Number Systems (숫자): Korean vs. Sino-Korean

Korean has two number systems — one for counting things you see, one for data.

4 min read·April 3, 2026·1 views
Number Systems (숫자): Korean vs. Sino-Korean
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Most languages have one set of numbers. Korean has two — and which one you use isn't random. It tells people whether you're counting something real in front of you, or communicating a piece of fixed information like a price, a date, or a phone number.

Here's the good news: the rule for choosing between them is simpler than it sounds. And once you hear both systems in context, they start to feel natural faster than you'd expect.


The Two Systems

Native Korean (고유어)

Sino-Korean (한자어)

Origin

Pure Korean

From Chinese

Feels like

Counting out loud

Official, numerical

Used for

Objects, people, age

Money, dates, floors, phone numbers

Range

1–99 only

Unlimited

Think of it this way: Native Korean is for counting things you can see and touch. Sino-Korean is for information.


Native Korean Numbers — 하나, 둘, 셋...

These are the numbers Koreans use when they're physically counting something in front of them — bottles on a table, people in a room, years of someone's life.

Number

Korean

Romanization

1

하나

ha-na

2

dul

3

set

4

net

5

다섯

da-seot

6

여섯

yeo-seot

7

일곱

il-gop

8

여덟

yeo-deol

9

아홉

a-hop

10

yeol

The Shape-Shift: Numbers Before Counters

Here's the part that trips most learners up. When 1, 2, 3, and 4 appear directly before a counter word (more on counters below), their ending changes slightly:

Standalone

Before a counter

Example

하나

한 개 (han gae) — one [item]

두 명 (du myeong) — two people

세 살 (se sal) — three years old

네 개 (ne gae) — four [items]

Tip — Don't memorize, just notice: You don't need to drill this. The more Korean you hear, the more these shortened forms will sound right naturally. If you say 하나 개 instead of 한 개, people understand — it just sounds a little unpolished.

Sino-Korean Numbers — 일, 이, 삼...

These came from Chinese and are used for anything numerical in a formal or informational sense: prices, phone numbers, dates, apartment floors, bus routes.

Number

Korean

Romanization

1

il

2

i

3

sam

4

sa

5

o

6

yuk

7

chil

8

pal

9

gu

10

sip

How They Build Past 10

Sino-Korean numbers follow a clean, logical pattern — think of it like multiplication built into the language:

Number

Korean

How it works

11

십일

sip + il (10 + 1)

20

이십

i + sip (2 × 10)

25

이십오

i + sip + o (2 × 10 + 5)

100

baek

1,000

cheon

10,000

man

Tip — 만 is the key unit: Korean counts large numbers in units of 10,000 (만), not 1,000 like English. So 50,000 is 오만 (5 × 10,000), not 오십천. This trips up Korean learners when dealing with prices — a 50,000 won bill isn't "fifty thousand," it's "five man." Once this clicks, reading Korean price tags gets much easier.

When to Use Which — The Decision Guide

Situation

System

Example

Counting objects

Native

커피 두 잔 (keo-pi du jan) — two coffees

Counting people

Native

세 명 (se myeong) — three people

Age

Native

스물다섯 살 (seu-mul-da-seot sal) — 25 years old

Money

Sino

오천 원 (o-cheon won) — 5,000 won

Dates

Sino

팔월 십오일 (pal-wol sip-o-il) — August 15th

Phone numbers

Sino

공일공… (gong-il-gong…) — 010…

Floor numbers

Sino

삼층 (sam-cheung) — 3rd floor

Note: 공 (gong) — meaning "zero" — is used in phone numbers instead of 영 (yeong) or 령. You'll hear 공일공 for the 010 area code on every Korean mobile number.


The Special Case: Telling Time

Telling time in Korean uses both systems in the same sentence — which makes it a great test of whether the logic has clicked:

  • Hours → Native Korean

  • Minutes → Sino-Korean

Time

Korean

Romanization

1:00

한 시

han si

3:30

세 시 삼십 분

se si sam-sip bun

7:15

일곱 시 십오 분

il-gop si sip-o bun

한 시 (one o'clock) — native Korean for the hour.
삼십 분 (thirty minutes) — Sino-Korean for the minutes.

Tip — Why time mixes both: Hours feel like something you're experiencing in the moment — one o'clock is this hour, right now. Minutes are numerical intervals — a measurement. Korean encodes that intuition directly into which number system you use.

Common Counters to Know

Both number systems attach to counter words — similar to "two cups of coffee" or "three sheets of paper" in English. Korean uses counters far more consistently than English does.

Counter

Romanization

Used for

Example

gae

General objects

두 개 — two [things]

myeong

People

세 명 — three people

sal

Age

스무 살 — twenty years old

jan

Cups, glasses

한 잔 — one cup/glass

si

O'clock

두 시 — 2 o'clock

bun

Minutes

십오 분 — fifteen minutes

won

Korean currency

천 원 — 1,000 won

cheung

Floors

이 층 — 2nd floor


Try It Right Now

Match each situation to the right number system — Native Korean or Sino-Korean?

  1. Ordering two beers at a bar

  2. Saying today's date

  3. Telling someone your age

  4. Reading out a phone number

  5. Saying it's 6 o'clock (the hour part)

  6. Saying it's 6 o'clock (the minute — as in, zero minutes)

Answers: 1. Native / 2. Sino / 3. Native / 4. Sino / 5. Native / 6. Sino (영 분 or just skip it — Koreans usually drop the zero minutes)

If you got most of those right, the system has clicked. If not, re-read the decision guide and try again — it usually takes one more pass.


Next up: Survival Korean: Food, Shopping & Places →

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