There is a moment at every BTS concert when the crowd transforms into something greater than the sum of its parts. The lights drop, the opening notes hit, and thousands of voices shout the same Korean words in perfect unison. If you have ever watched a fancam and felt left out of that moment — this article is for you.
Learning Korean through BTS is not a shortcut. It is a doorway. Korean is now the 13th most studied language in the world, and US enrollment in Korean language courses has surged by 31% in recent years.
Behind many of those new learners is a seven-member group from Seoul. With the BTS Arirang World Tour kicking off in April 2026 across 82 dates and 34 cities, there has never been a better time to learn the phrases that will make your concert experience unforgettable.
ARMY can relive the reunion journey through the BTS: The Return documentary on Netflix.
This guide starts where every ARMY journey begins: the fan chant.
The BTS Fan Chant — Your First Korean Lesson
The official BTS fan chant is the most important Korean you will ever memorize as an ARMY. It is shouted during instrumental breaks before verses, and it follows a strict order of member names. Getting it wrong — or staying silent — is a missed connection with 50,000 other fans.
The correct order is: Kim Namjoon! Kim Seokjin! Min Yoongi! Jung Hoseok! Park Jimin! Kim Taehyung! Jeon Jungkook! BTS!
Notice that Korean names follow the format: family name first, then given name. This is standard in Korean culture. “Kim,” “Min,” “Jung,” “Park,” and “Jeon” are all family names. When you shout these names at a concert, you are practicing authentic Korean name pronunciation in front of thousands of native and fluent speakers — a genuinely impressive flex.
The syllables in Korean names are clean and phonetic. “Namjoon” is exactly as it sounds. “Seokjin” has a soft ‘S’ and a clean ‘jin.’ “Yoongi” rhymes with “young-gee.” Practice slowly, then build speed. By the time you walk into the arena, the chant should feel as natural as your own name.
10 Must-Know Concert Phrases
Beyond the fan chant, a handful of high-energy Korean phrases will carry you through an entire concert. These are the words you will hear BTS themselves say on stage, the ones fans shout back, and the ones that will make your experience feel fully immersive.
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 화이팅! | Hwaiting! | You can do it! / Fighting! | Before a performance, during hype moments |
| 사랑해요 | Saranghaeyo | I love you | Any emotional moment, when members address the crowd |
| 대박 | Daebak | Amazing! / Jackpot! | After a stunning performance or surprise |
| 멋있어! | Meoshisseo! | So cool! | When a member pulls off a difficult move |
| 최고! | Choeigo! | The best! | At the end of a song, during bows |
| 앵콜! | Aengkol! | Encore! | After the main setlist ends |
| 감사합니다 | Gamsahamnida | Thank you (formal) | When members thank the crowd; echo it back |
| 축하해요 | Chukahaeyo | Congratulations | Milestone announcements, anniversaries |
| 화장실 어디예요? | Hwajangsil eodiyeyo? | Where is the bathroom? | Practical survival — between sets |
| 얼마예요? | Eolmayeyo? | How much is it? | Merch booth, food stalls |
A note on formality: Korean has multiple speech levels. 사랑해요 is polite; 사랑해 is casual and intimate. At a concert, either works — the members use both depending on the moment. When in doubt, the polite form is always respectful.
Song-Specific Fan Chants — DNA, Dynamite, and More
The name-order chant is the universal BTS chant, but many songs have their own unique crowd call-and-response patterns. Knowing these marks you as an experienced ARMY and contributes to the collective energy that BTS consistently credits as a key part of their performances.
For DNA, fans shout the member names at the instrumental intro — the classic chant order. The energy at this point in a concert is electric, and a coordinated crowd chant can physically raise the decibel level of the arena.
For Dynamite, the English-language track released during 2020, fan chants blend Korean shouts with English hype phrases, making it the most accessible entry point for newer ARMY members. The chorus outro is a prime moment to shout 최고! (Choeigo! — The best!).
For Boy With Luv, the crowd typically mirrors the playful, lighter energy of the song. 사랑해요 during the bridge lands with massive emotional weight in a stadium setting. IDOL features one of the most complex fan chant structures — worth studying separately via YouTube tutorial videos at least a week before the concert.
Survival Korean for Concert Day
A concert is not just the two hours inside the arena. It is the line outside, the merch scramble, the food trucks, the fan-made poster exchange zones, and the post-show chaos. These practical Korean phrases will serve you throughout the entire day.
Getting there: If you are attending a tour date in a city with a significant Korean community — Los Angeles, New York, Chicago — you may encounter Korean-language signage or vendors near the venue. Knowing 어디예요? (eodiyeyo? — where is it?) as a suffix is powerful. Attach any location word: “화장실 어디예요?” (bathroom), “출구 어디예요?” (exit — chulgu eodiyeyo?), “버스 정류장 어디예요?” (bus stop — beoseu jeongnyujang eodiyeyo?).
At the merch booth: 얼마예요? (Eolmayeyo?) handles every price question. If something is sold out, staff may say 품절이에요 (pumjeorieyo — it’s sold out). Good to know before you get your hopes up.
With other fans: Meeting Korean ARMY members is one of the genuine joys of a BTS concert. A simple 반가워요 (bangawoyo — nice to meet you) goes a long way. If you want to compliment someone’s outfit or lightstick setup, 예뻐요 (yeppeoyo — it’s pretty/beautiful) works universally.
The ARMY Bomb (응원봉, eungwonbong): BTS concerts are famous for synchronized lightstick effects controlled via Bluetooth from the stage. Make sure your ARMY Bomb is charged and updated before the show. If someone near you needs help, 도와드릴까요? (dowadeurilkkayo? — can I help you?) is a kind offer in any language.
ARMY Dictionary — The Vocabulary Every Fan Needs
ARMY culture has its own vocabulary — a blend of Korean fandom terms, BTS-specific language, and community shorthand. Understanding these terms deepens your connection to the fandom and, crucially, helps you navigate fan communities, Weverse posts, and concert forums.
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 응원봉 | Eungwonbong | Lightstick (literally “cheering stick”) — ARMY Bomb |
| 팬싸 | Paenssa | Fansign event — intimate signing/meeting events |
| 컴백 | Keombaek | Comeback — a new album/single release cycle |
| 막내 | Maknae | Youngest member (Jungkook in BTS) |
| 형 | Hyung | Older brother — used by younger male members to older ones |
| 노래 | Norae | Song |
| 무대 | Mudae | Stage |
| 공연 | Gongyeon | Performance / concert |
| 대박 | Daebak | Amazing, jackpot — high praise for anything incredible |
| 화이팅 | Hwaiting | Fighting — a cheer of encouragement |
ARMY stands for “Adorable Representative MC for Youth” — a title BTS gave their fanbase that reflects the reciprocal, almost contractual bond between the group and the people who support them. Understanding the vocabulary of that bond is part of living it.
How to Practice Before the Tour
The Arirang World Tour opens in April 2026. That gives you weeks to build genuine Korean fluency in the phrases that matter most to your concert experience. Here is a structured approach that works whether you have 10 minutes a day or an hour.
Week 1 — The chant and the basics: Memorize the member name order until you can say it at full speed without hesitating. Add the 10 concert phrases from the table above. Use flashcard apps like Anki or the free Naver Korean dictionary app to drill romanization alongside Hangul.
Week 2 — Song-specific chants: Pick your two or three most-likely setlist songs and learn their specific fan chant patterns. YouTube search “[song name] BTS fan chant guide” — there are excellent community-made tutorial videos for every major track. Watch them multiple times and practice out loud.
Week 3 — Practical phrases and Hangul: Learn to read Hangul. It is not as difficult as it looks — the alphabet has 24 base characters and most learners can read basic words within a week. Apps like Duolingo, Pimsleur, and Talk To Me In Korean all offer structured beginner Korean courses. Even basic Hangul reading ability will help you navigate venue signage and fan-made materials.
Week 4 — Full immersion prep: Watch recent BTS concert footage with Korean subtitles. Notice how the members phrase crowd interactions. Practice the emotional beats — when to shout 대박, when to go quiet for 사랑해요, when the chant timing lands. Concert energy is not just about knowing the words. It is about feeling when to use them.
Language learning researchers consistently find that emotional motivation is the strongest predictor of long-term retention. You already have the motivation. The April 2026 tour is the deadline. Every Korean word you learn between now and that concert date is a word you will shout in a stadium alongside tens of thousands of people who also learned it — and chose to be there.