
Busan
South KoreaSouth Korea's lively port city, Busan captivates with its stunning coastline, colorful hillside villages, world-famous fish market, rejuvenating hot springs, and an international film festival that has put it on the global cultural map.
Quick Facts: Busan
- Cheapest fare
- ฿4,486
- Cheapest month
- June
- Airlines
- 14 carriers
- Flight time
- ~5h 20m
- Non-stop
- Direct flights available
- Avg temperature
- 21°C
- Climate
- Mild
- Distance
- 0 km
South Korea's lively port city, Busan captivates with its stunning coastline, colorful hillside villages, world-famous fish market, rejuvenating hot springs, and an international film festival that has put it on the global cultural map.
Best Deals
Price Intelligence
Historical pricing for flights to Busan
Year avg
฿7,375
Cheapest seen
฿4,486
Plan Around a Holiday
Long weekends & public holidays
About Busan
Busan's coastline is among the most scenic and varied of any major city in Asia, stretching from golden sandy beaches to dramatic rocky cliffs, ancient seaside temples, and colorful fishing villages. The star attraction is Haeundae Beach, a 1.5-kilometer crescent of fine sand that fills with sunbathers, surfers, and families during the warm months and serves as the backdrop for the city's famous international film festival each October. The beachfront promenade is lined with seafood restaurants, cafés, and luxury hotels, and at night the area transforms into a vibrant entertainment zone. Just south along the coast, Gwangalli Beach offers a more relaxed atmosphere and what may be the most photogenic night view in Korea: the Diamond Bridge spanning the harbor, its LED lights cycling through patterns reflected in the dark water. For a more rugged coastal experience, the Haedong Yonggungsa Temple is a Buddhist temple perched on oceanside cliffs northeast of the city, offering a rare combination of temple architecture and crashing waves — most Korean temples are nestled in mountains, making this coastal setting exceptional. The Igidae Coastal Trail, running along the clifftops between Oryukdo Skywalk (a glass-bottomed walkway jutting over the sea) and Haeundae, provides roughly five kilometers of stunning ocean panoramas and is one of the best urban hikes in South Korea. At the city's southern tip, Taejongdae Park occupies a forested headland where walking paths wind through camellia trees to clifftop viewpoints overlooking the open sea, with Japan's Tsushima Island visible on clear days. Whether you are building sandcastles, watching monks chant against a backdrop of Pacific waves, or trekking clifftop trails above sparkling water, Busan's coast delivers endless variety.
Busan's markets are legendary, and no visit is complete without plunging into the sensory overload of Jagalchi Market, the largest seafood market in South Korea. Spread across a massive waterfront building and the surrounding streets, Jagalchi is a living theater of commerce where vendors shout over tanks teeming with every conceivable sea creature: wriggling octopus, glistening mackerel, spiny sea urchins, and enormous king crabs. On the upper floors, restaurants prepare your market-fresh selections as sashimi, grilled, or in spicy stews, offering some of the freshest and most affordable seafood dining in the country. Nearby, the Gukje International Market is a sprawling labyrinth of covered alleys selling everything from imported clothing and souvenirs to vintage electronics and traditional Korean textiles. The food stalls here are equally compelling: try ssiat hotteok, a Busan specialty pancake stuffed with seeds, nuts, and brown sugar syrup, or tteokbokki (spicy rice cakes) served at legendary street stalls that have been perfecting their recipes for decades. For cultural immersion, the Gamcheon Culture Village is Busan's most photogenic neighborhood, a hillside settlement of pastel-painted houses cascading down to the harbor, decorated with murals, sculptures, and quirky art installations. Originally built as a refugee settlement during the Korean War, it has been transformed into a vibrant open-air gallery that tells the story of Busan's resilience. Winding through its narrow staircase streets, you'll discover hidden cafés, artist workshops, and rooftop viewpoints offering sweeping vistas of the harbor. The Huinnyeoul Culture Village along the southern coast offers a similar but quieter experience, with clifftop paths connecting renovated houses that now serve as galleries and book cafés overlooking the sea.