Don't get fooled by tourist traps. The Seoul on guidebooks and the Seoul locals actually live in are completely different cities.
With Kaydee who's spent 30 years living, eating, and exploring every corner of this city. Real food, real hidden spots, real happiness — the tour that even Seoulites are jealous of. I'll be your Seoul friend.
K-food tasting the way locals actually eat — no tourist menus, no overpriced set meals
Olive Young K-beauty haul with a real Korean influencer — skip the hype, find what actually works for your skin
Han River chicken picnic and cycling on a public bike, the way Seoulites spend their weekends
️ Hidden local spots in Hongdae & Itaewon that don't exist on Google Maps
Hanbok photos at Hanok and palaces
️ Seongsu pop-up culture — the neighborhood where Korean trends are born before the rest of the world finds out
Every itinerary is built around you. Tell me what you love, and I'll design the day.
Your host will reach out via WhatsApp after booking to confirm the exact meeting point based on your location and the day's route.
Meeting and end points are tailored to each traveler's route. Start and finish locations may differ. Share your plans in advance and I'll map out a personalized route just for you.
Seongsu-dong is Seoul's beauty and cultural epicenter right now — the neighborhood where Korean Z-generation influencers set trends before the rest of the world catches on. Join a Korean content creator (10M+ monthly views) for 3 hours in Seongsu. Queue at the best bakery Seoulites line up for, eat K-food the right way (always end with bokkeum-bap), hit the hottest pop-ups of the week, and snap a iconic 4-cut photo like every Korean influencer does.
The Han River is where Seoulites come to breathe — and cycle, eat convenience store ramyeon, and watch the city skyline glow. Rent a Ttareungi public bike and ride the river the way locals do every weekend.
K-beauty tour : Olive Young / Olive better Korea's biggest beauty chain — but without insider knowledge, you'll buy what the ads tell you to. Shop with a Korean influencer who knows what actually works, what's overhyped, and what's worth every won.
Seoul's 600-year-old village frozen in time — narrow stone alleys, wooden hanok gates, and rooftop views over the modern city below. Dress in hanbok (traditional Korean clothing) and take photos that look nothing like a tourist shot. Duck into a century-old tea house hidden inside a real hanok, slow down, and feel the Korea that existed long before K-pop
Seoul's oldest market and the most viral food destination in Korea — but most tourists eat it wrong. Start with bindaetteok (mung bean pancake) hot off the griddle with makgeolli. Move to mayak kimbap, the bite-sized rolls so addictive they're literally named after drugs. Then yukhoe (Korean beef tartare with raw egg yolk) raw and incredible. If you're feeling brave, sundae (Korean blood sausage) is next. End with a bowl of kalguksu from the stall that made it onto Netflix. No tourist traps. No overcharging. No eating alone at the wrong stall. Just the way a local who actually lived there would show you.
Seoul's creative youth hub where indie culture, street art, and underground music collide. Skip the tourist traps, hit the hidden local bars, vintage shops, and food spots only regulars know about.
Seoul's most cinematic route — from gritty old Seoul to royal palace, all on a bike. Fuel up first at Jungang Market — the local spot tourists never find. Fresh ssam greens, steaming borigbap, 8,000 KRW, tastes like someone's grandmother made it. Then explore Sindang — old Seoul's new cool. Century-old alleys hiding cafés and restaurants only Korean influencers know. No Google reviews. No English signage. Just the real thing. Hop on a Ttareungi and ride 30 minutes through Jongno's canyon of glass towers — watch a century of Korean development pass by on either side. Drop to Cheonggyecheon Stream. Shoes off, feet in, city breathing beneath you. Gwanghwamun Square: Admiral Yi Sun-sin, King Sejong, and Korea's history in five minutes — no museum required. Finale: rent a hanbok and walk through the gates of Gyeongbokgung Palace. This isn't a tour. It's the day a local would design for herself.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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