Coming to Busan and want to hit the city’s 3 most famous sights — Gamcheon Culture Village, Haedong Yonggungsa Temple, and Haeundae Blue Line Park? Add the cliffside art village of Huinnyeoul Culture Village to that list and… does this sound familiar?
“Can I really do all of them in a single day?”
“Isn’t Yonggungsa Temple way out in the middle of nowhere?”
“What if I can’t get a Blue Line Park ticket?”
“Even figuring out how to get there seems exhausting…”
I lived in Busan for 5 years and have visited every one of these spots on my own, more times than I can count. So I’ll just say it straight: doing all of these solo in one day is genuinely tough — especially for a first-time visitor.
That’s where the tour I’m covering today comes in: Klook’s Busan 1-Day Tour. Door-to-door transport, an English-speaking guide option, and all 4 sights in a single day. As someone who’s done the DIY route many times, here’s an honest take on what actually makes this tour worth it.
2 things that make the DIY version painful

Why do I recommend this tour? Because I know first-hand how rough the DIY version is. Gamcheon Culture Village, Haedong Yonggungsa Temple, Haeundae Blue Line Park, and Huinnyeoul Culture Village are scattered across Busan in totally different directions. You’ve got two DIY options — and both come with friction.
Wall #1: Public transit takes 1.5 days
The cheapest route is metro + bus. But Yonggungsa is far from any metro line, so you’ll have to transfer between buses. All 4 spots are pretty far apart, and realistically it takes about 1.5 days to cover them all. That eats up half your 3-day trip just on logistics.
Wall #2: One day is doable by taxi — but…
If you want to do everything in one day, you’ll be hopping between taxis. Two problems with that.
First, the money. A rough estimate for a solo traveler doing it all by taxi:
| Leg | Taxi (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Seomyeon → Haedong Yonggungsa | ~20,000 KRW |
| Yonggungsa → Cheongsapo | ~9,000 KRW |
| Cheongsapo → Mipo (Haeundae) (via Blue Line Park) | — |
| Mipo (Haeundae) → Huinnyeoul Culture Village | ~22,000 KRW |
| Huinnyeoul → Gamcheon Culture Village | ~8,000 KRW |
| Gamcheon → Seomyeon | ~11,000 KRW |
| Taxi total | ~70,000 KRW (~$50) |
Add the Blue Line Park ticket on top, and since a taxi fare is per-car (not per-person), going solo makes it pricier. The total easily clears 80,000 KRW.
But honestly, the bigger cost is mental. Hopping between taxis all day, in a city where you don’t speak the language, is way more draining than it sounds.
- Flag a taxi every leg
- Tell the driver where you want to go (and hope it lands)
- Worry about being overcharged (rare in reality, but the worry is real)
- Confirm you’re being dropped at the right spot
Repeat that 5 or 6 times in a day and you’re wiped out before you’ve even enjoyed the sights. And don’t forget the prep work — how to get to Yonggungsa, which bus to take, how to book Blue Line Park, the most efficient order — just planning takes serious effort.
DIY vs. Tour at a glance
| DIY (transit or taxi) | Klook Tour (74132) | |
|---|---|---|
| Time needed | 1.5 days by transit / 1 day by taxi | All in 1 day |
| Logistics | Bus transfers, taxi-flagging, navigation | Private vehicle does it for you |
| Language | You explain every destination yourself | English-speaking guide option available |
| Blue Line Park ticket | Buy at counter, line up yourself (hard in peak season) | Secured in advance |
| Cost estimate | ~70,000 KRW taxi + ticket fee | From ~$48 (transport + guide + ticket all included) |
| Planning effort | Bus routes, reservations, order — all on you | Just click “book” |
Your day in the tour: pickup, route, drop-off
So what does the day actually look like?
Each stop gets around an hour, so the day doesn’t feel rushed. And what would take 1.5 days on your own fits into a single day. Big win.
The 4 spots you’ll visit
Quick run-through of the 4 spots — all of them are icons of Busan tourism.
① Haedong Yonggungsa Temple (해동용궁사) — a seaside temple with epic views

First stop: a temple perched on coastal rocks at the eastern edge of Busan. The combination of the temple complex and the open sea is genuinely breathtaking — often called “one of Korea’s most beautiful temples.” It’s also the hardest of the 4 to reach by yourself, so getting driven straight there is a real relief. With over an hour on-site, you can take your time exploring and shooting photos.
② Cheongsapo Skywalk + Haeundae Blue Line Park (블루라인파크)

Next, the Cheongsapo area. First up is Cheongsapo Daritdol Skywalk — a glass-floored walkway extending out over the sea. Walking on the glass feels like floating above the waves. Lunch is in this area too (not included in the tour — pick from the seaside restaurants and cafés, and eat what you actually want).

Then the main event: Blue Line Park, the coastal sightseeing railway that everyone’s been posting on Instagram. You’ll ride from Cheongsapo Station to Mipo Station (Haeundae) with the sea right beside you. Two rides exist — the relaxed “Beach Train” and the colorful elevated “Sky Capsule” — and which one you get depends on your course (more on this below). Honestly might be Busan’s most photogenic spot.
③ Huinnyeoul Culture Village (흰여울문화마을) — cliffside art village

A colorful art village along the Yeongdo coast — sometimes called “the seaside version of Gamcheon.” It was a filming location for the Korean movie “The Attorney” (변호인). The cliffside ocean views are stunning and the alleys are incredibly photogenic — easy material for your feed.
④ Gamcheon Culture Village (감천문화마을) — “Busan’s Machu Picchu”

And finally, the village often called “Busan’s Machu Picchu.” Pastel-painted houses cascade down the hillside, with art installations and photo spots tucked into a maze of alleyways. It’s the most iconic stop in all of Busan tourism — many travelers come to Busan specifically for this. Wandering the hilly lanes is half the fun.
What you get: zero prep, 1 day, peace of mind
So what does booking this tour actually buy you? Let me break it down along the timeline of your trip.
Before the trip: zero prep, zero Busan-savvy needed
Your only job is hitting the “book” button. You don’t need to research routes, learn bus transfers, install local taxi apps, or memorize Korean addresses. You don’t need to be Busan-savvy. On the day, you just show up at the pickup station. “No prep needed” is more freeing than you’d think.
During the trip ①: 1 day instead of 1.5 — you get half a day back
What takes 1.5 days solo fits into 1 day with the tour. A private vehicle moves you efficiently, so you free up half a day for shopping, exploring a different neighborhood, or just eating your way through Busan. Your itinerary instantly opens up.
During the trip ②: about the same price as taxi-ing it yourself
Here’s the surprise. From Wall #2 above: solo-taxi DIY adds up to about 70,000 KRW in taxis + ticket fees (over 80,000 KRW total / ~$60+). The tour starts at around $48. In other words, you’re paying basically what you’d pay for DIY taxis — except now you also get transport, an English-speaking guide, and your Blue Line Park ticket included.
During the trip ③: no taxi stress, plus an English-speaking guide
The vehicle is waiting for you, so no flagging taxis, no awkward destination explanations, no overcharge anxieties. Pricing is fixed. And with an English-speaking guide option, the language stress drops to zero. Reviews mention “the guide was kind and took tons of photos for us,” “their English was fluent — no language barrier,” and “they checked in on solo travelers throughout the day.”
During the trip ④: hard-to-get tickets secured + Huinnyeoul included
Blue Line Park’s Beach Train and Sky Capsule often sell out same-day in peak season. The tour bundles the ticket, so you won’t show up only to be told it’s gone. You also visit Huinnyeoul Culture Village, and you get to pick your drop-off station — so your evening is yours to spend in whichever neighborhood you like.
Two courses to choose from (go with the one that includes the ride)
The tour comes in a few course variations, but if you’re going at all, pick a course that includes a Blue Line Park ride — the bundled ticket is worth real money in peak season. Quick comparison:
| Course B Beach Train | Course C Sky Capsule | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Relaxed sea views | Photo-first travelers |
| Adult price | from ~$48 | from ~$64 |
| Child (3–12 yrs) | Same as adult | from ~$46 |
| Age 0–2 | Free if no seat needed (all courses) | |
| Included ride | Beach Train (one-way) | Sky Capsule (premium experience) |
| All 4 spots (Yonggungsa, Blue Line, Huinnyeoul, Gamcheon) | ○ | ○ |
| English-speaking guide | ○ | ○ |
※ Prices shift with date, season, and group size. Check the Klook button below for current pricing and availability.
Who this tour is right for
On the other hand, if you’d rather take it slow and savor the journey at your own pace, doing it solo is its own kind of fun — that’s just a different style of Busan trip.
Bottom line: don’t burn out on logistics — enjoy Busan
DIY: cheap-but-slow (1.5 days) or fast-but-stressful (taxi tag for 1 day, mounting fares, anxiety). The tour gets you zero prep, single-day completion, basically the same cost as DIY taxis, and an English-speaking guide. Hard to argue with that math.
The biggest win, though, is this: you don’t get burnt out on logistics — you actually enjoy Busan. The hours at each sight, the free evening at the end, all of it stays usable. The overall trip satisfaction goes way up.

