Accommodation Safety: What You Need to Know
If your accommodation safety feels off in Korea, leave the room immediately if you are in danger, then contact the front desk or host. If the problem is not fixed, report it through your booking platform, call 112 when there is a real threat, and move to a safer place as soon as you can. Your safety comes before refunds or complaints.
What to Do First
- Go to a lobby, staffed area, or public place if you feel unsafe right now.
- Contact the front desk or host and state the problem clearly.
- Save photos, screenshots, and booking details.
- Use your booking app to contact platform support if the issue is not resolved.
- Call 112 if there is a threat, harassment, or illegal entry.
- Find a safer hotel or guesthouse and move if you do not feel comfortable staying.


When This Guide Helps
This guide is for foreign visitors in Korea who are already staying in a hotel, motel, guesthouse, or short-term rental and suddenly feel unsafe. It gives you a simple action order for accommodation safety: staff first, platform next, police when needed, then a backup place to stay. Use it when you need practical next steps, not general travel advice.
Common situations include:
- A door or window that does not lock properly
- A stranger trying to enter your room
- Staff entering without permission
- Harassing messages or suspicious behavior
- A building or neighborhood that feels unsafe after check-in
- Noise or disturbance that the property will not address
Note: A noisy room is not always an emergency, but it can still be a reason to ask for a room change or relocate.
What to Do First
If your accommodation safety is in question, use this order. Only skip ahead if the danger is immediate.
Step 1 — Get to a Safe Space
If you feel threatened, leave the room and go to the lobby, a staffed area, or another public place. Do not wait to pack everything first.
Step 2 — Contact the Front Desk or Host
For hotels and motels, speak to the front desk in person or call the posted number. For guesthouses and short-term rentals, send a message through the booking app right away so there is a written record. Ask for a room change, help with the door or lock, or immediate support.
If the problem is solved quickly and you feel safe again, you may not need to escalate further. If staff do not respond or the issue is serious, move to the next step.
Step 3 — Contact Your Booking Platform
Open the app or website you used to book and contact support in-app. This is important because the booking details stay attached to the report. The platform may help with rebooking or a refund, but the outcome depends on current policies and the property response. Confirm the latest rules directly with the platform.
Step 4 — Call 112 When There Is Real Danger
Call 112 if there is a real threat to your safety, harassment, illegal entry, or a hidden device that makes you feel unsafe. You do not need Korean. Stay calm, give the property name and your location, and ask for help.
Step 5 — Move to a New Accommodation
If staying there does not feel safe, leave and find another place. You can search for same-day hotels or guesthouses in a map app or booking app. Handle any refund or complaint after you are somewhere safer.

Korean Phrases You Can Show
You can show these lines on your phone if speaking feels difficult.
Useful Korean Signs or Words
These signs and words can help you find staffed areas and emergency support quickly.

Where to Get Help
Front Desk Staff
The front desk is usually your first stop for accommodation safety problems. They can change your room, contact security, or help with checkout.
Korean National Police — 112
Call 112 if there is a real threat, harassment, illegal entry, or another urgent safety issue. You can ask for English help.
Korea Tourism Organization Helpline — 1330
Call 1330 for travel help, communication support, and nearby accommodation guidance. It is useful for non-urgent problems and can help you speak with the property.
Your Booking Platform Support
Use the app or website you booked through, such as Airbnb, Booking.com, Agoda, or a similar service. In-app support is best because it keeps your booking details connected to the case.
Nearby Convenience Store or Lobby
If you need to leave your room quickly, a 24-hour convenience store or staffed lobby is a good place to wait while you make calls and look for another stay.
Common Mistakes
- Using 112 for every complaint. Save 112 for real danger.
- Waiting too long to contact support. Contact the front desk and platform as soon as the problem is clear.
- Staying only because you already paid. Leave if you do not feel safe.
- Not saving a record. Keep booking details, messages, and simple photos.
- Trying to handle a threat alone. Go to a public place and ask for official help.
- Ignoring 1330. This helpline can help with communication and next steps.

Quick Safety Checklist — Use This Right Now
- Are you physically safe? If not, go to a lobby or public area first.
- Have you contacted the front desk or host?
- Have you saved photos, screenshots, and booking details?
- Have you contacted platform support in-app?
- Is there a real threat? Call 112. Need travel help? Call 1330.
- Have you looked for a safer place to stay?
Your accommodation safety matters more than any reservation. Get safe first, then handle the rest.
For official information, check 1330 Korea Travel Hotline.
FAQ
What should I do if my hotel room feels unsafe in Korea?
Leave the room if you feel in immediate danger and go to a staffed public area. Then contact the front desk and explain the problem clearly. If staff do not fix it, contact your booking platform and move to a safer place. Call 112 if there is a real threat.
Should I call 112 if my accommodation feels unsafe in Korea?
Yes, if there is a genuine threat, harassment, or illegal entry. For lower-level concerns, start with the front desk and 1330. If you are unsure, 112 can still help assess the situation.
Can I change hotels right away if the place feels unsafe?
Yes. You can leave and book another place even if you already paid. Handle any refund issue later from a safer location.
What should I save for an unsafe accommodation complaint?
Save your booking confirmation, messages with staff or the host, and clear photos of the problem. Keep the information simple and organized so you can explain what happened later.
Note: This guide is for travel navigation in Korea. It is not medical, legal, or emergency professional advice. For urgent situations, contact local emergency services, official staff, or your embassy/consulate as appropriate.


