Korean bingsu (bing-su, λΉμ) has come a long way from the simple shaved ice and red bean paste bowls sold at street stalls in the 1970s. Today it is one of the most photographed desserts in East Asia β a towering mound of finely shaved flavoured ice, topped with fresh fruit, condensed milk, mochi rice cake cubes, and cereal, served in a bowl the size of a salad dish and meant to be shared. If your K-drama education includes any summer dating scenes with someone eating something that looks like a cloud made of ice, you have already seen bingsu. This guide covers every version: the traditional red bean original, the snow-flake revolution, the cafe-style seasonal variations, and where to find all of them in Seoul.
Types of Bingsu You Need to Try
Patbingsu β The Original (ν₯λΉμ)
Patbingsu (pat-bing-su, ν₯λΉμ) is where the story starts. Pat (ν₯) means red bean, and the classic version is straightforward: finely shaved ice over a base of sweetened pat (red bean paste or whole cooked beans), topped with rice cake cubes (tteok, λ‘), condensed milk, and sometimes a scoop of vanilla ice cream. The combination of cold ice, sweet beans, and chewy tteok is intentionally textural β every spoonful hits differently.
Patbingsu has existed in Korea since at least the Joseon Dynasty, when the royal court stored winter ice in stone chambers called seokbinggo (μλΉκ³ ) and distributed it to aristocrats during summer. The tradition of shaved ice with sweet toppings is therefore centuries older than most people assume.
Snow Flake Bingsu β The Revolution (λκ½λΉμ)
Nunkkot bingsu (nun-kkot bing-su, λκ½λΉμ) β literally "snow flower bingsu" β changed everything. Instead of shaving plain water ice, nunkkot uses frozen flavoured milk that is shaved into extremely fine, petal-like flakes. The texture is closer to fresh snow than to crushed ice: it melts on the tongue almost instantly, without the cold shock of traditional ice. This style was popularised by specialty cafes in the 2010s and is now the dominant form at upscale dessert establishments.
The base flavour of the milk (strawberry, matcha, black sesame, mango) carries through into every bite, making nunkkot bingsu both more complex and more consistent than patbingsu. The visual impact is also higher β the shaved flakes pile up dramatically above the bowl's rim.
Strawberry Bingsu (λΈκΈ°λΉμ)
Ttalgi bingsu (ttal-gi bing-su, λΈκΈ°λΉμ) is the seasonal pinnacle of Korean bingsu culture. From December through April, when premium Korean strawberries β the Seolhyang (μ€ν₯) and Kingsberry (νΉμ€λ² 리) varieties β are at peak sweetness, cafes and dessert shops stack them generously on top of milk-shaved ice. The strawberries are not a garnish: they are halved, quartered, and sometimes blended into the milk base itself. This version has a devoted following and sells out daily at popular spots during the season.
Matcha Bingsu (λ§μ°¨λΉμ)
Malcha bingsu (mal-cha bing-su, λ§μ°¨λΉμ) uses Japanese-style ceremonial matcha as both a flavouring in the ice base and a powder dusted over the top. It pairs with sweetened red bean, mochi, and condensed milk. The bitterness of the matcha counterbalances the sweetness in a way that the strawberry version does not β it is the choice for people who find standard bingsu too sweet.
Injeolmi Bingsu (μΈμ λ―ΈλΉμ)
Injeolmi bingsu (in-jeol-mi bing-su, μΈμ λ―ΈλΉμ) centres on injeolmi β roasted soybean powder-coated rice cake, one of Korea's oldest tteok varieties. The powder has a nutty, slightly earthy flavour that transforms the bingsu from a purely sweet experience into something more grounded. This is widely considered the most authentically Korean of the modern bingsu variations and has a devoted following among locals.
How to Eat Bingsu
Bingsu is almost always served in a large bowl designed for two. Eating it alone is possible but unusual β you will receive looks of mild concern from the staff. Most cafes provide two spoons by default. The standard approach is to mix from the bottom up on your first few bites, incorporating the condensed milk and red bean paste pooled at the base before the ice above absorbs them.
Eat quickly. Bingsu begins to collapse and pool as soon as it is served. The ideal window for the full snow-flake texture is the first five to eight minutes. If you are taking photos, keep them brief β the melt is faster than it looks.
In traditional patbingsu style, it is acceptable to pour any remaining condensed milk from the small jug provided over the top and mix the whole bowl together toward the end. This is not considered messy β it is the correct finishing move.
Where to Find Bingsu in Seoul
Samcheong-dong (μΌμ²λ) and Bukchon (λΆμ΄) are the most concentrated areas for traditional and upscale bingsu. The neighbourhood's mix of hanok (traditional Korean houses) converted into cafes creates a setting that suits the dessert perfectly β the aesthetic match between the surroundings and the food is not accidental. Samcheong Bingsu (μΌμ²λΉμ) in Jongno-gu is a long-running specialist in the area.
Myeongdong (λͺ λ) has the most tourist-accessible bingsu options, including Buk-hae Bingsu (λΆν΄λΉμ) in Jung-gu, which caters to walk-in crowds. The quality here is consistent if not extraordinary.
For the franchise option, Sulbing (μ€λΉ) β Korea's largest bingsu chain β operates branches throughout Seoul and is the easiest introduction to the format. Sulbing standardised the injeolmi bingsu as a menu staple and remains the reference point for most first-timers. Prices are lower than specialty cafes and the consistency is reliable.
To plan routes between bingsu spots across districts, the Korea transportation guide covers subway connections between Jongno, Jung-gu, and Mapo.
Bingsu Year-Round: The Cafe Solution
Bingsu is culturally associated with summer but has become a year-round menu item at most Korean cafes. The seasonal versions β strawberry in winter and spring, mango in summer, sweet potato and chestnut in autumn β mean there is always a relevant variation available. If you visit Seoul outside of summer and assume bingsu is unavailable, you will miss it. Look for cafes displaying λΉμ on their menu boards regardless of season.
Price Guide
- β©8,000β12,000 β Sulbing franchise and casual bingsu shops
- β©14,000β20,000 β Specialty cafe bingsu (matcha, injeolmi, standard strawberry)
- β©22,000β32,000 β Premium strawberry or mango bingsu at well-known Seoul cafes during peak season
- β©40,000β80,000 β Hotel dessert buffet bingsu (seasonal, reservation required)
- Most spots include two spoons; single servings are available at some locations for a small surcharge
Tips for First-Timers
- Go in the morning or late afternoon. Popular bingsu cafes in Samcheong-dong and Bukchon have queues at peak summer lunchtime. Arriving before 11 AM or after 3 PM avoids the worst of the wait.
- Check the ice type before ordering. Ask whether the restaurant uses nunkkot (snow flake, λκ½) or eoreumgalgi (plain shaved ice, μΌμκ°κΈ°) β the texture difference is significant and the price often reflects it.
- Share, always. A standard bingsu bowl is sized for two people. Ordering one each and leaving half behind is wasteful and expensive. The sharing model is built into the pricing.
- Strawberry season runs December to April. Korean strawberries peak in winter and early spring β the opposite of what most visitors expect. If strawberry bingsu is your goal, plan a visit before late April.
- Sulbing is the starting point, not the ceiling. The franchise is fine for a first experience but does not represent the quality ceiling. Treat it as calibration and then seek out independent specialty cafes.





