Korea nightlife: where to go & how it works
Korean nightlife runs late and comes in many flavors — from casual street-tent snacks and singing rooms to big clubs. Public transport, convenience stores, and food are available deep into the night, so evenings can stretch a long way. Here's a first-timer's map.
The main nightlife districts (Seoul)
- Hongdae — young, energetic, student vibe. Live music, street performances, bars, and clubs. The best all-round starting point.
- Itaewon — the most international area; diverse bars and food, popular with foreigners.
- Gangnam — upscale and pricier; bigger clubs and a polished crowd.
- Euljiro & Jongno — retro "hip" bars in old buildings, plus classic after-work pubs.
- Gyeongridan / Haebangchon — craft beer, cocktail bars, relaxed evenings.
Uniquely Korean nights out
- Pojangmacha (포장마차) — orange street tents serving soju and hot snacks. Cheap, lively, very local.
- Noraebang (노래방) — private singing rooms rented by the hour; a Korean night-out staple, great in a group. English songs available.
- Korean BBQ + soju — dinner easily becomes the night; grill meat, pour drinks for each other (see etiquette below).
- Hof / pubs — casual beer-and-fried-chicken ("chimaek") spots.
- PC bang & 24h cafes — a low-key way to pass late hours.
Drinking etiquette
- Pour for others, not yourself; let someone refill your glass.
- Use two hands when receiving or pouring a drink for someone older, and turn slightly away when drinking in front of elders.
- Soju + beer ("somaek") is a common mix — pace yourself; soju is stronger than it tastes.
- The legal drinking age is 19 — you can drink from January 1st of the year you turn 19; carry ID/passport.
Hours, getting home & rough costs
- Bars and clubs often run until 4–6am; some go all night, especially on weekends.
- The subway stops around midnight. After that, use late-night buses, a taxi, or a ride-hailing app (Kakao T). Weekend late-night taxis can be hard to catch — expect a wait.
- Convenience stores are open 24/7 for water, snacks, and hangover drinks.
- Rough costs: soju ~₩4,000–5,000 a bottle at a restaurant, beer ~₩5,000–8,000 at a bar, club entry ~₩10,000–30,000 (often includes a drink), noraebang ~₩15,000–25,000/hour per room.
Convert prices with our exchange-rate tool.
Staying safe
- Korea is generally very safe late at night, but use normal caution in crowded nightlife areas.
- Watch your drink and don't accept drinks from strangers.
- Avoid touts pulling you into unmarked bars/clubs — some run inflated "service charge" scams. Stick to places with clear pricing.
- Keep enough for a taxi home, and know your accommodation's address in Korean (screenshot it).
- Emergency numbers: 112 (police), 119 (fire/ambulance). For tourist help, the 1330 line offers 24/7 English support.