Gangnam Premium Korean Restaurants: 5 Fine Dining Spots Worth Every Won

Category: K-Food | Related: Best Myeongdong Restaurants — Verified Local Foodie Guide

Gangnam premium Korean restaurants guide — Seoul fine dining from Michelin-starred Jungsik and Mingles to traditional Samwon Garden galbi
Gangnam premium Korean restaurants guide — Seoul fine dining from Michelin-starred Jungsik and Mingles to traditional Samwon Garden galbi

Looking for the best Gangnam premium Korean restaurants? This verified guide covers five spots — from Seoul’s only Michelin 3-star to a ₩15,000 ox bone soup worth every won.


Myeongdong fed us history. Gomtang from 1938, noodles from 1966, soup from 1964 — kitchens that have been doing the same thing, in the same place, for longer than most of us have been alive.

Cross the Han River and the conversation changes entirely.

Gangnam is where Korean cuisine asks a different question — not what has always worked, but what is possible now. This Seoul restaurant guide to Gangnam premium Korean restaurants covers the full spectrum: from Korean fine dining in Gangnam at the three-Michelin-star level, to a bowl of ox bone soup at ₩15,000 that somehow belongs in the same sentence. It is where 50-year-old barbecue traditions share a postcode with some of the most innovative tasting menus in Asia.

This is the second stop on the Korea Pulse Seoul food journey. Consider it the upgrade.


Quick Reference: Gangnam Premium Korean Restaurants at a Glance

RestaurantRecognitionSignaturePrice Range
Jungsik (정식당)Michelin ⭐⭐New Korean tasting course₩230,000–330,000+
Samwon Garden (삼원가든)Michelin Guide + Blue RibbonHanwoo Galbi₩65,000/portion
Jinmi Pyeongyang Naengmyeon (진미평양냉면)Michelin Bib GourmandPyeongyang Cold Noodles₩15,000
Mingles (밍글스)Michelin ⭐⭐⭐Jang-based tasting course₩320,000+
Oegojip Seolleongtang (외고집 설렁탕)Blue Ribbon ×2Ox Bone Soup₩15,000

🔗 Reservations: Michelin Guide Seoul | Catch Table (Korean reservation platform)


1. Jungsik (정식당): Where New Korean Cuisine Was Born

Jungsik Seoul - Gangnam premium Korean restaurants
Jungsik Seoul – Gangnam premium Korean restaurants

There is a before and after in the story of Korean fine dining, and Jungsik Seoul sits precisely at the dividing line. Among all the Gangnam premium Korean restaurants on this list, Jungsik is the one that changed the rules of the game entirely.

Chef Yim Jung-sik is credited with introducing Korean cuisine to the world with an innovative flair that is entirely his own — drawing inspiration from the familiar, like gimbap and bibimbap, to create something innovative yet entirely authentic. The Seoul restaurant holds Michelin 2 Stars, while the New York outpost has since been elevated to three — a distinction that gives some sense of how seriously the global culinary world takes what he’s doing.

Located in Cheongdam-dong, the experience here is theatrical in the best sense: each course tells a story about Korean ingredients that you thought you knew, reimagined through technique that is entirely international in its confidence.

The thing to order: The Massinneun Gimbap (맛있는 김밥) — an add-on at ₩28,000 — is non-negotiable. An ultra-crispy seaweed shell packed with seasoned beef and truffle rice. It sounds like a gimmick. It is not a gimmick.

Practical info

  • Price: Tasting course from ₩230,000 (lunch) — seasonal variations apply
  • Reservations: Essential, often weeks in advance
  • Address: 11 Seolleung-ro 158-gil, Cheongdam-dong, Gangnam-gu
  • Tel: +82 2-517-4654
  • Website: jungsik.kr
  • Korea Pulse tip: If you’re planning to visit multiple Gangnam premium Korean restaurants in one trip, Jungsik works best as a standalone dinner — give it the evening it deserves.

2. Samwon Garden (삼원가든): Half a Century of K-BBQ at Its Most Gracious

Samwon Garden - Gangnam premium Korean restaurants
The galbi at Samwon Garden has been marinated the same way since 1976. Some things don’t need to be reinvented. They just need to be protected.

Some restaurants exist to push boundaries. Samwon Garden exists to remind you why certain boundaries were never the point.

Since 1976, Samwon Garden has set the gold standard for Korean BBQ in Seoul, serving premium Hanwoo galbi to discerning diners, international dignitaries, and families celebrating life’s special moments. Listed in both the Michelin Guide Seoul 2026 and the Blue Ribbon Survey 2026, this is the K-BBQ institution that has survived nearly five decades in Gangnam by doing one thing — premium Hanwoo beef — with an absolute refusal to compromise. Among Gangnam premium Korean restaurants, it remains the most beloved for special occasions.

A gorgeously landscaped outdoor garden, coupled with high ceilings and glass walls infused with the Korean aesthetics of empty space, adds a sense of openness to this gracious dining. It is, frankly, one of the most beautiful restaurant settings in Seoul. The kind of place where the surroundings are part of the meal.

The thing to order: Marinated Galbi (양념갈비) — scored precisely to absorb a soy-based marinade that has not changed since the restaurant opened. Around ₩65,000 per portion. The Bulgogi (불고기, ~₩58,000) for something slightly more relaxed.

Practical info

  • Price: Galbi from ₩65,000/portion | Bulgogi ~₩58,000
  • Reservations: Recommended for weekends and private dining rooms
  • Address: 623 Eonju-ro, Gangnam-gu (near Apgujeong Station)
  • Tel: +82 2-548-3030
  • Website: samwongarden.com
  • Korea Pulse tip: Samwon Garden is consistently cited as one of the top Gangnam premium Korean restaurants for business dining and special occasions. Book a private room if you can.

3. Jinmi Pyeongyang Naengmyeon (진미평양냉면): The Most Elegant Bowl of Cold Noodles in Gangnam

Jinmi Pyeongyang Naengmyeon - Gangnam premium Korean restaurants
Jinmi Pyeongyang Naengmyeon – Exterior Source: Michelin Guide
Pyeongyang-style cold buckwheat noodles in clear beef broth at Jinmi Naengmyeon, Gangnam Seoul — Michelin Bib Gourmand
The broth looks like water. It tastes like something that took all day. This is the particular genius of Pyeongyang naengmyeon — restraint as an art form.

Fine dining does not require a tasting menu, a sommelier, or a bill that requires a moment of private reflection afterward. This is perhaps the most important thing to understand about Gangnam premium Korean restaurants — the range is genuinely extraordinary.

Jinmi Pyeongyang Naengmyeon holds the Michelin Bib Gourmand — the guide’s recognition for exceptional food at accessible prices — and it earns it through a discipline that is genuinely harder than it looks. Pyeongyang-style cold noodles are famous for their incredibly clear beef broth: it looks like water, and leaves a savory depth that takes minutes to fully register. The buckwheat noodles carry just enough chew. Everything is calibrated.

On a warm Seoul afternoon, or after a heavy barbecue, or simply because you want to eat something that a serious cook spent years learning to make correctly — this is the bowl.

The thing to order: Pyeongyang Naengmyeon (평양냉면, ₩15,000) alongside Jeyuk (제육, ₩32,000 for a full plate of tender boiled pork). The cold and the rich. The restrained and the generous. They were made for each other.

Practical info

  • Price: Naengmyeon ₩15,000 | Jeyuk ₩32,000
  • Location: 307 Hakdong-ro, Gangnam District, Seoul
  • Tip: Go early — lunchtime queues are real and they do not shorten
  • Korea Pulse tip: Among Gangnam premium Korean restaurants, Jinmi is the best argument that price and quality are not the same thing.

4. Mingles (밍글스): Three Stars and the Soul of Korean Fermentation

Mingles restaurant Seoul — Michelin three star modern Korean tasting menu with Jang-based dishes and elegant minimal plating
The Jang Trio at Mingles: doenjang, ganjang, and gochujang reimagined as a French-inspired dessert course. Ancient fermentation, modern plating, Chef Mingoo Kang’s particular genius.

A correction from the original source on this one: Mingles Seoul is now a Michelin 3-Star restaurant — elevated in 2025, making it currently the only three-star restaurant in South Korea, and the undisputed pinnacle of Korean fine dining in Gangnam. Worth noting before you make your reservation.

Chef Mingoo Kang seamlessly weaves Korean culinary philosophy into a modern tasting format, using seasonal ingredients to build layered, nuanced flavors rather than overt showiness. Signature elements such as the long-simmered “Mingling Pot,” rich with concentrated umami from dried seafood, vegetables, and fruit, and the “Jang Trio,” a French-inspired dessert reinterpreting doenjang, ganjang, and gochujang, highlight the chef’s innovative use of Korean ferments.

The core of what Mingles does — and why it deserves those three stars — is its relationship with Jang: the foundational fermented pastes of Korean cuisine (doenjang, ganjang, gochujang). In most Korean cooking, these are the background. At Mingles, they are the argument. Chef Kang built an entire tasting menu around proving that the complex, layered flavours of Korean fermentation can anchor a world-class contemporary dining experience. He was right.

Reservations open monthly and fill within minutes. Set a reminder.

The thing to order: The full tasting menu. There is no other way to experience this restaurant.

Practical info

  • Price: Tasting menu ₩320,000+ (lunch) | Dinner slightly higher
  • Reservations: Via Catch Table — opens monthly, books immediately
  • Address: Near Cheongdam Station, Gangnam-gu
  • Tel: +82 2-515-7306
  • Website: restaurant-mingles.com
  • Korea Pulse tip: Mingles is the only three-star restaurant among Seoul’s Gangnam premium Korean restaurants — and reservations are among the hardest to get in the country. Plan two months ahead.

5. Oegojip Seolleongtang (외고집 설렁탕): The ₩15,000 Bowl That Belongs on This List

Oegojip Seolleongtang ox bone soup served in traditional brass bowl at Samseong-dong Seoul — Blue Ribbon restaurant
₩15,000. Two Blue Ribbons. Domestic Hanwoo only, no artificial additives, broth simmered until it says what it wants to say. Oegojip Seolleongtang doesn’t need to justify itself. The bowl does that.

After three tasting menus and a galbi feast, let’s talk about ₩15,000.

Oegojip Seolleongtang in Samseong-dong holds two Blue Ribbons — one of Korea’s most respected independent restaurant certifications — and serves a bowl of ox bone soup that earns them without fuss or theatre. All domestic Hanwoo beef. No artificial additives. A broth so clean it’s almost architectural: clear, deep, with a savory persistence that lingers in a way that the expensive meals sometimes don’t.

This is the other face of Gangnam’s food culture — the daily bowl that local workers and Gangnam residents actually eat, sitting alongside the Korean fine dining temples, equally confident and equally serious. It is, in its own way, the most honest entry on this list of Gangnam premium Korean restaurants.

The thing to order: Seolleongtang (설렁탕, ₩15,000) — season it yourself at the table with salt, green onion, and kimchi to taste. For a full spread, add the Boiled Beef Head Meat (머릿고기 수육, ₩60,000) to share.

Practical info

  • Price: Seolleongtang ₩15,000 | Suuk ₩60,000
  • Location: Samseong-dong, Gangnam-gu
  • Hours: Check Naver Map for current hours — opens early
  • Korea Pulse tip: The most affordable entry among Gangnam premium Korean restaurants — and one of the most satisfying. Don’t skip it because it’s cheap.

Your Seoul Restaurant Guide: Myeongdong to Gangnam

The two sides of Seoul’s dining culture are not in competition. They are the same story told at different volumes.

Stop 1 — Myeongdong: The century-old kitchens, the Michelin plaques earned through decades of consistency, the soup that tastes the same today as it did in 1938. → Best Myeongdong Restaurants — Verified Guide

Stop 2 — Gangnam: The full spectrum of Gangnam premium Korean restaurants — from the only three-star Korean fine dining restaurant in the country to a ₩15,000 bowl of cold noodles with a Michelin Bib Gourmand. A Seoul restaurant guide isn’t complete without both sides of the river.

Both are essential. Both are Seoul. The Han River between them is only about twenty minutes by subway.

🔗 Book your table: Jungsik | Samwon Garden | Mingles | Michelin Guide Seoul

🔗 Getting there: How to Use Seoul Subway — Complete Guide


Which of these five Gangnam premium Korean restaurants is going on your Seoul list first? The three-star tasting menu or the ₩15,000 bowl that somehow belongs in the same conversation? Let us know in the comments.


korea-pulse.com | K-Food

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