To prevent serious problems occurring in abandoned mines such as ground subsidence, it is commonly carried out to fill cavities with some materials. During or after the cavity-filling process, we need to monitor distribution of filling materials in abandoned mines. Various geophysical methods, such as microgravity, electrical resistivity, ground penetrating radar, and seismic methods, have been used to describe abandoned mines themselves or to monitor distribution of filling materials. Microgravity, electrical resistivity, ground penetrating radar, and microseismic methods can be used to detect cavities, but may have some limitation in monitoring material distributions. In this study, we apply the seismic reflection method to image distribution of filling materials in near-surface abandoned mines. As the imaging methods, we use full waveform inversion and reverse time migration. In addition, we apply seismic interferometry to obtain better results. The full waveform inversion and reverse time migration methods are applied to four models which can mainly appear in abandoned mines. Through numerical examples, we investigate feasibility of seismic reflection method for describing filling material distribution in abandoned mine. Acknowledgements This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (MSIT) (No. 2017R1A2B4002031) and by the project funded by the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, Korea (D11603317H480000112).