Let’s skip the tourist checklist garbage.
You’ve seen the clickbait: “10 Must-See Things in Seoul!” It always includes the same recycled spots: Myeongdong, N Seoul Tower, Lotte World, maybe a random palace for bonus “culture points.”
Let’s fix that.
This is the real list—no fluff, no overhyped photo traps, no pretending a mall is a “cultural attraction” (I’m talking about you, Starfield Library). These are the Top 10 things you should actually do in Seoul, ranked not by how many likes they get on Instagram, but by how much soul (and Seoul) they have.

1. Euljiro After Dark: Neon, Soju, and Seoul’s Best Dive Bars
Think industrial workshops bathed in green and pink neon. Tiny staircases lead to smoky hideouts where bartenders serve cocktails in teacups, and Korean uncles sing 1980s ballads in the alleyways.
- Best for: Night owls, creatives, anti-influencer types
- Skip if: You’re allergic to metal shavings and cigarette smoke

2. Gyeongbokgung Palace (But Only If You Do It Right)
Wear a hanbok (free entry), get there early (before the tour buses), and actually take in the architecture—not just the selfie potential. Don’t bother with a rushed group tour. Instead, spend time wandering, then hit the National Folk Museum behind it.
- Best for: History nerds, photographers
- Avoid: Peak weekend crowds; also skip the Changing of the Guard if you’re low on time—it’s more cosplay than ceremony.

3. Mangwon Market: Seoul’s Food Lab
This is where real Koreans actually shop, and where young vendors are reinventing street food. We’re talking deep-fried bulgogi dumplings, crème brûlée hotteok, and next-gen bungeoppang.
- Best for: Food tourists, street food hunters
- Avoid: Showing up hangry—too many choices = paralysis

4. Ikseon-dong Hanok Village: The Last Cool One
Yes, it’s popular. But it earns it. Instead of being a soulless theme park, Ikseon is a tight-knit warren of century-old hanok buildings filled with cocktail dens, handmade crafts, and surprisingly good bistros.
- Best for: Café crawlers, boutique lovers, couples
- Avoid: Midday weekends—it’s a zoo. Go early evening instead.

5. Majang Meat Market: Grill With the Butchers
It’s Seoul’s largest meat market, but tourists rarely go. Why? Because it smells like beef and isn’t sanitized. Pick your Hanwoo (Korean beef), then take it upstairs and grill it yourself with the same guys who butchered it. It’s primal. It’s glorious.
- Best for: Carnivores, Korean BBQ fans
- Avoid: If you think meat should come shrink-wrapped and guilt-free

6. Eungbongsan or Inwangsan: Actual Seoul Hikes With Actual Views
Forget Namsan Tower. These hikes have better views, fewer tourists, and no overpriced elevator tickets. Plus, you might pass a shrine or a shamanic altar along the way.
- Best for: Hikers, photographers, temple nerds
- Avoid: Rainy days unless you like slipping on wet pine needles
Bonus: Go for a unique hike that is more than just racing up a trail. The Seoul Hike offers an afternoon away from the crowds complete with folktales of Korea’s mountain culture.

7. Hongdae: Seoul’s Chaos Engine of Youth Culture
More than just bars and shopping, Hongdae is a living organism. Street dancers, buskers, late-night tteokbokki stalls, claw machine arcades, gallery pop-ups—it’s Seoul’s all-night attention deficit disorder in its purest form. Hang out in Yeonnam-dong nearby for a slower pace with better coffee and less noise.
- Best for: Nightlife fans, K-culture seekers, people-watchers
- Avoid: Friday nights if you’re crowd-averse or sober. Or–it’s best for that.
8. Seongsu-dong: Seoul’s Café Capital (No, It’s Not Hongdae)
Once a grimy shoe factory district, Seongsu is now where Seoul’s creative class sips espresso in concrete bunkers and shops at indie pop-ups inside shipping containers.
- Best for: Hipsters, brunchers, design geeks
- Avoid: If you still think Gangnam is where it’s at

9. Temple Food or Monk’s Meal: Korea’s Spiritual Cuisine
Book a temple food tasting (try Balwoo Gongyang near Jogyesa) or do a short temple stay with a meal. It’s vegan, but don’t panic—this is Korean Buddhist food: deep flavors, fermented everything, and zero fake meat nonsense.
- Best for: Culinary travelers, wellness folks, philosophers
- Avoid: If you consider vegetables “side quests”
10. Korean Bathhouse (Jjimjilbang): Clean, Naked, and Roasted Like a Sweet Potato
Hit a real jjimjilbang like Siloam or Dragon Hill Spa. Sweat in a kiln, nap on a heated floor, snack on baked eggs and cold sikhye (rice punch). You’ll emerge cleaner, softer, and slightly dehydrated.
- Best for: Budget wellness, cultural immersion, recovery days
- Avoid: If you can’t handle communal nudity. Seriously.
Honorable Mentions (Because We’re Not Here to Gatekeep)
- Cheonggyecheon Stream at night: Urban cool-down stroll with LED ducks.
- DMZ Tour: Still interesting, but overpriced and overstructured—research well.
- K-pop Dance Class: Actually fun, if you don’t take yourself too seriously.
- Cooking Classes: Choose one that takes you to a local market, not just a studio in Itaewon.
Skip These Unless You Like Disappointment
- ❌ Namsan Tower – Overrated views, overpriced food, long lines. See #6 instead.
- ❌ Myeongdong – Like Times Square had a skincare addiction.
- ❌ Insadong (main drag) – All the charm has been bulldozed and paved over.
- ❌ Lotte World – Fine if you’re 12. Otherwise, go to Hongdae on a Saturday night—it’s wilder and cheaper.
- ❌ Gangnam – It’s just a neighborhood with a good PR agent.
TL;DR – Seoul Is a Choose-Your-Adventure Game
You could do Seoul by guidebook and come home thinking it’s clean, quirky, and photogenic.
Or you can wander into the real places—the ones full of contradictions, strange flavors, burning soju, and unspoken rules—and realize that this city doesn’t want to impress you.
It wants to absorb you.
And if you let it, it’ll be the most confusing, delicious, surprising city you’ll ever get to know.
👉 Coming Up Next:
How Not to Look Like a Tourist in Seoul—the essential survival tips for apps, etiquette, cultural landmines, and why shouting “annyeonghaseyo” at a barista is not the vibe.
[Read next → Practical Tips for Seoul]