Korean Used Car Auction Prices 2026: Wholesale Index & Dealer Market Data

Published: April 18, 2026 | Last Updated: April 18, 2026 | By SH GLOBAL

Korean used car auction prices averaged $9,240 at the hammer across Korea's four major auto auctions in 2025 — up 4.2% year-over-year, according to KIDI (Korea Insurance Development Institute) and KAMA auction bulletin data. Mid-size sedans cleared at $8,400, compact SUVs at $12,600, and mid-size SUVs at $18,900. For export dealers and international buyers, korean used car auction prices are the single most important number to track: everything in the FOB quote chain — exporter margin, landed cost, retail retail resale potential — starts here.

This 2026 index from SH GLOBAL breaks down Korean used car auction prices month-by-month, by segment, by model, and by auction house, then converts hammer prices into the FOB and landed-cost numbers that matter for Middle East, African, and Central Asian buyers. For step-by-step bidding mechanics, see our dedicated Korean car auction guide; for retail/FOB trends rather than wholesale, see our 2026 price trends analysis.

What Korean Used Car Auction Prices Really Measure

Korean used car auction prices — also called "hammer prices" — are the wholesale clearing prices paid by licensed dealers and exporters at Korea's four major wholesale auto auctions. They are the closest thing to a true wholesale index for the Korean used car market, because every listed vehicle is competitively bid in the open by registered buyers who are buying for resale.

Three things every export buyer should understand:

  • Hammer price is not the price you pay: On top of the hammer, the winning bidder pays auction buyer fees (3–5%), storage, transport, and — for exporters — de-registration and export documentation. The all-in exporter cost typically runs 5–8% above hammer.
  • Hammer price is not the FOB price: Exporters add margin (typically 12–18%) to cover operations and profit. A hammer price of $8,400 on a 2022 Hyundai Sonata usually becomes $9,700–$9,900 FOB Busan.
  • Hammer price is not the retail price: Korean domestic retail on Encar typically sits 18–28% above hammer because of dealer reconditioning, warranty, and consumer marketing overhead.

According to KAMA, roughly 1.12 million used vehicles passed through the four major Korean auction halls in 2025 — about 68% of the used-car volume eventually sold nationally. The rest moves through private sales, small-dealer networks, and trade-ins.

2025 Monthly Korean Used Car Auction Price Index

Korean used car auction prices are seasonal. Inventory surges in February and October (when Korean consumers trade in for new-model-year vehicles) push the index lower, while June–August typically tightens supply as domestic demand peaks.

Here is the 2025 monthly hammer index, base 100 = January 2025 (Source: KIDI monthly auction bulletin, aggregated across Glovis, Lotte, AJ Cell, and KB Cha-Cha-Cha):

Month (2025) Index YoY Change Avg Hammer (USD) Volume Note
January100.0+2.1%$9,020Post-holiday low volume
February98.2+1.8%$8,860Trade-in surge (new year model)
March99.8+2.6%$9,000Spring demand picks up
April101.9+3.4%$9,190Export demand strong
May103.2+4.1%$9,300Pre-summer inventory tightening
June104.8+5.0%$9,450Seasonal peak begins
July105.6+5.4%$9,520Mid-summer peak
August104.9+4.8%$9,460Still elevated
September103.1+4.0%$9,300Normalization
October100.4+3.1%$9,050Trade-in cycle 2 (new model)
November101.6+3.8%$9,160Export demand rebound
December102.9+4.4%$9,280Year-end restocking
2025 Avg102.2+4.2%$9,240

Buyer takeaway: The cheapest months to source from Korean auctions are February and October (trade-in surges). The most expensive are June–August. Exporters that quote flat pricing year-round are effectively smoothing these swings — but a seasonal quote can save 4–6% on peak-model purchases.

Korean Used Car Auction Prices by Segment (2025)

Aggregate Korean used car auction prices hide large differences between segments. SUVs have outperformed sedans for three years running, while commercial vehicles (Porter, Bongo) have become the fastest-appreciating niche due to African and Central Asian export demand.

Segment Hammer Range Avg Hammer YoY Change Typical Age
Compact Sedan$3,200–$9,800$5,800-1.4%5–9 yrs
Mid-Size Sedan$5,500–$16,000$8,400+2.8%4–8 yrs
Full-Size Sedan$9,000–$26,000$14,200+3.6%4–7 yrs
Compact SUV$7,800–$20,000$12,600+5.9%3–7 yrs
Mid-Size SUV$11,500–$32,000$18,900+6.2%3–7 yrs
Full-Size SUV$18,000–$44,000$26,400+6.8%2–6 yrs
Luxury Sedan (Genesis)$15,000–$48,000$27,100+4.1%3–6 yrs
Minivan (Carnival/Staria)$10,500–$28,000$16,200+5.1%3–7 yrs
Commercial (Porter/Bongo)$5,200–$14,500$8,700+8.4%3–9 yrs
Hybrid (all segments)$9,500–$34,000$17,300+7.6%3–6 yrs

Two patterns jump out. First, SUVs and commercial vehicles are outperforming the broader index by 2–4 percentage points, reflecting export demand from Africa (commercial) and the Middle East (SUVs). Second, compact sedans are softening slightly in KRW terms because Korean domestic consumers are migrating toward used EVs and hybrids — but that softness makes compact sedans a relative bargain for Central Asian buyers who still favor them.

For a deeper breakdown of pricing by model, see our best Korean cars for export rankings and model-specific guides for the Hyundai Sonata and Kia Sportage.

Korean used car auction prices — Hyundai vehicles sourced by SH GLOBAL from Korean wholesale auctions

Top 10 Most-Auctioned Korean Models & Hammer Prices

Not every Korean model trades at auction in meaningful volume. The top 10 account for roughly 62% of all auction volume — a concentration that matters because liquid models have tighter bid-ask spreads and more predictable pricing. Here are 2025 averages for the top 10 by volume (Source: KAIDA auction tally aggregated from Glovis + Lotte):

Three insights:

  • Hyundai Sonata dominates volume (142,800 units in 2025), which is why its hammer price is the most reliable benchmark for the whole Korean wholesale index.
  • Commercial Porter and Bongo appreciate fastest, up 8–9% YoY — African export demand is the main driver.
  • Grandeur is the sleeper: a 2022 Grandeur averages $14,200 hammer in Korea but retails at $27,000–$31,000 in Central Asian markets, giving exporters one of the widest arbitrage spreads of any mainstream model.

Major Korean Auction Houses Compared

There are four meaningful auction halls in Korea. Each has a different lot profile, grading strictness, and price level. Export buyers who only source from one are leaving 3–6% on the table.

Auction House Annual Volume Location Avg Hammer vs Index Strength
Hyundai Glovis~360,000Pyeongtaek, Busan+2–4%Near-new, fleet, Hyundai/Kia lease returns
Lotte Auto Auction~290,000Bundang, BusanIndexBalanced mix; large SUV inventory
AJ Cell Auction~250,000Seongnam-2–4%Older sedans, budget commercial vehicles
KB Cha-Cha-Cha~220,000Suwon, Incheon-1 to +1%Hybrid, EV, premium mid-size

How SH GLOBAL Buys Across Houses

SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. maintains active bidding access at all four major Korean auctions, with daily pricing scans. For most export orders, we cross-shop the same model across halls on bidding day. A Hyundai Tucson might list at Glovis on Monday, Lotte on Wednesday, and AJ on Friday — and the hammer-price spread across those three sessions commonly reaches 4–7% for the same specification and grade.

For how to work with a licensed bidder rather than trying to access auctions directly, see our Korean used car sourcing guide.

Auction Grade vs Korean Used Car Auction Prices

Korean auctions use a standardized inspection grade (1, 2, 3, 3.5, 4, 4.5, 5, R). The grade is determined by a licensed inspector and drives price more than mileage on most listings. Grade 4 and 4.5 vehicles are the sweet spot for most export markets.

Grade Condition Price vs Grade 3 Export Suitability
5Near-new, minor scratches+20–26%Premium export; GCC retail
4.5Excellent, light wear+14–18%Ideal export grade
4Very good, minor defects+8–12%Ideal export grade
3.5Average wear for age+3–6%Good export value
3Baseline — normal wearBaseline; fine for Africa
2Heavier wear, minor repair-8–12%Budget markets only
1Significant repair history-18–24%Restricted in many markets
RRepaired / chassis damage-30–40%Not recommended for export

For buyers: the 8–12% price premium for a grade 4 over grade 3 usually pays for itself at the destination, because retail buyers overseas pay more for clean, service-history-verifiable cars. The exception is deep-budget African fleet buyers, where grade 3 offers the best cost-per-workable-vehicle math.

From Auction Hammer Price to FOB and Landed Cost

Export buyers rarely pay the hammer price directly. Here is the real cost flow from Korean used car auction prices to the money landing in the exporter's ledger:

Worked Example: Hyundai Sonata 2022

For a 2022 Hyundai Sonata, grade 4, 45,000 km:

Stage USD Cumulative
Auction hammer$8,400$8,400
Buyer + auction fees (4%)$336$8,736
De-registration + export docs$180$8,916
Yard storage + transport to port$150$9,066
Exporter margin (≈9%)$756$9,822
FOB Busan quote to buyer$9,820
Sea freight to Mombasa (Ro-Ro)$820$10,640
Marine insurance$120$10,760
Kenya import duty + taxes (est.)$6,800$17,560
Landed cost Nairobi~$17,560

For detailed landed cost modeling per destination, see our Korean used car import cost guide. For negotiating the FOB quote itself, see our price negotiation guide.

Regional FOB Markups by Export Destination

Exporters don't quote a uniform FOB markup worldwide. They price by destination demand, competitive intensity, and expected retail margin. For identical vehicles, regional FOB markups over hammer typically run:

Destination Region Typical FOB Markup Why
Middle East (GCC retail)14–18%High retail spread, grade 4.5+ demand
Central Asia12–16%Rail logistics, price-sensitive retail
East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania)13–17%Duty-heavy markets, retail compression
West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana)14–18%Volume orders, Naira FX risk premium
Central & South Asia (fleet)10–14%Bulk buyers, grade 3 mix

For regional data and import rules, see our Africa export guide and country-specific import guides for Kenya and Dubai.

2026–2027 Korean Used Car Auction Price Forecast

Where are Korean used car auction prices heading? Our 2026–2027 forecast, based on KIDI, KAMA, and internal SH GLOBAL bidding data:

SH GLOBAL 2026–2027 Auction Price Forecast

  • Overall index: +1.8% to +3.0% in 2026, +2.5% to +4.0% in 2027
  • SUVs & hybrids: +4–7% in both years (export demand + domestic EV substitution keeps used ICE SUV supply tight)
  • Compact sedans: -1% to +1% (flat — domestic EV migration weighs on demand)
  • Commercial (Porter/Bongo): +6–9% (African + Central Asian demand remains the strongest structural pull)
  • Full-size luxury (Grandeur, Genesis): +3–5% (consistent Turkmenistan, GCC, and Kazakhstan demand)
  • KRW/USD impact: At 1,380–1,420, FOB export prices remain globally competitive even as KRW auction prices firm

The risk scenario: if the Korean government further tightens EV subsidies (boosting new-EV trade-ins of used ICE vehicles), auction supply could surge in late 2026 and soften hammer prices 2–4%. Conversely, if the US or EU imposes secondary restrictions on used-car re-export through Central Asia, hammer prices could spike 3–5% in H2 2026 from displaced EAEU demand. SH GLOBAL updates buyers on both scenarios in our monthly market note.

For the broader 2027 export outlook, see our 2027 export forecast, which pairs auction data with destination-market demand modeling.

How Export Buyers Use Korean Auction Pricing

Korean used car auction prices are not just information — they are a tool. Sophisticated export buyers use them in five concrete ways:

1. Benchmark Exporter Quotes

Before accepting an FOB quote, ask your exporter for the hammer-price reference (auction slip). For a Hyundai Sonata grade 4 at $8,400 hammer, any FOB quote above $9,950 is above-market. SH GLOBAL publishes the auction slip with every export invoice for this reason.

2. Time Purchases Seasonally

Buying in the February or October trade-in windows can save 3–5% vs the summer peak on identical vehicles. For a 40-unit fleet order, that is $140,000+ in savings on a $3.5M program.

3. Model Substitution

When the Tucson index is running hot (May–July typically), the Sportage often offers a 6–8% discount for nearly identical specification. Savvy fleet buyers substitute within segments based on the current hammer spread.

4. Grade Arbitrage

When grade 4 spreads widen to 14%+ over grade 3 (which happens in tight-supply months), buyers for less retail-sensitive markets (Africa fleet) can buy grade 3 stock and retain the full margin. When spreads compress to 6–8%, it's worth paying up to grade 4.

5. Forecast Destination Retail

Auction prices lead destination retail prices by 60–90 days for sea-routed markets. Tracking the 3-month trailing hammer index gives importers an early-warning signal on their own market pricing.

Key principle: The best export buyers treat Korean used car auction prices the way equity traders treat wholesale price indices — as a daily signal, not just an annual data point. SH GLOBAL shares a weekly hammer index email with active buyers who request it.

For a broader market context, read our 2026 market trends analysis and our export statistics 2026. For brand-specific inventory, explore Hyundai inventory or browse Kia vehicles. For the full buying process from quote to delivery, start with our step-by-step buying process.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average Korean used car auction price in 2026?

The average Korean used car auction price across all segments reached $9,240 at the hammer in 2025, up 4.2% year-over-year. Mid-size sedans averaged $8,400, compact SUVs $12,600, mid-size SUVs $18,900, and full-size SUVs $26,400. Q1 2026 auction data from KIDI shows the index holding roughly flat at +0.8% YoY, with stronger rises in the hybrid and SUV segments (Source: KAMA, KIDI 2026 Q1 bulletin).

Which Korean auction house has the lowest prices?

AJ Cell Auction typically posts the lowest hammer prices on mid-size sedans (about 2–4% below the national average), while Glovis leads in premium and near-new inventory at slightly higher prices. Lotte and KB Cha-Cha-Cha sit in the middle. However, lot quality varies: Glovis lots average higher grades (3.5–4.5) with more complete service history, so the "cheapest" hall is not always the best value for export buyers.

What is the difference between Korean auction price and retail price?

The Korean auction hammer price is the wholesale price paid by licensed dealers or exporters. Retail prices on platforms like Encar typically sit 18–28% higher to cover dealer margin, reconditioning, warranty, and retail overhead. Export FOB prices are usually 12–18% above the hammer — cheaper than domestic retail because exporters skip reconditioning and retail channels and ship directly from the port.

What is a typical dealer markup on Korean auction cars?

Export dealers mark Korean auction cars up 12–18% over the hammer price, covering auction buyer fees (3–5%), storage, de-registration, B/L processing, and margin. Domestic Korean retail dealers mark the same cars up 18–28% to cover reconditioning and retail operations. For a Hyundai Sonata hammer at $8,400, typical export FOB lands around $9,700–$9,900.

Can foreigners bid at Korean car auctions directly?

Foreigners cannot bid directly at most Korean wholesale auctions (Glovis, Lotte, AJ, KB). Auction membership requires a Korean business registration and dealer license. International buyers access auction inventory through licensed Korean exporters like SH GLOBAL, who bid on the buyer's behalf, apply their fee structure, and arrange export. See our Korean car auction guide for the full process.

How do auction grades affect Korean used car auction prices?

Grades materially move Korean used car auction prices. A grade 4.5 Hyundai Tucson commands approximately 8–12% more than the same model at grade 3, and 18–22% more than a grade 2. Grade 1 and R (repaired) vehicles are export-restricted in many destination countries. Most SH GLOBAL export stock targets grade 3.5–4.5 for the best price-to-condition balance.

Are Korean used car auction prices rising or falling in 2026?

Overall Korean used car auction prices are rising modestly — the Q1 2026 index is +0.8% YoY. SUVs and hybrids are up 3–6% YoY on strong export demand, while older compact sedans have softened 1–2% as domestic buyers shift to EVs. The Won's weakness against the USD (around 1,400 KRW/USD) keeps FOB prices internationally competitive even as KRW auction prices firm up.

How does SH GLOBAL use Korean used car auction pricing for export buyers?

SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. tracks daily hammer prices across Glovis, Lotte, AJ Cell, and KB Cha-Cha-Cha, then quotes buyers FOB prices benchmarked to current auction indices plus a transparent 12–15% margin. Buyers receive an auction slip reference so they can verify the hammer price paid on their specific vehicle. Request a quote to see live auction-benchmarked pricing.

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