Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - How much does it cost to travel to Korea? How much does it cost to visit for three months?

How much does it cost to travel to Korea? How much does it cost to visit for three months?

4 people apply for a passport visa. Accommodation and meals are still very expensive in Korea. Eating a bowl of noodles costs 4 yuan. The round-trip air ticket from Shanghai to Seoul is about 2,6, and the round-trip air ticket from Shanghai to Busan is about 2,3. South Korea's overall price level is slightly lower than that of the United States and much lower than that of Japan. Now the tour in Korea is about 34, if you want to stay for three months. I have to travel by myself (air ticket+hotel). Generally speaking, the cost is: visa 4/ person, air ticket 3,/person, accommodation and meals 3×9 a day, transportation 6,, at least 7,-8,. The round-trip ticket from Shanghai to Seoul is about 26, and the round-trip ticket from Shanghai to Busan is about 23. South Korea's overall price level is slightly lower than that of the United States and much lower than that of Japan.

- Transportation: 6 won for ordinary buses, 6 won for subway section 1, 1,9 won for ordinary taxis and 4, won for model taxis-Diet: 5,-6, won for Korean food in ordinary restaurants, 3,9 won for Big Mac hamburgers in McDonald's

- Accommodation: super hotels (15,. Tourist hotels (8, won ~15, won), hotels (2, won ~5, won), residential houses (2, won ~4, won)-others: domestic cigarettes are 1,3 ~ 2, won, and tickets for the ancient palace/national museum are less than 3,. won, 5 won for ice cream in the supermarket, 5-6 won for mineral water (5 cc) and 5 won for paper towels to travel to Jeju Island and Seoul, South Korea: the team schedule is basically based on 2 nights and 3 days, 3 nights and 4 days, 4 nights and 5 days, 5 nights and 6 days, but these schedules are changed according to customers' requirements, and they are not restricted. A brand-new schedule can be made according to customer's requirements. (For example: Shanghai/Beijing-Seoul-Daegu-Jeju-Shanghai/Beijing) Reference Matters No visa is required in Jeju. If the passenger refuses to apply for a visa at Jeju border checkpoint, it will be regarded as the passenger's own responsibility. Passports must have an expiration period of more than 6 months. The five-day tour of Jeju in Seoul, South Korea is 3,98 yuan/person, with special emphasis: 1. The diet in South Korea is mainly light, spicy and cold dishes, which is quite different from the eating habits in China. China tourists can prepare some instant noodles and biscuits to prevent discomfort; 2. The standard of Korean hotels is lower than that of China hotels, and the facilities are different. Usually, there is no grand lobby like China hotels, but Korean hotels are clean and tidy. 3. Toothpaste, toothbrush, shampoo, bath lotion and other articles in Korean hotels need to be charged, and slippers are not disposable slippers. If necessary, please bring your own articles; 4. Both RMB and US dollars can be exchanged for Korean dollars at the counter marked "Two Substitutes" at the airport! Please read the above notice for other precautions! Koreans like kimchi, which tastes spicy, barbecued more and less oily. During our five days in Korea, except for a ginseng chicken soup and a abalone porridge, the rest of the meals were always four cold dishes of kimchi, kelp, dried bean curd and bean sprouts, with Chinese cabbage slices for barbecue or hot pot. Moreover, Koreans don't like monosodium glutamate, so they feel that the rice is too light to eat. I always hear people from Hong Kong or Guangdong at the next table sigh that they are coming to Korea to become monks. On our table, we pass on things like preserved vegetables, pickled mustard tuber or meat floss brought from China for dinner. Disposable toothbrushes and toothpaste are free in domestic hotels, and shampoo and shower gel will also be prepared for you in hotels with a little higher grade. Hotels in Korea don't provide free toothbrushes and toothpaste for environmental reasons, but they will put these things and razors on the desk in the room and put the price list. You must read it carefully. If you are not careful, you will have to pay an expensive bill the next day. The two small bottles beside the washbasin are often toner and lotion, unlike shampoo and shower gel in China, which makes you feel inconvenient. There is also the green control button on the TV remote control in the room. If you want to think clearly, press it again. Because it is an "informative program", it is charged for playing adult discs. Although it is only a hundred yuan, the next morning in the car in front of everyone, the tour guide asked a certain room to pay the fee for the informative program, which was embarrassing. Some places can't be filmed or photographed, so be sure to observe that there are many places in South Korea that can't be filmed or photographed due to political or cultural relics protection. Every time you visit a scenic spot, the tour guide will generally remind you that you must listen carefully and strictly abide by it. Scenic spots such as the Presidential Palace, Cheongwadae and Tianma House are forbidden to take pictures. There was a tourist in our car, who was lucky enough to shoot the exterior of the presidential palace in the car. He was immediately found by the security guards in casual clothes. When you got on the bus, please sell the image and deduct the tour guide's certificate. After a long time, the atmosphere on the car was ruined. Generally, you don't bargain when you buy things in Korea. Dongdaemun and Nandaemun in Seoul are a big clothing market, but you don't bargain. Maybe you can try, but the bargaining range is very small. Like some small souvenirs with ethnic characteristics, the prices in stalls, small shops and duty-free shops are similar, so buy them when you see fit, and there is no need to compare them. However, the price of tobacco and alcohol is the cheapest in airport duty-free shops. For example, the "THIS" brand cigarettes that Koreans like to smoke sell 11, won on the street, while duty-free shops only sell 8,8 won. Because of the different bargaining habits, we also had a bad time with the Korean tour guide. In Jeju, the tour guide lobbied us to take more boats, and each person paid 15, won (about 12 yuan RMB) to give drivers a little more "finance". Because the tone of the tour guide was quite like "begging for food", everyone agreed reluctantly. I smiled and asked the tour guide, "Can it be cheaper?" Unexpectedly, the tour guide was very angry. Of course, this is also related to the quality of the tour guide. So if you don't want to add more, don't bargain, just say no, and don't bother with the tour guide. The "public sales bureau" brought by the tour guide should be carefully purchased. Compared with China, the price of South Korea is 5-1 times more expensive, so unless it is very distinctive, you should use the $2, in your purse with caution. In particular, the "public sale bureau" brought by the tour guide should be more cautious. On the first day of our arrival in Korea, the local tour guides talked endlessly, talking about their own life experience from the history of Korea and the development of China from the economy of Korea, during which they were gagged and enthusiastic. Unfortunately, the good times didn't last long. The next morning, the tour guide took us to the "Ginseng Public Sale Bureau". The narrow public sale bureau was crowded with Beijingers, Shanghainese and Cantonese from China. The salesgirl introduced the medicinal value of Korean ginseng in fluent Chinese, and repeatedly stressed that it took a certain course of treatment to replenish the body. We strongly recommended a box of Korean Taiji Ginseng in 6 grams. When we saw the price of 225 US dollars, we thought that China was vast in territory and rich in ginseng in Changbai Mountain. Unexpectedly, the situation changed suddenly. After getting on the bus, the tour guide picked up the microphone and said, "We are here to make money, not to drink the northwest wind." After that, he sat in front and threw us in the "ice kiln" from then on. In addition, China is rich in amethyst processing plants in Seoul, honey shops and pearl houses in Jeju, and the prices there are at least ten times that in China. Beware of "sneak shots": In the car, except the tour guide, there is always a "tour guide assistant", who is very diligent in carrying luggage and adding food along the way, but he always takes out his camera to take a sneak shot when you pose for a photo. At the end, he gives you a large stack of developed photos, saying that you are satisfied, please pay 4 yuan RMB, but it doesn't matter if you are not satisfied, considering that your "jade photos" are always in a foreign land.