SEOUL, August 15, 2025 — The streets are quieter, but the conversation isn’t. South Korea’s major delivery firms shut down for Liberation Day, giving their drivers two days off. It’s a pause that’s been a long time coming, and it’s stirring more debate than the companies expected.
At a café in Mapo, a young office worker scrolls through her phone, laughing about how her online order is “stuck somewhere in Incheon.” She says she doesn’t mind the wait. At the next table, a man complains to a friend that his tools won’t arrive in time for a weekend job. It’s the same all over — mixed feelings, voiced loudly.
In the sorting centers, there’s an odd stillness. A skeleton crew keeps watch, checking temperature-sensitive goods, but most belts are silent. Boxes are stacked in corners like paused sentences, waiting to be finished.
The unions call the holiday a small victory. They’ve spent years asking for guaranteed breaks in an industry where drivers often eat lunch in their vans, if at all. The companies back them, saying this rest is essential to keep people healthy and the service reliable in the long run. Critics push back, suggesting better staffing could avoid a total stop.
By Monday, it will all be over. Trucks will roll out before sunrise, scooters will weave between cars, and the complaints will fade as quickly as they came. For now, though, South Korea’s delivery engine is idling — and everyone has something to say about it.