Scroll through Korean social media right now and you’ll see the same headline everywhere:
“I quit my corporate job. Now I make 25 million won a month.”
That’s roughly $18,000 USD — every single month — from a laptop.
Sounds incredible. But is it real? South Korea’s JoongAng Ilbo investigated the solopreneur phenomenon, and the truth is more complicated than the viral posts suggest.
Solopreneur vs. Freelancer: What’s the Difference?
The term solopreneur (solo + entrepreneur) is having a massive moment in Korea — and globally.
But it’s not the same as freelancing.
A freelancer trades time for money. No work = no income.
A solopreneur builds systems that generate money automatically.
Online courses, Notion templates, paid newsletters, membership communities — create them once, sell them forever.
The automation layer is everything. AI tools handle production, marketing, payments, and fulfillment. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has argued publicly that “one laptop, internet access, and an army of AI agents” could power a solo business worth $1 billion in revenue.

Korea’s 1-Person Startup Boom
According to South Korea’s Ministry of SMEs and Startups, the number of one-person startups exceeded 1 million for the first time last year — roughly 20% of all new businesses.
The driving force is painfully simple:
Inflation is outpacing salaries. Every single month.
When your paycheck can’t keep up with rent and groceries, building your own income system starts to look very rational.
The Success Stories Are Real
Kim Jae-ho built and runs “Coffee One Cup,” a dating app for Korean professionals in their 30s. His solo income now far exceeds his former corporate salary — without the brutal hours.
Kim Seung-kwon (known online as “Josh”) runs a popular paid newsletter. He started at roughly $3,600/month. Today, he reports monthly revenue of around $36,000.
These aren’t outliers invented for clickbait. They’re documented cases — but they represent a small fraction of those who try.

The Dark Side: “Digital Chicken Shops”
Here’s where the story gets honest.
Critics warn that the solopreneur boom is mostly producing what Koreans call “digital chicken shops” — a reference to the notoriously oversaturated fried chicken franchise market, where most owners eventually fail despite high entry optimism.
The parallel is uncomfortable:
- Notion templates? Already millions exist online
- Online courses? A brutally crowded market
- Paid newsletters? Reader acquisition is the hardest part
Building the system is hard. Making the system actually sell is harder.
Most solopreneurs stall not because they lack skills — but because they built something nobody wanted to pay for.
What Separates Those Who Survive
Researchers and successful solopreneurs point to four common traits:
- Niche expertise — Serving a specific person, not everyone
- Fast validation — Selling before the product is “perfect”
- Consistent content — Publishing 1–3 times per week for 12+ months
- AI-first workflow — Using tools like ChatGPT, Notion AI, and Zapier to operate like a team of one
The Bottom Line
The solopreneur path is genuinely possible. But for every person earning $18,000/month, there are dozens who quit after earning $180.
The real question isn’t “Can I do this?”
It’s: “Do I have expertise that someone will actually pay for?”
If the answer is yes — there’s never been a better time to try.
Do you think the solopreneur trend is a real opportunity — or just a new version of a dream that rarely works out?
Drop your thoughts in the comments. 👇