K-Event Calendar

K-pop Guides

Everything we wish someone had told us when we got into K-pop. Beginner primers, ticketing guides, concert etiquette, lightstick how-tos, and travel tips for fans visiting Seoul, Tokyo, and beyond.

Why these guides exist

K-pop has the most welcoming online community of any music genre — but it also has more genre-specific vocabulary and conventions than most music scenes. The first time you hear "ult bias," "OT7," "maknae line," "visual," or "line distribution" you might have to pause and Google. The first time you try to buy a Korean tour ticket, you'll bump into Yes24 and Interpark in Korean. The first time you go to a concert, you'll see a sea of perfectly synced lightsticks and want to know how that wave actually works. We wrote these guides because every K-pop fan has had to learn this stuff the hard way — and we want to make it easier for the next person.

What you'll find here

Our guides are organized into four broad categories. Tickets covers everything ticketing-related: how to buy tickets on Korean platforms (Interpark, Yes24, Melon Ticket), what to do when a tour goes on sale at 10:00 AM Seoul time, how to spot ticketing scams, when to use authorized resellers, and how the lottery system works for global pre-sales. Concerts covers the in-person experience: lightstick syncing, fan chants, dress code (yes, there is a soft dress code), what to bring (and what not to bring), seating tiers, and concert etiquette specific to K-pop. Beginner walks you through the very basics: how the K-pop industry actually works, who the major agencies are, how generations work, what a comeback is, what a fanmeet is, and the vocabulary that fandoms use online. Travel covers fan trips: getting around Seoul, must-visit fan locations, where to stay near each major venue, the best K-pop merch shops in Seoul (Line Friends, SM Town Coex, HYBE Insight, Weverse Shop), and how to plan a multi-day trip around a single concert.

How we write our guides

Every guide on this site is written by someone with first-hand experience — either a member of our team who has personally attended the events, bought the tickets, and walked the streets of Seoul, or a contributor we've verified. We don't auto-generate guides from web scraping. We don't commission writers who have never been to a K-pop concert. And we update our guides regularly: ticketing platforms change their interfaces; venues change their bag policies; agencies change their merchandise pickup processes. We treat each guide as a living document.

How to use this page

Use the category tabs above to filter by topic. Each guide card shows estimated reading time and the author. Most guides are 800–2,500 words, with a clear table of contents and step-by-step instructions where appropriate. We try to keep guides skimmable — bold the things you might be looking up, chunk the steps, and link generously to the relevant tools and event pages on our site.

Suggest a guide

We're actively expanding the library. If there's a guide you want us to write — "how to apply for a Korean fanclub membership," "how to find buddy tickets last-minute," "how to navigate the Tokyo Dome," whatever — email us through the contact page. We prioritize requests that come from real reader needs over what we think will rank well on Google.

No guides in this category yet

We're actively writing more guides. Check back soon, or browse another category.