Hyunwoo Cho

Hyunwoo Cho

With over 10 years of experience in the Hallyu industry, Hyunwoo has dedicated his career to connecting Korean culture with the world. As the founder of Daebak, he works closely with Korean brands and stays ahead of the latest trends to deliver an authentic taste of Korea to fans globally.

1Million Dance Studio performs at the Chatelet Theatre in Paris during the Korea Season 2024 program

K-pop Choreography and Korea's Famous Dance Studios: 1Million, Just Jerk, and More

Hyunwoo Cho

Table of Contents

K-pop is famous for its catchy hooks and slick music videos, but the engine behind every viral comeback is choreography. Korean choreographers and dance studios have turned point moves and crew battles into a global creative force, fueling everything from arena tours to thirty-second TikTok challenges. Here is a tour of the people, studios, and shows that put Korean dance on the world map.

1Million Dance Studio performs at the Chatelet Theatre in Paris during the Korea Season 2024 program
1Million Dance Studio kicks off Korea Season 2024 with a powerful performance in Paris. | Source: The Korea Herald

How K-pop Choreography Became a Global Creative Force

K-pop choreography is built around the idea of the point dance, a signature hook move that fans can copy in seconds. Tight formations, mirrored partner work, and camera-aware staging make every chorus feel like a music video and a TikTok loop at the same time. As Hallyu spread, choreographers moved from behind the scenes to credited creators, and studios in Seoul became destinations in their own right. Today a viral dance challenge can sell out a world tour, and a single sixteen-count chorus can travel from a Seongsu-dong practice room to bedrooms in Sao Paulo and Stockholm overnight.

1Million Dance Studio: Lia Kim, Mihawk Back, and Yoojung Lee

1Million Dance Studio, founded in 2014 by Lia Kim and Timon Youn, is the most recognizable name in Korean dance. Co-founders and lead choreographers Lia Kim, Mihawk Back, and Yoojung Lee built the studio's YouTube channel into one of the largest dance platforms in the world, with tens of millions of subscribers and billions of views. Lia Kim choreographed Sunmi's Gashina, TWICE's TT, I.O.I's Very Very Very, and most recently NewJeans's Get Up era, while Mihawk Back, also a credited member of 1Million, helped represent Korea at major international stages including the Korea Season 2024 Paris program.

BLACKPINK performs the Deadline world tour stage with full choreography at Hong Kong's Kai Tak Stadium
BLACKPINK on the Deadline world tour, where their full-group choreography returned to arenas. | Source: The Asia Business Daily

Just Jerk Crew, RisingSun, and the Studio Ecosystem

Outside 1Million, Korea has a deep bench of crews and studios. Just Jerk Crew, known for their precise, theatrical hip-hop style, has choreographed for BTS, NCT, and EXO and trained a new generation of dancers, including names that later appeared on Street Woman Fighter. RisingSun Dance Studio specializes in K-pop concept choreography and idol training, while Yongchae Yang's studio is a favorite stop for choreographers working on girl-group title tracks. World Of Dance Korea, the local franchise of the global brand, hosts competitions that turn underground dancers into household names. Choreographer Jihyo Kim, long associated with GFRIEND, is another example of how individual creators built reputations through specific group catalogs.

Iconic K-pop Choreographer Credits You Already Know

Many of K-pop's most loved performances come back to a small group of choreographers. Lia Kim crafted the bouncy, denim-cool footwork of NewJeans's Get Up era. BLACKPINK's How You Like That choreography came together with teams led by Kiel Tutin and Korean assistant choreographers, and the dance practice video alone has crossed 1.8 billion views on YouTube. BTS's signature performances, from Blood Sweat and Tears to Dynamite, are overseen by long-time HYBE performance director Son Sung-deuk, who has shaped the group's stage identity since debut. Twice's playful point moves are largely associated with Kiel Tutin and Lia Kim, while EXO's Kai is widely credited as one of K-pop's most influential idol-choreographers, contributing movement ideas across SM's roster.

HYBE performance director Son Sung Deuk who choreographs BTS, pictured during an interview about BTS songs
HYBE performance director Son Sung-deuk has shaped BTS's stage performances since their debut. | Source: Koreaboo

Visiting Top Korean Dance Studios as a Tourist

You do not have to be a trainee to dance in Seoul. 1Million Dance Studio runs a dedicated tourist program called 1M VIBE in Seongsu-dong, where visitors can take a beginner-friendly K-pop class taught by 1Million choreographers, with English-friendly guidance. MyKpopStudios and similar agencies bundle classes from RisingSun, Def Dance, and other studios into one-day or multi-day K-pop dance experiences for travelers. Even if you just want to peek inside, many top studios sit in walkable neighborhoods like Gangnam, Apgujeong, and Seongsu, making it easy to combine a class with cafe-hopping and shopping.

Street Woman Fighter dance crew leaders Monika, Aiki, Noze, Honey J, Gabee, Leejung, Rihey and Hyojin Choi pose together for GQ Korea
The eight dance crew leaders of Street Woman Fighter, named GQ Korea's Women of the Year. | Source: allkpop

Dance Covers, TikTok Challenges, and Fan Culture

Dance covers are now part of how K-pop songs live and breathe. Groups release official dance practice videos within days of a comeback, and choreographers regularly drop close-up tutorials so fans can learn the point move at home. Short-form platforms turn that into virality: TikTok and Instagram Reels challenges for songs like NewJeans's OMG, LE SSERAFIM's Perfect Night, and ILLIT's Magnetic have racked up billions of views, with idols, choreographers, and fans all dueting the same sixteen counts. For many global fans, a TikTok dance is now the first introduction to a new K-pop group.

Street Woman Fighter and the Rise of the Dancer-Star

Mnet's Street Woman Fighter, which premiered in 2021, did for choreographers what earlier survival shows did for idols: it turned them into stars. Crews like HOOK (Aiki), HolyBang (Honey J), Prowdmon (Monika), YGX (Leejung), LACHICA (Gabee), and WAYB (Noze) became household names. The franchise expanded with Street Man Fighter, Boys Planet, and the global spin-off World of Street Woman Fighter, which in 2025 pitted Korean crew BUMSUP against teams from the US, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand. Together, these shows cemented Korea's dancers, not just its idols, as drivers of the next Hallyu wave.

Members of BUMSUP, the Korean dance crew on World of Street Woman Fighter, pose at a press conference in Seoul
BUMSUP, the Korean dance crew on Mnet's World of Street Woman Fighter, at the Season 3 press conference. | Source: The Korea Times

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