Area × Category Comparison

Korean Medicine Clinics in Mapo-gu — Info Comparison (4)

마포구 한의원 — 정보 비교

Korean medicine clinics in Mapo-gu, Seoul. Hours, location, external links — facts only, no ranking.

Data Updated: 2026-05-07 (measurement criteria / update date / source are shown with each item)

Selection Criteria for This List

Auto-matched from HIRA (Health Insurance Review & Assessment) public data (data.go.kr 15001698). No selection by advertising fees, commissions, or listing fees. No quality ranking between clinics.

NameLocationWeekday EveningSaturdayPhoneExternal Links
서울, 마포구서울특별시 마포구 양화로 105, 2층 (서교동)Closed02-332-7075
서울, 마포구서울특별시 마포구 만리재로 15, 208호 (공덕동, 제일빌딩)Closed02-703-9754
서울, 마포구서울특별시 마포구 월드컵로 112, 2층 (성산동, 효성빌딩)Closed338-1075
서울, 마포구서울특별시 마포구 마포대로 68, 302, 303호 (도화동, 마포아크로타워)Closed02-717-8275

Practice Information

Korean medicine clinics are primary medical institutions providing traditional Korean medicine. Licensed Korean medicine doctors practice acupuncture, herbal medicine, chuna manipulation, and physical therapy. Acupuncture, cupping, moxibustion, and chuna are covered by National Health Insurance (patient cost typically 1,500–3,000 KRW per session); some herbal prescriptions also qualify.

Insurance Coverage

Insurance-covered items — acupuncture, cupping, moxibustion, chuna therapy (posture correction / disc), Korean medicine physical therapy, and herbal decoction pilot programs (lower back pain, facial paralysis, menstrual pain, allergic rhinitis, functional dyspepsia).

Non-covered items — general herbal prescriptions, pharmacopuncture, tonic herbal medicine, cosmetic procedures. Non-covered prices vary by clinic and can be verified through HIRA non-covered price database (15001700).

Korean Medicine Specialties

Korean medicine clinics are subdivided into 8 specialties — Internal Korean Medicine, Korean Gynecology, Korean Pediatrics, Korean Otorhinolaryngology, Korean Neuropsychiatry, Acupuncture & Moxibustion, Korean Rehabilitation Medicine, Sasang Constitutional Medicine. Board-certified specialists practice in their respective fields.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. What should I check first when comparing Korean medicine clinics?
(1) Operating hours — Saturday/evening availability; (2) Location — accessibility, parking; (3) Whether the clinic has a board-certified Korean medicine specialist among 8 sub-specialties; (4) Herbal prescription prices — non-covered prices vary; HIRA's price disclosure system enables clinic-by-clinic comparison; (5) National Health Insurance coverage — acupuncture, cupping, moxibustion, chuna therapy, and select herbal pilot programs are covered. Comparing these factual points and confirming directly with the clinic is the typical workflow.
Q. How does a clinic with a board-certified Korean medicine specialist differ from a general Korean medicine clinic?
Board-certified Korean medicine specialists complete additional training in 8 government-designated sub-specialties (Internal, Gynecology, Pediatrics, Otorhinolaryngology, Neuropsychiatry, Acupuncture & Moxibustion, Rehabilitation, Sasang Constitutional Medicine). For chronic or specialty-specific care, this is one factor to consider. All licensed Korean medicine clinics may legally provide acupuncture and herbal prescriptions. Specialist status is a relevant criterion but does not by itself indicate quality ranking.
Q. Are acupuncture, chuna therapy, and herbal medicine covered by the National Health Insurance?
Covered — acupuncture (typical patient cost 1,500–3,000 KRW per session), cupping, moxibustion, chuna therapy (posture correction, disc), Korean medicine physical therapy, and herbal decoction pilot programs (lower back pain, facial paralysis, menstrual pain, allergic rhinitis, functional dyspepsia). Non-covered — general herbal prescriptions, pharmacopuncture, tonic herbal medicine, cosmetic procedures. Non-covered prices can be compared via HIRA disclosure (15001700).
Q. Why do herbal medicine prices vary between Korean medicine clinics?
Differences arise from herbal raw material grade and origin, prescription composition, preparation method (decoction vs pills/powder), and clinic operating costs. Non-covered herbal prescriptions are not subject to government price control. The pilot insurance program for select conditions applies standardized pricing.
Q. How do I check Korean medicine clinic hours and closures?
Refer to the 'Hours' column or each clinic's detail page. Korean medicine clinics often have longer lunch breaks or Saturday-morning-only operations. Hours can change; we recommend cross-checking via Kakao Map or Naver Place, or contacting the clinic directly before visiting.

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