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Apple Pay Launches in South Korea

After a years-long wait, Apple Pay today launched in South Korea, allowing those living in the country to use Apple's payment system to make contactless payments using the iPhone or Apple Watch.

Apple Pay Feature
Apple has been working to bring ‌Apple Pay‌ to South Korea since 2017, but Apple was unable to be registered as an electronic financial business operator because regulators were investigating whether ‌Apple Pay‌ violated local regulations and laws. Apple was finally approved by financial regulators back in February.

NFC terminal adoption was also low in retail stores in South Korea around when ‌Apple Pay‌ first launched, which continues to be an issue. There are more NFC terminals than there were six years ago, but The Korea Times suggests ‌Apple Pay‌ will face "significant challenges" in Korea due to the limited number of NFC terminals.

With ‌Apple Pay‌, credit and debit cards from supported banks in South Korea can be added to the iPhone and Apple Watch to make purchases at stores that have contactless payment options. ‌Apple Pay‌ cards can also be used on iPhone, iPad, and Mac to make ‌Apple Pay‌ purchases on the web.

According to the Apple Pay website in South Korea, a number of stores are accepting ‌Apple Pay‌ including McDonald's, Shake Shack, Lotteria, Krispy Kreme, Gong Cha, Lotte, HomePlus, Hollys, and more.

At the current time, ‌Apple Pay‌ is limited to Hyundai Card users, which could see South Koreans interested in using the service picking up a Hyundai Card. No other card companies are participating in ‌Apple Pay‌ as of yet.

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Top Rated Comments

antiprotest Avatar
43 months ago

Apple was unable to be registered as an electronic financial business operator because regulators were investigating whether Apple Pay violated local regulations and laws. Apple was finally approved by financial regulators back in February ('https://www.macrumors.com/2023/02/03/apple-pay-korea-launch-approved-2023/').
If I was paranoid, which I am not, I would have thought that Samsung "lobbied" (bribed) the regulators to delay Apple Pay since it should not have taken that many years just to decide whether something like this violated local laws.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Junipr Avatar
43 months ago

I can't believe you still can't use Apple Pay in places like Walmart after all these years
You do realize that’s entirely Walmart’s decision not to support Apple Pay, right?
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
TheYayAreaLiving 🎗️ Avatar
43 months ago
I can't believe it took Apple 6 years to implement Apple Pay in South Korea. They didn't give up!
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
surfzen21 Avatar
43 months ago

If I was paranoid, which I am not, I would have thought that Samsung "lobbied" (bribed) the regulators to delay Apple Pay since it should not have taken that many years just to decide whether something like this violated local laws.
I'd absolutely believe it.

I've had clients with very small business on the wrong end of similar power plays by other small businesses. Major players and big businesses do it all the time.

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Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
43 months ago
Bring Apple Pay to North Korea. That will be a news headline.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
43 months ago
I would argue that Apple Pay is Apple's most successful post-Jobs product rollout. The watch was excellent, but so were many others. Airpods/headphones are great, but so are many others. Same goes for services, smart speakers, etc.

But...so many well-capitalized companies have tried digital payments before, and have failed miserably after hemorrhaging cash on a large scale for a few years. Apple crushed it with cutting edge security, working with existing payments providers, making the whole experience seamless, etc. It's truly remarkable how hard everyone (incl Google and enormous finance Co's) have tried, and yet have failed to interest the customers, retailers, and issuers at the same time.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)