📍 Places to Visit

Gyeongbokgung Palace
Korean Folk Village
Insadong
Bukchon Hanok Village
National Museum of Korea

Culture — Travel That Experiences Korea Firsthand

The real charm of a trip to Korea lies not behind museum glass but inside a culture that is still alive and moving. Walking a 600-year-old palace in hanbok, passing through hanok alleys where people actually live, standing before 5,000 years of artifacts, watching a performance at a traditional market — all of this is possible within a half-day in the city center.

What you can experience

  • Palaces — the architecture and gardens of the Joseon dynasty. Gyeongbokgung is the best known, and many palaces are free to enter if you wear hanbok.
  • Museums — the National Museum of Korea lets you see all of Korean history, from prehistory to Joseon, for free.
  • Hanok villages & alleys — streets where tradition and the modern mix, like Bukchon and Insadong.
  • Folk village — an open-air museum recreating a whole Joseon-era town, with performances and hands-on programs.

Use the seasons

Cultural sites change with the seasons, too. Spring blossoms at a palace, autumn foliage over hanok roof tiles, a snow-covered old palace in winter — each makes the same place look entirely different. Indoor museums are good for escaping heat and cold, easy to add to a midsummer or midwinter itinerary.

Good to know

Most sites are downtown and reachable by subway, and palaces and museums are free or inexpensive. Hanbok rental shops are plentiful near the landmarks, so you can borrow one on the spot. Hanok villages are real residential areas, so quiet, considerate visiting is expected.

The places below are recommended for foreign travelers encountering Korean culture for the first time.

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