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Korean beer drinking is its own ritual, anchored by a handful of mass-market lagers that practically every Seoul restaurant pours and a craft beer wave that has reshaped what Koreans expect from their pint. From Cass Fresh, the country's bestselling lager, to Terra's green-bottled rise since 2019 and the indie brewers scattered around Itaewon and Jeju, this is the complete guide to Korean beer brands and the drinking culture that surrounds them.
Cass Fresh: Korea's Bestselling Lager
Brewed by Oriental Brewery (OB), Cass Fresh is the undisputed king of the Korean beer market. It is an American adjunct lager at 4.5 percent ABV, launched in 1994 and acquired by OB in 1999. Cass overtook Hite in 2011 and has held the top spot in the domestic market ever since. OB, now owned by AB InBev, accounts for roughly half of all beer sold in Korea, and Cass is the brand it leans on at convenience stores, grocery aisles, and barbecue tables. The 2024 "All New Cass" refresh added a thermometer label that turns blue at perfect drinking temperature, a small detail that signaled OB's commitment to defending its number-one position.
Terra: The Green-Bottled Challenger
Launched by Hite Jinro in March 2019, Terra arrived in a distinctive green bottle and sold one million boxes faster than any beer in Korean history. By the end of its second year it had crossed 1.65 billion bottles in cumulative sales, lifting Hite Jinro's beer division back into serious competition with OB. Terra is brewed with Australian Golden Triangle malt and 100 percent natural carbonation, which Hite Jinro markets as the source of its sharper, cleaner finish. The brand pushed into Hong Kong, Singapore, and the United States starting in 2021, and Terra is now the default "new generation" lager at Korean restaurants worldwide.
Hite and Filgood: The Classic and the Value Player
Before Terra came along, Hite was Hite Jinro's flagship beer and Korea's top-selling lager for years before losing that crown to Cass. Hite (originally launched in 1993) remains a familiar grocery-store option with a slightly sweeter, smoother malt profile. On the other end, Filgood is OB's value-priced lager aimed at home drinkers who want something cheaper than Cass for everyday refreshment. Together, Cass, Hite, Terra, and Filgood make up the four big-volume Korean lagers you will see stacked in every convenience-store cooler.
Import Beer Competition
Korean drinkers have been embracing import beers since the early 2010s. Heineken, Tsingtao, Asahi, and Japanese craft labels surged thanks to convenience store "4 cans for 10,000 won" promotions and the deregulation of small breweries. Imports peaked around 2018, then dipped during Japan's trade dispute and a soft yen, before bouncing back. Today imports sit on the same shelf as Cass and Terra, which forced the domestic giants to rebrand, redesign, and innovate, exactly the pressure that made Terra possible.
The New Craft Beer Wave
Korea's craft scene was effectively unlocked when the government loosened brewery licensing rules in 2014 and 2018. Magpie Brewing Company, founded in Itaewon in 2011 and now also operating a Jeju brewery, is widely credited as the spark of the modern Korean craft movement. The Booth Brewing Company, launched in 2013, expanded across Seoul and into supermarkets nationwide. Hand and Malt of Namyangju, Korea Craft Brewery (maker of ARK and Jeju Beer-adjacent labels), BBC Brewery, and Goose Island Korea round out the early generation. Today, hundreds of independent breweries pour everything from Magpie Pale Ale to imperial stouts at taprooms in Gyeongnidan, Seongsu, and Itaewon's craft beer alley.
Chimaek: The Sacred Beer Pairing
If there is one ritual that defines Korean beer culture, it is chimaek, the portmanteau of chicken (chi) and maekju (beer). Crispy double-fried chicken from a brand like BBQ, Kyochon, or Nene gets paired with an ice-cold lager, usually Cass or Terra, and the combination became a global phenomenon after the 2014 drama "My Love from the Star" turned it into a fictional craving. Whether eaten in a beer hall, by the Han River with delivery, or at a chicken shop, chimaek is the chosen format for unwinding after work or watching baseball on a summer night.
Somaek: The Beer and Soju Cocktail
Somaek (so-ju + maek-ju) is the bomb-shot cocktail that powers every Korean hoesik (work dinner) and barbecue table. The golden ratio most drinkers agree on is three parts soju to seven parts beer, poured into a beer glass with a marked line or built by dropping a shot glass of soju into a pint. The beer of choice is almost always Cass or Hite, because their lighter, clean profile lets the soju shine. Somaek lowers the perceived bitterness of straight beer and softens the edge of soju, which is why it has become a fixture in K-drama dinner scenes and university circles alike.
Beer Halls and Pojangmacha: Where Koreans Drink
You can pour yourself a beer almost anywhere in Korea, but the classic venues are hof (large beer halls serving Cass and Terra on draft with anju snacks), pojangmacha (orange-tented street bars in Jongno, Euljiro, and around train stations), and the craft taprooms of Gyeongnidan Road in Yongsan. Gyeongnidan is where the craft revival started, and it remains the best place in Seoul to bar-hop through Magpie, The Booth, and a dozen smaller breweries pouring pale ales, IPAs, and seasonal sours.
Where to Find Korean Beer Outside Korea
Outside of Korea, the easiest places to find Cass, Terra, and Hite are H Mart and other Asian grocers, Korean barbecue restaurants, and increasingly larger supermarket chains in cities with sizeable Korean communities. Terra is widely exported now, and Cass shows up in the imported lager section of many US grocery stores. For craft, Magpie's Jeju operations have started exporting limited cans, and a few US craft beer importers are stocking Korean labels. If you want the chimaek experience at home, pair a chilled Cass with delivery Korean fried chicken and call it a complete Friday night.
Beer-Flavored Snacks and the Daiso Combo
Korean snack aisles have plenty of beer-friendly anju (drinking snacks): squid jerky, rice crackers, dried anchovies with peanuts, peanut-puff Kkokkalcorn, and seasoned seaweed. A growing TikTok trend pairs Daiso's bargain jjajang ramen with an ice-cold Cass, an inexpensive at-home hoesik that captures the essence of casual Korean drinking nights. Look for these alongside Korean beer at Asian grocers, or build your own Korean beer night with chips, jerky, and a cold can of Cass or Terra.
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