South Korea national futsal team
| Nickname(s) | Taegeuk Warriors The Red Devils The Reds | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Association | Korea Football Association | ||
| Confederation | AFC (Asia) | ||
| Head coach | Lee Sang-jin | ||
| Asst coach | Lee Chang-hwan | ||
| Home stadium | Paju NFC Futsal Stadium | ||
| FIFA code | KOR | ||
| FIFA ranking | 70 2 (4 April 2025) | ||
| |||
| First international | |||
| Japan 1–2 South Korea (Shanghai, China; 27 March 1996) | |||
| Biggest win | |||
| South Korea 26–1 Guam (Beijing, China; 25 November 2009) | |||
| Biggest defeat | |||
| Iran 14–1 South Korea (Dubai, United Arab Emirates; 25 May 2012) | |||
| FIFA World Cup | |||
| Appearances | 0 | ||
| Asian Cup | |||
| Appearances | 12 (First in 1999) | ||
| Best result | Runners-up (1999) | ||
| Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games | |||
| Appearances | 2 (First in 2009) | ||
| Best result | Quarter-finals (2013) | ||
| Confederations Cup | |||
| Appearances | 0 | ||
| Grand Prix de Futsal | |||
| Appearances | 0 | ||
The South Korea national futsal team (Korean: 대한민국 풋살 국가대표팀, recognized as Korea Republic by FIFA) represents South Korea in international futsal and is governed by the Korea Football Association.
South Korea finished runners-up in inaugural AFC Futsal Asian Cup, but it lost its competitiveness in Asian futsal unlike in football due to lack of attention. In 2024, the president of Korea Futsal League (FK-League Federation) claimed the vitalization of South Korean futsal could help South Korean football expand its base, while the country was suffering from low fertility.