BTS World Tour in Busan: What to Expect from the Ultimate K-Pop Festival Experience
Daniel Kim Views

Busan is gearing up to transform the whole city into a monthlong festival playground tied to tourism content for BTS’s world tour stop next month.
The city will run four themed tourism tracks—hospitality, hands-on experiences, food, and unforgettable moments—throughout June to coincide with the BTS World Tour Arirang IN Busan concerts on June 12–13 at Busan Asiad Main Stadium. City officials call it a citywide festival project and plan pop-ups and experience zones across Busan.
First up, the Eurasia Platform at Busan Station will become a welcome center from June 5–21. Visitors can get tourist information and luggage storage there, and enjoy K-pop experiences, photo spots, and Busan tourism content. Gimhae Airport’s international arrivals hall will also host welcome programs for international guests.
The city will stage landmark-driven spectacles, too. On concert nights, Gwangalli Beach will light up with a drone show featuring 1,000 drones synchronized with the lighting on Gwangan Bridge.
Song Sang-hyun Square will host the The Red Moment Busan program, and a BTS-themed sand sculpture exhibition will run alongside the Haeundae Sand Festival. Also, themed city tour buses will run special routes connecting northern and western Busan, downtown, Geumjeong, and Haeundae so visitors can explore neighborhoods beyond the venue.
Food-focused programming is a core element. Local F&B vendors will take part in Port Village Busan 2026 at Pier 1, while Hwamyeong Ecological Park will feature a traditional-liquor pop-up and a night market. Busan will also publish a gourmet map that incorporates Michelin Guide and Taksheling data.
The city is allocating KRW 506,000,000 (about $379,500 USD) from its own budget for the project. That includes KRW 375,000,000 (about $281,250 USD) for the welcome center, KRW 100,000,000 (about $75,000 USD) for welcome kits, and KRW 31,000,000 (about $23,250 USD) for pop-up store operations. The drone show, bridge lighting, and night market will use linked existing project budgets.
To prevent crowds from over-concentrating near venues and to curb price gouging at hotels, Busan will spread visitor spending across the city with initiatives like Busan Big Sale Week, special Dongbaekjeon tourism vouchers, and extra cashback at budget-friendly participating businesses.
The city will also run a 24/7 lodging complaint system to protect visitors from unsafe conditions and overcharges. When complaints arrive, district and city inspectors will conduct joint on-site checks, and officials will restrict use or impose administrative penalties if they find serious risks or violations.
After the concerts, Busan will measure the event’s tourism impact with visitor surveys and analysis of card and telecom big data, then feed the results into future tourism policy.
Hwang Min-gyeong, an official in Busan’s Tourism Policy Division, said, “We coordinated with the organizers for months to prepare the Gwangan Bridge lighting, the drone show, the Busan Cinema Center big-roof lighting, and sand-festival content. We’ll run linked events across the city so visitors can experience Busan’s many charms, not just the concert.”
Kim Kyung-deok, acting mayor of Busan, said, “This concert is a chance to showcase Busan’s safety-management capabilities and city brand to the world. We’ll do everything we can to create a welcoming tourism environment and convenient services so the concert’s excitement spills into local experiences and cuisine—and so visitors remember Busan as a global city they’ll want to return to.”











Most Commented