This study examines the lifestyle of the poor and the non-poor by analyzing their time use patterns. Using 2009 Time Use Survey by Statistics Korea, the first half of the report illustrates how low income individuals spend their time on self-care, household chores, family caregiving, work, education, and leisure. By comparing their time use to the non-poor's, the authors attempt to portrait the daily lives of poor families. The second half of the report adopts GIS-based Time Geography and calculates the level of access to various community care facilities. The findings show that individuals with low income exhibit lifestyles that are different from the non-poor: they are more likely to be isolated from the community and less likely to have access to community care. From the findings the authors draw several policy implications for, among others, offering more flexible service hours at community care facilities and ensuring adequate mobility tools for low-income families.