Korean barbecue
Best planned as a social meal with enough time, not squeezed between attractions.

A South Korea checklist for Seoul, Busan, transit cards, cards, cash backup, winter layers, markets, and food-first days.
This page is intentionally static. Use it before booking, then verify current payment acceptance, local transport rules, prices, closures, and entry details near departure.
South Korea is a strong first Asia trip for travelers who like cities, food, transit, and neighborhood density. The essentials are transit-card planning, card backup, small cash, and season-appropriate clothing.
Food works best when planned by neighborhood. Markets, barbecue meals, cafes, soups, and simple takeaway foods all have a role; the trip does not need every meal to be a famous restaurant.
Reviewed 2026-06-27
Static planning guidance. Verify current payment acceptance, transit card rules, ATM fees, opening hours, local closures, and entry requirements before departure.
Keep the bag focused on the country, season, and route shape instead of rare edge cases.
Treat these as useful route anchors, not a rigid list that makes every meal feel mandatory.
Best planned as a social meal with enough time, not squeezed between attractions.
A useful first dish for travelers who want vegetables, rice, and flavor without a complicated ordering process.
Good for cold days or when the itinerary needs a filling, simple meal.
Strong market or evening food, but pace spice and late-night eating honestly.
A practical train, picnic, or light-lunch option.
Payment acceptance varies by city, merchant, machine, card network, and date. Use this as the backup plan to verify before departure.
Cards are widely useful in cities, shops, restaurants, hotels, and cafes.
Transit stored-value cards simplify subways, buses, taxis, and convenience-store purchases.
Keep some cash for transit card top-ups, markets, small stalls, and backup.
Products such as tourist prepaid or transport-payment cards can help, but compare fees and current rules before relying on one.
Foreign wallet support varies by merchant and card, so keep a physical card.
Cards are widely useful, but some cash is still practical for transit-card setup or top-ups, markets, small stalls, and backup.
T-money and Cashbee are common stored-value options for transit and convenience-store use, but travelers should check current purchase and top-up options before arrival.
Ignoring season. Winter can be genuinely cold, while summer can be humid and rainy, so clothing should match the travel month.
Pair country essentials with checks for hotel location, transfer risk, timed tickets, rail passes, and hidden package costs.