Kimchi loses ground at home to cheaper Chinese imports, British daily says

By Park Kyung-ah Posted : December 24, 2025, 16:27 Updated : December 24, 2025, 16:30
Participants make kimchi during the ‘Saemaul Women’s Association 2025 Sharing Kimchi’ event on Nov. 24 at the Geumosan Grand Parking Lot in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province.
Participants make kimchi at an event in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province on Nov. 24, 2025. Yonhap
SEOUL, December 24 (AJP) - South Korea's staple dish, kimchi, is losing ground on price, fueling a surge in imports of Chinese-made kimchi, the Guardian reported earlier this week.

The British daily on Monday said, "South Korea imports more kimchi than it exports, and the gap has widened as cheaper Chinese-made products take hold in the domestic market."

Figures from the Korea Customs Service show this trend, with kimchi imports totaling US$159.46 million during the first 10 months of this year, up 3.1 percent from a year earlier. Exports also increased, but imports grew faster, resulting in a trade deficit of $22.07 million, more than 10 percent higher than last year.

If this trend continues, total kimchi exports this year appear on track to set a new record for the second consecutive year.

Chinese-made kimchi currently sells for about 1,700 Korean won (about $1.15) per kilogram, less than half the roughly 3,600 won charged for South Korean kimchi. The Guardian pointed out that many South Korean kimchi makers often have a few staff, making it difficult for them to compete with Chinese factories in mass production.

One owner who has run a kimchi factory in Incheon for more than 30 years told the daily that many local restaurants "have abandoned his product in favor of lower-priced imports" from China.

To address this, the government plans to step up monitoring of violations of country-of-origin labeling for imported kimchi, while also implementing support measures to help domestic kimchi makers.
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