Skip to main content

40 posts tagged with "City"

City-focused travel guides and neighborhood overviews.

View All Tags

Beyond the Humidity: The Best Summer Beach Escapes in Korea

· 22 min read
Elena Vance
Editor-in-Chief & Logistics Expert

Summer in Korea (July-August) is not for the faint of heart. It is hot, sticky, and incredibly humid. But the heat is also the perfect excuse to explore the country's stunning coastline.

Whether you want to surf the waves of the East Coast, sip coffee overlooking a night bridge in Busan, or just float in turquoise water, Korea has a beach for you.

Here is your guide to escaping the city heat and finding your perfect summer spot.

Beyond the Humidity: The Best Summer Beach Escapes in Korea

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Mastering Seoul's Transport System: Bus Colors, Transfer Discounts, and The Pink Seat

· 16 min read
Kai Miller
Cultural Explorer & Photographer

Seoul's public transportation system is often cited as one of the best in the world. It is clean, hyper-efficient, and covers every inch of the city.

but it is also a complex web of color-coded buses and silent rules. To save money and avoid getting lost, you need to understand the Hwanseung (Transfer) system and the logic behind the colors.

Stop wasting money on taxis. Here is how to navigate Seoul like a local.

Mastering Seoul's Transport System: Bus Colors, Transfer Discounts, and The Pink Seat

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Seoul to Busan: The Ultimate Transport Battle (KTX vs. SRT vs. Bus vs. Flight)

· 15 min read
Kai Miller
Cultural Explorer & Photographer

The journey from Seoul to Busan covers about 325 kilometers (200 miles) diagonally across the Korean peninsula. It connects the two largest cities in the country—the political capital (Seoul) and the maritime capital (Busan).

This is the "Golden Route" of Korean travel. Almost every visitor will make this trip at least once.

But how should you withstand the journey? Do you prioritize speed? Budget? Or perhaps you want to sleep in a lay-flat seat?

Here is the ultimate breakdown of the four main ways to travel from Seoul to Busan.

Seoul to Busan: The Ultimate Transport Battle (KTX vs. SRT vs. Bus vs. Flight)

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Battle of the Cards: K-Pass vs. Climate Card vs. T-Money

· 15 min read
Kai Miller
Cultural Explorer & Photographer

In 2024, Korea's public transport payment landscape got complicated. What used to be a simple choice—"Just get a T-Money card"—has evolved into a three-way battle for your wallet.

Now, travelers are faced with three major competitors: the resident-focused K-Pass, the Seoul-specific unlimited Climate Card (Gihu Donghaeng Card), and the classic, reliable T-Money.

Which one should you buy? The answer depends entirely on your itinerary. Are you a "Seoul Power User" hitting five cafes a day in Hongdae? Or are you a cross-country explorer heading to Busan and Jeju?

Here is the definitive breakdown for 2025 to help you choose the right card and save money.

Battle of the Cards: K-Pass vs. Climate Card vs. T-Money

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

A Foodie's Guide to Seoul: Top 15 Must-Try Street Foods

· 15 min read
Elena Vance
Editor-in-Chief & Logistics Expert

In Seoul, the best meal you will have might cost 3,000 won and be eaten standing up on a street corner while a vendor watches you. Korean street food culture is not a survival option for budget travelers — it is a distinct culinary tradition with its own deep history, regional variations, and vendors who have spent decades perfecting a single dish. The orange pojangmacha tent stalls that appear across Seoul at dusk are temples in their own right, and Gwangjang Market's mung bean pancake vendors have been cooking the same recipe for three generations.

Seoul street food stalls at night with tteokbokki, fish cake skewers and crowds of visitors

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Daegu Travel Guide: The Hot & Tasty Heart of Korea

· 14 min read
Elena Vance
Editor-in-Chief & Logistics Expert

They call it "Daefrica"—a portmanteau of Daegu and Africa. Yes, Daegu is notorious for being the hottest city in South Korea during the summer, but the soaring temperatures perfectly match the fiery passion of its people and the intense spice level of its legendary food scene. As of 2026, the city has transformed itself into a hub of "Green Heat Management," with misting "smart-poles" and expansive urban forests making even a July visit surprisingly manageable.

Daegu Travel Guide 2026: The Hot and Tasty Heart of Korea

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Beyond the Layover: A Day Trip Guide to Incheon

· 14 min read
Kai Miller
Cultural Explorer & Photographer

Most travelers treat Incheon as a waiting room — the place you sit between your flight and your Seoul hotel. That is a significant miscalculation. Incheon is a city of extraordinary contrasts: one of the most ambitious planned urban districts ever built on reclaimed land, directly adjacent to a 19th-century port district where the alleyways still smell of the black bean noodles invented here over a century ago. If you have six hours or more between flights, or if you are looking for a day trip that feels nothing like Seoul, Incheon will surprise you every time.

Songdo Central Park Incheon futuristic skyline with waterway and city towers

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Gyeongju Travel Guide: The Museum Without Walls

· 13 min read
Elena Vance
Editor-in-Chief & Logistics Expert

If Seoul represents the hyper-modern, fast-paced face of 21st-century South Korea, Gyeongju undeniably represents its ancient, enduring soul. For almost an entire millennium—from 57 BC to 935 AD—this relatively small city in the southeastern corner of the Korean peninsula stood proudly as the capital of the Silla Kingdom.

Gyeongju Travel Guide The Museum Without Walls

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

The Ultimate Seoul Travel Guide: Where to Stay & What to See

· 15 min read
Elena Vance
Editor-in-Chief & Logistics Expert

Seoul is massive, and that scale is the first thing that intimidates first-time visitors. At 600 square kilometers with nearly 10 million residents in the city proper — and 25 million in the greater metropolitan area — it is one of the largest urban concentrations on earth. The subway map alone looks like a circuit board. The question every traveler faces is the same: where do I start, where do I stay, and how do I see enough of this city to understand it in a finite number of days?

Seoul cityscape at night with Han River and illuminated city towers from Namsan Mountain

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.

Exploring Busan: A Complete Guide to South Korea's Coastal Gem

· 14 min read
Kai Miller
Cultural Explorer & Photographer

If Seoul is the polished, high-speed, high-achievement capital of Korea, Busan is its counterweight — louder, saltier, warmer in every sense. Korea's second city sits on the southeastern tip of the peninsula where the mountains meet the sea, a geography that forces the city's architecture and personality into a compressed, dramatic arrangement: hillside neighborhoods spilling toward harbor waters, beaches backed by skyscrapers, Buddhist temples clinging to sea cliffs. The people here are famously more direct, the dialect more pronounced, the food spicier, and the overall atmosphere one of a place that does not defer to Seoul's self-regard.

Sky Capsule train on Haeundae Blue Line Park track above the ocean in Busan Korea

Sponsored booking
한국 태그 글에만 노출됨. 스크롤 흐름을 안 깨고도 클릭을 받을 수 있음.