Highlights
- Thousands of global shoppers are now scheduling their South Korea trips around Olive Young retail events.
- The retailer’s latest figures reveal how K-beauty retail is becoming a fast-growing force behind repeat international travel.
- Olive Young will soon implement new plans to accommodate the tourism surge.
Global tourism to South Korea is currently going through a structural shift, as people make it into a hyper-targeted, calendar-driven retail pilgrimage. CJ Olive Young, South Korea’s leading health and beauty retailer, released new customer data on June 22, 2026.
The figures revealed that the number of foreign tourists who returned to the country for its March and June seasonal promotional windows has increased elevenfold since 2023, with sales doubling annually.
K-Beauty Tourism Fuels Repeat Travel
The findings were compiled with Global Tax Free, the nation’s largest tax refund operator. They depicted that K-beauty’s cultural capital is now boosting unique, cyclical travel behaviors amongst global consumers and industry stakeholders alike.
The joint analysis revealed these shoppers are flying back home only to re-book flights for the upcoming discount cycles. This is because domestic tax laws mandate international travelers to export their tax-free purchases within a strict statutory window. Last year, about 6,200 tourists from abroad visited South Korea three or more times, particularly during the retailer’s promotional periods.
Olive Young Expands Beyond Seoul
The economic impact of this retail tourism is also decentralizing quite rapidly. Although the lion’s share of international cosmetic tourists traveled to Seoul, overseas sales at Olive Young outlets outside the capital region surged 72% year-over-year during the June sales event. Notably, traffic to the Global Mall, the retailer’s international e-commerce platform, jumped 180% over the same period, signaling that physical tourism is acting as a channel for long-term digital retention.
The seasonal sales, which happen quarterly across March, June, September, and December, feature more than 1,500 domestic beauty brands at the moment. To sustain this drive from abroad, Olive Young announced plans to upgrade its infrastructure in tourist-heavy districts; this includes the installation of localized shopping-support devices.
Olive Young will also have enhanced product curation in the coming days. The objective, as per the company statement provided to The Korea Herald, is to “keep working to improve foreign tourists' satisfaction and to widen the points where K-beauty brands meet customers around the world.” With this, Olive Young is set to make their physical retail locations into permanent cross-border touchpoints, solidifying K-beauty’s popularity as a key anchor of the current South Korean tourism wave.

