20 Korean Netflix Shows Fans Keep Revisiting

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By Oliver Drayton

Korean dramas have taken the world by storm, and Netflix has made it easier than ever to binge-watch the best ones. Whether you love heart-fluttering romances, edge-of-your-seat thrillers, or emotional slice-of-life stories, K-dramas have something for everyone.

Fans around the globe keep coming back to these shows again and again, proving that great storytelling never gets old. Here are 20 Korean Netflix shows that people simply cannot stop rewatching.

1. Crash Landing on You

Crash Landing on You
© The Guardian

Few shows have captured hearts quite like this one. A wealthy South Korean heiress accidentally lands in North Korea during a paragliding accident and falls for a disciplined army officer sworn to protect her secret.

The forbidden romance, packed with humor and heartbreak, made this series a worldwide sensation.

Fans say the slow-burn love story feels incredibly real. Every rewatch uncovers new emotional details that make the ending hit even harder than the first time.

2. Business Proposal

Business Proposal
© The Indian Express

What happens when your blind date turns out to be your boss? That is exactly the hilariously awkward situation at the center of this rom-com.

A researcher fills in for her friend on a date, only to meet the CEO of her own company, leading to a contract relationship neither expected.

Short episodes and snappy humor make this an easy rewatch. The chemistry between the leads is so natural that viewers keep coming back just to relive the best moments.

3. Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha

Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha
© Netflix

Small-town charm meets big-city ambition in this cozy seaside romance. A confident dentist moves to a quaint coastal village and slowly falls for the town’s beloved jack-of-all-trades, a man with a mysterious past and a heart of gold.

Their slow-burn romance feels warm like a cup of tea on a rainy day.

Rewatching this show feels like visiting a favorite vacation spot. The community of lovable side characters makes every episode feel like catching up with old friends.

4. Goblin (Guardian: The Lonely and Great God)

Goblin (Guardian: The Lonely and Great God)
© kseoulflix

Imagine being cursed with immortality for nearly a thousand years and finally finding the one person who can set you free. That is the haunting premise of Goblin, a fantasy romance that blends ancient Korean history with modern-day Seoul in breathtaking fashion.

The storytelling is poetic, layered, and deeply moving.

Fans revisit this one for its stunning cinematography and emotional depth. The soundtrack alone is enough reason to hit play again on a quiet evening.

5. What’s Wrong with Secretary Kim

What's Wrong with Secretary Kim
© Rakuten Viki

A narcissistic vice-chairman cannot imagine his office running without his incredibly capable secretary, so when she announces she is quitting, chaos follows. Based on a popular webtoon, this show blends workplace comedy with a sweet, slow-reveal romance that keeps viewers hooked from start to finish.

The lead actors have undeniable on-screen chemistry that makes every scene sparkle. Fans rewatch it mostly for the playful banter and the satisfying way the romance unfolds episode by episode.

6. Hospital Playlist

Hospital Playlist
© Netflix

Five doctors who have been best friends since medical school now work side by side at the same hospital, balancing life-or-death cases with the everyday messiness of adult friendships. Hospital Playlist is less about medical emergencies and more about the quiet, meaningful moments between people who genuinely care for each other.

The band scenes where the doctors play music together are fan favorites that never get old. This show rewards rewatchers with subtle emotional details hidden throughout each episode.

7. It’s Okay to Not Be Okay

It's Okay to Not Be Okay
© Her World

Healing does not always look the way you expect it to. This emotionally rich drama follows a children’s book author with antisocial personality disorder and a psychiatric ward caregiver, two broken people who slowly help each other find peace.

The fairy-tale-inspired visuals make the storytelling feel like a dark but beautiful storybook.

Mental health themes are handled with unusual care and honesty here. Many fans say this show changed how they think about emotional wounds and the courage it takes to face them.

8. The Glory

The Glory
© ScreenRant

Revenge served cold has never felt this calculated or gripping. The Glory follows a woman who spent years quietly preparing to destroy the lives of the classmates who brutally bullied her in high school.

Every chess-like move she makes is satisfying to watch unfold with chilling precision.

Song Hye-kyo’s performance is widely praised as one of the best in K-drama history. Viewers rewatch this series to catch all the foreshadowing and clever plot details they missed the first time around.

9. Extraordinary Attorney Woo

Extraordinary Attorney Woo
© Netflix

Woo Young-woo graduated at the top of her law school class, has a photographic memory, and also happens to be on the autism spectrum. Watching her navigate a high-powered law firm while solving creative legal cases is both inspiring and genuinely entertaining.

Her love for whales and unique way of seeing the world make her impossible not to root for.

Each case tackled in the show teaches something new about fairness and empathy. Fans return to this series for its uplifting energy and the way it celebrates thinking differently.

10. Vincenzo

Vincenzo
© Netflix

Part mafia thriller, part dark comedy, and entirely unforgettable, Vincenzo follows a Korean-Italian consigliere who returns to South Korea to reclaim hidden gold and ends up taking down a corrupt mega-corporation along the way. The show is unapologetically stylish and wildly entertaining from the very first episode.

Song Joong-ki plays the lead with effortless cool that makes every scene magnetic. Fans love rewatching the moments where Vincenzo outsmarts the villains using the most unexpected and creative methods imaginable.

11. Squid Game

Squid Game
© Euronews.com

When it dropped in 2021, Squid Game became the most-watched Netflix show in history almost overnight. Desperate contestants compete in deadly versions of children’s games for a life-changing cash prize, and the social commentary underneath all the tension is razor-sharp.

Every episode peels back another layer of who these characters really are.

Rewatching reveals symbolic details about class inequality and human nature that are easy to miss when you are just holding your breath. Season two only deepened the obsession fans already had.

12. Reply 1988

Reply 1988
© Collider

Set in a tight-knit Seoul neighborhood in 1988, this show is basically a warm hug in drama form. Five families living side by side share meals, heartbreak, laughter, and the kind of everyday moments that feel almost too real and familiar.

The nostalgia hits hard even for viewers who did not grow up in that era.

Reply 1988 is consistently ranked among the greatest K-dramas ever made. People rewatch it just to spend more time with characters who feel less like fictional people and more like beloved family members.

13. Under the Queen’s Umbrella

Under the Queen's Umbrella
© Decider

Running a kingdom is hard enough, but raising a group of troublemaking princes while navigating palace politics is a whole different challenge. This historical drama follows a fierce queen determined to whip her unruly sons into shape before the crown prince selection tears the royal family apart.

The court intrigue is layered, tense, and addictively watchable.

Kim Hye-soo’s portrayal of the queen is commanding and unforgettable. Fans rewatch for the sharp political maneuvering and the surprisingly emotional mother-son storylines woven throughout.

14. My Mister

My Mister
© Medium

Not every great K-drama is about romance and fantasy. My Mister is a quiet, devastating portrait of two people carrying invisible burdens who find unexpected comfort in each other’s honesty.

A middle-aged engineer and a hardened young woman form an unlikely bond that slowly heals wounds neither of them could admit existed.

The pacing is slow and deliberate, which only makes the emotional payoff more powerful. Viewers who stick with this show often call it the most meaningful drama they have ever watched.

15. Alchemy of Souls

Alchemy of Souls
© Netflix

Magic, soul-switching, forbidden love, and political betrayal all collide in this wildly imaginative fantasy series. Set in a fictional ancient kingdom, two characters with tangled destinies must navigate dangerous sorcery while fighting feelings they were never supposed to have.

The world-building is rich enough to get completely lost in.

Fight choreography and visual effects set a high bar for K-drama fantasy productions. Fans rewatch to untangle the complex mythology and relive the electric romantic tension that builds across both seasons.

16. King the Land

King the Land
© Netflix

Luxury hotels, a grumpy heir who never smiles, and a sunshine employee who refuses to stop trying to make him laugh make for one of the most feel-good rom-coms on Netflix. King the Land leans fully into the fantasy of a glamorous workplace romance without taking itself too seriously, which is exactly why it works.

Yoona and Lee Junho bring undeniable warmth to their roles. Fans revisit this one on days when they need something light, pretty, and guaranteed to leave them smiling by the final episode.

17. All of Us Are Dead

All of Us Are Dead
© The Guardian

Being stuck at school is bad enough without adding a zombie apocalypse to the mix. All of Us Are Dead traps a group of high school students inside their campus as a terrifying virus spreads, forcing them to fight for survival with nothing but their wits and each other.

The tension never lets up for a single episode.

Teen characters face impossible choices that make the show emotionally gripping beyond just the horror. Fans rewatch to appreciate how carefully each character’s arc was constructed from the very beginning.

18. Strong Girl Bong-soon (Strong Woman Do Bong Soon)

Strong Girl Bong-soon (Strong Woman Do Bong Soon)
© IMDb

Born with superhuman strength she inherited from a long line of powerful women, Do Bong-soon just wants to design video games and survive a love triangle. Working as a bodyguard for a charming CEO while trying to catch a local villain makes for a delightfully chaotic mix of action, comedy, and romance.

Park Bo-young’s comedic timing is absolutely flawless in this role. Viewers come back to this show for its quirky humor, adorable leads, and the pure fun energy that radiates from every single scene.

19. Descendants of the Sun

Descendants of the Sun
© Netflix

A decorated military captain and a sharp-witted surgeon fall in love under the most dangerous circumstances imaginable. Set against the backdrop of a fictional war zone, Descendants of the Sun explores what it means to love someone whose job might take them away forever.

The stakes feel real, which makes every tender moment between the leads count even more.

This show helped launch the global K-drama craze before Netflix even entered the picture. Fans still rewatch it for the chemistry, the action sequences, and a romance that genuinely feels worth fighting for.

20. Itaewon Class

Itaewon Class
© ABS-CBN

After being wrongfully imprisoned, Park Saeroyi channels every ounce of his anger into one goal: building a restaurant empire to take down the food conglomerate that destroyed his family. Itaewon Class is an underdog story built on grit, loyalty, and the stubborn belief that hard work can outmatch corruption every single time.

The show makes you genuinely cheer for a character who refuses to give up no matter what gets thrown at him. Fans revisit it whenever they need a burst of motivation and a reminder that resilience always wins in the end.

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