Best Glamping Spots Near Busan for a Night Under the Stars
Words by
Ji-woo Kim
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Why Glamping Near Busan Hits Different
There is something about sleeping just outside the city that resets your entire nervous system. Busan sits between mountains and sea, and the best glamping spots near Busan take advantage of that geography in ways a hotel room never could. I have spent nights in dome tents listening to the East Sea crash below me and mornings waking up in treehouses surrounded by pine forest in the Gyeongsangbuk-do hills just north of the city. Each spot on this list I have personally visited, some multiple times across different seasons, and I can tell you exactly what to expect when you arrive.
Busan has always been a city shaped by contrasts. It was a wartime refuge, a port city that absorbed cultures from across the sea, and now a metropolis of nearly 3.5 million people that still manages to keep mountains and beaches within a 30-minute drive of downtown. The glamping culture here reflects that duality. You will find places that lean hard into luxury camping Busan style, with heated floors and premium linens, and others that feel more raw and connected to the landscape. I have organized this guide by location and experience type so you can find exactly the night under the stars that suits your mood.
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1. Busan Ciel-Dongba Camping & Glamping (Gijang County)
Location: Gijang-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do (approximately 40 minutes northeast of Haeundae)
This is the spot I recommend first when someone asks about the best glamping spots near Busan. Gijang County sits along the East Sea coast, and Busan Ciel-Dongba occupies a stretch of land that faces the water directly. The dome tent Busan visitors find here are not the flimsy pop-up kind. These are permanent structures with proper beds, climate control, and private bathroom facilities. I visited in late October and the sound of the waves was so clear through the tent walls that I slept deeper than I had in months.
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What to Order / See / Do: The on-site seafood grill station serves fresh abalone and sea urchin harvested from local Gijang fishermen that morning. Order the grilled mackerel set, it comes with a soybean paste stew that tastes like something your grandmother made. Walk the coastal trail behind the property at sunset, the rocky outcrops glow orange and you can see fishing boats returning to Gijang Harbor.
Best Time: Arrive by 4:00 PM on a Friday. The weekend crowd starts pouring in by Saturday morning, and the quietest nights are Sunday through Thursday when you might have half the site to yourself.
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The Vibe: Clean, modern, and unpretentious. The staff are mostly local Gijang residents who have worked this coastline their whole lives. One small complaint: the hot water in the shared shower facilities runs lukewarm during peak evening hours when everyone returns from the beach at the same time.
Insider Tip: Ask the front desk about the Gijang Market run, a small morning fish auction that happens at 6:00 AM about 15 minutes south. Most glamping guests sleep through it, but it is one of the most authentic market experiences in the greater Busan area.
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Connection to Busan: Gijang has been Busan's seafood pantry for centuries. The glamping site sits on land that was historically used by fishing families as seasonal shelter, and the owners have preserved several old stone boundary walls that still run along the property's eastern edge.
2. Forest Resort Glamping (Geochang, Gyeongsangbuk-do)
Location: Geochang-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do (approximately 90 minutes northwest of Busan, accessible via Gyeongbu Expressway)
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If you are willing to drive a bit further, Forest Resort Glamping in Geochang delivers a treehouse stay Busan-area visitors rarely know about. The units are elevated wooden platforms built around mature zelkova trees, with canvas roofs and mesh windows that let the forest air flow through. I came here in early spring when the wild cherry blossoms were exploding across the valley, and the view from my platform felt like something out of a Studio Ghibli film.
What to Order / See / Do: The campfire kit they sell at the entrance includes local Geochang charcoal, marshmallows, and a small cast-iron grill pan. Buy it. The on-site restaurant does a decent bibimbap but the real move is cooking your own meat over the fire pit outside your unit. Hike the trail that loops behind the property, it takes about 40 minutes and ends at a small Buddhist temple that most tourists never visit.
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Best Time: Weekday evenings in April or May. The cherry blossom and fresh green seasons overlap briefly, and midweek you will have the forest almost entirely to yourself.
The Vibe: Rustic but comfortable. The beds are surprisingly firm and warm, with electric blankets provided. The one honest drawback is that the treehouse units are close enough together that you can hear your neighbors talking, so light sleepers should request a unit at the far end of the row.
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Insider Tip: Geochang is famous for its apples, and the small orchard adjacent to the glamping site sells fresh-pressed apple juice at a roadside stand from August through November. It is not listed on any menu, just look for the hand-painted sign on the access road.
Connection to Busan: Geochang was a significant stop on the old Yeongnam Road, the historical route that connected Busan's port to the interior of the Korean Peninsula. Travelers and merchants rested in these mountains for generations, and the area still carries that sense of being a place between destinations.
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3. Mipo Glamping & Ocean Camping (Mipo-dong, Busan)
Location: Mipo-dong, Haeundae-gu, Busan (along the southern coast, just south of Dalmaji Hill)
Mipo is technically within Busan city limits, which makes it one of the most accessible options for luxury camping Busan residents book for quick weekend escapes. The site sits along the waterfront promenade near Mipo Port, and the dome tent Busan visitors get here are sleek white structures that look almost like igloos from the outside. I stayed here on a Saturday night in August and watched the Haeundae fireworks from my tent's front opening, which felt absurdly glamorous.
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What to Order / See / Do: The Mipo area is famous for its raw fish restaurants, and the glamping site has a partnership with a nearby sashimi spot that delivers fresh cuts directly to your tent. Order the hwache (assorted raw fish) platter. After dinner, walk north along the coastal path toward Dalmaji Hill, the cherry trees that line the road are spectacular in spring and the ocean views never get old.
Best Time: Friday evening, specifically during the Busan Fireworks Festival season (typically October). The Mipo waterfront offers one of the best unofficial viewing angles, and watching from your glamping tent beats fighting the crowds at Gwangalli Beach.
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The Vibe: Polished and social. This is a place where couples and small groups come to take photos and enjoy the waterfront. The downside is that the site is popular enough that it can feel a bit crowded on summer weekends, and the tent walls are thin enough that you will hear the ocean breeze and your neighbors equally well.
Insider Tip: The Mipo area has a small lighthouse walk that starts just east of the glamping site. It takes about 20 minutes round trip and offers a view of the entire Haeundae coastline that most tourists miss because they stay on the main beach.
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Connection to Busan: Mipo has been a working port for over a century. Before Haeundae became the glamorous district it is today, Mipo was where fishing boats docked and where the city's maritime economy actually functioned. The glamping site sits on reclaimed waterfront that was renovated in the early 2010s, and you can still see old mooring posts near the tide line.
4. Yangsan Glamping Village (Yangsan City)
Location: Yangsan-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do (approximately 30 minutes north of Busan, just past the northern edge of the metropolitan area)
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Yangsan is the city you pass through on your way to nowhere, which is exactly why its glamping village feels so removed from the Busan chaos. The site sits in a shallow valley surrounded by low mountains, and the treehouse stay Busan weekenders love here are built on wooden stilts along a small stream. I visited in July during the monsoon season and the sound of rain on the canvas roof was so heavy I had to turn off my podcast and just listen.
What to Order / See / Do: The on-site makgeolli bar serves a local Yangsan rice wine that is brewed in small batches. Order the plain variety with a plate of pajeon (savory pancakes). The stream that runs through the property is shallow enough to wade in during summer, and the rocks are smooth enough to sit on comfortably while the water flows around you.
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Best Time: Late June through mid-July, during the monsoon season. I know that sounds counterintuitive, but the valley turns an almost impossibly deep green, the stream swells to a perfect wading level, and the rain on the tent roof is genuinely one of the most soothing sounds I have ever experienced.
The Vibe: Quiet and slow. This is not a party spot. The units are spaced well apart, the staff keep to themselves, and the main activity is reading by the stream. One practical note: the access road is narrow and unpaved for the last 800 meters, so if you are driving a low-clearance sedan, take it very slowly.
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Insider Tip: Yangsan is home to the Yangsan Tongdosa Temple, one of the oldest Buddhist temples in Korea. It is about a 20-minute drive from the glamping site and opens for early morning meditation sessions at 5:00 AM. Go once, even if you are not religious, the mountain setting at dawn is extraordinary.
Connection to Busan: Yangsan has historically been the agricultural buffer zone that fed Busan's growing population. The glamping village sits on land that was rice paddies until about 15 years ago, and the old irrigation channels that once fed the fields now supply the stream that runs through the property.
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5. Jeongdongjin Glamping Park (Jeongdongjin, Gangneung, accessible from Busan)
Location: Jeongdongjin, Gangneung-si, Gangwon-do (approximately 2.5 hours north of Busan via Gyeongbu Expressway and Donghae Highway)
I know this one is a stretch for a Busan-focused guide, but Jeongdongjin is one of the most famous glamping destinations in the greater Busan corridor and many Busan residents make the drive up for long weekends. The site sits directly on the beach, and the dome tent Busan visitors find here are positioned so close to the water that you can hear the tide retreating through the sand. I came here in September and woke up at 5:30 AM to watch the sunrise over the East Sea, which is the entire reason this place exists.
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What to Order / See / Do: The Jeongdongjin area is known for its sunrise viewing, and the glamping site provides a wake-up call service specifically for sunrise. Use it. The sunrise from the beach in front of the tents is one of the best on the east coast, and the morning light hitting the sand creates a pink-orange gradient that photographs cannot capture. After sunrise, walk to the Jeongdongjin Railway Station, which sits right on the beach and is one of the most photographed train stations in Korea.
Best Time: The first two weeks of September. The summer crowds have thinned, the water is still warm enough for wading, and the sunrise times are early enough (around 5:50 AM) that you do not have to wake up at an unreasonable hour.
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The Vibe: Romantic and slightly touristy. This is a well-known spot, so expect to see other visitors and a fair amount of camera equipment. The tents themselves are comfortable and well-maintained, but the shared facilities can feel a bit institutional compared to smaller glamping sites.
Insider Tip: The Jeongdongjin Sun Train, a tourist rail car that runs along the coast, departs from the station next to the glamping site. A single ride costs about 15,000 won per person and takes you north along the coastline for about 30 minutes. It is touristy, yes, but the ocean views from the open-air car are genuinely worth it.
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Connection to Busan: Jeongdongjin has been a pilgrimage site for Busan residents seeking the east coast sunrise for decades. Before the expressway system was fully developed, the drive from Busan took over four hours, and families would leave in the middle of the night to arrive by dawn. The glamping site is a modern evolution of that tradition.
6. Gadeokdo Ocean Glamping (Gadeokdo Island, Busan)
Location: Gangseo-gu, Busan (Gadeokdo Island, accessible via Gadeokdo Bridge from the mainland)
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Gadeokdo is the largest island in Busan, and most residents have never set foot on it. That is a shame, because the ocean glamping site on the island's southern shore offers one of the most isolated overnight experiences within Busan's administrative boundaries. The dome tent Busan visitors get here are weather-rated for the strong coastal winds that roll in off the West Sea, and the site has its own private beach that is rarely visited by day-trippers. I stayed here on a Wednesday in November and did not see another person for nearly four hours.
What to Order / See / Do: The island is famous for its seaweed and abalone farms, and the glamping site's restaurant serves a se-gae-gukbap (seaweed soup with rice) that is richer and more deeply flavored than anything you will find on the mainland. Order it with a side of sliced radish kimchi. Walk the perimeter trail around the southern tip of the island in the late afternoon, the views of the West Sea and the distant Oryukdo islands are stunning in the golden hour light.
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Best Time: Late October through mid-November. The summer humidity is gone, the winds are manageable, and the West Sea takes on a deep blue-gray color that feels almost Nordic.
The Vibe: Remote and contemplative. This is the spot for people who want to feel like they have left the city entirely. The honest drawback is that the island's infrastructure is limited, so if you forget something essential, the nearest convenience store is a 25-minute drive back toward the bridge.
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Insider Tip: Gadeokdo has a small lighthouse on its northern tip that is accessible by a 45-minute coastal walk from the glamping site. The lighthouse area is a local fishing spot, and if you go in the early morning you will see elderly residents casting lines from the rocks, a scene that has not changed on this island in 50 years.
Connection to Busan: Gadeokdo has been a strategic maritime location for centuries. During the Korean War, the island served as a military outpost, and remnants of old fortifications are still visible along the northern coastline. The glamping site itself sits on land that was returned to civilian use in the early 2000s.
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7. Songjeong Glamping & Caravan Park (Songjeong-dong, Haeundae-gu, Busan)
Location: Songjeong-dong, Haeundae-gu, Busan (along the eastern coast, between Haeundae Beach and Songjeong Beach)
Songjeong is the quieter cousin of Haeundae, and the glamping park here reflects that personality. The site offers both fixed dome tents and caravan-style units, and the treehouse stay Busan visitors occasionally book here are smaller and more intimate than the ones at larger resorts. I visited in early December and the cold air off the East Sea made the heated tent feel like a cocoon, I read an entire novel in one sitting while the wind rattled the canvas.
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What to Order / See / Do: The Songjeong area has a cluster of excellent coffee shops along its main street, about a 10-minute walk from the glamping site. Go to Café Rooftop (yes, that is its real name) for an iced americano and a view of the coast from its second-floor terrace. Back at the site, the barbecue set they sell includes premium beef short rib and fresh vegetables from nearby farms, cook it yourself at the individual fire pit outside your unit.
Best Time: Weekday evenings in December or January. The Haeundae crowds are gone, the beach is empty, and the cold air makes the glamping experience feel more authentic and cozy.
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The Vibe: Low-key and local. This is where Busan residents come when they want to glamp without driving far or spending a lot. The facilities are clean but not luxurious, and the overall atmosphere is more "neighborhood camping" than "resort experience." The one complaint I have is that the caravan units can feel a bit cramped if you are taller than average, the ceiling height is tight.
Insider Tip: Songjeong Beach has a left-hand break that local surfers ride year-round. If you are a beginner, the Songjeong Surf School offers two-hour lessons for about 45,000 won, and the instructors are patient enough that you will almost certainly stand up at least once.
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Connection to Busan: Songjeong was a fishing village long before Haeundae became a tourist destination. The glamping site sits on land that was part of the village's communal fishing grounds, and the owners have preserved an old fishing net drying rack near the entrance as a nod to the area's history.
8. Nakdong River Glamping Park (Nakdong-gu, Busan)
Location: Nakdong-gu, Busan (along the Nakdong River, near the Eulsukdo Ecological Park area)
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The Nakdong River is Busan's lifeblood, and the glamping park along its banks offers a completely different experience from the coastal sites. The dome tent Busan visitors find here are set up on a grassy floodplain with views of the river and the Eulsukdo wetland beyond. I visited in May when the migratory birds were passing through, and the evening sky was filled with flocks of egrets and herons heading to their roosting spots on the wetland islands.
What to Order / See / Do: The Nakdong River area is famous for its eel grilled over charcoal, and the glamping site's restaurant serves a version that is smoky and slightly sweet. Order the grilled eel set with a bottle of local rice wine. Rent one of the site's kayaks and paddle out onto the river in the late afternoon, the current is gentle and the views of the surrounding wetlands are surprisingly peaceful for a site within a major city.
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Best Time: Late April through May, during the spring migration season. The bird activity at Eulsukdo is at its peak, and the weather is warm enough for comfortable camping without the summer humidity.
The Vibe: Natural and unstructured. This is the most "camping" of all the spots on this list, with fewer luxury amenities and more emphasis on the outdoor setting. The trade-off is that the mosquito situation can be intense near the river in late spring, so bring strong repellent or request a unit further from the water's edge.
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Insider Tip: The Eulsukdo Ecological Park, about a 15-minute drive from the glamping site, has a bird observation deck that is open from 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM. The park rangers give free guided tours on weekends at 10:00 AM and 2:00 PM, and they can identify every species in the wetland by call alone.
Connection to Busan: The Nakdong River delta has been Busan's agricultural and ecological heartland for centuries. The Eulsukdo wetland was nearly developed in the 1990s but was saved by a local conservation campaign, and it is now one of the most important migratory bird stopovers in East Asia. The glamping park exists because of that conservation victory.
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When to Go and What to Know
The best glamping spots near Busan are accessible year-round, but the experience shifts dramatically with the seasons. Spring (April through May) brings mild temperatures and cherry blossoms to the mountain sites, while summer (June through August) is best for coastal locations where the sea breeze keeps things cool. Autumn (September through November) is my personal favorite, the skies are clear, the humidity drops, and the sunsets over the East Sea are spectacular. Winter (December through February) works well for heated dome tent experiences, especially if you enjoy the contrast of cold air outside and warm blankets inside.
Most glamping sites in the Busan area require advance booking, particularly for weekends and during peak seasons. I recommend reserving at least one week ahead for weekend stays and two weeks ahead for holidays like Chuseok and Seollal. Payment is typically made online through Korean booking platforms like Yanolja or Goodchoice, and most sites accept international credit cards. Expect to pay between 80,000 and 200,000 won per night depending on the unit type and season.
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Transportation is worth planning carefully. The coastal sites in Gijang and Haeundae are accessible by bus from Busan, but the mountain and island locations really require a rental car. If you do not have an international driving permit, taxis from Busan to Yangsan or Gadeokdo are feasible but expensive, expect 40,000 to 80,000 won each way depending on distance.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the safest and most reliable way to get around Busan as a solo traveler?
The Busan Metro system covers most major districts and operates from 5:30 AM to midnight, with single rides costing between 1,400 and 1,600 won using a T-money card. For glamping sites outside the metro network, such as Gijang or Yangsan, intercity buses run regularly from Busan Terminal and cost between 2,000 and 5,000 won. Taxis are safe and metered, with a base fare of 3,800 won for the first two kilometers.
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What are the best free or low-cost tourist places in Busan that are genuinely worth the visit?
Haedong Yonggungsa Temple sits on the coast east of Busan and charges no admission, the ocean-side setting is one of the most photographed in Korea. The Gamcheon Culture Village is free to enter and takes about two hours to explore fully. Haeundae Beach and Songjeong Beach are open year-round with no entry fee, and the coastal walking trails connecting them offer excellent views at no cost.
Is it possible to walk between the main sightseeing spots in Busan, or is local transport necessary?
Walking between major spots is possible within individual districts, Haeundae Beach to Dalmaji Hill takes about 20 minutes on foot, and Gamcheon Culture Village to Jagalchi Market is roughly 30 minutes downhill. However, crossing between districts requires transport, the distance from Haeundae to Seomyeon is about 8 kilometers and takes 30 minutes by metro. For glamping sites outside the city center, walking is not practical.
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How many days are needed to see the major tourist attractions in Busan without feeling rushed?
Four full days allows you to cover the core attractions at a comfortable pace. Day one for Haeundae and Dalmaji Hill, day two for Gamcheon Culture Village and Jagalchi Market, day three for Haedong Yonggungsa Temple and Gijang County, and day four for the Nakdong River area or a relaxed beach day. Adding a fifth day gives you time for a glamping overnight without rushing the rest of the itinerary.
Do the most popular attractions in Busan require advance ticket booking, especially during peak season?
Most outdoor attractions in Busan, including beaches, temples, and cultural villages, do not require advance tickets and are free to enter. The Busan Aquarium and some museums charge admission and occasionally sell out on weekends, but advance booking is optional. Glamping sites are the exception, reservations are strongly recommended for all sites listed in this guide, particularly during summer weekends and the October fireworks festival period.
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