Resident's Guide

Travel & Leisure in Korea: The Resident's Guide (2025)

Living in Korea means some of the best travel access in Asia — from mountain trails an hour from Seoul to tropical beaches, Japan by ferry, and UNESCO heritage cities just two hours on the KTX. This guide is for residents, not tourists.

Table of Contents

  1. Getting Out of Seoul: How to Think About Domestic Travel
  2. Weekend Trip Ideas from Seoul
  3. Korea's National Parks & Hiking Culture
  4. Jeju Island: The Resident's Guide
  5. Best Food Destinations by Region
  6. Seasonal Travel: What to Do When
  7. Temples, Palaces & Cultural Sites
  8. Nightlife & Entertainment Districts
  9. Sports & Outdoor Activities
  10. Travelling Outside Korea: Re-entry & Visa Tips
  11. Budget Travel Tips for Residents
  12. Glossary of Travel Terms in Korean

1. Getting Out of Seoul: How to Think About Domestic Travel

One of the great advantages of living in Korea is how compact and well-connected the country is. From central Seoul:

  • Suwon, Incheon: 30-60 minutes by subway
  • Busan, Gwangju, Jeonju: 2-3 hours by KTX high-speed rail
  • Gyeongju: 2 hours by KTX
  • Jeju Island: 1 hour by plane

This means almost any Korean destination can be done as a comfortable overnight trip or a long weekend. As a resident — not a tourist — you have the luxury of going off-peak and going back.

Booking Tips for Residents

  • Korail (korail.com): Book KTX tickets online in English; the website works reliably. The Korail app is mostly Korean.
  • Rail discounts: Korail offers 30-40% early-bird discounts. Book 30+ days ahead for weekend trips.
  • Peak avoidance: Major holidays (Chuseok, Seollal, Golden Week in late April/early May) see booking sellouts weeks in advance and road chaos. Travel the week before or after.
  • Express buses (고속버스): Significantly cheaper than KTX but 2-3x longer journey. Good for Jeonju, Gyeongju, Andong, and destinations without direct rail.

2. Weekend Trip Ideas from Seoul

Busan (부산) — 2h 15min by KTX

Korea's second city is the anti-Seoul: coastal, laid-back, hilly, and characterful. Best spots:

  • Gamcheon Culture Village: Pastel-coloured hillside neighbourhood, murals, independent cafes
  • Haeundae & Gwangalli beaches: City beaches with dramatic bridge backdrop
  • Gukje Market & Bupyeong Kkangtong Market: Traditional markets; street food heaven
  • Taejongdae park: Coastal cliff walk with lighthouse views
  • Jalgachi Fish Market: Eat raw fish (회, hoe) upstairs from the stalls — freshest sashimi in Korea

Best for: Food lovers, beach breaks, contrast to Seoul's pace

Gyeongju (경주) — 2h by KTX

Korea's ancient capital from the Silla dynasty (57 BCE-935 CE). The entire city is effectively an open-air museum — burial mounds rise from park grounds, Buddhist temples dot the hills, and Bulguksa Temple is a masterpiece of Silla architecture.

  • Bulguksa Temple & Seokguram Grotto: UNESCO World Heritage
  • Tumuli Park (대릉원): Royal burial mounds you can walk among
  • Anapji Pond (동궁과 월지): Illuminated at night — stunning
  • Cheonmachong: Ancient royal tomb open for interior viewing

Best for: History, culture, cycling (the city is flat and very bikeable), autumn foliage

Jeonju (전주) — 2h by KTX or express bus

Home of the hanok village (한옥마을) — the most intact traditional Korean neighbourhood in the country. Also the birthplace of bibimbap.

  • Jeonju Hanok Village: 700+ traditional Korean houses; cafes, craft shops, bibimbap restaurants
  • Jeonju bibimbap: The original; try it at a century-old restaurant
  • Gyeonggijeon Shrine: Portraits of the Joseon dynasty founders
  • Makgeolli scene: Jeonju has excellent traditional rice wine bars with bottomless snacks

Best for: Architecture, food, culture, slow travel

Sokcho & Seoraksan (속초/설악산) — 2.5h by express bus

The gateway to Seoraksan National Park — Korea's most dramatic mountain scenery. Sokcho is a coastal town with excellent seafood; Seoraksan rises behind it.

  • Ulsanbawi Rock: 6km round hike to famous rock formations; stunning views
  • Seoraksan cable car: Quick access to mountain views for non-hikers
  • Sokcho's seafood: Ojingeo (squid) and fresh crab — the best in Korea
  • Naksansa Temple: Coastal Buddhist temple dramatically set above the East Sea

Best for: Hiking, autumn foliage (October), seafood, mountain scenery

Andong (안동) — 2.5h by bus or train

One of Korea's most historically preserved cities. Home of the Confucian heritage culture and the iconic Andong hahoe village.

  • Hahoe Folk Village: UNESCO World Heritage; traditional houses still inhabited
  • Dosan Seowon Confucian Academy: On 1,000-won note — see it in real life
  • Andong Jjimdak (안동찜닭): Braised chicken; a local specialty worth the trip alone
  • Soju Museum: Andong produces Korea's traditional premium soju

Best for: Culture, history, authenticity; fewer foreign tourists than other destinations

Gangwon Province (강원도) — Various

  • Spring: Tulip and canola flower festivals (Taean, Jeju)
  • Summer: East Coast beaches (Jeongdongjin, Naksan, Yangyang); surfing at Sokcho
  • Autumn: Namiseom Island (나미섬) — maple/ginkgo trees at peak; iconic Korea scene
  • Winter: Ski resorts — Yongpyong, High1, Vivaldi Park (1.5-2.5h from Seoul)

3. Korea's National Parks & Hiking Culture

Hiking (등산, deungsan) is Korea's national pastime. On any given weekend, thousands of Koreans of all ages take to the trails — many in full matching hiking gear with colour-coded walking poles and elaborate packed lunches.

Korea has 22 national parks (국립공원), all maintained by the Korea National Park Service (knps.or.kr — English available). Entry is free at most parks; some charge minimal admission.

Top National Parks for Expat Hikers

Park Location Highlight Difficulty
Bukhansan (북한산) Inside Seoul Accessible mountain granite peaks; views of Seoul Moderate
Seoraksan (설악산) Gangwon Korea's most dramatic alpine scenery Moderate-Hard
Jirisan (지리산) South Korea's largest mainland park; multi-day ridge walk Hard
Hallasan (한라산) Jeju South Korea's highest peak (1,947m) Hard
Naejangsan (내장산) Jeollabuk Best autumn foliage in Korea Easy-Moderate
Gyeryongsan (계룡산) Chungnam Close to Daejeon; beautiful; less crowded Moderate

Practical Hiking Tips

  • Trail apps: Use Naver Map for trail details; KoreanHiking.com for English trail guides
  • Trail times: Korea's national parks have cut-off times — turn back times enforced by rangers. Check before you go.
  • Hallasan reservation: Certain summit trails on Hallasan require advance reservation (free) at the Korea National Park Service website. Book weeks ahead.
  • Gear culture: Koreans take hiking gear seriously. You will be underdressed in regular clothes — the culture revolves around proper footwear and layers.
  • Mountain restaurants (산장): Many popular peaks have simple restaurants selling makgeolli (rice wine), instant noodles, and pajeon (Korean pancakes) near the summit. A uniquely Korean trail experience.

4. Jeju Island: The Resident's Guide

Jeju (제주도) is South Korea's largest island, 1 hour south of the mainland by plane, and the country's most-visited destination. As a resident, you can explore it at leisure rather than on a rushed tourist schedule.

Getting There

  • Fly: Multiple daily flights from Seoul (Gimpo or Incheon) and most major Korean cities. Budget carriers (Jeju Air, T'way, Jin Air) offer tickets from ₩30,000-₩80,000 one-way. Book early for weekends.
  • Ferry: Overnight ferry from Incheon (~13 hours) or Busan (~12 hours). Cheaper than flying; scenic but slow.

Transport on Jeju

Jeju's attractions are spread across the island — unlike Seoul, public buses can reach many places but are infrequent. Renting a car is the best option for flexibility.

  • Korean driver's license required (or IDP for visitors)
  • Rental from ₩30,000-₩70,000/day for compact cars
  • Navigation via Kakao or Naver Map — GPS quality is excellent on Jeju

Must-Do Experiences

Natural:

  • Hallasan National Park: South Korea's highest peak (1,947m), dormant volcano; multiple trails from easy (Eorimok, 3h) to hard (Seongpanak-Gwaneumsa summit, 8-9h). Advance reservation required for summit trails.
  • Seongsan Ilchulbong (Sunrise Peak): UNESCO tuff cone crater; 45-min hike to the rim; dawn views extraordinary
  • Manjanggul Lava Tube: One of the world's longest lava tubes; 1km open to visitors; cool even in summer
  • Jeju Olle Trail: 437km coastal walking network in 27 segments (~16km each). Each segment is a self-contained day walk accessible by bus. Autumn and spring are ideal.
  • Hyeopjae Beach: White sand, turquoise water; the most photogenic beach in Korea

Cultural:

  • Haenyeo (해녀) diving demonstration: Jeju's legendary female free-divers, aged 60+, dive year-round for seafood. See them at Seongsan Ilchulbong or the Haenyeo Museum.
  • Jeju Folk Village: Traditional life of Jeju's communities; thatched-roof homes, folk customs
  • Black pork BBQ (흑돼지): Jeju's indigenous black pigs produce sweeter, more flavourful pork than mainland breeds. Try it at a traditional BBQ restaurant in Seogwipo.

Best Time to Visit (for Residents)

  • Avoid: July-August (peak summer; crowded, hot, humid, typhoon risk); Chuseok week
  • Best: April-June (warm, flowers, fewer crowds); September-November (ideal hiking weather, fewer tourists)
  • Worth it: January-February (Hallasan snow; quiet island; camellia flowers)

5. Best Food Destinations by Region

Korea's regional food cultures are dramatically different. As a resident, exploring regional cuisine is one of the great pleasures.

Region / City Signature Foods
Seoul Korean fried chicken, tteokbokki, street food markets (Gwangjang, Namdaemun), everything from every region
Busan Raw fish (hoe), dwaeji gukbap (pork soup with rice), milmyeon (cold wheat noodles), Jagalchi fish market
Jeonju Bibimbap (the definitive version), makgeolli, kongnamul gukbap (bean sprout soup with rice)
Andong Jjimdak (soy-braised chicken), heotjesabap, traditional Andong soju
Gyeongju Hwangnam bread (sweet red bean pastry), ssambap, traditional confections
Jeju Black pork BBQ, haemul (seafood stew), Jeju tangerines, abalone porridge
Chuncheon Dakgalbi (spicy stir-fried chicken), makguksu (buckwheat noodles)
Sokcho Ojingeo (squid), crab dishes, raw seafood platters
Daejeon Sikdang culture (many restaurants); Okgol-dong chicken alley

6. Seasonal Travel: What to Do When

Spring (March-May)

The most beloved season for Korean travel. Cherry blossoms (벚꽃, beotkkot) bloom from late March in the south, reaching Seoul in early April — for about 2 weeks.

Best spots for cherry blossoms:

  • Yeouido Hangang Park (Seoul): The most famous; crowded but spectacular
  • Jinhae (Gyeongnam): The largest cherry blossom festival in Korea; small naval city becomes extraordinary
  • Gyeongju: Petals along the ancient moat of Donggung Palace

Other spring highlights: yellow forsythia, pink magnolias, green paddy fields beginning in May.

Summer (June-August)

Hot, humid, and rainy during monsoon season (장마, jangma): typically mid-June through late July. After the rains, beaches become the focus.

Summer highlights:

  • East Coast beaches: Yangyang (surfing culture), Naksan, Sokcho
  • Boryeong Mud Festival: Late July; enormous and silly; hugely popular with foreigners
  • Gyeongbokgung Night Palace: Special evening openings of Seoul's palaces during summer; atmospheric

Autumn (September-November)

Many Koreans and expats consider autumn the best season. Crisp air, clear skies, fiery foliage.

Best autumn foliage destinations:

  • Naejangsan National Park: Peak colour usually mid-to-late October; maple tunnel trails
  • Seoraksan: High-altitude early colour; typically starts late September
  • Namiseom Island (나미섬): Iconic golden ginkgo and maple lined paths; accessible by ferry from Gapyeong

Chuseok: Major holiday typically in September or October. Plan around it.

Winter (December-February)

Cold (-10C to -15C possible in Seoul) but often brilliantly clear skies. Ski season. Fewer foreign tourists.

Winter highlights:

  • Skiing: Yongpyong, High1, Vivaldi Park, Elysian Gangchon — 1.5-2.5h from Seoul
  • Hwacheon Sancheong Ice Festival: January; Korea's famous ice fishing and winter festival on frozen rivers
  • Gyeongbok Palace snow: A handful of snowfall days per winter transform Seoul's palaces
  • Jeju in winter: Camellia flowers, Hallasan snow, fewer crowds

7. Temples, Palaces & Cultural Sites

Seoul's Palaces

Seoul has five royal palaces from the Joseon dynasty (1392-1897), all accessible by public transport.

Palace Korean Notes
Gyeongbokgung 경복궁 Largest; main palace; Changing of the Guard ceremony
Changdeokgung 창덕궁 UNESCO World Heritage; includes the beautiful Secret Garden (비밀정원)
Changgyeonggung 창경궁 Quieter; connected to Jongmyo Shrine
Deoksugung 덕수궁 In the centre of the city; Changing of the Guard
Gyeonghuigung 경희궁 Least visited; peaceful

Admission: Most palaces charge ₩3,000 — free for ARC holders (some) or significantly discounted. The Gyeongbokgung-Changdeokgung-Changgyeonggung combined ticket (₩10,000) is excellent value.

Hanbok rental: Wearing traditional Korean clothes (한복) in the palace grounds is free of charge for entry to most palaces. Rental shops near each palace charge ₩15,000-₩30,000 for a 2-4 hour rental.

UNESCO Sites in Korea

Site Location Notes
Bulguksa Temple & Seokguram Grotto Gyeongju 8th century Silla masterpiece
Changdeokgung Palace Seoul Secret Garden and main palace complex
Hahoe & Yangdong Villages Gyeongju / Andong Intact Joseon-era aristocratic villages
Hwaseong Fortress Suwon 18th century fortress; impressive walking circuit
Jeju Volcanic Island & Lava Tubes Jeju Hallasan, Seongsan Ilchulbong, Manjanggul
Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty Scattered nationwide Beautiful woodland burial mounds
Gochang/Hwasun/Ganghwa Dolmen Sites South Korea Prehistoric megalithic culture
Joseon Dynasty Confucian Academies (Seowon) Nationwide 9 academies inscribed 2019

8. Nightlife & Entertainment Districts

Seoul

Hongdae (홍대): University area; live indie music, club scene, cheap bars, always busy. Most foreigner-friendly nightlife area. Main clubbing venues around Club FF, Cakeshop, and Machinae.

Itaewon (이태원): International district; diverse bar scene; LGBTQ+ friendly area on "Homo Hill"; Western food, international pubs, rooftop bars. More relaxed atmosphere than Hongdae.

Gangnam (강남): Upscale clubs and bars; higher cover charges; K-pop idol sightings. Apgujeong and Cheongdam for premium venues.

Sinchon / Edae: Student bars; cheaper; classic Korean drinking experience with pojangmacha (tent bars) and Korean pub food.

Insadong / Samcheongdong: Art galleries, tea houses, traditional cafes; better for daytime and evening culture than nightlife.

Busan

Seomyeon: Main entertainment district; clubs, karaoke, restaurants, 24-hour street food.

Haeundae: Beach-adjacent; rooftop bars, casual evening scene, night markets in summer.

Norebang (노래방) — Karaoke

Norebang is a private karaoke room experience — your group gets a room to yourselves for 1-2 hours. Sound systems are genuinely excellent. It is an integral part of Korean night-out culture. Cost: approximately ₩15,000-₩30,000/hour per room (split among the group).

9. Sports & Outdoor Activities

Hiking (등산)

Covered in Section 3 — the most accessible and popular outdoor activity.

Cycling

Korea has an extensive national cycling trail network (국토종주 자전거길) connecting much of the country via dedicated paths along rivers. The Four Rivers Trail (4대강 자전거길) stretches 633km from Seoul to Busan and takes 8-10 days to complete. Seoul's Han River bike paths are excellent for casual rides.

Bike rental: Seoul's 따릉이 (Ttareungi) public bicycle system is affordable (₩1,000/hour) and widely available. Busan and other cities have similar schemes.

Surfing

Yangyang (양양) on the East Coast has become Korea's surf hub — multiple surf schools, consistent waves from spring through autumn, a young and international crowd. Easiest destination for beginner lessons.

Rock Climbing

Bukhansan National Park has excellent granite sport climbing routes accessible from Seoul. Indoor climbing gyms (클라이밍 짐) have proliferated across Korea — very popular among younger Koreans.

Skiing & Snowboarding

Major resorts all within 1-3 hours of Seoul:

Resort Distance from Seoul Notes
Yongpyong 2.5h Largest; used for 2018 Olympics downhill
High1 2.5h Excellent vertical; good English service
Vivaldi Park 1.5h Closest to Seoul; popular weekends
Elysian Gangchon 1.5h Smaller; good for beginners

Season: approximately December-March. Weekends are packed — go mid-week if possible.

Professional Sports

Sport Season Key Teams
Korean baseball (KBO) March-October LG Twins, Doosan Bears (Seoul), Lotte Giants (Busan)
K-League football March-November FC Seoul, Jeonbuk Hyundai, Ulsan HD
Korean basketball (KBL) October-March Seoul Samsung, Ulsan Hyundai Mobis

KBO baseball games are an excellent expat experience — affordable tickets (₩10,000-₩30,000), lively atmosphere, cheap beer and food at the stadium. Crowd participation culture (synchronised chants for every player) is unique and fun.

10. Travelling Outside Korea: Re-entry & Visa Tips

Re-entry Permit (재입국 허가)

Most long-term visa holders do NOT need a re-entry permit for trips under 1 year — they are automatically exempt. The key exceptions:

  • F-5 (permanent resident): Must return to Korea within 2 years or your PR status lapses
  • Visa applicants with a pending application: Leaving Korea cancels your in-progress application unless you have a valid re-entry permit
  • Certain humanitarian/G-1 visa holders

If in doubt, confirm your status at your local immigration office or via HiKorea before any international trip.

Popular Short Trips from Korea

Korea's geographic position makes it an ideal base for regional exploration:

Destination Approx. Travel Time Notes
Tokyo / Osaka (Japan) 2h by flight Day trips and long weekends popular; visa-free for most nationalities
Fukuoka (Japan) 3h by ferry from Busan or 1h flight Excellent ramen; compact; very popular for a night
Hong Kong 3h by flight Shopping, dim sum, hiking; visa-free for most
Taiwan (Taipei) 2.5h by flight Night markets, mountains, excellent food
Bangkok 5h by flight Winter escape; popular with Seoul-based expats
Vietnam (Hanoi / Ho Chi Minh) 4.5h by flight Excellent winter destination; visa-free for many nationalities

Bringing Items Back to Korea

When returning to Korea with purchased goods abroad:

  • Duty-free allowance: USD 600 per person (₩800,000 equivalent) plus 1L of alcohol and 200 cigarettes
  • Items exceeding this value must be declared at customs
  • Certain food items (meat products, fresh produce) have restrictions — check with Korea Customs Service before travel

11. Budget Travel Tips for Residents

As a resident (not a tourist paying foreign prices), you have access to Korean pricing.

  • Book KTX 30+ days ahead for 30-40% early-bird discounts
  • K-Pass transit card (K-패스): For frequent public transport users; monthly discounts of 20-53% depending on usage frequency
  • ARC discounts: Some national parks, cultural sites, and museums offer free or discounted entry to foreign residents with ARC (not always advertised — ask)
  • Visit attractions on weekdays: No crowds; same experience
  • Use 24-hour convenience stores for meals on trips: A rice ball, ramyeon, and coffee from a convenience store is genuinely good and costs ₩3,000-₩5,000
  • Guesthouses and hanok stays: ₩30,000-₩60,000/night in many heritage cities; clean, atmospheric, far cheaper than hotels
  • Package day tours (from Seoul): T-money card + tour bus operators like KoTour offer English-language day trips to Gyeongju, Jeonju, and DMZ for ₩50,000-₩80,000 including transport and guide

12. Glossary of Travel Terms in Korean

Korean Pronunciation English Meaning
여행 yeohaeng Travel / trip
관광 gwangwang Tourism / sightseeing
기차역 gichayeok Train station
버스터미널 beoseu teomineol Bus terminal
공항 gonghang Airport
숙소 sookso Accommodation
여관 yeogwan Guesthouse / inn
펜션 pension Pension / private guesthouse
한옥 hanok Traditional Korean house
san Mountain
등산 deungsan Hiking / mountaineering
해수욕장 haesuyokjang Beach (swimming beach)
사찰 sachal Buddhist temple
gung Palace
유네스코 UNESCO UNESCO
입장료 ipjangnyo Admission fee
예약 yeyak Reservation / booking
왕복 wangbok Round trip
편도 pyeondo One-way
노래방 noraebang Private karaoke room
포장마차 pojangmacha Street food tent bar
벚꽃 beotkkot Cherry blossom
단풍 danpung Autumn foliage

Last updated: 2025 | livinginkorea.org — Travel & Leisure