Getting around Korea

Subway, buses, taxis, trains — and the apps that actually work

Korea's public transport is fast, clean, cheap, and mostly English-friendly. The main thing to know upfront: Google Maps does not do walking or driving directions well in Korea. Download a local map app before anything else.

Maps: use Naver Map or KakaoMap

Subway

The subway covers Seoul and other big cities extensively. Tap your T-money card on the way in and out. Signs, announcements, and station names are in English. Line colors and numbers make transfers easy once you've done it once.

💡 Tip: Pick the right exit number before you surface — large stations have 10+ exits and choosing wrong can mean a long detour. Your map app tells you the exact exit.

Buses

Buses reach places the subway doesn't. Tap T-money when boarding and when getting off (the second tap gives you the transfer discount). Bus-stop signs and app arrival times are reliable. Colors roughly mean: blue = main routes, green = local, red = express/intercity.

Taxis

Intercity: KTX & buses

For city-to-city travel, the KTX high-speed train is the fast option (e.g., Seoul–Busan in about 2.5 hours). Intercity buses are cheaper and reach smaller towns. Book KTX in advance during holidays.

Planning the weather for a trip? Check our Korea weather tool. Next: Money & payments →