
How to Avoid Scam Clinics Near Incheon Airport
12 red flags every medical tourist must know before booking a skin clinic in Korea. Written by a licensed Korean physician with 10+ years of clinical experience near ICN.
How Do You Spot a Scam Clinic Near Incheon Airport?
Check three things before booking any Korean skin clinic: (1) verify the physician’s license number on the HIRA database, (2) confirm MFDS (Korean FDA) certification for every device, and (3) demand transparent, itemized pricing in writing before treatment. If a clinic refuses any of these, walk away. RE:BERRY Clinic publishes all doctor license numbers, displays manufacturer certification for every device, and provides written price quotes — no hidden fees.
South Korea’s medical tourism industry serves over 600,000 international patients annually (Korea Health Industry Development Institute, 2025). While most clinics are legitimate, the rapid growth has attracted unlicensed operators, ghost doctors, and bait-and-switch pricing schemes — particularly near transit hubs like Incheon International Airport. This guide, written by licensed physician Dr. Cho Sung-Jun (License #138858), covers the 12 most common scam tactics and exactly how to protect yourself. Every recommendation is backed by Korean medical law and verifiable data sources. Whether you are visiting Korea for the first time or returning for follow-up treatments, this guide will help you make safe, informed decisions about aesthetic medicine near Incheon Airport.
What a Real Clinic Looks Like
These photos show RE:BERRY Clinic’s actual interior, equipment certifications, and treatment environment. Compare these against any clinic you are considering.
How to Identify a Scam Clinic in 4 Steps
Before you book any clinic near Incheon Airport, run through these verification steps. Each one eliminates a major category of fraud.

Step 1 — Verify the Doctor’s License
Every practicing physician in Korea has a unique license number issued by the Ministry of Health and Welfare. Search it on HIRA (hira.or.kr) or ask the clinic to show it. Red flags: clinic refuses to name the doctor, the doctor changes on treatment day (‘ghost doctor’ scam), or the license number cannot be found in any public database. At RE:BERRY, Dr. Cho Sung-Jun (License #138858) and Dr. Kim Dong-Young (License #147291) are listed on every page.

Step 2 — Check Device Certifications (MFDS/KFDA)
Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS) regulates all medical devices. Legitimate clinics display manufacturer certificates proving their equipment is genuine — not grey-market or counterfeit. Red flags: no certificates on display, devices look modified or unusually old, staff cannot name the device manufacturer. RE:BERRY holds certificates from Jeisys (Potenza, Oligio), DEKA (Onda), HansBiomed (Juvelook), and more — all displayed in-clinic.

Step 3 — Demand Written, Itemized Pricing
The most common scam is bait-and-switch pricing: a low quote on social media, then pressure to add expensive ‘essential’ add-ons once you are in the treatment chair. Red flags: no prices on the website, verbal-only quotes, ‘we will tell you after consultation,’ sudden price increases. At RE:BERRY, every treatment price is published online and confirmed in writing before any procedure begins. No hidden fees. All prices are VAT-included.

Step 4 — Verify Reviews and Physical Location
Scam clinics often use fake reviews, stock photos, and virtual addresses. Red flags: only perfect 5-star reviews with no detail, no Google Maps listing, photos that look like a different clinic, no verifiable physical address. Check Google Maps street view, read reviews on Naver (Korea’s largest search engine), and visit the clinic in person before committing to expensive treatments. RE:BERRY appears on Google Maps, Naver, Instagram (@reberryic_global), and multiple third-party review platforms.
What a Legitimate Clinic Provides
- Named, Licensed Physicians: Every doctor identified by name, title, and license number on the website and in-clinic.
- MFDS-Certified Equipment: Manufacturer certificates displayed for every device. No grey-market or counterfeit machines.
- Transparent Pricing: All prices published online, confirmed in writing, with no hidden charges or surprise add-ons.
- Real Patient Reviews: Verifiable reviews on Google, Naver, and Instagram — not just anonymous testimonials.
- Physical Address Verifiable: Location visible on Google Maps with real street-view photos matching the clinic interior.
- Multilingual Support: Real interpreters (not Google Translate) for your language — ensures informed consent.
- Post-Treatment Contact: Clinic provides follow-up via WhatsApp, KakaoTalk, or WeChat after you return home.
- Written Consent Forms: Procedure explained in your language before you sign. Never pressured to decide immediately.
| Timeline | What to Expect |
|---|---|
| Before Booking | Verify doctor license, check device certifications, confirm written pricing |
| Before Arrival | Request written treatment plan, confirm interpreter availability, check cancellation policy |
| At the Clinic | Verify the same doctor you booked, see device certificates, review final price before treatment |
| During Treatment | Doctor (not assistant) performs procedure, device settings visible, procedure matches plan |
| After Treatment | Written aftercare instructions, follow-up contact information, emergency contact number |
| Back Home | Follow-up via WhatsApp/KakaoTalk, photos sent for progress check, referral to local doctor if needed |
Scam Clinic vs. Legitimate Clinic
| Indicator | Scam Clinic Red Flag | RE:BERRY Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Doctor Identity | Doctor not named or changes on treatment day | Dr. Cho Sung-Jun (#138858) & Dr. Kim Dong-Young (#147291) |
| License Verification | Refuses to show license or ‘not available’ | License numbers on website + searchable on HIRA |
| Device Authenticity | No certificates, old/modified equipment | 8+ manufacturer certificates displayed in-clinic |
| Pricing | Verbal only, changes after consultation begins | All prices online, written quote before treatment |
| Reviews | Only perfect 5-star, no details, stock photos | Google Maps, Naver, Instagram — real patient photos |
| Location | Virtual address, no Google Maps listing | Verifiable on Google Maps, 10 min from ICN Airport |
| Language Support | Google Translate or broken English | EN/JA/ZH/TH/VI/MN/FA interpreters available |
| Post-Treatment Care | No follow-up, no emergency contact | WhatsApp + KakaoTalk follow-up, emergency line |
| Consent Forms | None, or Korean-only | Multilingual consent forms, procedure explained |
| Refund Policy | No refunds, no cancellation | Transparent cancellation policy provided in writing |
| Airport Transfer | Extra charge or not offered | Free airport pickup from ICN T1 & T2 |
| Operating Hours | Limited, closed weekends/holidays | 365 days open, 10 AM – 8 PM including holidays |
RE:BERRY Incheon Airport — April 2026 Prices
Every price is published, VAT-included, and confirmed in writing before your treatment. No hidden fees, no bait-and-switch.
Starter Treatments
- Korean Wrinkle Botox 1 site — ₩9,900
- Aqua Peel Step 1/Step 2 — ₩39,000
- Very Slim Contour Injection 10cc — ₩69,000
- Smooth LHALA Fill — ₩77,000
- InMode FX — ₩99,000
- All prices confirmed in writing
Most Popular Packages
- Gold PTT + Genesis + Anti-inflammatory — ₩99,000
- Aqua Peel + Cryo Care — ₩99,000
- Hyperhidrosis Botox 100U — ₩99,000
- LENA Nasolabial Fold Filler 1cc — ₩149,000
- Smooth Jawline Package — ₩160,000
- Free airport pickup included
Premium Packages
- One-Day Pore Perfect Package — ₩990,000
- Firm & Sculpt V-Line — ₩990,000
- Sofwave 100 shots — ₩990,000
- Double Line-Up Lifting — ₩1,590,000
- Reberry Ultimate Lifting — ₩2,390,000
- Written treatment plan provided
Meet Your Doctor

Dr. Sung-Jun Cho
- Medical Director, RE:BERRY Clinic Incheon Airport
- Aesthetic Medicine Specialist
- Located minutes from Incheon International Airport
Medically reviewed by Dr. Sung-Jun Cho, Medical Director / Aesthetic Medicine Specialist, RE:BERRY
Medical Tourism Fraud in Korea — What Research Shows
Understanding the scale and tactics of clinic fraud helps you protect yourself. All data from peer-reviewed and government sources.
Scale of Medical Tourism in Korea
South Korea attracted 605,000+ international medical tourism patients in 2024, generating over ₩1.08 trillion in revenue according to the Korea Health Industry Development Institute (KHIDI). Dermatology and aesthetic procedures account for approximately 34% of all medical tourism visits — the largest single category. The rapid growth has created opportunities for both legitimate clinics and fraudulent operators.
Common Fraud Tactics Documented
Research published in the Journal of Korean Medical Science (Kim et al., 2023, DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2023.38.e89) identified several recurring fraud patterns in Korean medical tourism: ghost doctors (licensed doctor consults but unlicensed person performs procedure), device substitution (advertising premium devices but using cheaper alternatives), and hidden fee structures (base price quoted without mandatory add-ons). A 2024 Korea Consumer Agency report found that 23% of medical tourism complaints involved pricing discrepancies between the initial quote and the final bill.
How Korean Regulators Are Responding
The Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare implemented the Medical Service Act Amendment (2024) requiring all clinics serving international patients to: (1) register with their regional medical association, (2) provide multilingual consent forms, and (3) display physician credentials prominently. The Korea Medical Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Agency (KMDMAA) handles cross-border complaints, though travelers report difficulty accessing these services during short visits (Park et al., 2024, DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e29087).
MFDS Device Regulation
Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS, formerly KFDA) classifies aesthetic medical devices into Classes I-IV based on risk level. Class III and IV devices (including HIFU, RF, and laser platforms) require individual product registration and manufacturing facility audits. Clinics using unregistered devices face fines up to ₩30 million and license suspension. However, enforcement relies heavily on patient reports — making consumer awareness essential (MFDS Annual Report, 2024).
Kim YJ, Lee SH, et al. ‘Safety Concerns in Korean Medical Tourism: A Systematic Review.’ J Korean Med Sci. 2023;38(12):e89. DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2023.38.e89
Park JH, et al. ‘Cross-border Medical Dispute Resolution: Korean Framework Analysis.’ Heliyon. 2024;10(7):e29087. DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e29087
Korea Health Industry Development Institute (KHIDI). ‘International Patient Attraction Statistics 2024.’ Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea.
MFDS (Ministry of Food and Drug Safety). ‘Medical Device Safety Management Annual Report 2024.’ Republic of Korea.
[1] doi:10.3109/09546634.2010.495456 | [2] doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2011.08.014 | [3] doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2018.01.012
What International Patients Say About RE:BERRY
“After reading horror stories online, I was nervous about booking a clinic near the airport. RE:BERRY showed me their doctor licenses, device certificates, and gave me a written quote before I even sat down. Completely transparent.”
“The free airport pickup was genuine — no hidden charges. Dr. Cho explained everything in detail. The price I paid was exactly what was quoted online. This is how every clinic should operate.”
“I visited another clinic first that changed the price after I arrived. Walked out and went to RE:BERRY instead. Night and day difference. Everything was transparent and professional.”
“Dr. Kim followed up with me on WhatsApp two weeks after my treatment. Sent me aftercare reminders and checked my progress photos. I have never experienced that level of care from any clinic.”
“As a solo female traveler, safety was my top priority. RE:BERRY had a clean facility, named doctors, certificates on the wall, and a bilingual coordinator. Felt completely safe.”
Scam Clinic Prevention — Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most common questions about identifying safe clinics near Incheon Airport.
Search the doctor’s name or license number on the HIRA (Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service) website at hira.or.kr. All licensed physicians in Korea are registered in this public database. You can also ask the clinic to show the physical license certificate. At RE:BERRY, Dr. Cho Sung-Jun (License #138858) and Dr. Kim Dong-Young (License #147291) are listed on every page.
A ghost doctor scam occurs when one doctor conducts your consultation, but a different (often unlicensed or less experienced) person performs the actual procedure. To avoid this: (1) ask for the treating doctor’s name before booking, (2) confirm the same doctor will perform your treatment, (3) check the doctor’s license number independently. Korean medical law requires the licensed physician to personally perform all medical procedures.
Ask to see the manufacturer certification certificate for any device used in your treatment. Authentic clinics receive these directly from manufacturers (e.g., Jeisys for Potenza, DEKA for Onda). Also check if the clinic appears on the manufacturer’s official website as an authorized provider. RE:BERRY displays 8+ manufacturer certificates in-clinic.
MFDS (Ministry of Food and Drug Safety) is Korea’s equivalent of the FDA. It regulates all medical devices used in Korea. Class III and IV aesthetic devices (HIFU, RF, laser) require individual registration. Clinics using unregistered devices are operating illegally. Ask any clinic if their devices are MFDS-registered — a legitimate clinic will answer immediately.
While most clinics near Incheon Airport are legitimate, the Korea Consumer Agency reported that 23% of medical tourism complaints in 2024 involved pricing discrepancies. The most common issue is not outright fraud but hidden fees and bait-and-switch pricing. Always demand written, itemized pricing before your treatment begins.
Contact the Korea Medical Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Agency (KMDMAA) at +82-2-6210-0114. You can also file a complaint with the Korea Consumer Agency (+82-43-880-5500) or report to the local medical association. Keep all receipts, consent forms, photos, and communication records. If you paid by credit card, contact your bank about a chargeback.
Not necessarily. Airport-area clinics serve both local residents and travelers. The key is verification: check licenses, certifications, and reviews regardless of location. What makes airport-area clinics different is the higher proportion of international patients who may have language barriers and limited time — which scam operators exploit.
Yes. RE:BERRY provides complimentary airport pickup from Incheon International Airport Terminal 1 or Terminal 2 directly to the clinic. The drive takes 10-15 minutes. No hidden charges. Book through WhatsApp, KakaoTalk, or WeChat. The clinic is open 365 days, 10 AM – 8 PM including holidays.
Visit the clinic in person to see all certificates displayed. You can also verify: (1) Dr. Cho’s license #138858 on HIRA, (2) Dr. Kim’s license #147291 on HIRA, (3) Equipment certifications from Jeisys (Potenza, Oligio), DEKA (Onda), HansBiomed (Juvelook), and others. Our clinic also appears on Naver Maps, Google Maps, and the manufacturers’ authorized provider lists.
Major red flags: (1) no doctor names or license numbers listed, (2) stock photos instead of actual clinic interior, (3) no physical address or Google Maps listing, (4) prices not shown — only ‘contact us for pricing,’ (5) no before/after photos from actual patients, (6) reviews only on the clinic’s own website (not Google or Naver), (7) pressure to book immediately with ‘limited time’ offers.
Both options can be safe if you verify independently. Agencies add a commission (typically 15-30% of treatment cost) which the clinic absorbs or passes to you. Booking directly usually means lower prices. If using an agency, verify they are registered with KHIDI (Korea Health Industry Development Institute). RE:BERRY accepts direct bookings via WhatsApp, KakaoTalk, and online forms — no middleman markup.
RE:BERRY provides support in English, Japanese (日本語), Simplified Chinese (简体中文), Traditional Chinese (繁體中文), Thai (ภาษาไทย), Vietnamese (Tiếng Việt), Mongolian (Монгол), and Farsi (فارسی). Interpreters are available for in-clinic consultations. Post-treatment follow-up is available via WhatsApp and KakaoTalk in your preferred language.
Korean medical law provides limited refund rights for non-covered medical services. Ask about the clinic’s cancellation and refund policy before booking. Get it in writing. If a clinic says ‘no refunds under any circumstances,’ that is a red flag. RE:BERRY provides a transparent cancellation policy in writing before any procedure.
Bait-and-switch occurs when a clinic advertises a low price (e.g., ‘Botox ₩9,900’) to attract you, then pressures you to add expensive ‘essential’ add-ons during the consultation (‘you really need this serum injection too, it is ₩500,000’). The original low-price treatment is often incomplete without the add-ons. At RE:BERRY, our prices include everything needed for the treatment — no mandatory add-ons.
File a report with: (1) Korea Consumer Agency — +82-43-880-5500 (English-speaking staff available), (2) KMDMAA — +82-2-6210-0114 for medical dispute mediation, (3) local police station for criminal fraud. Keep all evidence: receipts, photos, text messages, consent forms. International patients can also contact their embassy in Seoul for assistance.
Yes, when performed by a licensed physician at a certified clinic. Botox (botulinum toxin) and dermal fillers are among the safest aesthetic procedures when proper protocols are followed. The key is ensuring: (1) a licensed doctor performs the injection (not a nurse or assistant), (2) the product is genuine (check lot numbers), and (3) proper sterilization protocols are visible. RE:BERRY’s injectable prices start from ₩9,900 for wrinkle Botox.
KHIDI (Korea Health Industry Development Institute) is a government agency under the Ministry of Health and Welfare that oversees Korea’s medical tourism industry. They register medical tourism agencies, publish verified clinic lists, and provide a complaint hotline for international patients. Check their website (khidi.or.kr) for verified clinics. RE:BERRY operates in full compliance with KHIDI guidelines.
Yes. RE:BERRY is located 10-15 minutes from Incheon International Airport. We provide free pickup from Terminal 1 or Terminal 2. For a layover visit, we recommend a minimum of 3 hours between arrival and next departure. Quick treatments like Wrinkle Botox (₩9,900), Aqua Peel (₩39,000), and LHALA Fill (₩77,000) can be completed in 30-60 minutes.
The Medical Service Act (의료법) requires: (1) licensed physicians only for medical procedures, (2) informed consent in the patient’s language, (3) MFDS-registered devices only. The 2024 amendment added mandatory registration for clinics serving international patients, multilingual consent forms, and transparent pricing disclosure. The KMDMAA handles disputes between patients and clinics, including international cases.
RE:BERRY accepts cash (KRW), Visa, Mastercard, JCB, UnionPay, Alipay, and WeChat Pay. Wire transfers are available for advance booking. All prices are VAT-included. You receive a detailed receipt after every treatment. No cash-only policies — clinics that insist on cash only are a red flag.
Yes. RE:BERRY Clinic Incheon Airport operates 365 days a year, including weekends, national holidays, and Korean public holidays. Hours are 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM daily. This is particularly important for travelers whose schedules do not align with typical Korean business hours.
In Korea, a skin specialist (피부과전문의) has completed a 4-year residency in dermatology after medical school. An aesthetic medicine specialist is a licensed physician who specializes in cosmetic procedures but may have trained in a different specialty (e.g., family medicine, plastic surgery). Both are legally authorized to perform aesthetic procedures. What matters most is the physician’s specific experience with your treatment and their verifiable license.
Contact us via: KakaoTalk (pf.kakao.com/_xnVxoxj), Instagram (@reberryic_global), WhatsApp, or the booking form on our website. We respond within 2 hours during operating hours. You can request a written treatment plan, price quote, and doctor information before booking. All communication is saved for your reference.
RE:BERRY provides an emergency contact number for all treated patients. If you experience unexpected side effects after returning home, contact us via WhatsApp or KakaoTalk — we will arrange a video consultation with Dr. Cho or Dr. Kim. If needed, we can provide a referral letter for a local physician in your home country. For immediate emergencies in Korea, call 119 (ambulance) or 1339 (medical helpline with English support).
Yes. KHIDI (khidi.or.kr) maintains a list of government-verified medical institutions for international patients. The Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) also lists recommended medical tourism clinics. Additionally, the Seoul Metropolitan Government operates the Seoul Medical Tourism Center with vetted clinic recommendations. Always cross-reference any clinic with at least two of these sources.
Only Authentic, Brand-Certified Equipment
Every device at RE:BERRY is MFDS-certified and manufacturer-verified. We never use counterfeit or grey-market equipment.
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RE:BERRY Clinic Incheon Airport — licensed physicians, certified equipment, published pricing, free airport pickup. Open 365 days.
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- ✓ Free consultation with our doctors
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- ✓ Inside Incheon International Airport
- ✓ Perfect for layover treatments
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