Korea Kimchi Premium economics — the structure of Upbit/Bithumb local price spreads

Confidence: Likely Updated 2026-05-19 Review by 2026-09-22 Sources 1 Machine-translated Original (JA)
#exchanges#korea#kimchi-premium#market-structure#arbitrage
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This entry sits under exchanges index. Read it against Korea's 5 major CEX regimes compared — Upbit / Bithumb / Coinone / Korbit / GOPAX for peer / contrast context and FSA crypto-asset exchange registration system — number system / Local Finance Bureau jurisdiction / registration requirements for the broader system / regulatory boundary.

Overview

The “kimchi premium” (Korean 김치 프리미엄) is the phenomenon where the BTC price on domestic Korean CEXs (Upbit/Bithumb, etc.) runs 1-10% higher than overseas (Binance/Coinbase) prices. At the 2017-2018 peak it reached 40-60%. The dual drivers of KRW fiat-outflow controls and overheated domestic Korean crypto demand internalize a regulatory gap into the price, producing a distinctive market structure.

Structural factors

  • Capital controls: Korean KRW overseas-remittance controls · individual annual cap of $5 万 · arbitrage routed through crypto assets carries the risk of violating the Foreign Exchange Act
  • Excess demand: Korea’s retail crypto participation rate is world-leading (estimated at 15-20% of adults)
  • Real-name account restriction: only 5 社 holding an ISMS + bank real-name contract can trade in KRW · oligopoly created by competition restriction
  • Corporate account regulation: Korean corporations (until Q1 2024 ) were barred from CEX accounts — concentrating retail demand excessively

Numerical movement

  • 2017-12 to 2018-01: peak 40-60% (simultaneous BTC bubble + KRW withdrawal restrictions)
  • 2021-04: around 20% (buy pressure from the 3 -month crypto-taxation debate)
  • 2024-2026: 1-5% in normal times · spiking to 10% during events

arbitrage strategy + constraints

  • Theoretical arbitrage: buy BTC overseas → send to Korea → sell for KRW = locked-in profit
  • Actual constraints: KRW overseas remittance is prohibited · routed via USDT/USDC → stopped at bank KYC
  • OTC route: via domestic Korean OTC + personal networks (grey)
  • Corporate / financial institutions: use of regulatory-exemption provisions (limited)

Overseas vs domestic-market implications

Domestic CEXs (Japan) have no Kimchi phenomenon — JPY overseas-remittance controls are weak and crypto-asset regulation is unified, so no local price spread arises. The Chinese-yuan premium (Tether OTC) is a different structure and is fully OTC-ized. Korea is a distinctive market that “internalizes a capital-control gap into price,” the result of a regulatory structure combined with overheated retail demand.