
Seoul in Summer: Heat, Monsoon & How to Make the Most of It
April 25, 2026
Seoul's summer is extreme in ways that catch most foreign students off guard. July and August bring genuine heat (35°C+ days are common), followed by 장마 (jangma), the annual monsoon season, which drops weeks of near-continuous rain. Then comes the humidity that makes a 30°C day feel like 38°C. It's a lot — and yet, Seoul in summer is also spectacular. Here's how to survive and enjoy it.
Understanding the Korean Summer
Korean summer runs roughly June through August, with distinct phases:
- June — Hot and increasingly humid; pre-monsoon. Still manageable, genuinely pleasant evenings. Best month for outdoor activities before the rain arrives.
- July — Jangma (장마, monsoon) — Typically 3–4 weeks of heavy rain, often daily. Temperatures stay high (28–33°C) with 80–90% humidity. Flooding in low-lying areas is common. The rain isn't cold — it's warm and heavy.
- August — Post-monsoon heat wave; often the most intense month. Temperatures regularly exceed 35°C. Koreans call this period 폭염 (pokyeom, extreme heat). The nights barely cool down.
Practical Survival
Clothing
Korean women often wear long sleeves and carry parasols in summer — not a fashion statement but sun protection logic. Lightweight, breathable fabrics are essential. One counter-intuitive discovery: Korean convenience stores and subway stations are aggressively air-conditioned (sometimes uncomfortably so), meaning you'll want a light layer even on 35°C days. Carry a packable jacket.
Hydration & Food
Dehydration happens quickly in Seoul's summer humidity. Cold drinks are everywhere and cheap — convenience stores stock iced coffees from ₩1,000 and cold sikhye (sweet rice drink) which is both refreshing and culturally appropriate.
Korean summer food culture has excellent answers to heat:
- 냉면 (Naengmyeon) — ice-cold buckwheat noodles; counterintuitively refreshing on the hottest days
- 팥빙수 (Patbingsu) — shaved ice with sweetened red beans, condensed milk, and fruit; Korea's essential summer dessert, available at every café and patisserie from June through August for ₩8,000–₩15,000
- 삼계탕 (Samgyetang) — whole chicken stuffed with ginseng, rice, and garlic, boiled in broth; eaten hot in summer (이열치열 — fight heat with heat) on the three hottest days of the year (삼복, sambok)
What to Do in Summer
Han River Swimming & Water Sports
The Han River park outdoor pools (한강시민공원 수영장) at Ttukseom, Gwangnaru, and Mangwon open in July and August: ₩5,000 for the day. Get there early on weekends — they fill up fast. Kayak and paddleboard rentals are available at most parks (₩10,000–₩15,000/hour).
Festivals
Summer is Seoul's festival season. Key ones:
- Seoul Jazz Festival (May/June) — Olympic Park; international and Korean artists
- Seoul Lantern Festival on Cheonggyecheon (November, but worth planning for) — the stream is lit with thousands of handmade lanterns
- Waterbomb Festival (July/August) — the world's largest water gun festival; messy, chaotic, and genuinely fun
- Seoul Fringe Festival (August) — independent performance arts across the city
Escape to Mountains
Seoul is surrounded by mountains, and even in summer the peaks (Bukhansan, Dobongsan) are significantly cooler than the city. A morning hike starting at 6–7 AM before the heat builds is one of the best ways to spend a summer day. Bring more water than you think you need.
Monsoon Practicalities
- Buy an umbrella at Daiso (₩2,000–₩5,000) — carrying one is simply part of Seoul summer life during jangma
- Many Koreans use transparent umbrellas (투명 우산) which are fashionable and functional
- Waterproof sandals or shoes you don't mind getting wet are more practical than sneakers during monsoon weeks
- Check Seoul's flooding alerts if you're near low-lying areas — the city has a strong alert system
- Mould in apartments is a real issue during extended rain; a small dehumidifier (제습기) from Coupang (₩50,000–₩80,000) is worth buying for a summer stay