Seoul Palaces & Hanbok: A Day Among the Joseon Courts
Seoul wears its 600-year history lightly, but a day of palaces and hanbok brings the Joseon dynasty right back to the surface. Here is how to pair Gyeongbokgung's changing of the guard with a rented hanbok, the lanes of Bukchon and the Secret Garden of Changdeokgung — plus the best-rated tours and experiences to book for each.
At a glance
- 1Gyeongbokgung guard ceremony
- 2Hanbok rental near the palace
- 3Bukchon Hanok Village lanes
- 4Changdeokgung Secret Garden
Morning: Gyeongbokgung and the changing of the guard
Start at Gyeongbokgung, the grandest of Seoul's five Joseon palaces, timed for the changing of the royal guard — a costumed ceremony staged at the main Gwanghwamun gate around 10am and 2pm daily except Tuesdays, when the palace closes. Standard entry is a modest ₩3,000, and it is waived entirely if you arrive dressed in hanbok. Allow at least ninety minutes to walk the throne hall, the pavilion on the lotus pond and the on-site palace museum.
Dressing the part: hanbok rental
Slip into a rented hanbok before you explore and half the city becomes your backdrop. Rental shops cluster around Gyeongbokgung and Bukchon, with four-hour packages from around ₩15,000–30,000 and full-day or studio photoshoot options costing more. The traditional dress is not just for photos: wearing it earns free entry to all four main palaces and Jongmyo Shrine, so a rental often pays for itself over a day of palace-hopping.
Afternoon: Bukchon Hanok Village and Changdeokgung
A short walk uphill leads to Bukchon Hanok Village, a lived-in maze of tile-roofed hanok houses that frame views back over the palace rooftops. It is a genuine residential neighbourhood, so keep voices low and stick to the marked lanes. Nearby Changdeokgung rewards the climb with its Secret Garden, or Huwon — a wooded royal retreat of ponds and pavilions open only on a timed guided walk, so book the English slot ahead, as numbers are capped.
Evening: Insadong and Gwangjang Market
Wind down in Insadong, minutes away, where tea houses, galleries and craft shops line a pedestrian street built for slow browsing. For dinner, the covered stalls of nearby Gwangjang Market serve sizzling bindaetteok mung-bean pancakes and mayak kimbap well into the evening. It is an easy, atmospheric close to a day that has moved from royal ceremony to living neighbourhood without ever leaving central Seoul.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Seoul — prices per person.







