Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees

Jeju turns on a totally different dial out west, and this one-day bus route is built for it. You get 1100 Highland for big Hallasan views and Cheonjeyeon Falls for that misty, legend-heavy atmosphere, all in one efficient day. I like that the stops are scenic but not a suffering contest—your main work is walking and stairs at each viewpoint, not a long hike. One thing to weigh: the day includes real walking on uneven ground, so it’s not a fit for wheelchair users or people with mobility impairments.

What makes this tour worth your time is the tight focus: nature first, no shopping detours, no optional rabbit holes. You’ll also be traveling with a professional English-speaking guide, and you’re not stuck figuring out entry tickets and timing between widely spaced sights.

At $43 per person, this is a value play if you want the island’s highlights without spending your vacation stitching together buses, tickets, and backup plans. Just remember lunch isn’t included, so you’ll want to plan a simple meal break on your own.

Key things you’ll get (and why they matter)

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Key things you’ll get (and why they matter)

  • Hallasan viewpoints at 1100 Highland so you can enjoy highland air without committing to a summit hike
  • Cheonjeyeon Falls tickets included for an easier, less stressful arrival
  • Jusangjeolli Cliff access included to see those dramatic hexagonal basalt columns and tide-sculpted waves
  • O’sulloc tea culture stop with time to walk through tea fields and visit the museum
  • Coastal temple finish at Bomunsa (Sanbangsan) where sea views and prayer share the same cliffside air

West Jeju in One Day: Efficient, Scenic, and Actually Manageable

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - West Jeju in One Day: Efficient, Scenic, and Actually Manageable
West Jeju is where you go for volcanic drama. Basalt cliffs. Wild-looking coastlines. Waterfalls that look like they belong in a myth. The nice part is that a full-day bus tour keeps the logistics from eating your energy.

This itinerary strings together big-name sights that are spread across the west and south-west side, so you can see multiple ecosystems in one day. Highland air at the start, forest-mist in the middle, then tea fields and ocean views. It’s a good rhythm for a short trip or for days when you don’t want to rent a car.

Also, the tour is designed to avoid time-wasters. There’s no shopping loop and no optional-tour hunting. That matters on Jeju. When you’re paying for a day, you want your hours spent outside, not stuck in a mall line.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Jeju Province.

1100 Highland: The Hallasan Viewpoint That Starts the Day Right

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - 1100 Highland: The Hallasan Viewpoint That Starts the Day Right
You begin at 1100 Highland, which is a smart entry point if you want Hallasan’s presence without signing up for a major climb. Expect crisp mountain air, alpine plants, and wide panoramic views over the island.

Why this stop works:

  • It gives you an instant sense of Jeju’s scale. The island looks different when you’re up high.
  • You get a nature-feeling start before the day gets more crowded and busier at the coastline.

What to watch for:

  • It can be cooler or breezier than you expect, even in warm seasons—bring the jacket you’re told to pack.
  • You’ll still be walking around for viewpoints, so comfortable shoes are not optional.

Cheonjeyeon Falls: Misty, Myth-Filled, and Photo-Friendly

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Cheonjeyeon Falls: Misty, Myth-Filled, and Photo-Friendly
Cheonjeyeon Falls is often called the Pond of the Gods, and you’ll see why. The water drops in multiple tiers, surrounded by lush forest, with that classic Jeju misty softness.

You’ll have your ticket handled for you, which saves time at the entrance. From a visitor comfort angle, that’s a real win: you’re not scanning ticket counters while everyone else is trekking to the same path.

How to enjoy it:

  • Go slow near the falls. The best photos come from stepping back and letting the mist do the work.
  • Expect wet patches on the ground and plan your footing.

If weather gets rough, the day can shift. In severe conditions, Mt. Hallasan may be replaced with other attractions. The tour is still meant to keep you moving toward major sights safely.

Jusangjeolli Cliff: Hexagonal Basalt Columns and Loud Ocean Power

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Jusangjeolli Cliff: Hexagonal Basalt Columns and Loud Ocean Power
Jusangjeolli Cliff is pure volcanic geometry. You’re looking at hexagonal basalt columns formed by ancient lava flows, and then the ocean hits them like a drum. In other words: this is a place where nature isn’t subtle.

Your entry ticket for Jusangjeolli is included, so you’re not stuck adding fees at the last minute. Once you arrive, the view does the selling. Even on an ordinary day, the waves and the column shapes create a strong sense of place.

Practical notes:

  • This is a cliff environment. The air can be salty and windy. Dress like it’s outside, because it is.
  • Bring your patience for crowds during peak times. You’re dealing with a popular stop plus photos.

Also, if the sea is rough, the experience may feel more intense—just follow guide instructions about where it’s safe to stand.

O’sulloc Tea Fields and Museum: Calm After the Cliffs

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - O’sulloc Tea Fields and Museum: Calm After the Cliffs
After the power stops, the O’sulloc leg gives you a slower pace. You’ll walk through green tea fields and visit the museum to learn about Korea’s tea culture.

This part is valuable because it changes the texture of the day:

  • You go from ocean noise and cliff views to a quieter, sensory landscape.
  • Tea culture gives you context for Jeju beyond scenery. It’s a reminder that food and agriculture are part of the island’s identity.

You may also find tea treats on-site (green tea ice cream or steamed buns are mentioned as possible options). The nice thing about this timing is that it’s often where you reset before the coastline temple finish.

Tip: take a few minutes in the tea field walks just to look down the rows. It’s oddly relaxing, even if you’re already a photo person.

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Songaksan: Coastal Meadows and Volcanic Trails with Big Sea Views

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Songaksan: Coastal Meadows and Volcanic Trails with Big Sea Views
Songaksan is about sea-meets-land drama. Expect lush meadows and volcanic trails that overlook the ocean, with panoramic views stretching toward Marado and Gapado Islands.

This stop is for the “I want to feel like I’m outside” part of your day. You’re not just looking at one viewpoint; you’re moving along paths with the sea as your backdrop.

What I’d plan for:

  • This is where comfortable shoes pay off again. Trails can be uneven.
  • Wind off the coast can make temperatures feel different than the city-side.

If you’re the type who likes a short walk rather than another photo platform, Songaksan is a good payoff.

Bomunsa Temple at Sanbangsan: A Sea-Edge Temple Finish

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Bomunsa Temple at Sanbangsan: A Sea-Edge Temple Finish
The day ends at Bomunsa Temple, located at Sanbangsan, tucked beneath towering cliffs by the ocean. It’s one of those places where you can feel the way Jeju blends practical geography with spiritual storytelling.

You’ll walk volcanic trails to reach it, so wear shoes you can trust. Then let the space do its job: ocean sounds, cliffside setting, and the temple atmosphere.

Why this ending works:

  • It’s a quieter close after earlier high-energy viewpoints.
  • The sea-air temple setting feels distinctively Jeju, not like a generic temple stop.

If you’re traveling in a group, this is also a nice moment to slow down and soak in the surroundings before heading back for drop-off.

Guide and Group Vibe: The Human Touch That Makes the Stops Click

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Guide and Group Vibe: The Human Touch That Makes the Stops Click
Here’s the real differentiator: the guide experience. Yeha Tour uses professional English-speaking guides trained in-house. That matters because you don’t just get directions—you get stories that connect the dots between volcanic landforms, cultural legends, and everyday Jeju life.

In the field, guides like Elin are repeatedly singled out for being joyful and caring. Some groups describe Elin, nicknamed Mama Jeju, as attentive, energetic, and organized. There are also mentions of small extras that help the day feel looked after—complimentary cold drinking water, local sweets, and even sun umbrellas when someone needs them. One group even mentioned a quiz on the bus with tiny Jeju grandfather statues and an album of photos afterward.

You might also meet other excellent guides (Angella and Kate are named in feedback). The common thread is the same: clear explanations, helpful photo-taking, and good timing so you’re not stuck rushing.

What I’d watch for on your own day: ask your guide what the best viewpoints are at each stop. With a strong guide, you get better angles fast—and you spend less time wandering.

Timing, Pace, and When You Might Feel Rushed

Jeju Island: Full-Day SouthWest Bus Tour with Entry Fees - Timing, Pace, and When You Might Feel Rushed
This is a full-day tour with multiple stops, so the pace is active. The tradeoff for seeing a lot is that you won’t have hours of total freedom at every location.

The good news is the stops are spaced for variety, and your guide is there to balance explanations with time to actually experience each place. Some groups describe the time spent at each location as just right. That usually means you’ll get:

  • enough time to walk to the main viewpoints
  • quick, useful context so photos feel more meaningful
  • smooth transitions by air-conditioned vehicle between stops

Still, if you’re someone who likes unhurried wandering, you may want to pace yourself early. The misty waterfalls and windy cliff areas can make you linger longer than planned if you’re chasing photos.

Price and Value: Why $43 Can Make Sense (and When It Won’t)

$43 per person is the kind of price point that attracts travelers who want the “big hits” without engineering a day on your own.

What’s included in that price:

  • a professional guide
  • transportation by air-conditioned vehicle
  • entry tickets for Jusangjeolli Cliff and Cheonjeyeon Falls
  • hotel drop-off
  • (plus the tour is built to avoid shopping detours)

Lunch isn’t included, so you’ll need to budget for your own meal. You also need to pay attention to footwear and weather, since this is an outdoor-heavy day.

When the value is strongest:

  • you want a full-day west Jeju highlights plan
  • you don’t want to handle multiple tickets and distances yourself
  • you like having someone else handle timing and route flow

When you might think twice:

  • if you want slow, independent sightseeing with long stays in just one spot
  • if you have mobility limitations (this tour is not suited to wheelchair users or people with mobility impairments)

Practical Tips Before You Go: Shoes, Jacket, and a Calm Weather Plan

Jeju weather can shift quickly. Bring what the tour suggests: comfortable shoes and a jacket. You’ll be walking around viewpoints and along trails, and you don’t want to do that in flimsy sneakers.

Also plan for the reality that conditions can change:

  • In severe weather, Mt. Hallasan may be replaced with other attractions.
  • If rain or wind hits, you’ll still be out and about, just with safe routing.

One more “small but real” tip: keep your phone handy for WhatsApp contact. The company will message you the day before your tour. If you don’t receive a message by 7:00 PM, reach out. If you want a meeting point change, do it at least one day in advance.

Should You Book This West Jeju Bus Tour?

Yes, if you’re aiming for a classic west Jeju day with minimal hassle. This tour is a good fit when you want Hallasan-area views, two major nature stops with tickets included, and a tea-and-temple finish—all without car rental math or ticket-line stress.

Skip it (or choose carefully) if:

  • you use a wheelchair or need mobility accommodations, since it’s not suitable for wheelchair users
  • you’re expecting a totally relaxed, long-stay schedule at one location
  • you have limited tolerance for walking on uneven outdoor paths

If your goal is to see the island’s signature natural sights in one day and let a real guide handle the flow, this one is an easy recommendation.

FAQ

What is included in the tour price?

The tour includes a professional English-speaking guide, air-conditioned transportation, hotel drop-off, and entry tickets for Jusangjeolli Cliff and Cheonjeyeon Falls.

Is lunch included?

No. Lunch is not included. You’ll get free time to eat on your own, and the guide will recommend local restaurants.

Do I need to pay for entrance fees at the stops?

Some entrance fees are included: specifically, Jusangjeolli Cliff and Cheonjeyeon Waterfall tickets are covered.

What should I bring?

Bring comfortable shoes and a jacket.

What happens if weather is severe?

In case of severe weather, Mt. Hallasan may be replaced with other attractions.

Is this tour suitable for wheelchair users or mobility impairments?

No. It is not suitable for people with mobility impairments or wheelchair users.

Are there language options?

The tour language is English.

Where can I be dropped off after the tour?

After the tour, you can choose drop-off at Ocean Suites Hotel (about a 10-minute walk to Dongmun Market), Lotte Duty Free, or Jeju Airport.

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