South Korea Residential Proxies
Route requests through real ISP-assigned IPs on South Korean home devices. FlashProxy delivers authentic South Korea residential proxies for accurate, local results.
South Korea Residential Features
Why a local South Korea residential IP matters
A South Korean residential IP comes from a real consumer ISP on a home device, so websites treat your requests as ordinary local traffic rather than datacenter or foreign access. Many Korean sites localize in Korean, price in won, and tailor content and availability by location, so a non-local IP can return a different view or none at all. FlashProxy's 100M+ pool, with 6–8M IPs active each day, gives you the address diversity to collect at scale without burning through a small set of IPs. You get data that mirrors what a genuine user in Seoul actually sees. That accuracy is the core value of residential routing.
Concrete use cases in South Korea
Korean residential proxies let teams monitor retail and electronics pricing in won, track marketplace inventory, and watch competitor promotions as they appear locally. Search teams pull rankings exactly as they surface inside South Korea, where local intent shapes results. Ad-verification teams confirm campaigns render correctly to Korean viewers and catch cloaked or geo-swapped creatives. QA teams validate localized checkout, delivery options, and regional offers across the customer journey. With ~400 ms typical latency and capacity for 50,000 concurrent connections, large-scale collection stays smooth.
City and region targeting across South Korea
FlashProxy offers country and city-level targeting everywhere, plus ASN targeting, so you can place traffic precisely inside South Korea. Cover the capital Seoul and neighboring Incheon, the southeastern port of Busan, and inland centers like Daegu, Daejeon, and Gwangju. City-level control matters when stock, pricing, and delivery windows differ between the Seoul metropolitan area and the southern cities. State and ZIP targeting is a US-only capability, so in South Korea you target at the country and city level. ASN targeting lets you focus on a particular network when needed.
Rotating vs sticky sessions
Rotating sessions give you a fresh Korean IP on every request, which suits high-volume jobs like price tracking and rank collection where address variety reduces friction. Sticky sessions keep the same IP for 1 minute to 2 hours, which is what multi-step flows need — signing in, building a cart, or moving through checkout without an IP change interrupting the sequence. Pick the mode per task, and combine both in one project as needed. Rotating maximizes spread; sticky preserves continuity. Both pull from the same genuine residential network.
Setup and integration
Setup is straightforward: choose a plan, target South Korea (and a city if required), select a protocol, and generate user:pass credentials. With HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5 support, the proxy slots into popular scraping frameworks, HTTP libraries, and headless browsers without special handling. Point your tooling at the endpoint, pass the credentials, and traffic exits from Korean residential IPs. Toggle between rotating and sticky modes in your session settings. Because the same credentials work everywhere, moving from a test script to a production pipeline takes no reconfiguration.
Pricing and bandwidth
Residential proxies begin at $2.98/GB and scale down to a $1/GB floor as volume increases, billed pay-as-you-go by the gigabyte. For larger, less demanding workloads, the Residential Lite tier starts at $0.30/GB and reaches $0.16/GB at volume. You're charged only for the bandwidth you consume, so small validation runs and big data projects share the same per-GB model. That makes it easy to start lean in South Korea and scale up. Volume discounts apply automatically as your usage grows.
Frequently Asked Questions
Residential Proxies in Other Countries
Get South Korea Residential Proxies Now
Start using residential proxies in South Korea today. Plans start at $0.77/GB.
Get Started