굿즈
"Goods / merch" — official K-pop merchandise, especially photocards, lightsticks, posters, and album-bundled collectibles.
- Meaning: "Goods / merch" — official K-pop merchandise, especially photocards, lightsticks, posters, and album-bundled collectibles.
- Pronunciation: /kut.t͈ɯ/ (gutjeu)
- Part of speech: noun
- Formality: Casual — for friends, family, and close peers.
- Literal: "goods" — English loanword
What does 굿즈 mean?
굿즈 (gutjeu) is the Korean fan term for K-pop merchandise — borrowed from English "goods." It covers everything from photocards (포토카드 / 포카) and lightsticks (응원봉) to posters, plushies, badges, hoodies, and album-bundled collectibles. K-pop fan economy revolves around 굿즈: trading photocards, displaying lightsticks at concerts, buying limited-edition seasonal collections. Companies release 굿즈 in tie-ins with 컴백s, anniversaries, and seasonal events. The term overlaps with but is distinct from MD (merchandise, used by companies) — fans say 굿즈, companies say MD. 공식 굿즈 (official goods) vs 비공식 굿즈 (unofficial goods, fan-made) is an important distinction. Photocard culture is central: fans trade photocards to complete sets featuring all members. The market value of rare photocards can exceed the album price many times over. Critical K-pop fandom vocabulary.
Examples in context
When to use 굿즈
- K-pop fan conversations about merchandise
- Photocard trading communities
- Concert and pop-up store contexts
- Online shopping and unboxing content
When NOT to use 굿즈
- General Korean "goods" or store inventory — that's 상품 (sangpum)
- Specific item names — say 포카 (photocard), 응원봉 (lightstick), etc. for clarity
- Non-K-pop merchandise — 굿즈 is K-pop / fan-culture specific
Related terms
More in K-pop fandom
Career, performance, and merchandise vocabulary for international K-pop fans.
"Comeback" — when a K-pop group or solo artist releases new music after an album cycle. The defining release event in K-pop fandom.
"Debut" — when a K-pop group or solo artist officially launches with their first release. The career-defining moment in K-pop.
"Fancam" — fan-recorded close-up video of a single K-pop performer, focused on one member throughout an entire stage performance.
"Youngest" — the youngest member of a Korean group, family, workplace, or any defined social unit.
Frequently asked questions
What does 굿즈 (goods) mean in K-pop?
굿즈 (gutjeu) is K-pop fan vocabulary for merchandise — borrowed from English "goods." It covers photocards (포카), lightsticks (응원봉), posters, plushies, badges, clothing, and album-bundled collectibles. The K-pop merchandise economy is enormous and centered on fan culture.
What is the difference between 굿즈 and MD?
굿즈 (gutjeu) is what fans say. MD (em-di, "merchandise") is what companies and industry insiders say. They refer to the same products. You'll see "MD" on official store websites and "굿즈" in fan conversations.
What is 포카 (photocard) culture?
포카 (poka, photocard) is the most traded type of 굿즈. Albums come bundled with random photocards featuring different members. Fans trade duplicates to complete sets featuring their bias (최애). Rare photocards (limited editions, lucky-draw inclusions) can sell for hundreds of dollars on resale markets.
How is 굿즈 pronounced?
굿즈 is pronounced [kut.t͈ɯ] — "goot-jjeu." Two syllables. The "굿" ends in a -t stop (Korean rule: -s in 굿 sounds like -t before a consonant); the "즈" has a tense doubled "jj" sound. Romanizations: "gutjeu" (Revised) or "gootz" (popular fan spelling).
More Korean slang?
Browse the full Korean Slang Dictionary or read the deep-dive: Korean Slang Ultimate Guide.