Experience the 33rd Yeoncheon Paleolithic Festival: A Unique Journey Back 30,000 Years!
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Yeoncheon Paleolithic Festival / Photo: Ji-eun Kim, Travel+ Reporter
Step back 300,000 years at a festival where visitors don leopard-print tunics, dance with stone axes and greet one another with a playful “uga uga.”
The 33rd Yeoncheon Paleolithic Festival takes place May 2–5 at the Jeongok-ri Prehistoric Site in Yeoncheon, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea.
This festival earned the 2026 Korea Festival Content Award in the cultural heritage and history category. Under this year’s theme, “From Civilization to Culture,” organizers have blended hands-on activities, exhibitions and live performances.

Yeoncheon Paleolithic Festival / Photo: Ji-eun Kim, Travel+ Reporter
The festival goes all-in on the Paleolithic experience. Interactive offerings include a Paleolithic barbecue, a costume area called the Jeongok-ri Dressing Room, a Paleolithic Olympics, archery hunt experiences, character-collage workshops and treasure hunts. There’s also a global zone featuring participants from seven countries, including Germany, Japan and Austria.
Hands-on events keep the energy high: expect the Jeongok-ri Survival challenge, a jigsaw-puzzle championship, a double-horned rhino race and even a campfire-staring contest. On opening day, May 2 at 5:30 PM, a street performance called the Jeongok Land Carnival will move along the route between Jeongok Station and the Yeoncheon County branch of the NongHyup Central Association.
When the sun goes down, headline singers take the stage, followed by a drone show and fireworks. Food is a focus this year: a marketplace featuring 70 local farms and ten festival eateries will be on-site, so come hungry.
Admission isn’t free, but most of the fee comes back to visitors as local vouchers. Adults pay 7,000 KRW (about $5.25), of which 5,000 KRW (about $3.75) is returned as local currency. Visitors 18 and under effectively receive a full refund of the 3,000 KRW (about $2.25) fee. Military personnel, people with disabilities and those recognized for independence contributions enter free. Online pre-purchasers and groups of 20 or more get a 1,000 KRW (about $0.75) discount.
Yeoncheon County is positioning the festival as a tourism springboard. This small city of about 40,000 residents is pairing archaeology with travel experiences and aims to host the World Paleolithic Expo in 2029.

HanaTour’s 2026 Yeoncheon outing promotion tied to the Paleolithic Festival / Photo: HanaTour
Organizers have also strengthened tourism links. In partnership with HanaTour, several one-day packages pair the festival with nearby sights. They’ll run a celebrity-style tour that mixes trekking and coffee experiences, and they’ll operate a city tour bus.
HanaTour rolled out a “Yeoncheon Outing” promotion for the golden holiday period. Packages combine camping, glamping and bus tours, and include festival tickets plus up to 20,000 KRW (about $15.00) in local gift vouchers.
The day-bus itinerary stops at Hantangang’s Pillow Lava Suspension Bridge, the Eundaeri Cultural Brick Factory and the Imjin River Nature Center. Overnight packages include accommodation at Baekhak Resort and late check-out.
A “Mingling Tour” aimed at people in their 20s and 30s is another highlight. Partnering with the Seoul Morning Coffee Club, the tour pairs a morning trek along the Yeongang ferry path with a hanok café visit and festival experiences.
Nol Universe is offering an early-bird ticket exclusively through NOL·NOL tickets. Adult tickets are 6,000 KRW (about $4.50), and youth/children tickets are 3,000 KRW (about $2.25). Buyers receive local gift vouchers of 5,000 KRW (about $3.75) and 3,000 KRW (about $2.25), respectively. Three hands-on experience packages are also on sale.
Seoyeon Moon, Travel+ Reporter











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