Kayaking in Seoul and Incheon

A guide to legally and safely kayaking from Seoul and the Incheon coastline. Useful both as a destination in its own right and as a training ground before tackling the Jeju Kayak Circumnavigation Challenge.

South Korea’s Water-Related Leisure Activities Safety Act (μˆ˜μƒλ ˆμ €μ•ˆμ „λ²•) governs all recreational water sports. The headline rules for kayakers:

These rules are uniform across the country. The local enforcement varies β€” friendly on the Han River, stricter along the militarised Incheon coast.

Kayaking the Han River (Hangang)

The Han River cuts through central Seoul and is the easiest and friendliest paddling water in the country. You can walk to the riverbank from most Seoul subway stations with a folding kayak, inflate it, and slide in.

Best launch points

Park Subway Notes
Ttukseom Hangang Park (λšμ„¬ν•œκ°•κ³΅μ›) Ttukseom Resort (λΆ„λ‹Ήμ„ ) Wide ramp; designated water sports zone; rental kayaks operate here so police are familiar with paddlers
Yeouido Hangang Park (μ—¬μ˜λ„ν•œκ°•κ³΅μ›) Yeouinaru (line 5) Big launch area, central, easy taxi access from anywhere in Seoul
Banpo Hangang Park (λ°˜ν¬ν•œκ°•κ³΅μ›) Express Bus Terminal (lines 3/7/9) Calm water under the rainbow fountain bridge
Jamsil Hangang Park (μž μ‹€ν•œκ°•κ³΅μ›) Jamsillaru (line 2) East end; quieter on weekdays
Mangwon Hangang Park (λ§μ›ν•œκ°•κ³΅μ›) Mangwon (line 6) Best for sunset paddles; west of the city centre

The river is about 1 km wide in central Seoul. A loop from Ttukseom to Yeouido and back is roughly 25 km β€” a good half-day session.

Rules specific to the Han River

Where to stash gear

Several Han River parks have lockers near the parking lots. Some kayak rental shops will hold a folded boat for the day if you ask politely (small fee or a tip).

Kayaking the Incheon coast and nearby islands

The Yellow Sea side of Korea is more complicated β€” beautiful, but militarised, with extreme tides and active shipping.

Where you can paddle

Where you cannot paddle

The tidal trap (the biggest local hazard)

Incheon has some of the highest tidal ranges in the world β€” up to 9 m at spring tide. The water recedes hundreds of metres horizontally, leaving thick mudflats.

Sample Incheon-area routes

Other useful Seoul-area waters

Training plan before a Jeju attempt

A reasonable Seoul-based training sequence:

  1. Han River, 1–2 hour sessions β€” 10Γ— minimum, until basic paddling technique is automatic.
  2. Wet exit and self-rescue practice β€” find a calm Han River shore on a warm day, deliberately flip the kayak, exit, and re-enter from the water. Do this 3–5 times. (Some kayak schools in Seoul run formal half-day classes for ~β‚©100,000.)
  3. 20+ km day paddle on flat water (Cheongpyeong, Soyang).
  4. Coastal day trips at Ganghwa or Taean β€” get used to swell, wind, and a real sea horizon.
  5. Overnight self-supported camping paddle β€” pack, paddle, camp, paddle home. Builds the logistical muscle for the Jeju Kayak Circumnavigation Challenge.