A jjimjilbang (찜질방) is a Korean bathhouse and sauna complex — part hot-spring spa, part relaxation lounge, and often open 24 hours. The key thing to know: the bathing area is gender-separated and fully nude, while the shared sauna rooms are co-ed and you wear the loose clothes the bathhouse gives you. Here is exactly how to use one, step by step, with no awkward surprises.
Last updated: June 2026.
What is a jjimjilbang?
A jjimjilbang is a large public bathhouse that combines hot and cold soaking pools with a set of heated sauna rooms, snack bars, and even sleeping areas. It has two zones: the wet bath (목욕탕, mogyoktang), which is nude and separated by gender, and the dry common area (찜질방), which is co-ed, clothed, and full of themed sauna rooms (kiln, jade, salt, ice). Many are open all night, which makes them both a wellness ritual and a budget place to sleep.
How do you use a jjimjilbang, step by step?
Pay at the front desk, store your shoes, then bathe nude in the gender-separated area before changing into the provided clothes for the shared sauna floor. The full flow:
- Pay and get a key. At the desk you pay entry (typically ₩8,000–15,000) and receive a locker key or wristband — the wristband often tracks any food or extras you buy, paid on the way out.
- Shoes off first. Put your shoes in the small shoe locker by the entrance, then go to the changing room for your gender.
- Undress fully and enter the baths. Swimsuits are not worn — the bath area is nude and same-gender only. Bring the small towel provided.
- Shower thoroughly before the pools. Wash sitting at a shower station first; this is essential etiquette before entering any shared tub.
- Soak. Alternate between hot pools, a cold plunge, and steam/sauna rooms.
- (Optional) Get a body scrub. A seshin (세신) attendant scrubs off dead skin on a table for about ₩20,000–30,000 — vigorous, but the Korean spa rite of passage.
- Change into the bathhouse clothes (shorts and a tee) to enter the co-ed common area with its sauna rooms, heated floors, snack bar and sleeping zones.
Tip: try folding your towel into the famous “sheep-head” (양머리) hat — and order the classic post-sauna combo of sikhye (식혜, sweet rice drink) and baked eggs (맥반석 구운계란).
What do I wear, and what’s the bathing etiquette?
In the bath area you wear nothing; in the common sauna area you wear the t-shirt and shorts the jjimjilbang issues at check-in. The rules that matter most to visitors:
- Always shower before entering a pool — non-negotiable.
- No swimsuits in the baths; nudity is normal and expected in the same-gender area.
- No phones or cameras in the bath area, for everyone’s privacy.
- Tie up long hair so it stays out of the water.
- Keep your voice down; sleeping rooms are silent zones.
- Don’t wear the bathhouse clothes outside — return them when you leave.
Where are the best jjimjilbang and spas in Busan?
Busan, sitting on natural hot springs, has some of Korea’s best bathhouses:
- Spa Land, Shinsegae Centum City (스파랜드) — a premium spa inside the giant Centum City department store, with around 22 themed spa rooms and outdoor foot baths. Entry is roughly ₩20,000 and there’s typically a time limit (around 4 hours); it is not a 24-hour, sleep-over type. Easy to reach via Metro Line 2, Centum City Station.
- Hurshimchung (허심청), Dongnae — one of Asia’s largest hot-spring bathhouses, fed by natural Dongnae hot-spring water, with a huge variety of mineral pools. A more traditional, local experience.
Jjimjilbang quick facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Typical entry | ₩8,000–15,000 (premium spas ~₩20,000) |
| Body scrub (세신) | ₩20,000–30,000, optional |
| Open hours | Many 24h; premium spas have time limits |
| Bath area | Nude, gender-separated |
| Common area | Co-ed, wear provided clothes |
| Overnight | Allowed at most 24h jjimjilbang — a budget bed |
FAQ
Do I really have to be naked?
Yes, in the bathing pools — they are nude and gender-separated, and swimsuits aren’t allowed. In the co-ed common sauna area you wear the clothes the jjimjilbang provides, so you’re only nude among the same gender.
Can I sleep overnight at a jjimjilbang?
At 24-hour jjimjilbang, yes — many travelers use them as a cheap place to sleep on heated floors or in sleeping rooms for roughly ₩10,000–15,000. Note that premium day-spas like Spa Land are not overnight venues.
Are tattoos allowed?
Generally yes at standard jjimjilbang, which are relaxed about tattoos. A few upscale spas or pools may have restrictions, so check at the desk if you have large visible tattoos.
What should I bring?
Not much — towels and sauna clothes are provided. Bring your own toiletries if you’re particular, and cash for the scrub, snacks and any extras (settled by wristband on the way out).
Explore more Korea Go Now guides
- Decide where to base yourself with our guide to where to stay in Busan.
- See how a spa day fits into the top 10 things to do in Busan.
- Work a jjimjilbang into the perfect 3-day Busan itinerary.