Busan in April: Peak Cherry Blossoms, Petals Falling and the Warmest Spring Yet (2026)
April is Busan at its spring peak — the cherry blossoms hit full bloom in the first days, then drift down like snow as fresh green takes over, the city’s own riverside blossom festivals open, and the days turn the warmest they’ve been all year. Here’s the complete, on-the-ground guide to timing it right.
- April is Busan’s spring peak: the warmest days yet (highs of about 17–20°C), with cherry blossoms in full bloom in the first days of the month, then falling to a carpet of petals and fresh green.
- Time it early. Busan’s cherry blossoms usually peak around late March to about April 5, so the first week catches the climax; by mid-to-late April the petals fall and tender green leaves and azaleas take over.
- It’s festival season: Busan’s own riverside cherry-blossom festivals open in early April (Daejeo and Samnak), and the famous Jinhae festival nearby runs into the first days of April.
- The catch is peak-season crowds and prices, a sea still too cold to swim (around 14–15°C) and the first coastal fog and sea breezes — but for full-bloom cherry blossoms, festivals and the warmest, greenest spring, April is glorious.
1. Is April a good time to visit Busan?
2. April weather in Busan, in detail
3. Catching the cherry blossoms in April: peak, then petals
4. Busan’s spring festivals in April
5. Beyond the cherry blossoms: azaleas, canola and fresh green
6. Spring outdoors at its best
7. The sea and beaches in April
8. Crowds, prices and booking
9. What to pack for April
10. A smart April itinerary and verdict
If you want to catch Busan at the absolute height of spring, April is the month — but the timing is everything, and it moves fast. The first few days of the month are the grand finale of cherry-blossom season: blossoms in full, frothy bloom along the streams and hillsides, the air soft and sweet, petals already beginning to loosen. Then, almost overnight, the wind shakes them loose and they fall like a slow pink snow, drifting onto the water of Oncheoncheon and gathering in soft drifts along Dalmaji-gil — one of the most beautiful sights of the whole year. By mid-April the trees are turning a tender, electric green, azaleas flush the hillsides pink and purple, and the city settles into the warmest, most comfortable weather it’s had since autumn. This is also when Busan throws its own riverside cherry-blossom festivals out at the Nakdong River, and when the legendary Jinhae festival next door winds down its final days. It isn’t without trade-offs — this is peak season, so expect the biggest crowds and highest prices of spring, a sea that’s warming but still too cold for swimming, and April’s signature sea fog rolling in off the coast. But for full-bloom blossoms turning to falling petals, festivals in full swing and the greenest, warmest spring days, few months in Busan are as rewarding. This in-depth guide walks you through the weather week by week, exactly how to catch (and not miss) the cherry blossoms, Busan’s own spring festivals, the azaleas and fresh green that follow, spring outdoors at its best, the sea and beaches, crowds and booking, what to pack, a smart day-by-day plan and how April compares to March and May. Plan it alongside the rest of your trip with our complete Busan Travel Guide.

1. Is April a good time to visit Busan?
Yes — April is one of the very best months to visit Busan, the absolute peak of spring. It’s the warmest, greenest the city has been since autumn, the cherry blossoms reach full bloom in the first days before falling in a beautiful pink drift, and Busan throws its own riverside blossom festivals. If you’ve ever wanted to walk under a tunnel of cherry blossoms with the sea glinting nearby, this is the month to do it.
There are real trade-offs to weigh. This is peak season, so you’ll meet the biggest crowds and the highest accommodation prices of spring, especially in the first half of the month and at weekends. The sea is warming but still too cold for swimming (around 14–15°C), and April brings Busan’s first coastal fog and brisk sea breezes, which can grey out a sunny afternoon along the shore. And the blossoms are fleeting — arrive a week too late and you’ll catch falling petals and green leaves instead of full bloom.
2. April weather in Busan, in detail
April is the warmest, most comfortable month of spring, climbing steadily as it goes — though the coast adds its own twist with fog and sea winds:
| Period | Typical daytime high | What it feels like |
|---|---|---|
| Early April | ~16–18°C | Mild and bright; cherry blossoms at full bloom; the lingering cool of spring mornings |
| Mid April | ~18–19°C | Warm, lovely spring days; petals falling, fresh green arriving |
| Late April | ~19–20°C | The warmest spring days; azaleas, lush green; first sea fog |
Daytime highs climb from around 16–18°C early in the month to 19–20°C by late April, with overnight lows rising from about 10°C to 13°C — comfortably mild, rarely cold. It’s noticeably warmer than March and the most pleasant all-round weather since autumn. Two coastal quirks are worth knowing: April is when Busan starts to see sea fog (haemu) rolling in off the water, which can turn a clear afternoon hazy along the beaches, and the sea breezes can make the shore feel cooler than inland. Rain is moderate — occasional spring showers, not a wet month. The sea itself is still cold (around 14–15°C) and warming only slowly, so it’s not yet for swimming.
3. Catching the cherry blossoms in April: peak, then petals
April is the climax of cherry-blossom season in Busan — but it’s a fast-moving target, and the magic is in catching the right week. Thanks to its warm southern coast, Busan blooms early: in a typical year the peak (when most trees are in full flower) lands around late March to about April 5. So the first week of April catches the full bloom, and then — often within days — the wind brings the petals down in a slow, breathtaking pink snowfall before tender green leaves take over by mid-month. Bloom timing shifts every year with the weather, so check a cherry-blossom forecast right before you travel.
Busan’s best blossom spots, and what makes each one special in April:
| Spot | Area | Why it shines |
|---|---|---|
| Oncheoncheon Stream | Dongnae | Long cherry-lined stream walk; petals on the water; lit up at night |
| Namcheon-dong cherry road | Suyeong | Famous blossom tunnel through a residential neighbourhood |
| Daejeo Ecological Park | Nakdong River | Cherry blossoms and vast yellow canola fields — a festival site |
| Samnak Eco Park | Nakdong River | Riverside cherry walkway with mountains behind — a festival site |
| Dalmaji-gil | Haeundae | Hillside cherry road with sea views; petals drifting toward the coast |
| Busan Citizens Park | Busanjin | Central, easy and family-friendly under the blossoms |
The classic Busan move is to pair the blossoms with a sea view — Dalmaji-gil above Haeundae does both at once. And don’t despair if you arrive after peak: the falling-petal days, when the ground turns pink and every breeze releases another flurry, are arguably even more romantic than full bloom.
4. Busan’s spring festivals in April
April is when Busan and its surroundings throw their biggest spring parties, all built around the blossoms. Cherry-blossom dates shift each year with the bloom, so confirm before you go — but here’s what to plan around:
- Nakdonggang Riverside Cherry Blossom Festival (Daejeo): Busan’s own festival out at Daejeo Ecological Park on the Nakdong River, typically in the first days of April (around 3–5 April in 2026). This is the magical one where cherry blossoms meet endless fields of bright yellow canola — a uniquely Busan combination.
- Nakdonggang River Garden Cherry Blossom Festival (Samnak): along the Samnak Eco Park cherry walkway, running a little longer (around 3–12 April in 2026), with riverside blossoms and mountain backdrops.
- Jinhae Gunhangje (nearby): Asia’s most spectacular cherry-blossom festival, in neighbouring Changwon, winds down its final days in early April (running to around 5 April in 2026) — an easy day trip from Busan via the West Busan (Sasang) intercity bus terminal (about 1 hour, ~₩6,100). Go on a weekday and start early; weekends are 2–3 times busier.
- Looking ahead to May: late April is when the city begins hanging lotus lanterns ahead of Buddha’s Birthday (24 May 2026) — a teaser for the spectacular Samgwangsa lantern festival that lights up in May.

5. Beyond the cherry blossoms: azaleas, canola and fresh green
Cherry blossoms steal the show, but April in Busan is a whole cascade of spring colour — and the part that comes after the cherries can be just as lovely:
- Canola (yuchae): at Daejeo Ecological Park, vast fields of bright yellow canola bloom right alongside the cherry blossoms in early April — one of Busan’s signature spring sights, and the heart of the riverside festival.
- Azaleas and royal azaleas (jindallae and cheoljjuk): as the cherries fade, hillsides across the city and on the mountains flush pink and magenta — a second wave of colour through mid-to-late April.
- Fresh green: perhaps the most underrated April pleasure — the moment the whole city turns tender, electric green as new leaves unfurl, after the petals have fallen. Mountains, parks and tree-lined streets glow.
- Magnolias, forsythia and spring blooms: the broader spring flower season carries on through the month in parks and gardens.
6. Spring outdoors at its best
With the warmest, greenest weather since autumn, April is when Busan’s outdoors truly comes alive — this is the month to be on your feet:
- Coastal walks: the seaside cliff paths, Oryukdo, Igidae and the Galmaetgil are glorious in warm spring air, with blossoms early in the month and fresh green later — just mind the cooler sea breeze and the odd patch of fog.
- Hiking: Geumjeongsan, Jangsan and the city’s mountains are at their finest, framed by cherry blossoms early on and azaleas and new green by late April, with comfortable temperatures and clear views.
- Comfortable sightseeing: Gamcheon Culture Village, the temples, markets and old quarters are a pleasure in mild, sunny weather — and Haedong Yonggungsa temple by the sea is especially beautiful in spring.
- Full, unhurried days: the warm, long days make April perfect for exploring dawn to dusk, from a morning hike to blossoms, markets and a sunset by the water.
7. The sea and beaches in April
April still isn’t a month for swimming — the sea is around 14–15°C, warming but slowly — yet Busan’s beaches are at their springtime best, alive and warm enough to enjoy:
- Lovely to stroll: Haeundae, Gwangalli, Songjeong and Songdo are warm, bright and much livelier than in winter, ideal for long walks along the sand.
- Blossoms by the sea: Dalmaji-gil above Haeundae and the cherry trees around Gwangalli pair flowers with sea views early in the month — a spring scene unique to Busan.
- Mind the fog and wind: April’s sea fog (haemu) can roll in and grey out the coast, and the sea breeze makes the shore cooler than inland — a light jacket helps, and a foggy morning often clears by afternoon.
- Surfers and seaside cafés: surfing picks back up at Songjeong (wetsuit still essential), and the warm evenings make seaside cafés and the lit-up Gwangan Bridge a delight again.

8. Crowds, prices and booking
April is peak spring season, and it pays to plan around it — this is the busiest, priciest the city gets outside summer:
- Busiest in early April: the first week, with full-bloom cherry blossoms and festival weekends, sees the biggest crowds of spring at the famous spots and on day trips to Jinhae.
- Book accommodation early: rooms in Haeundae and central areas fill up and prices rise for the blossom weeks — reserve well ahead, especially for weekends.
- Go on weekdays: blossom spots and Jinhae are 2–3 times busier at weekends; a Tuesday-to-Thursday visit transforms the experience.
- Mid-to-late April eases off: as the cherries fall, crowds thin and prices soften while the weather stays warm and the city turns green — a sweet spot for value.
9. What to pack for April
April is warm but coastal, so pack for mild spring days with a layer for cool shores and the odd shower:
- Light layers: t-shirts and light tops for warm afternoons, with a sweater or long sleeve for cooler mornings.
- A light jacket or windbreaker: useful for cool mornings and, above all, the sea breeze and fog along the coast.
- A compact umbrella: for the occasional spring shower.
- Comfortable walking shoes: for hikes, coastal walks and chasing blossoms across the city.
- Sun protection: the spring sun is strong now — bring sunscreen and sunglasses.
- Allergy medication: spring pollen is in full swing, so come prepared if you’re sensitive.
- A mask, just in case: spring can still bring the odd hazy day of yellow dust and fine dust — check the air-quality forecast.
10. A smart April itinerary and verdict
April rewards a plan built around the blossoms and the warm, green weather. Here’s how it compares across the heart of spring, with a simple template:
| March | April | May | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weather | Mild spring (~13–17°C) | Warm spring (~17–20°C) | Warm, early summer (~20–23°C) |
| Blossoms | Plums; first cherries (late) | Cherry peak then petals; azaleas; green | Fresh green; roses; lotus lanterns |
| Highlight | Jinhae festival & first blossoms | Peak bloom & riverside festivals | Buddha’s Birthday lanterns |
| Sea | Cold (~13°C) | Cold, warming (~14–15°C) | Cool (~17°C) |
| Crowds | Building | Peak (festival weeks) | Moderate |
- Early April: chase full-bloom cherry blossoms at Oncheoncheon, Namcheon-dong and Dalmaji-gil, hit the riverside festivals at Daejeo (cherry + canola) and Samnak, and day-trip to Jinhae on a weekday.
- Mid-to-late April: enjoy falling petals and the carpet of pink, azaleas on the hillsides, fresh green hikes and thinner crowds — and the first lotus lanterns appearing.
- Mix flowers and the sea: pair blossom spots with a coastal walk (mind the fog) for a classic Busan spring day.
- Evenings: warm and lovely — cherry streams lit at night, the Gwangan Bridge and dinner by the sea.
Verdict: April is one of the finest times to visit Busan — the spring peak, with cherry blossoms in full bloom turning to a romantic fall of petals, the warmest and greenest weather since autumn, and Busan’s own riverside festivals where cherries meet canola. You’ll pay for it with peak-season crowds and prices, a sea still too cold to swim, and the first coastal fog — but for full-bloom blossoms, festivals and the warmest, lushest spring days, few months can match April, especially if you time the first week to the bloom. Plan it all with our complete Busan Travel Guide.