Busan Fireworks Festival Guide: Best Viewing Locations, Transportation Tips, and Visitor Advice

<-2> Busan Fireworks Festival

| Location | Gwangalli Beach area |
| Host | Busan Metropolitan City |
| Organizer | Busan Culture & Tourism Festival Organizing Committee |
| Homepage | |

Overview

The Busan Fireworks Festival represents not merely a pyrotechnic display but a comprehensive multimedia maritime show that has become the largest of its kind in Asia, drawing over one million spectators annually to the southern port city. Hosted by Busan Metropolitan City and organized by the Busan Culture & Tourism Festival Organizing Committee, this event stands alongside the Busan International Film Festival as one of the metropolis’s signature cultural products.

What distinguishes this festival from its counterpart in Seoul—specifically the Seoul International Fireworks Festival, with which it shares recognition as one of Korea’s two major fireworks celebrations—is its maritime setting. Whereas Seoul’s event unfolds along the narrow Han River, necessitating strict safety limitations that constrain production scale, Busan’s festival launches from the open sea, allowing for unrestricted pyrotechnic creativity and larger explosive displays. The festival integrates laser shows with precisely choreographed musical accompaniment, featuring unique firework shapes and giant shells that transform the night sky above Gwangalli Beach into a synchronized canvas of light and sound.

Venue and Timing

The festival occurs annually on the last Saturday of October, a scheduling choice designed to maximize attendance while preserving Sunday for recovery from the inevitable logistical challenges. This Saturday tradition mirrors the Seoul International Fireworks Festival’s approach, though since 2019 the event has shifted to the first Saturday of November.

The primary stage encompasses the waters fronting Gwangalli Beach and the iconic Gwangandaegyo Bridge, where barges position themselves to launch fireworks from both sea and bridge structures. The maritime location effectively eliminates fire concerns; indeed, during the 14th festival in 2018, when a fire broke out on a barge, many attendees remained oblivious to the incident.

Since the 11th festival in 2015, the production has expanded to a “3-Point” system, launching fireworks simultaneously from Marine City and Igidae in addition to Gwangalli Beach. However, this creates a tiered viewing experience: the “Overseas Invited Fireworks Show” remains visible exclusively from Gwangalli Beach, while the “Busan Multi Fireworks Show” can be viewed from all three locations. Certain central areas of Gwangalli sandy beach have been designated as premium tourist seating since 2015.

Historical Evolution

The festival’s origins trace to November 16, 2005, when an Advanced Multimedia Maritime Show celebrated the APEC Summit with an investment of 1.3 billion won, attracting one million spectators and creating what locals described as a “hell gate” scene on Busan Metro Line 2. Inspired by this success, the city rebranded the event as the Busan World Fireworks Festival on November 10, 2006, expanding the scale to accommodate 1.1 million attendees; from 2007 onward, pre-festival events accompanied the main celebration.

By the 6th festival in 2010, attendance had surged to 2.6 million—establishing the event as Busan’s representative tourism product and prompting the city to specifically target Japanese tourists residing in Tsushima. The 2011 festival proceeded despite rain, while the 2012 edition, originally scheduled for October 26–27, was postponed to 8:00 PM on October 28 due to inclement weather. The 2013 festival ran from Friday, October 25 to Saturday, October 26 under the theme “50 Years of Love, Busan!” and included a public proposal event during the 2012 festival for a couple selected through open recruitment.

The 10th festival in 2014 featured narration by Bae Chul-soo, while 2015 marked a significant operational change: the introduction of paid seating on the beach (S seats at 70,000 won and R seats with tables at 100,000 won), the implementation of the 3-Point production, and narration by Yang Hee-eun alongside KNN announcer Jeong Hee-jeong and stadium announcer Ragio of the Busan kt Sonicboom. The 2016 edition abolished the pre-festival, scheduling colorful smoke bombs from 18:00–20:00 by China’s Sunny Co. (2011 competition winner), an Overseas Invited Fireworks Show from 20:00–20:15, an LED Water Board Maritime Show from 20:15–20:25, and the main Busan Multi Fireworks Show from 20:25–21:00, with Bae Chul-soo returning as narrator.

The 2017 festival featured Italy’s Paraent Co. for the overseas segment with narration by Yoon Do-hyun, while 2018 hosted Japan’s Marutama Co. with Bae Chul-soo narrating—the latter event notable for a fire on a barge that fortunately did not spread to remaining gunpowder. The 2019 festival, held on Saturday, November 2 with narration by actor Jo Jin-woong, featured OSTs from Japanese animations including Mazinger Z, Cowboy Bebop, and Howl’s Moving Castle during the Japanese team’s performance. The 16th festival, scheduled for November 7, 2020, was canceled due to COVID-19—a fate shared by the Seoul International Fireworks Festival that year.

Viewing Locations

The festival offers a spectrum of viewing experiences ranging from immersive beachfront participation to distant, contemplative observation from mountain peaks. Truly, every kind of place is listed among the options, each presenting distinct advantages and compromises regarding sound synchronization, crowd density, and visual perspective.

Primary Beachfront

Gwangalli Beach serves as the epicenter, where over one million people crowd the sandy beach to experience the full multimedia presentation. From this vantage point, fireworks explode in precise synchronization with music including “Busan Seagull,” pop songs, K-pop, and orchestral arrangements—a cohesion of sound and light unavailable elsewhere. High-rise hotels, condominiums, and restaurants behind the beach offer festival products with extreme overcharging, yet the beach remains optimal for the complete experience. Based on experience, the exodus is said to be a parade of zombies, with Gwang-an Station, Suyeong Station, and Millak Station becoming gathering places for these exhausted crowds.

Millak-dong Waterfront Park ranks as the third most popular viewing spot, located right next to Gwangalli near the Raw Fish Center harbor. While access to the breakwater is completely restricted due to dangerous drop-offs into deep water, and music cannot be heard clearly, spectators flock here when the beach interior becomes impossibly crowded.

Namcheon-dong Samick Beach Apartments on the opposite side ranks as the second-best prime spot alongside Gwangalli Beach proper, offering clear views of the Gwangandaegyo Bridge—though this popularity means the “hell gate” of congestion opens here as well.

Alternative Coastal Perspectives

Marine City offers a diagonal rear view of the Gwangandaegyo Bridge from a distance actually closer than Gwangalli Beach. Since 2015, fireworks launch from waters in front of Marine City as part of the 3-Point production. Residents of coastal mixed-use apartments here enjoy premium views—units facing the bridge command higher prices—though they suffer greatly from noise pollution.

Yongho Bay (Yongho 1-dong) encompasses the reclaimed land area featuring apartment complexes such as LG Metro City, GS Heights Xi, and W, facing Marine City across the water. This location has attracted huge crowds since becoming known as a viable alternative.

Igidae Park in Yongho-dong offers viewing near Dongsaengmal and Seopjari—the filming location for the movie Haeund—with well-equipped Gwangandaegyo Bridge viewing facilities. Unlike mountain alternatives, this location requires no hiking, and since recent years, audio systems, organizing staff, and police presence have enhanced both atmosphere and safety, albeit with smaller sound volume.

The Bay 101, opened mid-2014 as a complex marina facility with yachts, restaurants, and accommodation, provides an alternative to Marine City or Dongbaekseom, particularly for those wishing to view fireworks launched before Dongbaekseom alongside Marine City’s night view—though comfort here requires payment.

Cheongsapo, located along the abandoned Donghae Nambu Line site in Haeundae, presents a surprisingly less-known option with clear Gwangandaegyo Bridge visibility. The Cheongsapo Daritdol Observatory offers daytime sightseeing with nighttime fireworks viewing potential.

Mountain Vantage Points

For those willing to sacrifice musical synchronization to avoid crowds, nearby mountains offer panoramic perspectives.

Mt. Hwangnyeong and Mt. Geumnyeong provide elevated views, with the beacon tower at Mt. Hwangnyeong’s summit offering the best overlook of Gwangalli. However, this location has itself become a “hell gate,” particularly around the Geumnyeong Mountain Youth Training Center, with vehicle entry completely restricted and blocked roads necessitating walking up.

Mt. Jangsan (638m altitude) features the Ganbiosan beacon tower, built during the Joseon Dynasty to observe enemy ships, offering panoramic views of the entire Gwangandaegyo Bridge and surroundings. The significant hike required—coupled with dangerous descent paths in darkness—deters all but avid hikers, and the fireworks, arranged for beach viewing, lose emotional impact from this distance.

Mt. Baesan in Yeonje-gu (260m) offers comfortable viewing precisely because its distance discourages crowds, though the hiking pressure remains a bonus consideration for those seeking exercise with their pyrotechnics.

Bonglaesan in Yeongdo-gu and Mt. Cheonma in Seo-gu provide views from the old city center and western Busan respectively, with the latter’s observatory offering clear bridge visibility—though the distance between these locations and Haeundae-gu remains considerable.

Geumjeongsan offers multiple viewing points including Sanggyebong (reached via bus 33 to Guman-deok terminal then hiking), and the 3rd/4th Watchtowers, Godangbong, Gyemyeongam, and Gyemyeongbong Observatory Rock (reached via bus 203 to Geumjeongsanseong East Gate, followed by 40 minutes to 2 hours of hiking). These areas exceed 640m altitude and present dangers after dark, attracting almost exclusively hikers. Gyemyeongam, a subsidiary hermitage of Beomeosa Temple, offers a concrete path—steep but safer than general trails—for descent.

Distant and Unique Locations

Dongbaekseom Nurimaru in Haeundae, reached via a 10-minute walk from Dongbaek Station, serves East Busan residents primarily from Haeundae-gu. Professional photographers and amateurs deploy tripods and chairs early to claim prime photo positions.

Dalmaji Hill (Mipo Moontan Road) beyond Dongbaekseom provides clear bridge visibility, drawing crowds seeking alternatives to the main beach.

LCT (Landmark Tower) allows viewing from the 98th to 100th-floor observatories of this super high-rise before Haeundae Beach—access restricted to authorized persons only.

Lotte Mall Gwangbok Branch offers rooftop observatory views of the bridge from the Busan Tower side, though distance limits visibility from this old city center location.

Busan Tower permits viewing but prohibits photography due to glass reflections.

Busan International Finance Center (BIFC) allows viewing from its high-rise observatory, though distance and access restrictions apply.

Pusan National University Main Stadium provides distant views from the top of the stands, while various campuses of Pukyong National University (Yongdang and Daeyeon dormitories/College of Humanities and Social Sciences) offer emergency options when all else fails.

Tsushima Island, Japan (49.5km distant) presents perhaps the most unique viewing experience, where the festival serves as an international tourism product despite the significant sound delay and light scattering that biases colors toward red, orange, and yellow. Japan actively promotes this cross-border viewing opportunity.

Technical Production and Broadcast

The festival’s musical curation has evolved from simple background tracks to sophisticated thematic selections encompassing not only traditional fireworks accompaniment (classical and new age) but trending songs, past hits, and broadly relatable tracks—with the finale invariably remaining classical. As scale increased, famous DJs and celebrity narrators were incorporated, while Gwangandaegyo Bridge LED upgrades enabled subtitle displays for romantic atmosphere. Speakers are installed at major viewing points including Gwangalli Beach, Yongho-dong pier, Igidae City Nature Park, and Dongbaekseom.

For those unable to attend, KNN provides terrestrial DMB and radio broadcasts—though these typically cut off around 8:50 PM for regular programming, just before the finale. Busan MBC DMB broadcast the complete event in 2016. T-broad utilizes multiple cameras for dynamic coverage, while CJ HelloVision broadcasts in Full HD. Nevertheless, the limitations of broadcast media are significant: the super-giant fireworks and bridge explosions vary in size, launch angle, altitude, and distance, requiring constant camera switching that interrupts the experience, and large fireworks cannot be fully captured on screen—reducing the experience to less than a quarter of its in-person impact.

Practical Considerations

Transportation Logistics

The festival creates maximum demand across all transport modes, accompanied by what can only be described as severely overcrowded conditions. Busan Metro extends operating hours, with Line 2’s Geumnyeonsan Station and Gwang-an Station, plus Line 3’s Suyeong Station, serving the area. Bus 38 records its highest annual transport revenue on this day, while buses 1006 and 1011—despite not passing nearby—detour through Suyeong Intersection due to their Gwangandaegyo Bridge routes.

From Busan Station, bus 41 provides direct service, with buses 40, 1001, and 1003 as alternatives—though traffic delays are inevitable. The metro route requires taking Line 1 to Seomyeon, transferring to Line 2, and alighting at Geumnyeonsan Station. From Bujeon Station, bus 83 offers the most convenient access. From Busan Central Bus Terminal, bus 51 travels directly to Gwangalli Beach in approximately 90 minutes (longer with traffic), though the metro alternative via Seomyeon also exceeds one hour. From Busan Western Intercity Bus Terminal, Line 2 from Sasang Station provides immediate access.

Critical logistical realities include the complete closure of Gwangnam-ro, Gwang-an-ro, and Gwang-an Beach Road to general vehicles, with only city buses permitted on some routes. The lower deck of Gwangandaegyo Bridge closes entirely, forcing detours via Suyeong Intersection, the 2nd Mandeok Tunnel, or the Busan Outer Ring Expressway. City tour buses suspend operations, while Haeundae–Nam-masan intercity buses occasionally cancel last services when Gwangalli proves impossible to enter.

The scale of attendance—2.6 million representing over half Busan’s 3.5 million population—creates a uniquely challenging environment. In Seoul terms, this equates to eight million people converging on Yeouido. Communication failures are severe, with A-GPS often failing to function, and the crush of humanity at Suyeong, Gwang-an, and Millak Stations requires police and railway social service agents to control crowds from the station stairs themselves. Paradoxically, walking to Millak Station or Centum City Station may prove faster than attempting to board at the immediate vicinity.

Indeed, walking often outpaces vehicular transport: the Marine City area via Centum City requires approximately one hour on foot, Haeundae New Town two hours, and Seomyeon similarly two hours. Residents prepared to walk should note that bicycles—including folding models—are strictly prohibited on city buses and metro trains on festival day, with station employees and railway social service agents enforcing this restriction.

For those unable to navigate the post-festival exodus, spending the night at Gwangalli Beach or nearby PC cafes until the first morning train presents a viable alternative.

Safety and Etiquette

The convergence of millions in limited space creates genuine safety concerns, with transport capacity at bus stops and subway stations easily exceeded. Spectators must exercise patience and yield to one another to prevent disasters. Families with infants or young children face particular risks during the exodus, when falls could result in crushing injuries. Two return strategies are recommended: leaving slightly before the finale concludes, or preparing refreshments to extend the beach stay by 1–2 hours post-event, allowing crowds to dissipate naturally.

First-time attendees must prepare for significant temperature drops; despite Busan’s southern location, October nights by the sea are extremely cold with biting winds. Parkas, knee blankets, and scarves are essential regardless of daytime warmth. Snacks and drinks are advisable given the difficulty of procurement amidst crowds, and restroom use should be completed by 6:00 PM at the latest—women face particularly cumbersome queues, despite increased mobile toilet facilities and agreements allowing beachside merchants to open restrooms to the public.

Manners expectations include removing shoes when entering the sandy beach, avoiding foods with excessive moisture that might spill on neighboring spectators, maintaining queue discipline, and remaining seated during the performance to preserve sightlines for those behind.

Economic and Environmental Impact

The festival’s economic reality includes extreme overcharging across accommodation and dining, with beachfront cafe window seats commanding 100,000 to 150,000 won for reservations including minimal refreshments—a practice nearly universal among major franchises except for directly managed S Cafe locations.

Environmental management remains challenging despite the distribution of 50,000 trash bags in 2014 (continuing through 2017), with local residents citing light pollution, noise, and illegal dumping as grounds for petitions to abolish the event. Attendees must take personal responsibility for their waste.

Capturing the Experience

For those determined to film, the advice is paradoxical: abandon the attempt to capture the climax. Fireworks are moving fluids that defy fixed capture, and the emotion created by sea breeze, music, and spectacle cannot be preserved even one-tenth by camera. Moderate photography followed by complete immersion in the experience—which can never be repeated—is the recommended approach.

Video Archives

2018 Busan Fireworks Festival Video

2019 Busan Fireworks Festival Video

As the organizers note: if watched from a high place, it becomes merely a fireworks festival; if watched from the beach, it becomes a multimedia maritime show. The choice remains with each individual spectator.

What is Busan famous for?

Busan sits on Korea’s southeastern coast, where the Nakdong River delta meets the Sea of Japan. Mountains crowd the city from the west and north, leaving limited flat land that has built upward into dense residential towers. As the country’s second-largest city, it developed around a protected natural harbor that remains one of East Asia’s busiest container ports.

Haeundae Beach occupies the eastern curve of the coastline, a 1.5-kilometer strip of sand backed by high-rise hotels and apartment blocks. Further west, Gwangalli Beach offers a narrower but longer arch with direct views across the bay to Gwangan Bridge. These two beaches host the annual Busan Fireworks Festival each October, when spectators gather on the sand to watch displays launched from the bridge deck and from barges anchored offshore.

The port drives the local economy, handling international shipping routes and passenger ferries to Japan. At Jagalchi Fish Market, vendors sell live seafood from tanks that line the lower level, while the upper floors house restaurants where buyers eat fish cleaned and prepared on the spot. The industry shapes daily routines here more than in inland cities; mornings start before dawn at the auction halls.

Gwangan Bridge spans 7.4 kilometers across the bay, connecting the central districts with Haeundae. The cable-stayed design features LED lighting that changes color after dark. During the fireworks festival, crews mount launch tubes on the bridge itself, using the structure as a firing platform that stretches horizontally across the water.

In October, the Busan International Film Festival brings directors and distributors to the city for ten days of screenings at venues including the Busan Cinema Center, where an outdoor theater seats four thousand. Elsewhere, Gamcheon Culture Village covers a steep slope with houses painted in blues, pinks, and yellows, arranged in tiers that follow the contour lines and connected by staircases that replace streets too narrow for cars.

The festival works because of this geography. Viewers can spread along both beaches with clear sightlines to the bridge, while the bay contains the debris and reflects the light. The subway connects both beach areas, the port’s logistics experience helps manage the temporary infrastructure, and the density of hotels accommodates the overflow crowds. Using the bridge as a launch platform creates a horizontal line of fire that is visible from multiple angles across the city.

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