Skyline Luge Busan (2026): Full Guide to Korea’s First Luge — Prices, Tickets, How to Ride

Skyline Luge Busan (2026): Full Guide to Korea’s First Luge — Prices, Tickets, How to Ride

Steer a gravity-powered cart down 2.4 km of winding track high above the East Busan coast, then soar back over it on the Hyfly zipline. The Skyline Luge in Gijang is the city’s most addictive hit of silly, grinning fun — and it works for everyone from six-year-olds to adults who ‘came for the kids’. Here’s everything: real 2026 prices, how to ride, the age and height rules, getting there, and the smartest way to book.

Last updated: June 2026
The short version

  • What it is: Korea’s first Skyline Luge — a part-go-kart, part-toboggan gravity cart you steer down four winding tracks (2.4 km total) in the Osiria resort complex in Gijang, east of Busan. A chairlift (the Skyride) carries you back up each time.
  • Prices (2026): Luge 2 rides ₩31,000 (children ₩21,700); add a 3rd ride for ₩10,000; the Hyfly zipline is ₩40,000. Parking is free. Buy ahead online (Klook/KKday) and you usually save versus the gate — and skip the weekend queue.
  • Who can ride: solo from age 6 and 110 cm tall; smaller children (down to 85 cm) ride doubled-up with an adult. Helmets are provided and a one-minute briefing covers everything.
  • Getting there: Donghae Line to Osiria Station (Exit 1), then a short bus or taxi hop — or a 20-minute walk. It’s a 15-minute walk from Lotte World Adventure Busan, so the two stack into one big day.
  • Hours: 10:00–19:00 weekdays, 10:00–20:00 weekends and holidays (ticket sales stop 30 minutes before closing); open year-round. Wear closed-toe shoes.

Online tickets are usually a touch cheaper than the gate — lock in the lower price before you go:🛷 Book at the online price · Klook🛷 Book at the online price · KKday* affiliate link

Some Busan attractions you look at; the Skyline Luge you do — at speed, grinning, again and again. It’s a deceptively simple idea borrowed from New Zealand: a low gravity cart with bicycle-style handlebars, set loose on a network of banked, twisting tracks that drop 2.4 kilometres down a hillside above the East Busan sea. Pull the bars back to brake, ease them forward to fly. A chairlift hauls you and the cart back to the top, and within two runs you’re racing your friends and taking the corners faster than you should. It sits in the Osiria tourism complex out in Gijang, next to Lotte World, a short ride from Haedong Yonggungsa Temple — which means it slots perfectly into a whole day on Busan’s spectacular eastern coast. This guide covers the lot: exactly what the ride is like, the real 2026 prices and packages, the Hyfly zipline, the age and height rules (so nobody’s disappointed at the gate), how to get there without a car, and — because weekends and holidays get busy — the smartest, cheapest way to book. Build the rest of your trip around it with our complete Busan Travel Guide.

Winding Skyline Luge track and Skyride chairlift descending a green hillside
The winding track and Skyride lift of a Skyline Luge park — Busan’s, the first in Korea, runs the same way down the Osiria hillside. Photo: timsdad, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

1. What is the Skyline Luge in Busan?

The Skyline Luge Busan is Korea’s first luge — a gravity-powered cart you steer down four winding tracks totalling 2.4 km, high on a hillside in the Osiria resort complex in Gijang, east Busan. A chairlift carries you back to the top, and it runs year-round. Think part go-kart, part toboggan, zero engine: it’s powered entirely by gravity and controlled by you.

The Skyline Luge is a New Zealand invention that has spread to a handful of scenic spots worldwide, and Busan’s is the only one in Korea. What makes this one special is the setting — the tracks ribbon down an open hillside with the East Sea filling the horizon, so every run comes with a view.

  • The cart: a low three-wheeled buggy with handlebars. Pull back to brake or stop; ease forward to speed up. Anyone can do it in seconds.
  • The tracks: four of them, from gentle and scenic to fast and twisty, 2.4 km in total — so you can build up your nerve run by run.
  • The Skyride: a scenic chairlift that carries you and your cart back to the top between runs, with the best views of the day.
  • Plus the Hyfly: a separate zipline that sends you soaring over the East Busan coast — the optional adrenaline upgrade.
🛷 The one-line answer: it’s the most fun you can have in Busan without getting wet — easy enough for kids, fast enough for adults, and impossible to do just once.

2. Skyline Luge Busan at a glance

Everything you need on one screen — the where, when and how much.

  Details
What Korea’s first Skyline Luge — gravity carts on 4 tracks (2.4 km) + Hyfly zipline
Where Osiria tourism complex, Gijang-gun, east Busan (near Lotte World & Haedong Yonggungsa)
Hours Weekdays 10:00–19:00 · weekends/holidays 10:00–20:00 (sales end 30 min before close)
Luge price 2 rides ₩31,000 (child ₩21,700); +₩10,000 for a 3rd ride
Hyfly zipline ₩40,000 for 1 ride (add a luge ride for ₩10,000)
Who can ride Solo from age 6 & 110 cm; doubled with an adult from 85 cm
Getting there Donghae Line → Osiria Station (Exit 1) + short bus/taxi, or 20-min walk
Good to know Helmets provided · closed-toe shoes · free parking · open year-round
📅 Hours shift slightly month to month and the luge runs in most weather — but check the official site or your booking platform for the exact day you’re going.

3. What the ride is actually like

You don’t need any experience — a Skyline Luge run is as easy or as fast as you make it, and the cart does exactly what you tell it.

Before your first run, an instructor gives a one-minute briefing: pull the handlebars back to slow down or stop, push them forward to accelerate, keep both hands on the bars and both feet inside. That’s the entire skill. You put on the provided helmet, take a cart, and you’re off.

  • Run one is usually the gentlest, scenic track — your chance to feel the brakes and the steering. Most people take it slow and immediately want to go again, faster.
  • The faster tracks add banked corners, dips and tunnels. By your second or third run you’ll be leaning into the bends and chasing whoever’s ahead.
  • Between runs, the Skyride chairlift lifts you and your cart back to the summit — a calm few minutes with the coast spread out below, and arguably the best view of the visit.
  • The whole thing takes most people 60–90 minutes for a multi-ride ticket, longer if you add the Hyfly. It’s genuinely addictive — buying two rides and wishing you’d bought three is a Busan rite of passage.
🏁 Racing friends is half the fun, but the staff space carts out for safety — so it’s about your own line and speed, not bumper-cars. Smooth and fast beats frantic.

4. Hyfly: the zipline upgrade

If the luge is the silly fun, the Hyfly zipline is the adrenaline. It launches you out over the East Busan hillside, soaring above the same coast you’ve been carting down.

  • What it is: a separate harnessed zipline experience with sweeping sea-and-hills views — the optional thrill add-on to a luge visit.
  • Price: ₩40,000 for one Hyfly ride; if you start with the zipline you can add luge runs for ₩10,000 each.
  • Who it’s for: anyone after a bigger rush than the luge — though it has its own height and weight safety limits, so check on the day if you’re unsure.
🪂 Short on time or budget? The luge alone is the headline act and the better-value thrill. Treat the Hyfly as the cherry on top if you want the full Osiria adrenaline day.

5. Prices & packages, explained

Pricing is built around how many luge rides you want, with the Hyfly zipline sold separately. Here’s the full 2026 breakdown.

Ticket Adult Notes
Luge — 2 rides ₩31,000 Children ₩21,700; the standard starter ticket
Luge — 3rd ride add-on +₩10,000 Upgrade a 2-ride ticket to 3 rides
Hyfly zipline — 1 ride ₩40,000 Sold separately from the luge
Hyfly + extra luge ride +₩10,000 Per added luge run if you start with Hyfly
Child doubling Child rate Small child shares an adult’s cart (see ride rules)
Parking Free Automated payment lot, free weekdays & weekends

Two rides is the right call for first-timers, but be warned: almost everyone wishes they’d bought three. If you know you’ll love it (you will), the 3-ride ticket is the better value.

💡 Booking through a platform like Klook or KKday usually lands you a slightly better price than the on-site counter — and a fixed price you can compare before you go.
A single Skyline Luge gravity cart on a curving concrete track seen from above
A gravity luge cart curving down the track — easy to steer from your very first run. Photo: Harry Lund, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

6. How and where to buy tickets

You have two routes: book online in advance, or buy at the on-site counter. For weekends, holidays and peace of mind, booking ahead wins — it locks your price and saves you queuing.

  • Online (recommended): platforms like Klook and KKday sell Skyline Luge tickets with English support and instant confirmation, usually a touch cheaper than the gate. You show the voucher and exchange it for a physical ticket at the on-site counter — so you skip paying and choosing packages in Korean on the spot.
  • On-site: you can always just turn up and buy at the counter, but on busy weekends and holidays that can mean a queue both to pay and to ride.
  • Visit Busan Pass: the Skyline Luge is included on some versions of the Visit Busan Pass — worth checking if you’re doing several paid attractions.
🎟️ One practical note: tickets bought through any third-party platform must be exchanged for a physical ticket at the luge’s own counter before you ride. Keep your voucher handy.
💰 Weekends and holidays fill up, and prices online are usually below the gate — comparing both platforms takes ten seconds and often saves you money. We’ve put the live links in the booking box below.

Weekend and holiday slots fill up and the on-site counter has its own queue — booking ahead locks your price and lets you walk straight in. Compare both platforms:🛷 Check Skyline Luge ticket prices · Klook🛷 Check Skyline Luge ticket prices · KKday* affiliate link

7. Who can ride? Age, height & safety rules

The luge is built for almost everyone, but there are firm age, height and health rules — check them before you go so nobody’s turned away at the top.

  • Solo riders: must be at least 6 years old and taller than 110 cm to drive their own cart.
  • Younger/smaller children: from 85 cm tall, a child can ride doubled-up sharing a cart with an accompanying adult (the adult must be over 150 cm and at least 19, on a child-doubling ticket).
  • Not permitted: children under 85 cm, pregnant guests, anyone who has been drinking, and people with conditions where caution is advised (heart disease, high blood pressure, herniated discs and similar).
  • Safety gear & briefing: a helmet is mandatory and provided free; staff give a full briefing before your first ride. Both hands on the bars, both feet in the cart, no feet out until you’ve fully stopped.
👨‍👩‍👧 The doubling option makes this a genuine all-ages outing — toddlers ride with a parent while older kids and adults race their own carts. Just measure expectations to the 85 cm / 110 cm marks.

8. How to get there

Skyline Luge is out on Busan’s eastern coast in Gijang, and it’s easiest to reach via the Donghae Line to Osiria Station, then a short bus or taxi hop.

  • By metro + bus/taxi (easiest): take the Donghae Line to Osiria Station, Exit 1. From there it’s a 20-minute walk, a 4-minute taxi from the rank by the exit, or a quick bus (100, 139, 181, Haeundae-gu 9, 1001) to the “Yonggungsa Temple · NIFS” stop, which is a 3-minute walk from the luge.
  • From central Busan: the Donghae Line connects with the metro (e.g. at Bexco/Centum or Haeundae area), so you can reach Osiria from Seomyeon, Haeundae or the city centre with one transfer — see our transit guide for cards and routes.
  • By car: driving is straightforward and parking is free (automated payment lot) — handy if you’re touring the eastern coast.
🚇 Pick up a rechargeable transit card so the Donghae Line, metro and buses all just tap through — details in our Busan metro & transit card guide.

9. Best time to go & what to expect

The luge runs all year and in most weather — but timing your visit right means shorter queues and more runs per hour.

  • Quietest: weekday mornings right at opening (10:00) are the dream — minimal queues for the Skyride and tracks to yourself.
  • Busiest: weekend and holiday afternoons, and Korean school breaks. If that’s your only option, book online ahead and arrive early.
  • Weather: it’s an outdoor hillside attraction. It runs in light rain but may pause in heavy rain, strong wind or ice — check the day’s status if the forecast looks rough. Spring and autumn are the most comfortable; summer is hot up top, winter crisp and clear.
  • How long: budget 1–1.5 hours for a multi-ride luge ticket, more with the Hyfly or on a busy day with queues.
⛅ Cross-reference our best time to visit Busan guide — pairing the luge with a clear, mild day on the eastern coast is the move.
Smiling rider in a helmet steering a Skyline Luge cart out of a tunnel
Helmet on, both hands on the bars — the controls take about a minute to learn. Photo: Herman.M, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

10. What to wear & bring

There’s no dress code, but a couple of choices make the day smoother and safer.

  • Closed-toe shoes: sneakers, not sandals or slippers — your feet stay in the cart and you’ll want grip.
  • Comfortable, active clothing: you’re leaning, gripping and getting on and off a chairlift. Secure jackets, scarves, long hair and loose items so nothing catches.
  • Sun and layers: the hillside is exposed — sunscreen and a hat in summer, a windproof layer in winter.
  • A secured phone: great for photos on the Skyride, but use a strap or zipped pocket — you do not want to drop it mid-run.
⚠️ Loose items are the main hazard. Anything that can flap, swing or fall — scarves, hats, bags, untied long hair — should be tucked away or left with a non-riding friend before you set off.

11. Make a day of it: the Osiria circuit

The luge sits in the middle of Busan’s best cluster of eastern-coast attractions — so don’t make a special trip for it alone; build a whole day.

  • Lotte World Adventure Busan: a 15-minute walk away — pair the theme park with the luge for the ultimate family/adrenaline day in Osiria.
  • Haedong Yonggungsa Temple: Busan’s spectacular seaside temple is right by the luge’s bus stop — an easy, beautiful add-on before or after.
  • Songjeong & Blue Line Park: a short hop down the coast for the Sky Capsule, the beach train and Songjeong’s surf town.
  • Shopping & relaxing: the Osiria complex also holds Lotte Premium Outlets and the Ananti Cove resort — easy ways to wind down after the adrenaline.
🗺️ The classic Osiria day: luge at opening → Lotte World for the afternoon → Haedong Yonggungsa at golden hour. See our Lotte World Busan, Haedong Yonggungsa and Blue Line Park guides to stitch it together.

12. Is it worth it? Who it’s for

Few Busan attractions deliver this much grinning, repeatable fun for the money — the luge is a near-universal crowd-pleaser.

  • Families: the doubling option means toddlers ride too, while older kids get the independence of their own cart. It’s a clear family highlight.
  • Couples & friends: racing your own lines down the hill, then comparing times on the Skyride, is genuinely brilliant — and very photogenic.
  • Thrill-seekers: the faster tracks plus the Hyfly zipline give a proper rush; the gentle track keeps it accessible for the nervous.
  • “I came for the kids” adults: you will buy a ticket for yourself. Everyone does.
⭐ The honest verdict: as a standalone trip it’s a fun hour; as part of an Osiria day with Lotte World and Yonggungsa, it’s one of the best days out in Busan.

13. What it costs — and a ready-made Osiria day

The luge is mid-range fun at a fair price, and it anchors a full day on the eastern coast that needn’t cost much more.

  • Luge: ₩31,000 for 2 rides (children ₩21,700), +₩10,000 for a third — most people are happy on 2–3 runs.
  • Hyfly (optional): ₩40,000 for the zipline if you want the bigger thrill.
  • Getting there: a few thousand won each way on the Donghae Line plus a short bus or taxi; parking is free if you drive.
  • Save a little: booking the luge online (Klook/KKday) usually beats the gate price and skips the weekend queue.

The ready-made day: Donghae Line to Osiria for the 10:00 opening → three luge runs with the coast view → 15-minute walk to Lotte World Adventure for the afternoon → late-day stroll around Haedong Yonggungsa at golden hour → seafood dinner back toward Haeundae. A complete, memorable east-coast day for roughly the cost of one theme-park ticket plus the luge.

💰 Slot it into our 2-night-3-day or 4-day itineraries, and see the full Busan budget guide for how a day like this fits a daily budget.

Skyline Luge Busan — FAQ

Q. How much does the Skyline Luge Busan cost in 2026?
A standard luge ticket is ₩31,000 for 2 rides (₩21,700 for children), and you can add a third ride for ₩10,000. The Hyfly zipline is sold separately at ₩40,000 per ride, with extra luge runs ₩10,000 each if you start with the zipline. Parking is free. Booking online through Klook or KKday is usually slightly cheaper than the on-site counter and lets you skip the queue.
Q. Where is the Skyline Luge in Busan and how do I get there?
It’s in the Osiria tourism complex in Gijang, on Busan’s eastern coast near Lotte World Adventure Busan and Haedong Yonggungsa Temple. Take the Donghae Line to Osiria Station (Exit 1), then either walk about 20 minutes, take a 4-minute taxi, or hop a bus (100, 139, 181, Haeundae-gu 9 or 1001) to the ‘Yonggungsa Temple · NIFS’ stop, a 3-minute walk away. Parking is free if you drive.
Q. What are the age and height requirements?
To drive their own cart, riders must be at least 6 years old and over 110 cm tall. Smaller children from 85 cm can ride ‘doubled-up’, sharing a cart with an accompanying adult who is over 150 cm and at least 19 (on a child-doubling ticket). Children under 85 cm cannot ride, and the luge is not permitted for pregnant guests, anyone who has been drinking, or people with conditions like heart disease, high blood pressure or herniated discs.
Q. Do I need to book Skyline Luge tickets in advance?
Not strictly — you can buy at the on-site counter — but booking ahead online (Klook or KKday) is smart for weekends, holidays and Korean school breaks, when both the ticket counter and the rides get busy. Online tickets are usually a touch cheaper, come with English support and instant confirmation, and you simply exchange the voucher for a physical ticket at the counter, skipping the on-the-spot queue.
Q. How does the luge work — is it hard to ride?
Not at all. The cart is a low three-wheeled buggy with handlebars: pull back to brake or stop, ease forward to speed up, keep both hands on the bars and both feet inside. Staff give a one-minute briefing before your first run and a helmet is provided. Anyone from age 6 can do it, and most people are confidently taking the corners by their second run.
Q. How long does a visit take?
Plan about 1 to 1.5 hours for a multi-ride luge ticket — that covers the briefing, your runs and the Skyride chairlift back up between each one. Add more time if you’re doing the Hyfly zipline as well, or if you visit on a busy weekend or holiday when there are queues for the lift and tracks.
Q. What is the Hyfly zipline?
Hyfly is a separate harnessed zipline at the same site that sends you soaring over the East Busan hillside and coast. It costs ₩40,000 for one ride and is the optional adrenaline upgrade to a luge visit; if you start with the Hyfly you can add luge runs for ₩10,000 each. It has its own height and weight safety limits, so check on the day if you’re unsure.
Q. Is the Skyline Luge good for kids and families?
Very — it’s one of Busan’s best family activities. Children aged 6 and over 110 cm drive their own carts, while smaller kids from 85 cm ride doubled-up with a parent, so the whole family can join in. Helmets are provided, staff brief everyone, and the carts are easy to control. It pairs perfectly with Lotte World Adventure Busan, a 15-minute walk away.
Q. What should I wear to the Skyline Luge?
Closed-toe shoes such as sneakers (not sandals or slippers), and comfortable clothing you can move in. Secure jackets, scarves, long hair and any loose items so nothing catches during the ride. The hillside is exposed, so bring sun protection in summer and a windproof layer in winter, and keep your phone on a strap or in a zipped pocket.
Q. Is the luge open all year and in any weather?
Yes, it’s open year-round, with hours of 10:00–19:00 on weekdays and 10:00–20:00 on weekends and holidays (ticket sales stop 30 minutes before closing; hours shift slightly month to month). It runs in light rain but may pause for heavy rain, strong wind or ice, so check the day’s status if the weather looks rough. Spring and autumn are the most comfortable times to ride.
Q. Can I combine the Skyline Luge with other attractions?
Absolutely — that’s the smart way to do it. Lotte World Adventure Busan is a 15-minute walk away, Haedong Yonggungsa Temple is right by the luge’s bus stop, and Songjeong Beach and Blue Line Park are a short hop down the coast. The Osiria complex also has Lotte Premium Outlets and the Ananti Cove resort, so you can easily fill a full day on Busan’s eastern coast.
Q. Is the Skyline Luge included in the Visit Busan Pass?
The Skyline Luge is included on some versions of the Visit Busan Pass, so if you’re planning to visit several paid attractions in a day or two it can be worth comparing the pass against individual tickets. Check the current pass inclusions before buying, and see our Visit Busan Pass guide for how it works.
Q. Can two people ride one luge cart?
Yes, through the child-doubling option: a small child from 85 cm tall can share a cart with an accompanying adult who is over 150 cm and at least 19 years old, on a child-doubling ticket. This is designed for young children who don’t yet meet the solo requirements (age 6 and 110 cm). Otherwise, each rider drives their own cart.
Q. How many rides should I buy?
The standard ticket is 2 rides, which is enough to get the hang of it and have fun — but be warned that almost everyone wishes they’d bought three. If you already suspect you’ll love it (you will), the 3-ride ticket at just ₩10,000 more is the better value. You can also add rides on the day if you’re hooked.
Q. Is the Skyline Luge worth it?
For most visitors, yes — it’s affordable, genuinely fun and suits all ages, with a great coastal setting. As a standalone trip it’s an enjoyable hour; as part of a full Osiria day with Lotte World Adventure and Haedong Yonggungsa Temple, it’s one of the best days out in Busan. Book online to save a little and skip the weekend queue.

🛷 Next: plan the rest of your trip with all our Busan guides →