KR · South Korea

What's it like to live in Busan?

Pros, cons, and what locals really say · 3,453,198 residents

Reddit-sourced

What locals really say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on Busan's subreddit.

Busan feels like a big coastal city that still organizes a lot of daily life around beaches, hills, seafood, and neighborhood café strips. People seem to use it for both ordinary routines and weekend escape: commuter life near Seomyeon, walks on Gwangalli and Haeundae, hikes to city viewpoints, and easy side trips to temples, markets, and the shore. Compared with Seoul, the mood in the posts is more relaxed and scenic, but it also sounds a bit socially fragmented, with many residents and newcomers looking for friends, language exchange, or a stable group to hang out with. The city comes across as lively and attractive, but with some practical friction around transportation, seasonal beach rules, air quality, and finding the right social scene if you don’t already have one.

Pros — why people love Busan
  • Scenic coastal setting8
  • Seafood and food variety6
  • Good day-trip / neighborhood variety5
  • Lively beach-adjacent nightlife3
  • Strong café culture3
Cons — common complaints
  • Difficulty making friends / social fragmentation8
  • Beach season rules and swimming limits4
  • Air quality / dust2
  • Transport / taxi route issues1
  • Finding niche services and amenities2
Daily life

Daily life in Busan comes across as scenic but somewhat compartmentalized: people live near beaches, commute around Seomyeon, study at universities, and spend free time at cafés, parks, and markets. The city feels friendly enough for visitors, but several posts suggest that making close, lasting connections can be slow, especially for people who don’t drink or are new to Korea. There’s also a practical layer of small frictions—seasonal beach rules, occasional taxi annoyances, and the need to know the right neighborhood for the right activity.

Food scene

Busan’s food scene reads as coastal and seasonal, with seafood at the center but plenty of other everyday options layered around it. People talk about clam shabu shabu, seafood spots, sashimi, and local specialties like daeji gukbap, alongside café brunch, Korean-style pizza, and desserts. The city also seems to have neighborhood-specific eating zones, like Seomyeon for easy meals and Myeongji for shellfish restaurants, so food is both destination-based and part of casual local routines.

Nightlife & culture

Nightlife in Busan seems concentrated around beach districts like Gwangalli and Haeundae, where people go for drink spots, bridge views, music, and an easy transition from evening walk to bars. The vibe in the posts is more fun and social than wild: lots of K-pop/EDM, “just one drink” turning into a longer night, and a crowd that feels lively rather than sketchy. It also sounds somewhat expat-friendly in certain pockets, but many people still seem to rely on alcohol-centered venues or organized meetups to socialize.

Weather, for real

The city is associated with beaches and outdoor life, so the default image is sunny, warm, and pleasant. But the lived experience sounds more mixed: one commenter said a bright day was so dusty they could taste it and got itchy skin quickly, and others ask whether swimming is still allowed once the season ends. So the weather feels like a major draw, but locals and visitors still have to think about dust, humidity, heat, jellyfish barriers, and seasonal rules rather than assuming perfect seaside conditions year-round.

In their words

“I live in Busan and I love meeting new people, but for some reason, connections here seem to fizzle out pretty quickly. I barely drink, so the usual bar or pub scene isn’t really my thing.”

r/Busan· 8 votes

“Weather was actually really bad. Sunny and warm, but it was so dusty that i could tast dust in every breath i take and my skin got itchy in very short period of time.”

r/Busan· 31 votes

“It’s definitely a high-energy spot — lots of K-pop/EDM, big weekend vibes, and a super lively crowd. Not really the place if you’re trying to have a quiet conversation or do a calm ocean-view drink.”

r/Busan· 10 votes
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