Brides in South Korea’s wealthy Gangnam district did not have a bigger age gap with their husbands than the national average, according to 2019 government statistics, contrary to Facebook posts sharing incorrect figures and accusing younger women in the area of marrying rich, older men. Official data in fact showed Gangnam brides were on average 2.1 years younger than their grooms, compared to the national average of 2.8 years younger.
“Average age difference between newlywed couples in Gangnam,” reads a Korean-language post on the Dogdrip online forum from March 10.
It shares a chart that appears to show data from 2019 on the age gap between newlywed brides and grooms in South Korea.
According to the chart, South Korean men were on average 3.1 years older than their brides, with the age gap rising to 6.4 years in Seoul’s affluent Gangnam district.
The chart also lists supposed age difference in various Gangnam neighbourhoods. In Apujeong-dong and Samseong-dong — known for financial firms and a cluster of plastic surgery clinics — the average gap rose to more than eight years.
The chart is credited to Statistics Korea and Seoul’s statistics database.