Home Travel Guide 1 Week in South Korea Itinerary — Seoul, DMZ, Busan or Jeju
Travel Guide Updated April 2026

1 Week in South Korea Itinerary — Seoul, DMZ, Busan or Jeju

A practical day-by-day plan for seven days in Korea, covering Seoul, a DMZ day trip, and your choice of Busan or Jeju.

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Is One Week Enough for Korea?

Seven days is the sweet spot for a first visit to South Korea. You can comfortably experience Seoul's headline sights, take a licensed DMZ tour, and add a second city or Jeju Island for contrast. It's tight but not rushed if you base yourself in just two locations and use the KTX high-speed train to move between them.

This itinerary assumes you arrive at Incheon International Airport (ICN) on Day 1 and depart on Day 7. If your flight lands late, shift the Day 1 activities to Day 2 and cut one afternoon from Seoul. Most visa-waiver nationals (US, UK, EU, AU, NZ, CA, JP) can stay up to 90 days, but you'll still need a K-ETA (₩10,000, apply at k-eta.go.kr at least 72 hours before flying) unless you qualify for the current exemption list.

Always verify the latest entry rules at hikorea.go.kr and k-eta.go.kr before booking. Requirements change without much notice.

Day-by-Day 7-Day Itinerary

Day 1 — Arrival & Myeongdong

Land at ICN, clear immigration, and take the AREX Express train to Seoul Station (43 minutes). Buy a T-money card at any convenience store to use on subway, buses and taxis. Check into your hotel in Myeongdong or Jongno, then walk around Myeongdong for street food, skincare shops, and your first bowl of kalguksu or kimchi jjigae.

Day 2 — Gyeongbokgung, Bukchon & Insadong

Start at Gyeongbokgung Palace for the 10:00 changing of the guard ceremony. Wear a rented hanbok to skip the ₩3,000 entry fee. Walk to the National Folk Museum, then up the hill to Bukchon Hanok Village for traditional architecture. Finish in Insadong for tea houses, galleries and dinner.

Day 3 — DMZ Day Tour

Book a licensed full-day DMZ tour — independent access is not permitted. Most tours depart central Seoul around 07:30 and return by 16:00, covering the Third Infiltration Tunnel, Dora Observatory and Imjingak. JSA/Panmunjom visits are sometimes suspended, so check availability before booking.

Day 4 — Hongdae, War Memorial & N Seoul Tower

Spend the morning at the War Memorial of Korea (free entry), then head to Hongdae for lunch, busking and indie shopping. Evening: ride the cable car up Namsan to N Seoul Tower for sunset views, and lock a padlock on the terrace if you're feeling romantic.

Day 5 — KTX to Busan or Fly to Jeju

Catch a morning KTX from Seoul Station to Busan (2h40, around ₩60,000) or a 1-hour LCC flight from Gimpo (GMP) to Jeju (CJU) from around ₩40,000. Afternoon beach time at Haeundae or a scenic drive around Jeju's east coast.

Day 6 — Full Day in Busan or Jeju

In Busan: Gamcheon Culture Village in the morning, Jagalchi Fish Market for lunch, Beomeosa Temple or Taejongdae in the afternoon. In Jeju: climb Seongsan Ilchulbong at sunrise, then Manjanggul lava tube and a coastal café stop.

Day 7 — Return & Departure

Morning KTX back to Seoul or direct flight to ICN from Busan/Jeju. Allow at least 3 hours at ICN for check-in, immigration and tax refunds on any shopping over ₩30,000.

Busan vs Jeju — Which to Choose

FactorBusanJeju
Getting thereKTX 2h40 from Seoul1h flight from Gimpo
VibeBig port city, beaches, marketsVolcanic island, nature, resorts
Best forFood, street life, city loversHiking, beaches, road trips
BudgetLower — no flightHigher — flight + rental car
Public transportExcellent subwayLimited — car recommended

Choose Busan if it's your first visit and you want more Korean urban culture. Choose Jeju if you crave nature, volcanic landscapes and don't mind renting a car (international driving permit required).

Budget, Transport & Booking Tips

  • Mid-range budget: around ₩180,000 per person per day including hotel, food, transport and one paid activity.
  • Book KTX tickets on Korail's website or Let's Korail app up to a month ahead for popular weekend trains.
  • DMZ tours sell out — reserve 1-2 weeks ahead, especially for JSA if available.
  • T-money card works on almost all public transport nationwide and in 7-Eleven, CU and GS25 convenience stores.
  • Download Naver Map or KakaoMap — Google Maps walking and transit directions are unreliable in Korea.
A Wise or Revolut card avoids dynamic currency conversion at ATMs. Withdraw from Woori, KEB Hana or Citibank ATMs labeled 'Global'.

Sample Costs for One Week

CategoryBudgetMid-rangeComfort
Hotel (7 nights)₩280,000₩700,000₩1,800,000
Food₩150,000₩300,000₩600,000
Transport inc KTX₩130,000₩180,000₩250,000
Activities₩100,000₩200,000₩400,000
Total per person₩660,000₩1,380,000₩3,050,000
Emergencies: 112 police, 119 fire/medical, 1330 for the 24/7 KTO tourist helpline (free, English available).
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Preguntas Frecuentes

Is 7 days enough to see South Korea?

Yes, for a first visit. You can cover Seoul comfortably, take a DMZ day trip, and add either Busan or Jeju. Going beyond that in a week means constant transit and burnout.

Should I visit Busan or Jeju with one week?

Busan is easier and cheaper (KTX only) and gives you more Korean city culture. Jeju wins for nature and beaches but needs a flight and usually a rental car.

How much does one week in Korea cost?

Plan for roughly ₩1.3-1.5 million per person (about US$1,000-1,100) for a mid-range week including hotels, food, transport and a DMZ tour.

Do I need a K-ETA for one week in Korea?

Most visa-waiver nationals need a K-ETA unless they're on the current temporary exemption list. Apply at k-eta.go.kr at least 72 hours before flying. Always verify at hikorea.go.kr.

Can I do the DMZ on my own?

No. The DMZ is only accessible via licensed tour operators. Independent access is prohibited for security reasons.

Is Korea expensive compared to Japan?

Generally slightly cheaper than Tokyo or Osaka for food and transport, similar for hotels in Seoul. Jeju can be pricey due to the flight and car rental.