Accutane comes up constantly in questions about Korean dermatology, usually from people who are already on it back home and wondering if they can keep their treatment going during a longer stay, or from people who've heard Korean dermatology is excellent and want to start it here.
It's a fair question, and the honest answer is more nuanced than a flat yes or no. Our guide to beauty treatments for short-term visitors covers plenty of options that fit neatly into a short trip. Accutane isn't really one of them, and here's why.

Jump to:
- 💊 Is Isotretinoin (Accutane) Even Legal to Get in Korea?
- 🏥 What Actually Happens at a Dermatology Visit
- 💳 The Insurance Catch: Why Residents Pay Less Than Visitors
- 📅 Why the Real Obstacle Is Time, Not Access
- 🔍 What to Look for in a Clinic
- 🧴 If a Full Course Doesn't Fit Your Trip
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 💬 Comments
💊 Is Isotretinoin (Accutane) Even Legal to Get in Korea?
Yes. Isotretinoin, the generic name for Accutane, is a legitimate prescription medication in Korea and dermatologists prescribe it regularly. It's not sold over the counter anywhere, and it requires a proper consultation, but there's no special restriction that blocks foreigners specifically from being prescribed it.
The practical advice locals give each other is to search for a board-certified dermatologist (피부과전문의) rather than a general skin clinic (피부과), since the two aren't the same qualification and only the former reliably means an actual dermatology specialty.
🏥 What Actually Happens at a Dermatology Visit
A first visit typically includes a consultation, a skin assessment, and if the doctor agrees isotretinoin makes sense, an initial prescription along with baseline blood work. Because the medication affects liver enzymes and cholesterol levels, most clinics require monthly blood tests for as long as you're taking it, with the dose adjusted based on the results.
For anyone coming from a country where this process is more bureaucratic, Korea's version is usually faster and cheaper: consultations tend to run somewhere in the $15–45 range, with monthly medication costing roughly $25–55 on top of that, plus the blood work.
💳 The Insurance Catch: Why Residents Pay Less Than Visitors
This is where residents and visitors actually diverge. Korea's National Health Insurance (NHIS) subsidizes healthcare costs significantly, but enrollment requires an Alien Registration Card and, in most cases, a Korean stay of six months or longer. Short-term visitors don't qualify, so they pay the full private-pay rate out of pocket.
That rate is still relatively affordable compared to plenty of countries, which is part of why Korea shows up so often in these conversations. But it does mean a tourist and a long-term resident are not paying the same price for the exact same prescription.
📅 Why the Real Obstacle Is Time, Not Access
Getting a single prescription isn't the hard part. A full isotretinoin course typically runs four to six months, with monthly appointments, blood tests, and dose changes along the way. That timeline is simply incompatible with most tourist visas and short trips.
This is really the core answer to the visitor-vs-resident question: visitors can start treatment in Korea, but very few can realistically finish a full course here unless they're staying long-term. People who make this work are almost always residents, long-stay students, or expats, not someone in the country for a week or two.

🔍 What to Look for in a Clinic
If you do want to pursue this while in Korea, a few things make the process smoother: a dermatologist who speaks enough English to explain dosage and side effects clearly, a clinic that's upfront about the monthly blood work requirement, and realistic expectations about follow-up if you leave the country mid-course. Some visitors coordinate with a doctor back home to continue monitoring after their trip, which is worth arranging before you start, not after.
It's also worth reading up on general side effects before your first visit. Mayo Clinic's overview of isotretinoin is a solid, non-Korea-specific starting point for understanding what the medication actually does.
🧴 If a Full Course Doesn't Fit Your Trip
For visitors who decide the timeline doesn't work, Korea still has plenty to offer for skin concerns that don't require months of monitoring. Our guides to preparing for a skin treatment in Seoul and Botox pricing and process cover options that are built around a single trip rather than months of follow-up. It's the same logic that applies to other procedures people ask about for short visits, like our breakdown of LASIK for foreigners: some treatments fit a week in Seoul, and some genuinely don't.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, in the sense that no law blocks foreigners from being prescribed it. A dermatologist can see you, evaluate your skin, and prescribe isotretinoin on a first visit if they think it's appropriate.
No, you can pay out of pocket without insurance. Insurance (NHIS) just changes the price, not your ability to be seen or prescribed. Enrollment in NHIS itself requires an Alien Registration Card and typically six months of residency.
Most courses run four to six months, with monthly checkups and blood tests throughout. That timeline is the real reason it doesn't work well for short-term visitors, even though getting a single prescription is easy.
For a lot of people, yes, even paying full private-pay rates without insurance. Consultations and medication costs in Korea tend to run lower than equivalent private-pay costs in the US, for example, though it varies by clinic and country of comparison.





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