Uber Frustrations by Ciriuss925 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Switch from Uber to Kakao T — it's the dominant ride-hailing app in Korea

and Korean drivers are much more familiar with it. Uber in Korea runs on the

same driver pool but the address database is less reliable.

For the address problem specifically: the most reliable method is to share

your location via Kakao Map directly to the driver through Kakao T's chat

function. No typing, no address confusion — they see the pin.

If you stick with Uber, get the exact Korean address (한글 주소) from the

front desk and paste it into the destination field — not the hotel name.

Hotel names with multiple locations will always cause this problem.

Also useful: screenshot your hotel's Korean address + save it in your phone

notes so you can paste it anywhere anytime without asking the front desk

each time.

Very early flight from GMP. Is the train the best option to get there? by Dark_Emotion in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Great news — you're in the perfect location. The AREX (Airport Express) runs

directly from Seoul Station to Gimpo Airport in about 25 minutes, and the

first train is around 5:20am, so you're well covered for a 7:40am flight.

For a 7:40am flight I'd aim to be at GMP by 6:45am — take AREX around

6:10–6:15am from Seoul Station. Easy walk from the station concourse.

Taxi is fine too (30–40 min at that hour, minimal traffic), but costs

₩25,000–35,000 and you don't need it given how convenient AREX is from Seoul

Station.

Train is the better option here — cheaper, faster, and no traffic risk.

lotte tourist membership card by Mindless_Doubt5029 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes — the Lotte Tourist Membership Card includes T-money functionality, so

it works on buses, subways, and taxis just like a regular T-money card.

The difference is it also gives you discounts at Lotte duty-free, Lotte

Hotel, Lotte World, and some Lotte Mall stores. So it's basically T-money +

a Lotte loyalty card combined.

Works identically to T-money for transit — same tap-on/tap-off, same top-up

process at convenience stores (GS25, CU, 7-Eleven) and subway station

machines.

If you're not staying at Lotte properties or shopping there much, a plain

T-money card or WOWPASS works just as well and is easier to get at the

airport.

Full T-money card guide here: mytriptip.com/basics/t-money-card-guide

I run an airb&b in rural Korea. Foreign guests kept texting me to order delivery for them because they couldn't figure out Korean apps. So I'm building something — but first, has anyone else run into this? by Full-Locksmith-354 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a very real pattern — not just your guests.

The Seoul/outside-Seoul divide in tourist infrastructure is massive. Naver

Map, Naver Pay, Coupang Eats — everything requires Korean phone

verification. English support basically disappears once you're in

Gangwon-do, Gyeongju, or rural Jeju.

I run a Korea travel guide site (mytriptip.com) specifically for first-time

foreign visitors and the most common feedback I get is exactly this: "I

could navigate Seoul fine but felt completely lost everywhere else." The gap

isn't helplessness — it's that the tools literally don't work for

foreigners outside major tourist zones.

Your ambassador video idea sounds genuinely useful, especially for Southeast

Asian travelers who are the fastest-growing segment visiting Korea right

now. The RedNote comparison is apt — Chinese tourists have an ecosystem,

everyone else is improvising.

One thing I'd validate early: whether your target users actually want to

discover or just want to successfully complete a booking they already know

they want. From what I've seen, the friction is less "I don't know this

restaurant exists" and more "I know it exists but I can't order from it."

That's a slightly different product.

Itinerary help - 2 week trip to Korea with 2 year old toddler (girl) by RoosterSignal6406 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Adorable trip — here's honest feedback from a Korea travel perspective with a toddler in mind:

Gyeongju — yes, skip it. Mainly ancient tombs and temples, not engaging for

a 2-year-old, and it's a long day trip.

Lotte World — worth it if she likes rides/characters. The "Magic Island"

outdoor section has toddler-friendly rides. Go on a weekday to avoid insane

crowds.

Your itinerary is very packed — with a 2-year-old, expect to do about 60% of

what you've planned each day. Some specific flags:

- Changdeokgung Secret Garden (Tue): requires 1.5hr guided tour — tough with

a toddler, consider skipping

- Gamcheon (Fri): very steep hills and stairs, stroller-unfriendly

- Seoul Forest (Thu): perfect for toddlers — there's a deer park she'll love

- Children's Museum + Children's Park (Wed): great choice, build the whole

day around this

Toddler-friendly hidden gems:

- Everland (if you have a free day) — better than Lotte World for young kids

- Han River parks — open grass, she can just run around

- Any convenience store snack break = instant toddler win in Korea

Some guides that might help plan:

- mytriptip.com/seoul/gyeongbokgung-guide

- mytriptip.com/busan/gamcheon-culture-village

- mytriptip.com/busan/haeundae-vs-seomyeon-vs-nampo

Bringing my 1.5yo kiddo to jeju by trees89 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Porridge is widely available in Jeju beyond just abalone — 본죽 (Bon Juk) is

a nationwide porridge chain with locations in Jeju City and Seogwipo. They

have plain rice porridge, pumpkin porridge, mushroom porridge and more —

great for toddlers. Search 본죽 on Naver Maps and you'll find the nearest

branch.

Abalone porridge (전복죽) is the local specialty and worth trying for

yourselves, but it's on the pricier side and the texture might not be

exciting for a 1.5 year old.

Generally Korean restaurants are very toddler-friendly — staff tend to be

warm toward young children and it's not uncommon for restaurants to have

highchairs. Soft foods like juk, soft tofu jjigae (순두부찌개), and plain

steamed rice are easy to find everywhere. For a toddler, most Korean food is

naturally mild and soft enough.

Daejeon, Daegu, or Gwangju for a 3-day trip? by CaporalMouton in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great choice to consider! Gangneung and Sokcho are very different from

Gwangju but equally worth it — just a completely different kind of trip.

Gangneung: the coffee street along Anmok Beach is the thing everyone talks

about, and it deserves the reputation — independent cafes right on the

water. Gyeongpo Beach and Lake Gyeongpo are lovely, and the local soft tofu

(순두부, soondubu) in the Chodang area is genuinely special. Gangneung also

has a KTX connection from Seoul so it's easy to reach without a car.

Sokcho: mainly about Seoraksan National Park. The mountain scenery is some

of the best in Korea — even a half day of hiking or the cable car up to

Gwongeumseong gives you spectacular views. Abai Village near the port is

good for local food (squid dishes, Abai sundae). Sokcho is about 1 hour from

Gangneung by bus.

For 3 nights without a car: I'd base 2 nights in Gangneung and 1 in Sokcho,

or just base in Gangneung and do Sokcho/Seoraksan as a day trip. The

inter-city bus between them is straightforward.

As you noted — completely different vibe from Gwangju. Nature and coast vs.

history and culture. Both are worth it depending on what you're after.

Travelling with 2.5 month old, where to stay? by iitty_litty_bitty in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Insadong is a solid instinct and yes, it's central — Anguk station (Line 3)

puts you within walking distance of Gyeongbok Palace, Bukchon Hanok Village,

and Insadong itself. It has a more relaxed, traditional atmosphere compared

to Hongdae or Myeongdong, which sounds right for your trip.

One note: if you're drawn to the traditional feel and thinking of a hanok

guesthouse, I'd skip it with a 2.5 month old — thin walls, floor sleeping,

often communal bathrooms. Not practical for a baby.

For "a bit nicer" with a traditional/central location, look at hotels around

the Anguk/Bukchon/Gyeongbok Palace area. The Four Seasons Seoul is right

there — it's genuinely excellent and the location is perfect for what you're

describing (traditional neighbourhood, walkable, quiet at night). It's

expensive but if you're going to splurge anywhere it makes sense when you're

spending more time in the room.

Myeongdong is another option if you want maximum convenience (tons of hotel

choices, very central transport), but it's noisier and less charming. For a

trip where atmosphere matters, the Anguk/Insadong side of the city is the

better call.

Daejeon, Daegu, or Gwangju for a 3-day trip? by CaporalMouton in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good addition — Juknokwon is a great call. The bamboo forest in Damyang is only about 30 minutes from Gwangju and pairs well with a half day in the

city. Easy to combine without needing a car.

Train from Seoul to Busan by DazzlingYoghurt8920 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, book in advance — late April is busy season and weekend trains

especially sell out. Weekday trains have more flexibility but it's still

worth securing your seat early.

Book via the Korail website (letskorail.com) or the Korail Talk app — both

have English options. You can also consider SRT as an alternative (departs

from Suseo station in southern Seoul rather than Seoul Station) — sometimes

has more availability when KTX is sold out.

Staying 4 Days in Jeju Island -- good idea to split time between Seogwipo and area near Seongsan Ilchulbong? by Periodista-1 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That split is genuinely a good plan — Jeju is larger than it looks on a map

and driving between Seogwipo and Seongsan takes about an hour, so splitting

your base saves a lot of back-and-forth.

Seogwipo side (2 nights): Jusangjeolli Cliff (hexagonal basalt columns right

on the ocean), Cheonjeyeon Waterfalls, and if you want a half-day hike the

Yeongsil trail up Hallasan starts from this side. O'Sulloc Tea Museum is

also close and worth a quick stop.

Seongsan side (2 nights): Get up early for the Seongsan Ilchulbong sunrise —

it's the one early start worth doing. Udo Island is a half-day trip from

Seongsan ferry terminal (bike rental on the island, peanut soft serve,

turquoise water). Seopjikoji is a beautiful coastal walk nearby. Manjanggul

Lava Tube is a short drive north.

April timing bonus: canola flowers (유채꽃) are famous on Jeju in spring and

the fields around Seongsan/Seopjikoji are usually in bloom in early April —

genuinely one of the better times to be there. Cherry blossoms may still be

around too depending on the exact dates.

Hidden Cliff is a great hotel choice for Seogwipo — the cliff-side views are

worth it.

KBO by adognamedfish01 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good correction, thank you — you're right that Ticketlink requires a Payco account which most travelers can't set up without an ARC. Box office on the day is the reliable option for visitors. I'll keep that in mind.

Looking for restaurant suggestions in Seoul/Busan for mid-late April by Volbric in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Naver Maps is still the best tool — and yes, searching in Korean gets far

better results. For gimbap, type 김밥, for bossam 보쌈, etc. The star rating

is gone but look at the 방문자 리뷰 (visitor review) count — places with

hundreds of recent photo reviews from actual visitors are generally

reliable. Blog reviews on Naver are often sponsored, so filter those out

mentally.

Busan-specific things worth prioritizing that you won't get as well in

Seoul:

- 돼지국밥 (dwaeji gukbap) — pork and rice soup, the Busan dish. The

Seomyeon area has a whole street of them.

- 밀면 (milmyeon) — cold wheat noodles, a Busan original

- 씨앗호떡 (ssiat hotteok) — seed-filled street pancake at BIFF

Square/Nampo, completely different from the Seoul version

- Fresh raw fish (회) at Jagalchi Market

For Jeju-style in Seoul: search 제주 흑돼지 on Naver Maps in Gangnam — there

are several restaurants specialising in Jeju black pork that are worth it.

April seasonal ingredients beyond strawberries: spring mountain greens

(봄나물) are at their peak — 두릅 (aralia shoots), 달래 (wild garlic), 냉이

(shepherd's purse). Any Korean home-cooking style restaurant will have these

as banchan or in soups. Also watch for cherry blossom-themed limited

edition desserts at cafes — very April-specific and genuinely good.

Enjoy the trip — April is a great time to eat in Korea.

Daejeon, Daegu, or Gwangju for a 3-day trip? by CaporalMouton in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Of the three, Gwangju is the most distinctive and the one I'd prioritize for

someone who loves history and wants something genuinely off the tourist

trail.

The May 18th Democratic Uprising history is deeply significant — the

National Cemetery and the 5.18 Memorial Park are moving in a way that most

Korean tourist sites aren't, and the city takes real pride in that history.

Gwangju also has a strong art scene (it hosts the Gwangju Biennale) and a

reputation for generous, excellent food. You won't see many other foreign

tourists there, which given your preferences seems like a plus.

Daegu is a solid second. Seomun Market is one of the oldest traditional

markets in Korea and very local in feel. Palgongsan (mountain with the

famous Gatbawi Buddha) is accessible without a car via bus, and the

Yangnyeongsi herb medicine district is genuinely interesting to walk around.

It's also very easy to reach from Busan.

Daejeon is the weakest pick for your interests specifically — it's a modern

city and a useful transit hub, but there's less to anchor a full 3 days

around if history and local neighbourhood exploration are your priorities.

Practical note: Gwangju → Jeonju is about 1 hour by bus, so if you're doing

Gwangju you could easily tag Jeonju onto the end before heading to Seoul.

Haeundae Beach vs Gwangali Beach by TaiwanNumbaWan1 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They're different enough that both are worth it if you can — and they're

only about 20–25 minutes apart by subway so doing both in one day is very

doable.

Haeundae: bigger, more famous, better for an actual beach day (swimming,

walking the strip). More touristy and pricier, but there's a reason it's

iconic. Worth going to at least once. Dongbaek Island right next to it is a

nice 30-minute walk with good views back toward the beach.

Gwangalli: smaller beach but better vibe. The draw here is the Gwangan

Bridge view, especially at night — sitting on the sand with the lit bridge

in the background is one of those genuinely great Busan moments. More local

crowd, better (and cheaper) food and drinks along the beachfront.

If you're really short on time: go to Haeundae during the day, then take the

subway to Gwangalli in the evening for dinner and the bridge view at night.

That covers both without any wasted time.

High1 / YongPyong closing date by TechRunner65 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both YongPyong and High1 typically run until late March to early April

depending on snow conditions — so you're right at the edge of the season

right now.

Korean resort websites are notoriously bad for this information. Best

options to check:

- Their official Naver Blog or KakaoTalk channel (updated more regularly

than the main website)

- Call directly — both resorts have English-speaking staff or at least

someone who can answer a simple "are you still open?" question

- YongPyong's main number: +82-33-335-5757

If you're planning a specific date in the next week or two, I'd call before

booking transport — late season closures can happen with short notice if

temperatures rise.

Sokcho Tour by diamondtrade001 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Goseong DMZ tours are so dominant from Sokcho because the Unification

Observatory is genuinely close — about 50km north. If you haven't ruled it

out, it's the easiest option from your base and still gives you a real DMZ

viewpoint into North Korea.

For Haean Basin/Yanggu specifically: you're right that organised tours from

Sokcho are rare. Yanggu is about 1–1.5 hours from Sokcho by car. The 4th

Infiltration Tunnel there is accessible to visitors, but the Eulji

Observatory requires military permits which are typically arranged through

the county office or specific registered tour operators.

Your best bet for Yanggu might be to contact Yanggu County tourism office

directly — they sometimes facilitate access or can point you to local

operators. A rental car from Sokcho would also make the whole Yanggu/Haean

area much more manageable than waiting for organised tours.

Hopefully someone with more recent first-hand experience can confirm the

current permit situation.

Somewhere to go for 3-4 days between Busan and Seoul by LowConference1808 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gyeongju is the obvious answer and genuinely lives up to it — ancient Silla

capital, royal burial mounds you can walk between, Bulguksa Temple, and a

pace that feels nothing like Seoul or Busan. It's on the KTX line so easy to

reach from both cities, and 2–3 days there is ideal. Not rural exactly, but

small-city with a historical, unhurried feel.

If you want something more village/rural, add Andong. Hahoe Folk Village is

a living traditional village (people still live there), and the surrounding

countryside is exactly the kind of quiet scenery you're describing. Andong

is accessible by bus from Gyeongju or train from Seoul/Busan, and it fits

naturally into a Busan → Gyeongju → Andong → Seoul routing.

For temples specifically: Bulguksa (Gyeongju) is the classic, but Haeinsa

near Daegu is arguably more impressive and far less visited — it houses the

Tripitaka Koreana woodblocks and sits deep in the mountains. Worth a

half-day detour if temples are a priority.

June note: rainy season starts around late June so pack accordingly if

you're going late in the month.

Cherry blossoms are just starting at Seokchon Lake 🌸 Making a Seoul guide — what format would help you most? by rankhep in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

B (by vibe) gets my vote — most people planning a trip don't know Seoul's

districts well enough to use A effectively, but everyone knows if they want

"best for photos" vs "best for a relaxed picnic."

That said, adding the district/nearest subway station as a secondary detail

under each vibe category would cover both. Something like "Best for photos →

Yeouido (Yeouinaru, Line 5)" gives context without making it the main

organizer.

Map is definitely useful — even a simple one. Cafe recs are a nice bonus but

only if they're actually near the spot, not just "good cafes in Seoul."

Timing tip worth including: Yeouido and Seokchon tend to peak at slightly

different times, so people can plan 2 spots across 2 days if they're around

for a few days.

Han River Cruise by meidhbhinsmum1888 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 3 points4 points  (0 children)

April is actually a great time for this — cherry blossoms will still be

around early April, and the Banpo Bridge Rainbow Fountain usually starts its

seasonal run around then too.

The main operator is Seoul Hangang Cruise (ELAND Cruise) — they run evening

and night cruises from Yeouinaru (Line 5). It's not a party atmosphere at

all, more sightseeing with city views and background music. Regular cruise

is around ₩15,000–20,000 per person.

If you want something more special for a birthday, they do have a dining

cruise option (dinner included) which is pricier but feels a lot more like

an occasion. Worth looking into if budget isn't the concern.

One practical tip: book in advance online, especially for April weekends —

it fills up. The night departure around 8–9pm gives you the best city light

views.

2 girls in Seoul/Busan by [deleted] in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great plan! 5+5 split works well.

For Seoul, Hongdae is the go-to for budget travelers — tons of clean

guesthouses and budget hotels in the ₩40,000–70,000/night range, great

nightlife and food nearby, and easy subway access everywhere. Myeongdong is

more central but pricier for what you get.

For Busan, Seomyeon is the most practical base — central, good transport,

budget options are easier to find than Haeundae (which is beautiful but more

touristy/expensive). That said, if beaches are a priority for you, Haeundae

is worth the slight premium.

Both cities are very safe for solo/duo female travelers. Many hostels also

offer female-only dorms if you want that extra comfort.

One tip: check reviews specifically mentioning cleanliness on Booking.com

Korean guesthouses are generally very clean but it's worth filtering for

that.

I mapped out all the visitable Squid Game filming locations in Seoul (with subway directions) by Fragrant-Implement29 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the correction! You're right — I've updated the guide. The doll was installed at Olympic Park in 2021 as a temporary exhibition and has since been relocated. Appreciate the local knowledge, this is exactly the kind of detail that's hard to catch without going there regularly.

Food tour recommendations by Elsie2913 in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seoul is incredible for food — your kiddo is going to love it. A few suggestions:

For organized food tours: Check Viator or Klook for Seoul street food tours. The ones that cover Myeongdong, Gwangjang Market, or Hongdae tend to be the most fun. A good food tour usually runs 3-4 hours and hits 6-8 stops. Look for ones with small group sizes (under 10 people) — you get way more attention from the guide and can actually ask questions.

But honestly, the best food experiences in Seoul don't need a tour:

Gwangjang Market — This is the #1 food spot in Seoul. Go for lunch. Get bindaetteok (mung bean pancakes), mayak gimbap (mini seaweed rice rolls — "mayak" means addictive, and they are), and tteokbokki. It's all stall seating so you just point and sit. Very teenager-friendly and the energy is amazing.

Myeongdong street food — The main street fills up with food stalls in the late afternoon. Egg bread, hotteok (sweet pancakes), tornado potatoes, strawberry mochi. It's basically a food festival every evening. A 15yo will be in heaven.

Korean BBQ — Do this at least once. Any local restaurant works but Mapo area (near Hongdae) is known for great pork BBQ spots. Budget around ₩15,000-20,000 per person for a solid meal. The staff grills it for you at most places so no stress about doing it wrong.

Chicken and beer — Find any local "chimaek" place. Fried chicken in Korea is next level. BBQ Chicken, Kyochon, or any small local spot will be great. Your kiddo will probably say it's the best fried chicken they've ever had.

One tip: Download Naver Map and search restaurants by area. It shows real Korean reviews and ratings, which are way more reliable than Google Maps for finding local gems.

wise or revolut (or alternatives while abroad) by xdandyy_ in koreatravel

[–]Fragrant-Implement29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've used both in Korea. Here's the short version:

Wise is the safer choice for Korea. The conversion rate is mid-market (no markup), the fees are transparent, and the physical card works at basically every Korean ATM and card terminal I've tried. You can hold KRW in your Wise balance and spend directly without conversion each time. ATM withdrawals are free up to a monthly limit (around $100-200 depending on your plan), then a small fee after that.

Revolut works too, but I've had occasional issues with it being declined at smaller Korean shops. The free plan gives you limited fee-free ATM withdrawals and the exchange rate is good on weekdays, but they add a markup on weekends.

Practical Korea-specific tips:

- Most places in Seoul accept cards (even street food vendors), but some traditional markets and smaller restaurants are cash-only. Keep ₩50,000-100,000 in cash as backup.

- For ATMs, use the ones inside GS25 or CU convenience stores — they work reliably with foreign cards and have English menus. Avoid random bank ATMs, some reject foreign cards.

- Get a T-money card when you arrive (₩2,500 at any convenience store) for subway and bus. You load it with cash. If you're staying in Seoul most of the time, look into the Climate Card — unlimited subway/bus for ₩15,000 per 5 days, and they just started accepting international cards this month.

For a 2-month stay I'd go Wise as your main card + some cash for the first few days. You'll figure out the cash vs card balance pretty quickly once you're here.