Condolence Wreath Etiquette (근조화환)

When a family in Korea loses a loved one, the condolence wreath — the 근조화환 — is one of the most sincere and widely understood ways to say "I share in your grief, and I honor the one you have lost." If you cannot travel to the funeral, a well-timed wreath with the right words stands at the entrance in your place. This chapter explains the Korean funeral, when and where to send, the all-important ribbon wording, and the small courtesies that show genuine respect.

The Korean funeral, in brief

Most Korean funerals follow the three-day funeral (삼일장), held at a funeral hall (장례식장) that is very often located inside or beside a hospital. Within the hall, each bereaved family is given a mourning room or wake room (빈소), where a memorial portrait of the deceased is set up and where visitors (조문객) come to pay their respects.

The three days unfold roughly like this:

Because the whole observance is time-bound and the family is present at the hall throughout, timing is everything. A condolence wreath has meaning while mourners are being received; once the 발인 has taken place, it serves no purpose.

When to send — and how quickly

Send as soon as you learn of the passing. In practice this means same-day delivery when you order before the daily cutoff, or next-day at the latest, so the wreath is standing during the wake — ideally for the busy second day. Korean florists and funeral halls are entirely accustomed to receiving wreaths at short notice; speed is normal and expected, not rushed.

A simple rule of thumb: order the moment you hear the news. It is far better for a wreath to arrive a few hours after you order than to wait for "complete" details — halls can place a wreath as long as the family name is on it, and missing room numbers are easily filled in by phone.

White and yellow chrysanthemums (국화)

The condolence wreath is built almost entirely from white and yellow chrysanthemums (국화), the flowers of mourning in Korea. White speaks of purity and of a respectful farewell; yellow and white together are quiet, dignified, and unmistakably funereal. The arrangement stands tall on a frame, like a celebration wreath, but its restraint is the entire point: it is solemn rather than bright, and it is never colorful. Choosing the chrysanthemum is choosing the visual language of grief that every Korean mourner will recognize at a glance.

The ribbon wording (근조 리본)

Two long printed ribbons hang from the wreath, and getting them right is the heart of condolence etiquette. They have two distinct jobs:

Condolence phrases for the left ribbon

These are the standard, universally appropriate expressions. Any one of them is correct; the first is the most common.

The sender line for the right ribbon

Here you name who the wreath is from. Common formats:

Names in English work perfectly well alongside the Korean phrase; what matters is that the family can tell who honored them. If you are unsure, our team will transcribe your name into natural Korean for you.

Two worked examples

Putting the two ribbons together:

  1. From an individual.
    Left ribbon: 삼가 고인의 명복을 빕니다
    Right ribbon: John Smith (or 존 스미스)
  2. From a company.
    Left ribbon: 삼가 조의를 표합니다
    Right ribbon: Acme Corporation 대표 ○○○ ("Acme Corporation, CEO ○○○")

One ribbon speaks your sorrow; the other tells the family who came to stand with them.

How funeral-hall delivery works in practice

Condolence wreaths are delivered directly to the funeral hall, where staff arrange the many incoming wreaths by mourning room. To make sure yours reaches the right family, provide as much of the following as you can:

Of these, the family or deceased's name is the most important: halls host several families at once, and the name is what places your wreath beside the correct mourning room.

If your details are incomplete: don't delay your order. The most common situation for overseas senders is knowing the hall and the family name but not the room number — that is enough. A reputable florist will confirm the exact 호실 with the funeral hall by phone before the wreath is set in place, so a missing room number never stops a delivery.

Condolence money (조의금)

Alongside or instead of a wreath, Korean mourners customarily give condolence money (조의금, also called 부의금) — cash presented in a plain white envelope at the wake to help the family with funeral costs. Attending in person, one typically offers both a bow of respect and an envelope. If you are sending from abroad and cannot attend, a condolence wreath stands in for your presence; the money is a separate, in-person custom and is not something you need to arrange remotely. It is simply useful to understand, because together the wreath and the envelope are how Koreans express support at a funeral.

What not to do

A few mistakes are worth avoiding — most are easy once you know them:

Sympathy card and message wording

If you would like to add a short written message — for a card, an email, or a note to the family — keep it brief, sincere, and free of cheerfulness. A Korean line shows particular care; an English line is perfectly gracious on its own. A few appropriate examples:


Glossary of key terms

근조화환 — condolence (funeral) wreath
장례식장 — funeral hall, often inside a hospital
삼일장 — the traditional three-day funeral
빈소 — the wake / mourning room
발인 — the funeral procession on the final day
국화 — chrysanthemum, the flower of mourning
조의금 — condolence money given to the family
상주 — the chief mourner

Frequently asked questions

Where exactly is a condolence wreath delivered?

To the funeral hall (장례식장) — frequently inside a hospital — where the family receives mourners during the three-day funeral. Provide the hall name and address, and the deceased's or chief mourner's family name; the room number helps but is not essential.

What should I write on the ribbon?

On the left ribbon, a respectful condolence phrase such as 삼가 고인의 명복을 빕니다 ("may the deceased rest in peace"). On the right ribbon, your name, family, or company as the sender. We help confirm appropriate wording.

How fast can a wreath arrive?

Usually same-day when you order before the daily cutoff, otherwise next-day. Because funerals are short, ordering promptly is the best way to ensure the wreath is on display while the family is receiving visitors.

What if I don't know the room number?

That is fine. Order with the hall name and the family name, and the florist will confirm the exact room (호실) with the funeral hall before placing your wreath. A missing room number does not stop delivery.

Can the ribbon and my name be in English?

The condolence phrase is written in Korean, as is customary, but your sender name can appear in English, Korean, or both. We can transcribe an English name into natural Korean if you prefer.

Do I also need to send condolence money?

No. Condolence money (조의금) is an in-person custom offered at the wake. If you are sending from abroad, a condolence wreath respectfully stands in for your presence on its own.

Send a condolence wreath to Korea. Browse our condolence wreaths (근조화환) — delivered promptly to funeral halls nationwide, ordered entirely in English and paid with PayPal. If you are unsure of the hall, the wording, or the family details, please contact us and we will help you arrange everything with care.