Shopping in Busan: Markets, Malls & What to Buy (2026 Guide)
From the world’s largest department store to buzzing traditional markets and fashion streets, Busan is a brilliant place to shop. Here is where to go, what to buy, and how to claim your tax refund.
- Busan mixes huge modern malls (including the world’s largest department store) with lively traditional markets and trendy fashion streets.
- The big districts: Seomyeon and Nampo-dong for fashion and street shopping, Centum City for department stores, and Gukje Market for the traditional buzz.
- Top buys: Korean cosmetics and skincare, fashion, and edible souvenirs like Busan fish cake (eomuk) and seaweed.
- Foreign visitors can usually claim a tax refund on eligible purchases — check the current rules and keep your receipts.
1. Where to shop in Busan: the districts
2. Department stores & malls
3. Traditional markets
4. Trendy shopping streets
5. What to buy in Busan
6. Tax refund & practical tips
7. A simple shopping day
8. Is shopping in Busan worth it?
Busan is a shopping city with something for every style and budget. In one trip you can browse the gleaming halls of the world’s largest department store, haggle for socks and snacks in a post-war traditional market, and wander fashion-packed streets full of cosmetics shops and street food. The city’s shopping splits neatly into a few districts — modern malls out at Centum City, downtown markets and fashion streets around Nampo and Seomyeon — so once you know the map it is easy to plan. This guide walks through the best places to shop, what is worth buying, how the tourist tax refund works, and the practical tips to make it smooth. Fold it into the rest of your trip with our complete Busan Travel Guide.

1. Where to shop in Busan: the districts
Busan’s shopping clusters into a handful of areas, each with its own character. Knowing which is which makes planning simple:
| District | Best for | Vibe |
|---|---|---|
| Seomyeon | Fashion, cosmetics, underground mall | Busy central hub, all ages |
| Nampo-dong / Gwangbok-ro | Fashion streets, street food, BIFF Square | Lively downtown, youthful |
| Centum City (Haeundae-gu) | Department stores & malls | Modern, upscale |
| Gukje & Bupyeong markets | Traditional goods, bargains, snacks | Old-school market buzz |
If you want one easy plan: do Centum City for the big department stores, then head downtown to Nampo and the markets for street shopping and food. Seomyeon is the all-rounder in the middle of the city.
2. Department stores & malls
For air-conditioned, all-in-one shopping, Busan’s department stores are world-class — literally:
- Shinsegae Centum City: recognised as the world’s largest department store, a vast complex with luxury and high-street brands, a food hall, cinema and even a spa under one roof.
- Lotte and other department stores: big Lotte stores in Centum City, Seomyeon and Gwangbok-dong cover fashion, beauty and homeware, often with rooftop views or observation decks.
- Outlets: premium outlet malls on the city’s edges are the place for discounted brand-name shopping if you have a half-day.
3. Traditional markets
For the real, rough-and-tumble Busan, head to the traditional markets, where shopping comes with street food and a bit of haggling:
- Gukje Market: the city’s famous post-war market, a maze of stalls selling clothes, household goods, souvenirs and snacks, right downtown near Nampo.
- Bupyeong Kkangtong Market: next to Gukje, known for its night market and street-food alleys — great after dark.
- Bujeon Market: a huge, local everyday market near Seomyeon, piled with produce, dried goods and Korean ingredients.
- Jagalchi Market: Korea’s biggest fish market, more about seafood than shopping but an unmissable downtown sight.

4. Trendy shopping streets
Busan’s street shopping is where young Korea actually shops — fashion, cosmetics and cafés packed into walkable lanes:
- Seomyeon: the city’s shopping heart, with a big underground shopping mall, fashion outlets, and rows of cosmetics shops like the popular K-beauty chains.
- Nampo-dong & Gwangbok-ro: downtown fashion streets dotted with shops, street food and BIFF Square — buzzy day and night.
- Jeonpo Café Street: a hip neighbourhood of cafés mixed with indie fashion and design shops, near Seomyeon.
5. What to buy in Busan
Some things are simply better, cheaper or more local to buy here. The highlights:
| Buy | Why & where |
|---|---|
| Korean cosmetics & skincare | K-beauty is high quality and affordable — cosmetics chains in Seomyeon and Nampo |
| Fashion & accessories | Street markets and Seomyeon for trends; department stores for brands |
| Busan fish cake (eomuk) | A famous local food gift — boxed sets from well-known Busan brands |
| Dried seaweed (gim) & snacks | Light, popular edible souvenirs — markets and supermarkets |
| K-pop & character goods | Albums and merch — downtown stores and malls |
Edible souvenirs like Busan’s famous fish cake and packs of seaweed travel well and make easy gifts; cosmetics and fashion are where the real bargains are.
6. Tax refund & practical tips
A few habits make shopping smoother and cheaper:
- Claim the tax refund: foreign visitors can usually get a refund of the value-added tax on eligible purchases at tax-free shops. Bring your passport, ask for the tax-refund receipt, and claim it at the airport or a downtown refund kiosk before you leave.
- Carry some cash: markets and small stalls prefer cash, while department stores and chains take cards.
- Check opening hours: department stores and malls keep set hours and a regular closing day, while markets and streets run later — confirm before a special trip.
- Use a map app: set Naver Map or KakaoMap to English to find specific stores and markets, as Google Maps does not navigate well in Korea.

7. A simple shopping day
Want it mapped out? Here is an easy way to combine the best of Busan’s shopping in a day:
- Morning: start at Centum City for the big department stores and air-conditioned malls.
- Afternoon: head downtown to Nampo and Gwangbok-ro for fashion streets, then dive into Gukje Market for souvenirs and snacks.
- Evening: finish around Bupyeong Kkangtong night market for street food, or in Seomyeon for late shopping and dinner.
Mix and match by area and you will cover malls, markets and street style without backtracking. Plan the rest of your days with our complete Busan Travel Guide.
8. Is shopping in Busan worth it?
Definitely — Busan is one of Korea’s most rewarding shopping cities, and it works for every taste. You can go luxury at the world’s largest department store, hunt bargains and snacks in the old markets, and load up on affordable cosmetics and fashion in the buzzing streets, all in a compact, easy-to-reach city.
Pick a couple of districts, bring your passport for the tax refund and some cash for the markets, and Busan will keep your suitcase happily full. Plan the rest of your trip with our complete Busan Travel Guide.