Fruit & Orchards
A fruit that arrived by mission ship became the pride of Daegu, the backbone of Gyeongbuk's orchards, and — as the winters warm — a crop on the move north.

The apple (사과) is the fruit Koreans reach for first — the everyday snack, the Chuseok gift box, the offering on the ancestral table. It is also one of the clearest windows into how Korean agriculture is changing: a crop with a precise arrival date, a heartland everyone can name, and a growing map that is quietly sliding up the peninsula as the climate warms.
This feature traces where Korea's apples come from, the varieties in the crate, the year in the orchard, and the market signal behind the price — with a live link to prices for every commodity on the market data page.
Korea did have apples before the modern one. A small, tart native apple called neunggeum (능금) — botanically Malus asiatica — was grown for centuries, and Daegu still calls itself the neunggeum city. But the large, sweet, storable apple in today's crate is the Western apple, and it arrived much more recently.
By the most widely told account, an American medical missionary, Dr. Woodbridge O. Johnson of the mission hospital that became Keimyung University's Dongsan Hospital, planted Western apple saplings at his Daegu mission around 1899. Daegu's warm, relatively dry basin suited the trees, and through the 20th century "Daegu apples" became a national byword. At its mid-century peak the Daegu–Gyeongbuk region supplied the great majority of the country's apples.
The varieties changed underneath that fame. For decades the Korean orchard meant Hongok (홍옥, Jonathan) and Gukgwang (국광, Ralls Janet) — names older Koreans still remember. From the 1970s and 80s the Japanese-bred Fuji swept them aside on the strength of its sweetness and, above all, its keeping quality, and it has ruled the orchard ever since.
Relative apple production by province. Warmer-shaded regions carry more of the crop. Gyeongsangbuk-do is the heartland; Chungbuk and the southern highlands follow; Gangwon is the fast-growing northern frontier. Daegu, the historic apple capital, now grows little inside the city itself.
Select a region to focus it.
| Region | Relative production (index) |
|---|---|
| Gyeonggi | 10 index |
| Gangwon | 26 index |
| Chungbuk | 55 index |
| Chungnam | 18 index |
| Gyeongbuk | 100 index |
| Jeonbuk | 30 index |
| Daegu | 6 index |
| Gyeongnam | 38 index |
| Jeonnam | 8 index |
Relative index (0–100) reflecting the well-documented production ranking, not exact tonnage. Replace with sourced KOSIS / Statistics Korea fruit-production figures and an as-of year before hard launch. No private farm coordinates are used; only province/municipality aggregation.
Korea's orchard is, by area, overwhelmingly one apple — but the calendar is filled out by a small cast of others, several of them bred at home by the Rural Development Administration (RDA).
From spring blossom to a fruit that can sit in storage until the next crop.
White-pink flowers open; a late frost here can wipe out a season, the reason growers watch the forecast closely.
Hand-thinning (적과) removes excess fruit so the rest size up; some orchards bag fruit for color and finish.
Tsugaru/Aori and other summer apples reach market first.
Hongro ripens into the Chuseok gift season, the year's biggest demand spike.
The late Fuji crop comes in and sets the tone for the year's supply.
Cold and controlled-atmosphere (CA) storage carries Fuji through winter and spring, when prices typically firm.
National-average retail price for Fuji (후지) apples, sold by KAMIS per 10 fruit (원/10개). When live KAMIS data is available it shows here automatically; otherwise this is an editorially pinned, clearly-labeled snapshot. Prices typically ease at the autumn harvest and firm through storage season and the Chuseok gift spike.
Two things shape the apple economy more than any headline. The first is Chuseok: the autumn harvest festival turns premium apples into gift boxes and ancestral-rite offerings, and demand — and price — jump for the best fruit. The second is storage. Fuji's keeping quality, extended by controlled-atmosphere (CA) rooms, is what lets Korea eat domestic apples in June from an October harvest; it also means the tightest prices often come in late spring, when stores run low.
Korea's fresh-apple supply is overwhelmingly domestic. Strict quarantine rules keep most foreign fresh apples out on pest-risk grounds, so the shelf is a Korean shelf — which is exactly why the market signal on the market data page tracks a genuinely national crop.
Beyond the commercial orchards there is a lively enthusiast scene. Home and weekend-plot (주말농장) growers plant apples on dwarfing rootstocks (M9, M26) to keep trees small, and the ornamental mini-apple 'Alps Otome' (알프스오토메) is a favorite as a pollinizer and balcony tree. Regional pride runs deep, too: Cheongsong (청송) and Yeongju (영주) apples are protected regional brands prized for firmness and sugar from wide day-night temperature swings, with Mungyeong, Chungju, Geochang and highland Jangsu each carrying a local reputation.
“We used to say you could taste Daegu in an apple. Now the young trees that ripen best are two provinces north.”
Apples need cold. Warm winters shorten the chill the trees require, spring frost hits early blossom, and summer heat brings sunburn and cracking. As Korea warms, the map is responding. Press reporting of Rural Development Administration (RDA) analysis describes Gangwon-do's apple area rising several-fold over the past decade, while apple land in the Daegu–Gyeongbuk heartland has fallen by roughly half over about thirty years.
By RDA climate projections cited in Korean media, the zone well-suited to apples keeps shrinking and shifting to higher latitudes and elevations — toward parts of Gangwon by the 2070s under high-emission scenarios. Treat these as scenario projections, not certainties.
That is why a fruit so tied to Daegu now grows in Yeongwol and Jeongseon, and why "where apples are grown" is a moving answer. The heartland is still Gyeongbuk — but the frontier is heading uphill and north.



Recent ingested articles mentioning apples, pulled live from the news corpus.