ever nikon or canon’s offi­cial dis­trib­ut­ors wont hon­our the war­ranty on products that they didn’t sell. hence gray market.

zul — tri­pods may be cheaper here, but you prob­ably wont find sellers pre­pared to ship abroad. also, the ship­ping would mean that the cost of the gear becomes the same price as you would buy loc­ally — defeat­ing the pur­pose of shipping.

thanks for the com­ments everyone …

Posted by David on 30 January 2009 @ 1pm

Thanks David. I bought my 5D Mk II from YesDica a couple weeks back now, war­ranty included, and so far it’s awesome.

Actually, I didn’t go to YesDica on pur­pose. I just went around and got a good feel for that guy and only real­ized it was the same place you men­tioned when I was return­ing with my money from the ATM. I took it as a good sign.

He gave me an alright deal com­pared to the other places–started lower than most. I was just a lot more pleas­ant and easier to deal with than many–especially when com­pared to the Yongsan crowd.

This is a great blog. Thanks for it.

Peace,
Jeremiah
(www.jeremiahhill.com)

Posted by Jeremiah Hill on 7 February 2009 @ 3pm

sir,im now in chonan..i want to visit your showroom.…please give me your sho­room phone number…

Posted by moosa on 7 March 2009 @ 7pm

David, thank you.
This appears to be just what I was look­ing for in terms of inform­a­tion — as I’ve got a busi­ness trip com­ing up to Seoul in the middle of April, and was think­ing of check­ing out the local cam­era equip­ment. I’m based in the UK by the way.

I hope you can help answer a few of my questions…

1) Warranty
=========
The ques­tion of “grey” versus “offi­cial” lenses — par­tic­u­larly Canon.
I think that you are say­ing that the grey equip­ment still has an inter­na­tional war­ranty — although no war­ranty is offerred in South Korea, whereas the full offical import has both South Korean and inter­na­tional warranty?.

A few days ago I was brows­ing the US based B&H web­site where they explain the dif­fer­ence between the two ver­sion in the fol­low­ing way:
grey — we (B&H) war­ranty the item — you’ll have to ship it back to us (at your expense) if it needs repair.
offi­cial — you can use any Canon author­ised repair facility.

This dosen’t quite stack up with your exper­i­ence — per­haps it’s B&H that are offer­ing extra war­ranty themselves.

My under­ly­ing ques­tion is — if the shop in South Korea doesn’t provide war­ranty, can I be sure that I can get war­ranty some­where in the world for my lens — prefer­ably in the UK, but fail­ing that Japan?

2 Getting best Prices
========
I’m inter­ested in Canon L lenses between 1300k and 2500k Won — which appear from the search engines that you recom­men­ded to be quite a bit cheaper than in the UK, espe­cially for the grey mar­ket ver­sions.
You say that the best prices are for Won. Is it (in your opin­ion) safe to be car­ry­ing this amount of paper cur­rency around with you. Especially after it becomes known that you’re car­ry­ing, but haven’t spent.
If I need to get some cur­rency in a hurry in the main shop­ping area, where is the best place to go (both from a secur­ity and exchange rate point of view). I think I will most likely be in Namdaemun area.
If I use a card, how close to the grey fig­ures am I likely to get?

3) Used Equipment.
In the Namdaemun area, are there any par­tic­u­lar good (by good I mean large range, espe­cially Canon) sellers of used equip­ment that you know of?

4) If I’m car­ry­ing my SLR with me, do you think it will be reas­on­able to request that I fire of a few shots with the pro­spect­ive pur­chase and check the results?

4) Thanks in advance for any inform­a­tion you can provide.
Roy.

Posted by Roy on 1 April 2009 @ 9pm

Thanks for the info! I’ve been look­ing to buy my first DSLR and this info is very helpful!

Posted by Jamo on 18 April 2009 @ 5pm

Hello,

lots of inform­a­tion. I’ve been to Seoul, but at the time didn’t took the time to check cam­era prices… my bad. This time, I’ll have one after­noon to get a D90 from this store or close by. From the pic­tures I see that I’ve been really close to that place! :S

I’ll post my exper­i­ence here after­wards. By the way, I’ve been liv­ing in and out of Korea for a year and have yet to exper­i­ence any unsafe situ­ation or feel­ing. Carrying that much money (2.5 or 3 mil­lion) although not being usual at all, is no prob­lem. Get a bag or back­pack and some envel­opes… as soon as you with­drawal the money, stick it in an envel­ope and inside the back­pack. :)

Don’t really know places to get money since I don’t live in Seoul. :(

Posted by Carlos on 8 June 2009 @ 9pm

Hi Dave,

I have been in Korea for almost 2 months now and i am look­ing to buy my first DSLR cam­era. I do not know much about cam­eras and thanks, i found your site very useful.

Infact, a week ago i went to Namdaemun and went into every pos­sible cam­era shop there.…i popped in at yes­dica as well and spoke to a Mr Jang though, not sure where Mr Choi was. There prices were bet­ter than most of the stores there.

The thing is i am not sure what DSLR cam­era to buy, because there is so much dif­fer­ent view­points about vari­ous cam­eras and which is bet­ter than the other.

Someone told me that i should buy a Nikon D40 as a begin­ner. I also like Canon, and i was told that the EOS range is the best, but is it quite expensive.

I did some research on the inter­net and saw the Canon EOS 300D (KISS) which is an older model, but looks quite good.
I also looked at the fol­low­ing:
Canon Powershot SX1is, SX10is,SX200is, Nikon D60

Basically i am look­ing for a cam­era that takes good pic­tures and i would like one that could take action pho­tos as well.……sports, wild­life, etc.…
Could you please let me know what DSLR cam­era would be ideal for me to buy?

Hope to hear from you soon.…..

Posted by Saliem Khan on 18 June 2009 @ 12am

That is such great inform­a­tion! I was try­ing to buy a Nikon D90 and I saw that the price was..wow. So I plan­ning on buy­ing a used one since my dad is the one pay­ing for it. But then I see that the store in Namdeamun is pretty good so I’ll check it out! Thanks!

Posted by Lera on 18 June 2009 @ 2pm

First I would like to thank you for the guide, great information!

Today I went to Namdaemun for the first time of my 2month work­ing period in Korea, I will come back later to buy some­thing. At present I have a Canon 20D with the fol­low­ing lenses 10-22mm, 28-70mm 2.8L, 70–200 4.0L, 50mm 1.8.

I am look­ing to either buy a new cam­era­house (5D, 5D mark II or maybe 1D mark III ), when look­ing at prices from Danawa i got the prices 1590000won for 5D, 3010000 for 5d mk II and 3200000 for 1D mk III.

Do you (or any­one else) think that it is pos­sible to get the 1D mk III for that price? In sweden the price for a 1D mk III is about 6,600,000 won wheras the 5d mk II has a pricetag of 4,100,000. So I get “more value” for my money buy­ing the 1D mk III (yet I loose fullframe) …

Since I can not use my 10-22mm with either 5D or 1D is it pos­sible to sell/trade it in at some store in Namdaemun?

Have any­one here traded in equip­ment? Got any good deals by doing so?

Thank you // Daniel

Posted by Daniel on 4 July 2009 @ 6pm

saliem … the d40 or the newer d60 are both good cam­eras. i’d say there’s no dif­fer­ence between nikon and canon. any­one who argues one to be bet­ter than the other has their own agen­das behind that claim. i know a lot of nikon users and none of them ever com­plain about their gear. i hear more times that canon users are switch­ing to nikon, than visa versa.

buy the gear that suits you …

daniel … if you have gear that you don’t want, it’s very easy to trade it in for other equip­ment. all stores will take your used lenses and you can nego­ti­ate good trade value on other equip­ment … espe­cially if you deal in cash.

per­son­ally, i think that full frame is now worth the invest­ment. ini­tially, i said no, but now full frame has greatly improved. if you go full frame, you won’t go back.

good luck with the cam­era hunting.

Posted by David on 4 July 2009 @ 8pm

Hello David,
thanks for this excel­lent art­icle.. unfor­tu­nately too late for me, I have just read it today and had bought a cam­era in Yongsan about one month ago. Now I’m back to Europe but I am think­ing of vis­it­ing more of Korea soon, I really loved the coun­try.
Anyway I have ques­tion and as it seems you know a lot, maybe you can answer this one:
I bought an iXus Canon in Youngsan and the seller told me the con­structor war­ranty was valid world­wide. Yet, on the receipt he gave me, the name of the product does not appear, only the price. In the box, there’s the still blank Canon war­ranty card (in Korean) and the space reserved for the seller’s name (and stamp?) is empty.
So, I won­der if I just need to fill the card and/or register the product with the serial nr to activ­ate the war­ranty and if it would be valid world­wide actu­ally or if I needed an offi­cial paper from the seller (then i would get kind of ripped off I guess…)
Great art­icle once more!
Cheers

Yannick

Posted by Yannick on 15 July 2009 @ 9pm

Like said on my pre­vi­ous post, there I went to Seoul to get my D90. Knowing exactly what you want helps a lot since you don’t have to waste time look­ing into other brands, mod­els, etc and it keeps the hag­gling simpler.

Although, I must admit I didn’t haggle at all. Knowing the prices around Europe I set foot to the cam­era street. In the first shop I vis­ited I got my first sur­prise. I finally found bat­ter­ies for my father’s Yashica Electro GSN.
Then kept ask­ing prices for the D90 with the chosen lenses. The last shop was Yesdica and the price was amaz­ingly low. So low that when I com­pared it to the European price I just didn’t had any cour­age to try to lower it even further. :\

In the end, I payed 1,4 MWon for the D90 with the 18–55 lens plus a UV fil­ter, clean­ing kit, 8Gb SD card, cam­era bag and some sort of vel­vet bag to wrap the cam­era around.
At the exchange rate of then, this set me back around 800 Euro. This com­plete set bought in Europe would go for around 1300 Euro. :)

Posted by Carlos on 31 July 2009 @ 10am

Hi David.
I still can’t believe I found this site, it is exactly what i’ve been look­ing for! I’m going to Korea on hol­i­day soon, and mr. Choi will be one of the first people I’ll visit when I arrive :)
However, I have a ques­tion that may seem trivial, but it isn’t so for me. Are the cam­eras you buy in Korea exactly the same ver­sion you can find in europe or amer­ica? It won’t be of much use if I buy the Nikon D90 i’ve been dream­ing of, and then I have to learn korean to use it…

Thanks a lot for the use­full inform­aiton you share with use here.

Posted by Fernando on 5 August 2009 @ 3pm

Hi David.
I should be vis­it­ing Seoul in the end of the month, and I’ll be hunt­ing some used (but very good con­diiton) mir­ror lens, like Tamron 350mm, Minolta 250mm, and Nikon 500mm (latest model). I won­der if you know any cam­era shops in Seoul that might have those. Of course I will make Mr. Choi a visit as well. I shoot with Nikons. Thanks in advance.
Nico.

Posted by Nico on 1 September 2009 @ 8pm

Hi David

I have a Nikon D200 and have some dust and what looks to be a microfiber hair or some­thing ruin­ing my pics. I have read some self clean blogs to clean the sensor, but I dont feel like risk­ing the chance of my screw­ing up my camera.

Do you know of any places in Seoul where I can get my sensor or mir­ror boxes cleaned?

Look for­ward to your info and will be check­ing out Yesdica for some new gear.

thanks dylan email:dmcarter7@gmail.com

Posted by Dylan on 26 December 2009 @ 4pm

Hi Dave,

I remem­ber read­ing your guide a couple of years ago when I was look­ing at buy­ing some gear in Korea. I rarely got into Seoul since my wife and live in Gangwon-do so it was use­ful for me as I usu­ally like to buy stuff in-person. In the end though, I just took the jump and bought from G-Market — I found a couple of good sellers that beat all prices I found else­where and now return to them whenever I need something.

So.. gmar­ket is worth check­ing out for those that can read Korean and can deal with cour­i­ers on the phone in Korean when they try to deliver your gear.

All the best,
Andee

Posted by Andee on 10 January 2010 @ 10pm

Thanks for the awe­some guide Dave!

any­ways has any­one been to YesDica lately?
Because I just wanna know how much for a Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 AT-X
New or 2nd I dont mind…just because i wanna bring just the exact amout so I dont over spend LOL!
thanks in advance

Posted by sHin on 5 February 2010 @ 11am

Hi there Dave,

This guide is just great! My wife and I are mov­ing to Korea in about a month and I’m really inter­ested in get­ting some lenses, and maybe upgrad­ing to a bet­ter body, and wanted to know the best way to get a good deal.

Since it has been a while since you pos­ted this, I just wanted to know if Mr. Choi is still doing busi­ness. Do you (or any­one read­ing this post) know if YesDica is in fact still open?

Again, thanks so much for the great information.

Cheers,
David

Posted by David on 20 February 2010 @ 10am

Thank you so much for tak­ing the time to write all that you have.
You are spread­ing good will around.
I hope u get back some of what you give.
God bless.
Joanne

Posted by joanne on 4 March 2010 @ 1am

Looking to buy a nice cam­era case, maybe the kata dr 467. Do you know where I can get name brand cases? I have looked in Namdaemun and they had a lim­ited amount. I actu­ally bought my cam­era from Yesdica and love it.

Thank you for all your help­ful information.

Posted by Heather on 6 March 2010 @ 3pm

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