BTS Pushes Busan Room Rates to 760,000 Won Amc Movies

BTS Pushes Busan Room Rates to 760,000 Won Amc Movies

amc movies found Busan lodging turning into a pricing free-for-all before BTS’s June 12 and June 13 concerts. A room that normally cost 60,000 won reportedly jumped to 760,000 won, while city officials moved to check hotels and motels for excessive hikes.

Busan Rates Before June 12

The jump was not limited to one property. The Fair Trade Commission and the Korea Consumer Agency checked 135 Busan hotels and motels and found average concert-week room rates more than doubled versus the weekends before and after the event.

Motel rates rose more than tripled from normal levels, and hotel rates nearly tripled. Some properties went well beyond that, setting prices more than five times higher than usual. One 100,000 won room climbed to 750,000 won, and one 300,000 won room reached 1.8 million won.

Reservation Cancellations In Busan

Fans also reported accommodations canceling existing reservations after the concert announcement. That pushed the pressure from sticker shock into the booking process itself, leaving concert-period stays harder to secure even before the June dates arrive.

The concerts are part of BTS’s ARIRANG world tour, and June 13 also marks the group’s debut anniversary. Busan Metropolitan Government is preparing related events, so the lodging market is reacting to more than one demand spike at once.

Inspections After Complaints

Busan launched joint inspections focused on possible violations of the Public Health Control Act and warned businesses against excessive hikes. It also planned targeted inspections of accommodations drawing visitor complaints, a direct response that gives travelers a clearer path to pressure than they had before the complaints surfaced.

For visitors trying to book around June 12 and June 13, the practical takeaway is blunt: compare rates carefully, expect some properties to sit far above normal pricing, and treat any reservation changes as a sign the market is still unstable. The city’s next move is not another announcement; it is enforcement, and that is where the lodging market now has to prove it can hold up under scrutiny.

Next