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Things to Do in Seoul

13 attractions across 4 categories

Things to Do in Seoul — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Top sight
Gyeongbokgung Palace
Top sight
Bukchon Hanok Village
Top sight
Insadong

As of 2026, the must-see places in Seoul include Gyeongbokgung Palace, Bukchon Hanok Village, Insadong. See highlights, time needed and tips for each below.

Seoul blends historic landmarks, natural scenery, and local food experiences. We've organized 13 attractions across 4 categories. Each attraction card includes entry fees, opening hours, and local tips so you can plan straight from the page. Use the quick links below to jump to your favorite category.

Palaces & Tradition

3 spots
Ornate traditional Korean architecture of Gyeongbokgung Palace — symbol of the 1395 Joseon Dynasty main palace in Seoul 1

Gyeongbokgung Palace

Principal royal residence of the Joseon Dynasty (1395-1910). 132 buildings on 410,000 m² grounds, rebuilt 1990-2020 after Japanese-occupation destruction. The Geunjeongjeon throne hall and Gyeonghoeru pavilion (a wooden hall on 48 stone columns over a lily pond) are the must-photographs. Free entry while wearing hanbok.

Visit Info

  • Price Entry ₩3,000 / $2; free with hanbok rental (₩10,000-20,000 / $7-14)
  • Hours 9:00-18:30 (winter until 17:00); closed Tuesdays
  • Time 2-3 hours

Local Tip

Rent hanbok before entering — instant entry-fee waiver and infinitely better photos. Changing of the Guard at 10:00 and 14:00 daily is the photogenic ceremony. Best at 4-5 PM golden hour with fewer tour groups.

Bukchon Hanok Village in Seoul with tourists walking past 600-year-old traditional Korean houses 2

Bukchon Hanok Village

1km hilltop neighborhood of 900+ traditional Korean houses still inhabited. Walk between Gyeongbokgung and the village (10 min) via Samcheong-dong's café district. Quiet hours observed after 5 PM — residents request tourists not pose at doorways.

Visit Info

  • Price Free
  • Hours Always open (residents request quiet 5 PM-9 AM)
  • Time 1-1.5 hours

Local Tip

Combine with Gyeongbokgung in one half-day. Hanbok rental adds 30-40% better photos. The Bukchon Cultural Center (free) has the best aerial photo viewpoint.

Traditional Korean architecture near Seoul's Insadong cultural district — 700m of crafts, galleries, and tea houses 3

Insadong

Traditional culture and craft district adjacent to Bukchon. Tea houses, calligraphy shops, hanji (paper arts), traditional Korean crafts, and the Ssamzie-gil mall (3-story spiral of indie boutiques). The pedestrian-only Insadong-gil is the main artery.

Visit Info

  • Price Free to wander
  • Hours Most shops 10:00-21:00
  • Time 1.5-2 hours

Local Tip

Side alleys have better tea houses than the main strip. The traditional tea ceremony at any hanok-style tea house is ₩10,000-20,000 / $7-14 and worth it once.

Modern Seoul & Skyline

3 spots
N Seoul Tower framed by cherry blossom branches on Mt. Namsan — Seoul's most iconic skyline view 1

N Seoul Tower (Namsan Tower)

236m communications tower on top of 262m Mt. Namsan — total 498m above sea level. The observation deck has panoramic Seoul views, especially dramatic at sunset and during cherry blossom season. Famous as a K-drama backdrop and the 'love locks' fence around the base.

Visit Info

  • Price Cable car + observation $20; free walk up the mountain
  • Hours 10:00-23:00 (cable car until 22:00)
  • Time 1.5-2 hours

Local Tip

The cable car ride is itself part of the experience. Sunset (arrive 30 min before) is most photogenic. Walking up the mountain instead saves $10 and adds a 30-min hike that locals do for exercise.

Silhouette of the 555m Lotte World Tower against a dusky Seoul sky — Korea's tallest building 2

Lotte World Tower & SkySeoul

555m, the 6th-tallest building in the world (as of 2026; 5th-tallest at 2017 opening). The Seoul Sky observation at 117-123F is the highest in Korea. The transparent glass floor at 477m is the photogenic moment. Lotte World theme park is at the base if you have kids.

Visit Info

  • Price Seoul Sky $20; Lotte World theme park $40
  • Hours 10:00-22:00
  • Time 2 hours observation; full day for theme park

Local Tip

Pre-book online for $5 discount. Sunset booking captures both day and night views. The Lotte World theme park inside the same complex is one of the better Asian theme parks for families with younger kids.

Lotte World Tower at dusk in Gangnam Seoul — the same district as Starfield Library and COEX Mall 3

Starfield Library (COEX Mall)

13-meter-tall two-story bookshelf wall in the basement of COEX Mall, Gangnam. Free entry. Became Instagram-famous in 2017; tourists visit specifically for the architectural photo. The mall also has SEA LIFE COEX Aquarium and the Gangnam Style statue.

Visit Info

  • Price Free
  • Hours 10:30-22:00
  • Time 30-60 minutes

Local Tip

Weekday afternoons have fewer crowds. The aquarium ($28) is decent but skippable. Combine with COEX Convention Center events if any align with your dates.

Markets & Street Food

2 spots
Dried red chili peppers at Gwangjang Market in Seoul — Korea's oldest permanent market, founded 1905 1

Gwangjang Market

200-year-old traditional market in Jongno. Famous for bindaetteok (mung-bean pancakes), tteokbokki, and mayak gimbap (paper-thin rolled rice). Counter-bar restaurants serve full meals at ₩15,000-25,000 / $10-17. The atmosphere is the experience.

Visit Info

  • Price Free entry; meals ₩4,000-25,000 / $3-17
  • Hours 9:00-23:00 daily
  • Time 1.5-2 hours

Local Tip

Order bindaetteok (₩6,000) and mayak gimbap (₩4,000) at any food stall. Counter-bar restaurants serve banchan (side dishes) free. Pair with a soju shot for the full local experience.

Vibrant night market in Myeongdong Seoul — the country's most international street food district 2

Myeongdong Night Market

Tourist-central night street food after 6 PM. Tornado potatoes, Korean street hot dogs (mozzarella-stuffed and rice-flour-coated), egg bread, and dumplings. Plus all the major Korean cosmetics flagships at street level.

Visit Info

  • Price Free entry; meals ₩3,000-10,000 / $2-7
  • Hours Daytime shopping; night food market 18:00-24:00
  • Time 2-3 hours

Local Tip

Hit the night market for street food. For real Korean BBQ at honest prices, walk one street over to Myeongdong Gyoja's neighborhood — fewer tourist markups.

UNESCO Sites & Day Trips

5 spots
Korean traditional fortress — historical context for the Korean peninsula's divided heritage 1

DMZ Tour (Joint Security Area / JSA)

The 248km-long, 4km-wide buffer zone separating North and South Korea since the 1953 armistice — the most heavily-fortified border on Earth. A typical DMZ tour from Seoul (3-4 hour drive each way) visits Imjingak Park (the Freedom Bridge memorial), the Third Infiltration Tunnel (one of four North Korean invasion tunnels discovered between 1974-1990, descended via 350m sloped tunnel), the Dora Observatory (binocular views into North Korea), and Dorasan Station (the unfinished inter-Korea train terminal). The JSA add-on (the actual blue UN huts in Panmunjom where you stand on the border line) requires advance authorization and runs only with state-approved operators.

Visit Info

  • Price Standard DMZ day tour ₩60,000-90,000 / $40-60; JSA add-on ₩100,000-130,000 / $67-87
  • Hours Tours depart 7:30-8:30 AM; return 16:30-17:30 PM
  • Time Full day (10-11 hours)

Local Tip

Book through official Korea Tourism Organization-approved operators (Koridoor Tours, Klook, Viator) — independent visits are banned. JSA requires passport submission 3-5 days ahead and same-day passport carry; non-US/EU passport holders should check eligibility 7+ days ahead. Closed Mondays and during inter-Korean tension periods (verify departure 24h ahead). Dress code at JSA: no ripped jeans, no sandals, no military-style clothing — enforced strictly.

Traditional Korean palace architecture in Seoul — Changdeokgung's surroundings echo the Gyeongbokgung style 2

Changdeokgung Palace + Huwon Secret Garden (UNESCO)

Seoul's second royal palace, built 1405, the canonical 'most beautiful palace' by general consensus over the larger Gyeongbokgung. UNESCO World Heritage since 1997 specifically because Changdeokgung was designed to harmonize with the surrounding landscape rather than impose on it. The 78-acre Huwon (Secret Garden) at the rear was the royal family's private retreat — pavilions, lotus ponds, and a 200-year-old juniper tree, accessible only by guided tour to limit foot traffic. The palace itself is open self-guided; the Secret Garden adds 90 minutes by mandatory guided tour.

Visit Info

  • Price Palace ₩3,000 / $2.20; Secret Garden tour add-on ₩5,000 / $3.50
  • Hours Tue-Sun 9:00-18:00 (Secret Garden tours: 10:00, 11:30, 13:30, 14:30, 15:30); closed Mondays
  • Time 2.5-3 hours (palace + Secret Garden combined)

Local Tip

Book the Secret Garden tour 7-14 days ahead on the official website (eng.cha.go.kr) — same-day tickets sell out by 10 AM. English-language tours run at 11:30 and 14:30; Korean tours are the rest. The April cherry blossom and October maple foliage windows transform the garden — book those weeks 30 days ahead. Wear hanbok rental from Insadong (₩15,000 / $10 per 4 hours) for free palace entry and the canonical photo.

Suwon Hwaseong Fortress — King Jeongjo's 1796 walled city, a UNESCO World Heritage Site 3

Suwon Hwaseong Fortress (UNESCO, 1h south)

The late-18th-century fortified wall surrounding the city of Suwon — 5.7km of stone and brick walls, four monumental gates, and observation towers built 1794-1796 by King Jeongjo. UNESCO World Heritage since 1997 specifically for the unique blend of Korean, Chinese, and Japanese military architecture. Walk the full perimeter (2-3 hours, mostly flat with one elevated section) or ride the fortress trolley. Suwon city itself is the unofficial Korean fried chicken capital with the famous Tongdak Geori (Chicken Street) of 35+ chicken restaurants.

Visit Info

  • Price Wall entry ₩1,000 / $0.70; train round trip ₩2,000 / $1.40
  • Hours Daily 9:00-18:00 (until 22:00 in summer)
  • Time Half to full day from Seoul

Local Tip

Subway Line 1 from Seoul Station to Suwon Station (₩2,000 / $1.40, 50 min). The Hwaseong Haenggung (royal travel palace) inside the fortress runs traditional martial arts demonstrations at 11:00 daily except Mondays (free). Eat fried chicken at Tongdak Geori in Suwon for the canonical local lunch — Maehyang Tongdak and Yongsung Tongdak are the locals' picks. Combine with the Korean Folk Village (30 min from Suwon) for a Joseon-era theme park experience.

Nami Island reflected in a misty lake at Gapyeong — the 'Winter Sonata' K-drama destination 4

Nami Island + Petite France (K-drama destinations, 1h30 northeast)

The half-moon-shaped island in the Han River 60km northeast of Seoul — made internationally famous as the snow-blanketed setting of 'Winter Sonata' (2002, the K-drama that launched Hallyu / Korean Wave). The 2km-long ginkgo-tree avenue is the canonical photo, vivid yellow October-November and snow-covered December-February. Adjacent are Petite France (the 'Little Prince'-themed French village, K-drama backdrop for 'My Love from the Star') and the Garden of Morning Calm (the Korean traditional garden, evening illuminations October-March).

Visit Info

  • Price Nami Island ferry ₩16,000 / $11; Petite France ₩12,000 / $8; combo tour ₩50,000-80,000 / $34-54
  • Hours Nami daily 7:30-21:30; Petite France 9:00-18:00; Morning Calm 8:30-21:00
  • Time Full day from Seoul

Local Tip

Direct ITX train from Cheongnyangni Station to Gapyeong: ₩4,800 / $3.20, 50 min — then shuttle bus to Nami ferry pier. Day tours bundling all three (Nami + Petite France + Morning Calm) at ₩50,000-80,000 / $34-54 are the efficient choice for non-drivers. Spring (April cherry blossoms) and autumn (late October ginkgo + maple) are the peak photogenic windows. Avoid weekends in spring/autumn — Nami's ferry queue can hit 90 minutes.

War Memorial of Korea + National Museum of Korea

Two of Seoul's free major museums covering very different aspects of Korean history. The War Memorial of Korea (Itaewon area) documents the Korean War (1950-1953) and broader Korean military history — outdoor display of B-52 bombers, tanks, and naval vessels; the Statues of Brothers (depicting an actual moment two brothers fighting on opposite sides recognized each other at the front) is the emotional center. The National Museum of Korea (Yongsan) is one of Asia's largest museums, covering 5,000 years of Korean history from prehistoric to modern, with the 10-story stone Gyeongcheonsa Pagoda as the architectural centerpiece.

Visit Info

  • Price Both free entry
  • Hours War Memorial Tue-Sun 9:30-18:00; National Museum daily 10:00-18:00 (Wed/Sat until 21:00)
  • Time 2-3 hours each

Local Tip

Both have excellent free English audio guides. The War Memorial is best on weekday mornings (school groups arrive 11 AM). The National Museum's special exhibitions on Goryeo celadon and Joseon paintings rotate every 3-4 months — check the official site before visiting. Combine with Itaewon dinner for the canonical War Memorial day. Leeum Samsung Museum nearby (Hannam-dong, $11) covers Korean traditional + Korean contemporary art for the third museum option.

Suggested Walking Routes

Half-day to full-day routes that hit the highlights without backtracking.

Royal Seoul Walking Day

About 6 hours
  1. 1
    Hanbok rental near Gyeongbokgung 9:00-9:30

    Tip: Most rental shops are clustered by the palace's east gate; ₩10,000-20,000 / $7-14 for 2-4 hours

  2. 2
    Gyeongbokgung Palace + 10:00 Changing of the Guard 9:30-11:30
  3. 3
    Walk to Bukchon Hanok Village via Samcheong-dong cafés 11:30-12:30
  4. 4
    Lunch at a hanok-style tea house in Insadong 12:30-14:00
  5. 5
    Insadong stroll + Ssamzie-gil mall 14:00-15:00
  6. 6
    Return hanbok + Cheonggyecheon Stream walk 15:00-17:00

    Tip: From Gyeongbokgung to Dongdaemun is 11km of restored urban stream — lit beautifully at night

Modern Seoul Evening

About 5 hours
  1. 1
    Lotte World Tower Seoul Sky observation 17:00-18:30

    Tip: Sunset booking captures both day and night; pre-book online for $5 discount

  2. 2
    Subway to Hongdae for street performances 18:30-19:30

    Tip: Friday-Saturday Hongdae Walking Street has free K-Pop dance covers

  3. 3
    Korean BBQ dinner at Magal BBQ 19:30-21:30

    Tip: Order ssamgyeopsal + galbi + soju for full BBQ experience

  4. 4
    Hongdae bar crawl on Yongri-dan-gil 21:30-1:00

    Tip: Q Bar, Cocoon, Sing Sing all in walking distance; 24-hour cafés if you want to taper

By Interest

Quick picks based on travel style — couples, families, budget travelers, and more.

K-Pop and K-Drama fans
Seoul concert (when in town) + K-Pop dance class + N Seoul Tower (Boys Over Flowers) + Nami Island (Winter Sonata)

Three days of full K-pop immersion. Concert tickets are the pilgrimage moment if dates align.

Foodies
Korean BBQ Apgujeong + Gwangjang Market + Korean fried chicken + cooking class

All four pillars of Seoul food culture in 2-3 days. Add a soju + chimaek (chicken + beer) night for the full local experience.

Couples
Hanbok at Gyeongbokgung + N Seoul Tower 'love locks' + Han River cruise + DMZ day trip

Three iconic photo settings + the deeply meaningful DMZ experience. Han River cruise at sunset is one of Asia's most romantic city dates.

Family with kids
Lotte World Theme Park + COEX Aquarium + Korean Folk Village + Alive Museum (3D illusions)

Two full theme/family days plus folk village covers Korean culture for kids. Alive Museum in Insadong is the rainy-day backup.

Budget travelers
Convenience-store meals + Cheonggyecheon walk + Han River park + Hongdae buskers

Three days of full Seoul experience at $40/day food + transit. Convenience stores have proper meals at $3-5; Han River park bikes are $5/hour.

Beauty / shopping
Olive Young Myeongdong + COEX Mall Gangnam + Apgujeong plastic surgery row + premium spa day

K-Beauty heaven plus a premium spa experience. Tax-free at Olive Young if you spend ₩30,000+ with passport.

Practical Tips

Local know-how that saves you time and money on the ground.

1

Use Naver Maps or KakaoMap, not Google Maps. Google Maps doesn't show driving directions in Korea due to national security law restrictions on data export.

2

Rent hanbok before entering Gyeongbokgung — you save the entry fee, get better photos, and Koreans appreciate it. Most rental shops have English-speaking staff.

3

T-Money card pays for subway, buses, taxis, and even convenience-store snacks. Get one at any subway station for ₩4,000 / $2.70 deposit (refundable).

4

Don't tip — tipping is not Korean culture and may be refused. Service is included and the tip can confuse the recipient.

5

K-ETA is required for visa-exempt entry. Apply at k-eta.go.kr at least 72 hours before your flight ($7, valid 3 years). Don't wait until the airport.

Getting Around

Seoul Subway is the answer for 95% of trips. 23 lines, 700+ stations, all stations have Korean + English signage. Single rides ₩1,500 / $1 by distance. T-Money card (₩4,000 deposit, refundable) is the IC card — also works on buses, taxis, and convenience stores. Buses are also great if you know the route; same fare. Taxis are clean and metered; base fare ₩4,800 / $3.20, ~25-30% cheaper than Tokyo cabs. KakaoTaxi app is the local Uber equivalent.

Scams & Tourist Traps

  • Itaewon nightlife touts — though crowd has thinned post-2022 incident, lingering touts approach at Itaewon for 'free entry to Korean nightclub' that turns into ₩200,000+ table charges. Walk past anyone soliciting on the street.

  • Taxi 'no English' refusals at midnight — some drivers refuse foreign passengers near subway closing time (23:30-24:00). Use KakaoTaxi app — the destination is set upfront and the driver can't refuse without consequences.

  • Fake K-Beauty street vendors — random Hongdae or Myeongdong sidewalk sellers offering 'authentic Innisfree' at 50% off are usually counterfeit. Buy K-Beauty at official Olive Young, Innisfree, or department stores only.

  • Hostel/hotel 'AC fee' or 'cleaning fee' added at checkout — some smaller guesthouses add unannounced ₩10,000-30,000 fees not in the booking. Confirm with the hotel before arrival; reputable booking platforms (Agoda, Booking.com) usually cover this.

  • Insadong tea house pricing inflation — main-street tea houses charge ₩15,000-30,000 / $10-20 for traditional ginseng tea (vs ₩5,000-8,000 in side alleys). Walk one street off Insadong-gil for honest prices.

Book Tours & Activities in Seoul

Booking online is typically cheaper than walk-up rates and reserves your spot.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about attractions and activities in Seoul.

What are the five must-see places in Seoul?
First, Gyeongbokgung Palace ($2). Built 1395 by King Taejo as the main Joseon Dynasty palace — the architectural scale from Heungnyemun gate through Geunjeongjeon, Sajeongjeon, and Gyeonghoeru pavilion is genuinely impressive. Daily Changing of the Guard at 10 AM and 2 PM, plus the free National Folk Museum and National Palace Museum on the same grounds. Hanbok rental ($7–22) gets you free entry and Instagram shots. Second, Bukchon Hanok Village (free). 900 traditional hanok homes still occupied as a residential district, sandwiched between Gyeongbokgung and Changdeokgung. The Bukchon 8 Views are the iconic photo spots — go on weekday mornings (this is a real residential area, keep voices down). Third, N Seoul Tower + Han River ($20 observatory). Namsan cable car ($10 round-trip), the love-lock fence, Han River's 12 districts, and the Banpo Bridge Rainbow Fountain Show (April–October, 5–7 times daily after sunset, free) — a convenience-store ramen by the river ($3) is the canonical local experience. Fourth, Gwangjang Market ($3–17). Korea's oldest permanent market (founded 1905), CNN 'World's Best Street Food' two-time selection — bindaetteok (mung bean pancake), mayak gimbap, yukhoe (raw beef tartare). Fifth, DMZ tour ($45–70 for 8 hours). Imjingak, the Third Tunnel, Dorasan Station, and the geopolitical context of the Korean War. Three days hits the headlines, five adds Suwon and Nami Island, seven extends to Busan or Jeju.
What can you do in Seoul for free or nearly free?
Gyeongbokgung Changing of the Guard (daily 10 AM and 2 PM, 15 min, free). Wearing hanbok makes all four major palaces (Gyeongbokgung, Changdeokgung, Changgyeonggung, Deoksugung) plus Jongmyo shrine free. Bukchon Hanok Village + Insadong's car-free Sunday walk are free. Gwangjang Market is free to browse (watching bindaetteok being made is half the experience). Han River's 12 districts are free 24 hours — Ttareungi shared bikes are $0.75/hour, and the Banpo Bridge rainbow fountain show (April–October, 5–7 evening shows) is free. Namsan Park walk to N Seoul Tower's love-lock fence is free (1 hour up). Cheonggyecheon's 5.8km downtown stream walk is free. Starfield Library inside COEX Mall is free entry with its 13m bookshelves (Instagram landmark). Myeongdong Night Market street walk is free (you just buy food). Han River Mangwon district is free for camping/picnics. Pavilions, viewpoints, and Seoul City Hall plaza host free events constantly.
Which Seoul attractions are expensive, and how do I save?
Lotte World Adventure ($45), Lotte World Tower SkySeoul Observatory ($20), N Seoul Tower Observatory ($20), Aquarium ($21), and HYBE Insight ($16) are the expensive picks. Combined they cost less than a single NYC attraction. The 'Royal Palace Pass' ($7.50) covers all four palaces plus Jongmyo plus Huwon Secret Garden — full set. The 'Discover Seoul Pass' (1-day $30, 2-day $41, 3-day $52) includes 30+ attractions — pays back at 2–3 spots. K-pop concert tickets run $75–225, so target advance sales + foreigner-only ticket allocations (HYBE Insight or KSPO Dome sites). Tax refund: 10% VAT back at the airport on purchases over $22 (Tax Refund counter; Tax Free–marked stores only). Michelin Korean fine dining (Mingles, Jungsik) is half-price at lunch ($52–90 vs. dinner $150–340). Daiso ($0.75–$3.75) is the go-to for travel sundries and souvenirs.
What are the best day trips from Seoul?
DMZ Tour (8 hours, $45–70) — Imjingak, Third Tunnel, Dorasan Station, Dora Observatory; Korean War context. Suwon Hwaseong Fortress is 30 min by KTX ($7 round-trip) or 1 hour by subway ($1.50 round-trip) — 1796 UNESCO World Heritage Site, 5.7km walled city plus Hwaseong Haenggung palace. Nami Island + Petite France is 1h10 by ITX ($4.50 round-trip) — 'Winter Sonata' K-drama destination; the Gapyeong combo package runs $37–52. Incheon Chinatown + Songdo is 1 hour by subway ($1.50) — Korea's largest Chinatown plus Songdo Central Park. Ganghwa Island is 1.5 hours by car — Dangun mythology origin and Baekje-era temples. Busan is 2.5 hours by KTX ($90 round-trip), genuinely needing 1-night minimum (Haeundae, Jagalchi Market, Gamcheon Culture Village). Jeju Island is a 1-hour flight ($75–150 round-trip) — 2-3 nights for Hallasan, Olle Trail, and the haenyeo (free-diving women) culture. Some 'Discover Seoul Pass' tiers cover specific day-trip attractions — check the inclusion list before buying.
Where is Seoul good for kids?
Lotte World Adventure ($45 in Jamsil) is Asia's largest indoor theme park plus the Magic Island outdoor section — 100+ attractions plus ice rink and folk museum on one site. Weekday mornings have the shortest queues. Everland ($46, Yongin, 1 hour by car) combines zoo, safari, rides, and seasonal tulip/rose gardens. COEX Aquarium ($21, Samseong) pairs with the free Starfield Library and COEX Mall dining for a full-day kid route. Children's Grand Park (Neungdong, free) has a zoo, amusement park, and botanical garden — the best value family destination. The Children's Museum + National Museum of Korea (Yongsan, free, kid-friendly) makes the rainy-day pick. Han River bike rentals ($0.75/hour Ttareungi) and riverside picnics work year-round. Caribbean Bay water park ($38, summer) plus Caribbean Pirates plus Splash World are 1 hour out by car. Myeongdong Night Market plus Dongdaemun Design Plaza (DDP, free) are kid-friendly. Insadong Ssamzigil 4th-floor craft workshops ($11–30) teach Korean traditional crafts.
Where are the best Seoul night views and sunset spots?
N Seoul Tower Observatory ($20, 243m) is the iconic #1 — Namsan cable car ($10 round-trip) and the love-lock fence are part of it. 30 min before sunset is the signature entry time. Lotte World Tower SkySeoul Observatory ($20, 555m, Korea's tallest building) — the 117th-floor glass-bottom Sky Deck ($3.75 extra) is the dramatic moment; on clear days you see Incheon Airport. Han River Banpo Bridge Rainbow Fountain Show (April–October, 5–7 evening shows after sunset, free) — the 1,140m bridge with synchronized fountains and rainbow lighting. Jamsil Sports Complex riverside (free) is a hidden night-view spot. Han River Nodeul Island + Yeouido Han River Park — biking + picnics + free night views. Cheonggyecheon night illumination (November–February only, free). Dongdaemun Design Plaza (DDP) LED lighting is the night view itself — free. Gwanghwamun Plaza + Gyeongbokgung night opening (March–October weekdays 7–9:30 PM, $2.50; hanbok = free). Han River cruise ($11–19, 1 hour) with sunset routing.
What scams or rip-offs should I watch for in Seoul?
Itaewon and Hongdae club districts' 'VIP free entry' touts mean surprise cover and drink charges. Myeongdong 'free cosmetic sample' touts lure you into pressure sales — just ignore. Myeongdong and Itaewon taxis that won't run the meter — refuse and use Kakao Taxi instead (base $3.60 via app, Korean/English available). Some downtown temples demand 'donations' — only the official entry fee is required. Taxi rates: 12 AM–4 AM, 20% surcharge plus extra for trips outside city limits. Myeongdong K-pop merchandise stores mark up 'limited editions' 30–50% — compare against COEX SM TOWN or official online stores. Cosmetic store 'recommendations' from staff are often commission-based — the same items are 30% cheaper at Olive Young. Fake hanbok rentals ($3.75–6) have bad quality and don't fit — stick to majors like 'Hanbok Nam', 'Hanbok Talk', or 'Gyeongbokgung Hanbok Rental'. ATMs: only Global ATMs accept foreign cards ($2.25–3.75 fee per use). Korea has no tipping culture — high-end restaurants include a 10% service charge in the price, so don't add tip on top.
What are the lesser-known local spots most tourists miss in Seoul?
Seongsu-dong (Line 2, Ttukseom Station) is Seoul's Brooklyn — leather workshops, designers, indie cafés, and weekend flea markets cluster here. Daelim Changgo, Seongsu Yeonbang, and Ashihansha are the cafe picks. Yeonnam-dong (next to Hongdae, Line 2) has cafe alleys, designer boutiques, and flea markets — the real trend zone after dodging Hongdae's crowds. Ikseon-dong (Jongno, Lines 1/3) is a 600-year hanok cafe alley — old hanok homes turned cafés, bars, and restaurants, Instagram-famous. Mangridan-gil (Mangwon-dong, Line 6) — Mangwon Market + Han River Mangwon district + indie café alley. Euljiro Nogari Alley (Euljiro 3-ga) — 1953 Hamheung naengmyeon shop plus 1970s-era beer joints serving nogari (draft beer + dried pollack) at $1.10/glass; the Korean white-collar after-work drinking atmosphere. Songridan-gil (next to Jamsil, Line 8) — 15-min walk from Lotte World Tower, indie cafes and dessert alley. Gwanghwamun + Cheonggyecheon evening walk — free downtown route with great photos. Myeongdong's back alleys (Euljiro 4-ga) for 'Myeongdong-native' restaurants like Myeongdong Kyoja and Jinju-gwan. Three Michelin-starred Korean: Mingles (★★), Jungsik (★★), Joo Ok (★★) are Korea's fine-dining pinnacle. Insadong's Tongin Antique Shop (founded 1924), Gallery Hyundai, and the free National Museum of Korea for serious Korean art and history.

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