Where to Eat in Seoul: Standout Restaurants & Food Spots

Updated

Seoul's food scene runs from smoky grill houses to glowing market alleys to late-night chicken-and-beer joints. Meals here are social and generous — order a main and a parade of free banchan side dishes fills the table before you have lifted your chopsticks.

Dishes Worth Crossing the City For

Korean cooking layers ferment, spice and char. Make room for these:

  • Korean BBQ — samgyeopsal (pork belly) or galbi (marinated short rib) grilled at your table and wrapped in lettuce with garlic and ssamjang.
  • Bibimbap — rice topped with seasoned vegetables, egg and gochujang, mixed vigorously just before eating.
  • Kalguksu — hand-cut wheat noodles in a warming anchovy or chicken broth.
  • Yangnyeom chicken — double-fried chicken lacquered in sweet-spicy sauce, the national late-night hero.
  • Bindaetteok — crisp mung-bean pancakes, a market specialty best eaten fresh off the griddle.

Where to Wander and Eat

Gwangjang Market is the classic eating hall — grandmothers ladle out bindaetteok, mayak gimbap and live octopus from tightly packed stalls. Sit at a counter, point and share.

After dark, Euljiro has reinvented its old print-and-machine workshops into hidden bars and grill spots, a favorite of young Seoulites hunting the next no-sign hideaway.

A practical ordering tip: at BBQ houses the staff often grill and cut the meat for you, so wait before flipping; and never be shy about asking for more banchan — refills are free. A small soju with grilled pork is the local move.

Many neighborhood spots and market stalls post menus only in Korean Hangul, so photographing the board to translate it helps you tell the kalguksu from the kalbi and order exactly what you want.