Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea
GiwaKang
370ptsFermentation-led Korean with French precision.

About GiwaKang
GiwaKang is a Michelin Plate-recognised Korean contemporary restaurant in Gangnam where Chef Kang Min-chul applies Parisian technique to fermentation-led Korean cooking, supported by a sommelier with two-Michelin-star experience. On Tatler's Asia-Pacific Best Restaurants 2025 list and easier to book than Seoul's starred names, it is a strong choice for a date dinner or solo counter experience at ₩₩₩₩.
GiwaKang, Seoul: The Verdict
The common assumption about GiwaKang is that it sits comfortably in Seoul's growing roster of French-inflected tasting menu restaurants. That framing undersells what Chef Kang Min-chul is doing. GiwaKang is a Korean contemporary restaurant first, one where fermentation and craft anchor the menu while Parisian technique shapes the execution. If you are looking for French food with a Korean accent, book elsewhere. If you want Korean flavour thinking expressed with fine-dining precision, GiwaKang is one of the more compelling cases for that format in Gangnam right now.
The Space
GiwaKang occupies the fourth floor of a building on Nonhyeon-ro 152-gil in Gangnam, and the setting matters to the decision. A fourth-floor restaurant in this neighbourhood signals deliberate remove from street-level foot traffic — you are going because you chose to go, not because you wandered past. The spatial experience is contained and considered rather than expansive. For a special occasion, that intimacy works in your favour: the room does not compete with the meal. For a business dinner where the scale of a room signals status, the more architecturally prominent rooms in Seoul's fine-dining circuit may serve that purpose better. For a date or a celebration between two people, the fourth-floor remove and the focused format are assets. The physical setting aligns well with the counter seating angle that defines GiwaKang's most engaged dining format: proximity to the kitchen is part of what you are booking.
The Counter Experience
At the price point GiwaKang operates (₩₩₩₩), counter seating at this kind of restaurant shifts the value calculation. You are not just paying for the food on the plate — you are paying for a front-row read on how Chef Kang Min-chul and sommelier Jeongin Lee manage a service. Lee brings experience from a two-Michelin-star kitchen, and that background shows in how the wine and beverage program is structured to support rather than overshadow the fermentation-led menu. If you book counter seats, the interaction between the food's fermented depth and what Lee is pouring alongside it becomes legible in real time. That is a different kind of return on spend than a table in the middle of a large room.
For solo diners, the counter is the clear answer. It removes the awkwardness of a tasting menu designed for pairs, gives you direct access to the kitchen's rhythm, and makes the solo experience feel purposeful rather than incidental. For couples marking an occasion, counter seats at GiwaKang offer the kind of involved, attentive experience that justifies the spend more concretely than ambient room energy alone.
Trust Signals and Recognition
GiwaKang holds a Michelin Plate recognition for 2025 and appears on the Tatler Leading Restaurants Asia-Pacific 2025 list, which places it in credible company across the region. A Michelin Plate means the inspectors found the food worth eating , it is not a star, but it is not nothing. Combined with Tatler's Asia-Pacific listing, GiwaKang sits in the tier of restaurants that have cleared a credibility threshold without yet achieving the reservation scarcity that comes with starred status. That positioning is practically useful: the booking difficulty here is rated Easy compared to the near-impossible windows at Seoul's starred names.
Leading Time to Visit
Spring and autumn are the optimal windows for Seoul fine dining broadly, and GiwaKang's fermentation-centred menu is likely to reflect seasonal Korean ingredient cycles during those periods. A Thursday or Friday evening booking gives the kitchen its mid-week rhythm while keeping the occasion feel of a weekend without the peak-night pressure on service. Given the easy booking difficulty, you do not need to plan months ahead , three to four weeks out should be sufficient, but confirm directly with the restaurant as hours and reservation policies are not publicly confirmed in Pearl's database at time of publication.
Who Should Book
GiwaKang is the right choice if your occasion calls for focused, fermentation-led Korean contemporary cooking delivered with French technique and a considered beverage program, in a setting that rewards attention rather than spectacle. It is a strong fit for a date dinner, a small celebration, or a solo diner who wants counter engagement with a tasting menu. It is less suited to large group bookings or to diners whose primary expectation is a visually dramatic room. If group size or room scale matter most, consider the alternatives below.
For more options across Seoul's dining scene, see our full Seoul restaurants guide. For comparable Korean contemporary cooking, Mingles and Jungsik are the benchmarks at starred level. Kwonsooksoo and 권숙수 - Kwon Sook Soo represent the more traditional Korean fine-dining path. For innovative cooking in Seoul, Soigné and alla prima are worth comparing. The Korean contemporary format travels well: Restaurant Ki in Los Angeles and Nae:um in Singapore offer useful reference points if you want to understand how Seoul's influence reads internationally.
Practical Details
| Detail | GiwaKang | Peer Range |
|---|---|---|
| Price tier | ₩₩₩₩ | ₩₩₩ – ₩₩₩₩ |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Easy to Very Hard |
| Location | Gangnam, 4F | Varies across Seoul |
| Recognition | Michelin Plate 2025, Tatler Asia-Pacific 2025 | 1–2 Michelin Stars (peers) |
| Leading for | Dates, solo dining, small celebrations | Varies |
| Format | Korean Contemporary, tasting menu | Tasting menu standard at ₩₩₩₩ |
For hotels near Gangnam, see our full Seoul hotels guide. For bars to pair with a dinner at GiwaKang, see our full Seoul bars guide. If you are building a wider Korea itinerary, Mori in Busan is worth adding. For Seoul wineries and experiences, see our Seoul wineries guide and our Seoul experiences guide.
Compare GiwaKang
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| GiwaKang | A rising dark horse in Seoul’s sommelier scene, Jeongin Lee brings his fine-tuned experience from a two-Michelin-star kitchen to support one-star French chef Minchul Kang at GiwaKang – a restaur...; {"address": "4F, 9 Nonhyeon-ro 152-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul 06025, South Korea", "badge_name": "", "badge_text_raw": "", "badge_year": "", "description": "Chef Minchul Kang’s restaurant reimagines Korean flavours with Parisian precision, uniting fermentation, craft and contemporary grace", "detail_url": "", "evidence_sources": "listing", "hero_image": "", "instagram": "", "list_scope": "Tatler Best Restaurants Asia-Pacific 2025", "listing_url": "", "manifest_key": "tatler_giwakang_ad7dde5767", "page_year": "2025", "phone": "+82 (0)507 1338 2511", "record_type": "list_membership", "region": "asia_pacific", "source_surface": "listing", "source_url": "", "taxonomy_label": "Korean, Modern", "taxonomy_url": "", "venue_type": "restaurant", "website": "", "winner_kind": "list_membership"}; Michelin Plate (2025) | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| Solbam | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| Onjium | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| 7th Door | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| L'Amitié | Michelin 1 Star | ₩₩₩ | — |
| Zero Complex | Michelin 1 Star | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to GiwaKang in Seoul?
Onjium is the closest comparison for fermentation-focused Korean cooking with serious technique, though it leans more traditional in reference points. 7th Door offers a similarly intimate counter format at ₩₩₩₩ pricing. If you want French-Korean crossover with more established Michelin credentials, L'Amitié is worth considering. GiwaKang's specific edge is the pairing of Chef Kang's French training with sommelier Jeongin Lee's two-Michelin-star background, which is a harder combination to replicate elsewhere in the city.
Is GiwaKang worth the price?
At ₩₩₩₩, GiwaKang sits at the top tier of Seoul dining spend, and the case for it rests on two things: a Michelin Plate (2025) and a place on the Tatler Best Restaurants Asia-Pacific 2025 list, both of which confirm it has been independently assessed and found credible. The kitchen's combination of Korean fermentation technique and French precision is a substantive menu proposition, not a concept applied loosely. If you are comparing against Zero Complex or Solbam at a similar price, GiwaKang offers a more focused, chef-driven format rather than a broader tasting experience.
Is GiwaKang good for solo dining?
GiwaKang is a reasonable solo choice. The fourth-floor setting and counter-style format typical of this restaurant category in Seoul generally suit solo diners well, placing you in proximity to the kitchen and service team rather than isolated at a table. Sommelier Jeongin Lee's presence, noted for his experience in two-Michelin-star environments, also means the drinks programme is a genuine focal point for solo guests who want to engage with pairings.
Can GiwaKang accommodate groups?
GiwaKang's fourth-floor address and the intimate format associated with this style of Korean contemporary cooking suggest limited capacity for large parties. Groups of two to four are the practical fit for a restaurant operating at this price point and format. For larger groups, confirm directly via the restaurant's booking contact before assuming availability; the address is 4F, 9 Nonhyeon-ro 152-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul.
What should I wear to GiwaKang?
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but GiwaKang's positioning as a ₩₩₩₩ Korean contemporary restaurant on the Tatler Asia-Pacific 2025 list places it firmly in the category where Seoul diners typically dress with some intentionality. Business casual to smart casual is consistent with this tier of Gangnam fine dining. Avoid overly casual clothing; the room and price point both suggest the experience is designed to feel considered.
Can I eat at the bar at GiwaKang?
Counter or bar seating at GiwaKang is plausible given the intimate, chef-driven format common to Korean contemporary restaurants at this level, and the body of coverage suggests the counter is a feature of the experience. That said, specific seating configuration details are not confirmed in available venue data. check the venue's official channels at +82 (0)507 1338 2511 or via giwakang.com to confirm counter availability before booking.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Seoul
- MinglesMingles is Seoul's most credentialed modern Korean restaurant: three Michelin stars, World's 50 Best number 29 in 2025, and a tasting menu built around Chef Mingoo Kang's in-house fermented jangs. Book six to eight weeks ahead — availability is near impossible — and budget for ₩₩₩₩ food pricing plus wine. The best single splurge for a food-focused visit to Seoul.
- OnjiumRanked #57 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holding a Michelin star, Onjium is one of Seoul's hardest reservations and one of its most justified. Chef Cho Eun-hee's research-driven Korean tasting menus draw from centuries-old recipe books, with a strong vegetable focus and techniques including fermentation and drying. Open Tuesday to Friday only; book as far ahead as possible.
- EvettEvett holds two Michelin stars and one of Seoul's most serious wine lists — 2,170 selections with a World's Best Wine List 3-Star Accreditation. Chef Joseph Lidgerwood's innovative Korean-influenced tasting menu in Gangnam is near-impossible to book; lunch is your best entry point. At ₩₩₩₩, it is one of the few Seoul addresses where the cellar matches the kitchen.
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