The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Korean language pronunciations.
Korean consonants
 |  
|  IPA
 | 
 Hangul
 | 
 RR trans.
 | 
 English equivalent
 | 
 Notes
 |  
| b | 
 ㅂ  | 
 b  | 
 ball  | 
 between voiced sounds
 |  
| ɕ | 
 ㅅ  | 
 s  | 
 she  | 
 before [i] or [j]
 |  
| d | 
 ㄷ  | 
 d  | 
 doll  | 
 between voiced sounds
 |  
| dʑ | 
 ㅈ  | 
 j  | 
 gee  | 
 between voiced sounds
 |  
| ɡ | 
 ㄱ  | 
 g  | 
 gall  | 
 between voiced sounds
 |  
| h | 
 ㅎ  | 
 h  | 
 hall  | 
 |  
| j | 
 ㅖ, ㅒ, ㅑ, ㅛ, ㅠ, ㅕ  | 
 y  | 
 y’all  | 
 Spelled by doubling the dot on the vowel.
 |  
| k | 
 ㄱ, ㅋ  | 
 g, k  | 
 —  | 
 ㅋ is [k] at the end of a syllable.
 |  
| k͈ | 
 ㄲ  | 
 kk  | 
 skin  | 
 tense [k]
 |  
| kʰ | 
 ㅋ, ㅎㄱ  | 
 k  | 
 call  | 
 |  
| l | 
 ㄹ, ㄴ  | 
 l  | 
 call  | 
 ㄹ is [l] at the end of a syllable. ㄹㄴ and ㄴㄹ may be [ll].
 |  
| m | 
 ㅁ, ㅂ  | 
 m  | 
 mall  | 
 ㅂ is [m] before [n] or [m].
 |  
| n | 
 ㄴ, ㄹ, ㄷ, ㅅ, ㅈ  | 
 n  | 
 not  | 
 ㄹ may be [n] at the start of a word. ㄷ, ㅅ, ㅈ are [n] before [n] or [m].
 |  
| ŋ | 
 ㅇ, ㄱ  | 
 ng  | 
 king  | 
 ㅇ is only [ŋ] at the end of a syllable. ㄱ is [ŋ] before [n], [m] or [ɾ]
 |  
| p | 
 ㅂ, ㅍ  | 
 b, p  | 
 —  | 
 ㅍ is [p] at the end of a syllable.
 |  
| p͈ | 
 ㅃ  | 
 pp  | 
 span  | 
 tense [p]
 |  
| pʰ | 
 ㅍ, ㅎㅂ  | 
 p  | 
 pall  | 
 |  
| ɾ | 
 ㄹ  | 
 r  | 
 —  | 
 A flap, like Scots r or American ladder, between vowels
 |  
| s | 
 ㅅ  | 
 s  | 
 —  | 
 [s] with almost no sibilance
 |  
| s͈ | 
 ㅆ  | 
 ss  | 
 Saul  | 
 tense [s]
 |  
| t | 
 ㄷ ㄷ, ㅌ, ㅅ, ㅈ, ㅊ  | 
 d t  | 
 —  | 
 All are [t] and RR t at the end of a syllable.
 |  
| t͈ | 
 ㄸ  | 
 tt  | 
 stall  | 
 tense [t]
 |  
| tʰ | 
 ㅌ, ㅎㄷ  | 
 t  | 
 tall  | 
 |  
| tɕ | 
 ㅈ  | 
 j  | 
 each  | 
 |  
| tɕ͈ | 
 ㅉ  | 
 jj  | 
 —  | 
 tense [tɕ]
 |  
| tɕʰ | 
 ㅊ, ㅎㅈ  | 
 ch  | 
 chin  | 
 |  
| w | 
 ㅜ, ㅗ  | 
 w  | 
 wall  | 
 spelled ㅜ before [ʌ], [e], [i]; ㅗ before [ɛ], [e],* [a]
 |  
|    | 
 *ㅚ is pronounced [we] by most, but as the rounded ö vowel [ø] by some older speakers.
 |   
 | 
Korean vowels
 |  
|  IPA
 | 
 Hangul
 | 
 RR trans.
 | 
 Notes
 |  
| a | 
ㅏ  | 
 a  | 
spa
 |  
| aː
 |  
| e | 
ㅔ  | 
e  | 
 Similar to the beginning of the diphthong in main
 |  
| eː
 |  
| ɛ | 
ㅐ  | 
ae  | 
met; similar to e for young speakers.
 |  
| ɛː
 |  
| i | 
ㅣ  | 
i  | 
mean
 |  
| iː
 |  
| o | 
ㅗ  | 
o  | 
Spanish o or French eau
 |  
| oː
 |  
| u | 
ㅜ  | 
u  | 
moon
 |  
| uː
 |  
| ʌ, ɔ | 
 ㅓ  | 
 eo  | 
 young (these are pronounced [ɔ], as in more, in Seoul and North Korea)
 |  
| əː, ɔː
 |  
| ɯ | 
ㅡ  | 
 eu  | 
 Separate sound in Standard Korean; similar to eo for many dialects.
 |  
| ɯː
 |   
Korean diphthongs
 |  
|  IPA
 | 
 Hangul
 | 
 RR trans.
 | 
 Notes
 |  
| ɯi | 
 ㅢ  | 
 ui  | 
 |  
ø, we | 
 ㅚ  | 
 oe  | 
 ㅚ is pronounced [we] by most, but as the rounded ö vowel [ø] by some older speakers.
 |   
Sounds not written in hangul
 |  
|  IPA | 
 Explanation
 |  
|  ː  | 
 Long vowel. Long [ʌ] is [əː]. Young speakers in Seoul do not use length consistently, if at all.
 |  
|  ́  | 
 High tone, on any one syllable or the first two; used outside Seoul.
 |   
 |