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Experience More: How Korean Hotels Are Transforming Stays into Family Adventures

Daniel Kim Views  

As international airfares climb ahead of May’s golden holiday, hotels and resorts are changing tactics. Instead of the usual room discounts or complimentary breakfasts, they’re bundling stays with hands-on experiences—think cooking classes, local artisan workshops, author signings and horse-interaction programs. These activity-driven packages have become the go-to family offerings this May. With rising fuel surcharges making overseas trips more expensive, domestic lodgings are capturing family demand by turning the stay itself into the main attraction.

Across the country, major resorts and hotels launching family packages this May show a clear common thread: the focus has shifted from passive facility access to active, participatory experiences.

Hanwha Resort rolled out an all-inclusive package this season that bundles pool, sauna and theme-park access with lodging at up to 52% off the regular price. Last year that package made up 45% of the company’s total package sales and proved particularly popular with families with preschoolers. The Pyeongchang branch revamped its breakfast offerings to highlight regional specialties, while Seorak Sorano combined a full-day waterpark pass with nighttime outdoor hot-spring access—adding a local twist to traditional facility discounts.

Some properties went even further. Inspire Entertainment Resort introduced a new Mini Horse Healing Therapy this month—a gentle forest-walk experience with small, docile miniature horses. Running on weekends and over the Children’s Day holiday at Discovery Park, the program centers on animal interaction as a wellness experience, distinct from a typical kids’ pool or playroom. The same resort’s All-Day Kids Adventure Package strings together a resort tour, DIY crafts and water sports into a single day, intentionally reducing unstructured downtime so kids stay engaged.

Hotels are also leaning into local resources. Lahan Hotel Jeonju partnered with a regional traditional liquor brand to offer a one-day infusion-liquor class bundled with room packages. In Mokpo, the hotel teamed up with the Korea Tourism Organization and a local community business group to launch a local-trip promotion that bundles Yeongam fig-bread baking, natural dyeing and traditional liquor brewing. Hotel Hyundai by Lahan Ulsan worked with two neighborhood workshops to offer discounted one-day classes for kids and included visits to the Jangsaengpo Whale Museum in its packages. In these cases, hotels act less like mere accommodation providers and more like coordinators of local experiences.

City hotels are blending dining with hands-on fun. The Four Seasons Hotel Seoul set up separate stations at its Children’s Day buffet for cookie decorating and dalgona (Korean sugar-candy) pulling. Seoul Dragon City closed the gap between formal dining and families by offering a free kids’ menu when adults order the full European-course meal. Oakwood Premier Incheon designed guest programming so the stay itself becomes a playful route—for example, hosting a children’s cooking class in its 36th-floor premier room.

Paradise Hotel Busan teamed with French graphic-design brand OMY to stage a garden festival featuring drawing stations, temporary-tattoo stickers and nail-art booths. Starting mid-May, it will also host time-attack racing events for elementary-school families at a BMW Kids Driving Zone. The hotel is attempting to link rooms, outdoor activities and beach space into one seamless family-content flow.

▶ Hotels and resorts compete to become family-month ‘experience platforms’

▶ [Interview] Inspire ‘Minagi’ Head Chef Imira: “We’ll make it a playcation that heals the whole family”

▶ The line between staying and viewing exhibitions is disappearing… Domestic hotels expand ‘in-house exhibitions’

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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