The best hotels in Daegu
Daegu has 8,000+ places to stay and most of them will disappoint you. too far from the action, outdated rooms, or priced like they're in Seoul. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Daegu
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Toyoko Inn Daegu Dongdaegu Station
Dong-gu, Daegu
$52-78/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
Daegu Youth Hostel
Jung-gu, Daegu
$45-70/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
Novotel Ambassador Daegu
Jung-gu, Daegu
$140-210/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
InterBurgo Hotel Daegu
Suseong-gu, Daegu
$120-180/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Insignia Daegu
Buk-gu, Daegu
$105-155/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
Daegu Prince Hotel
Jung-gu, Daegu
$110-160/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
Toyoko Inn Daegu Seomun Market
Jung-gu, Daegu
$115-160/nightFree cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison of location, price, and vetted score.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Toyoko Inn Daegu Dongdaegu Station | Dong-gu, Daegu | $52-78/night | 7.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Daegu Youth Hostel | Jung-gu, Daegu | $45-70/night | 7.5/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Novotel Ambassador Daegu | Jung-gu, Daegu | $140-210/night | 8.6/10 | Business Pick |
| 4 | InterBurgo Hotel Daegu | Suseong-gu, Daegu | $120-180/night | 8.3/10 | Most Popular |
| 5 | Hotel Insignia Daegu | Buk-gu, Daegu | $105-155/night | 8.1/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Daegu Prince Hotel | Jung-gu, Daegu | $110-160/night | 8/10 | Best Location |
| 7 | Toyoko Inn Daegu Seomun Market | Jung-gu, Daegu | $115-160/night | 7.9/10 | Best Value |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here is what stood out.
Toyoko Inn Daegu Dongdaegu Station
This is a reliable Japanese business chain hotel right next to Dongdaegu Station, making it ideal for early trains or late arrivals. Rooms are compact and predictable but clean and well-maintained. The free breakfast is basic but included in the rate, which helps the value case. The surrounding area has plenty of late-night convenience stores and small eateries. Not glamorous, but does exactly what it promises.
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Daegu Youth Hostel
Located near Duryu Park in the central district, this hostel offers both private rooms and dormitory beds at some of the lowest prices in the city. The common areas are functional and staff are helpful with local transport advice. Rooms are plain but the beds are decent and the bathrooms are kept clean. It is a short bus ride from Seomun Market and Banwoldang Station. A solid base for budget travelers who plan to spend most of their time out exploring.
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Novotel Ambassador Daegu
Sitting on Taepyeong-ro in the heart of downtown Daegu, this Accor property is one of the most professionally run hotels in the city. Business travelers benefit from the meeting facilities and fast in-room Wi-Fi. The indoor pool and fitness center are genuinely good by city hotel standards. Restaurant on site serves a decent international buffet breakfast. The location near EXCO convention center makes it a frequent choice for conference attendees.
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InterBurgo Hotel Daegu
InterBurgo is a local institution in Suseong-gu, situated close to the scenic Suseong Lake where locals walk and cycle in the evenings. The hotel has a slightly dated decor but the rooms are spacious and the service is attentive. The attached shopping arcade and multiple dining options on the lower floors are a genuine convenience. It is a short taxi ride from Dongdaegu Station and easy access to the E-World amusement park. Great for families or couples wanting a quieter neighborhood feel.
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Hotel Insignia Daegu
Hotel Insignia is a newer mid-range property in Buk-gu, close to Daegu National Museum and Gyeongbuk National Science Museum. It attracts fewer tourists than downtown hotels, which keeps prices reasonable and the lobby quiet. Rooms are modern with clean lines and good blackout curtains. The staff speak enough English to manage common requests without difficulty. A great pick if you are visiting the northern cultural sites or Palgongsan Provincial Park.
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Daegu Prince Hotel
Daegu Prince Hotel sits on Dongseongno, the city's main pedestrian shopping and nightlife street, which puts it in the middle of everything. Getting to the Dongseongno entertainment district, local restaurants, and coffee shops takes about two minutes on foot. Rooms are clean and reasonably sized for the price point. The lobby cafe is popular with locals on weekends. Noise from the street can be noticeable on lower floors, so request a higher room.
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Toyoko Inn Daegu Seomun Market
A second Toyoko Inn location, this one near Seomun Market and the Banwoldang metro interchange in central Daegu. The location is considerably more interesting than the station branch, with traditional market streets and street food stalls within walking distance. Rooms follow the same compact formula of the chain but are clean and functional. Metro access from Banwoldang covers most of the city without needing a taxi. A good value option for travelers who want central access without paying downtown premium prices.
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Where to Stay in Daegu
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Jung-gu: where to actually stay
Jung-gu is the commercial and cultural heart of Daegu. Dongseongno Street is the pedestrian spine. packed with cafés, street food, and people-watching until midnight. Hotels here range from $45/night hostels to $420/night luxury towers.
Banwoldang Station sits at the junction of Metro Lines 1 and 2, making the whole city accessible in under 30 minutes. Stay within a 10-minute walk of it and you won't need a taxi once. Seomun Market is 8 minutes on foot. go for the night market, not just the day stalls.
Suseong-gu: the upscale local pick
Suseong-gu doesn't try to compete with Jung-gu. It's quieter, residential, and built around Suseong Lake. a proper urban lake with restaurants and bars along the promenade. Grand Hotel Daegu and InterBurgo Hotel both sit within this district.
Expect to pay a cab fare of around 6,000-8,000 KRW to reach Dongseongno from here. But if you're not chasing the nightlife, the tradeoff is worth it. The lake area on a weekend evening is one of Daegu's genuinely pleasant surprises.
Getting around Daegu: the honest version
Metro Lines 1 and 2 are clean, cheap, and mostly sufficient. Line 1 runs east-west and hits Dongdaegu Station. useful for KTX arrivals. Line 2 runs roughly north-south through Jung-gu. A T-money card (available at any convenience store) makes transfers seamless.
Taxis are abundant and honest by Korean standards. Most cross-city rides run 4,000-8,000 KRW. The main pain point: Palgongsan Mountain isn't served by metro, so you'll need Bus 401 from Ayang-gyo Bridge or a taxi costing roughly 15,000-20,000 KRW each way.
Daegu food: where the locals actually eat
Makchang (grilled beef intestines) is Daegu's signature dish and the best versions are in the alleys around Anjirang Makchang Alley in Buk-gu. not in touristy Jung-gu restaurants. A full meal with soju for two runs about 30,000-40,000 KRW. Get there by 7pm or wait in line.
Seomun Market's night food stalls open around 5pm and run past midnight. Flat dumplings (napjak mandu), sundae (blood sausage), and sweet rice drinks are the move. Street food here averages 2,000-5,000 KRW per item, and it's better than anything you'll find in a sit-down restaurant in the area.
Seasonal smarts: when to book and when to skip
Book for April or October if you have flexibility. April brings cherry blossoms to Duryu Park and the riverside near Suseong Lake, and hotel rates are still reasonable at $80-180/night for mid-range options. October hosts the Daegu International Musical Festival and the weather is crisp and comfortable.
July and August are brutal. Daegu regularly tops 36°C and humidity makes it feel worse. Hotels fill up during the Daegu Chimac Festival (chicken and beer) in mid-July, and rates spike by 20-30%. If you must come in summer, book Jung-gu hotels with proper air conditioning confirmed. don't assume.
What to skip (and what the tour guides won't tell you)
Dalseong Park is on every tourist itinerary and genuinely not worth your time unless you have kids. The zoo is small and dated. Spend that hour walking Kim Kwang-seok Street near Bangcheon Market instead. it's a tribute to the beloved Korean singer and the murals and small cafés along it are far more interesting.
Don't waste a meal at hotel restaurants unless you're at the Novotel or Grand Hotel level. Mid-range hotel restaurants in Daegu are overpriced and forgettable. Walk 10 minutes in any direction from Jung-gu and you'll find better food at half the price.
Daegu's best hotel regions
Jung-gu is where most visitors should base themselves. it's central, walkable, and has the widest range of hotels. Suseong-gu is worth the extra cab ride if you want lakeside calm and a more local feel.
Jung-gu 4 vetted hotels Central, walkable, and the obvious base for most visitors.
Central, walkable, and the obvious base for most visitors.
Jung-gu is where Daegu's commercial energy concentrates. Dongseongno pedestrian street, Seomun Market, and the Yangnyeongsi Herb Medicine Market all sit within a 15-minute walk of each other. Banwoldang Station connects you to both metro lines, so the rest of the city is genuinely accessible.
Hotels here span the full range. Daegu Youth Hostel and Toyoko Inn Seomun Market cover the budget end at $45-160/night. Daegu Prince Hotel and Hotel Lotte Daegu take it to the mid and luxury tiers. You're not making a mistake staying here regardless of what you're spending.
The noise is real at night around Dongseongno. ask for a room facing away from the main street if light sleeper. But the convenience trades well for a bit of street sound.
Browse all Jung-gu hotels → Suseong-gu 2 vetted hotels Lakeside, quieter, and Daegu's most polished district.
Lakeside, quieter, and Daegu's most polished district.
Suseong-gu sits southeast of the city center and orbits Suseong Lake. It's a residential district with upscale restaurants, wine bars, and weekend markets along the lake promenade. The vibe is decidedly more local than Jung-gu.
Grand Hotel Daegu and InterBurgo Hotel are both here, running $120-450/night between them. The Grand Hotel is Daegu's top-rated property and it earns it. rooms are spacious and the lake views from upper floors are genuinely worth paying for.
Budget 6,000-10,000 KRW for a taxi into Jung-gu if you want the nightlife or markets. But many guests staying in Suseong-gu barely leave the district. There's enough here to fill 2-3 days on its own.
Browse all Suseong-gu hotels → Dong-gu 1 vetted hotel The KTX arrival point. practical, not pretty.
The KTX arrival point. practical, not pretty.
Dong-gu is home to Dongdaegu Station, where KTX trains from Seoul and Busan arrive. It's a functional district: convenient if you're catching an early train, but not somewhere you'd choose for atmosphere. The streets around the station are loud, commercial, and generic.
Toyoko Inn Daegu Dongdaegu Station is the sensible pick here at $52-78/night. Clean, reliable, and exactly what you need for a transit stop or budget overnight. Don't expect character. Toyoko Inn knows what it is and delivers it consistently.
If you're staying more than 2 nights, honestly consider paying the extra cab fare to Jung-gu instead. Dong-gu has the station and not much else worth building a trip around.
Browse all Dong-gu hotels → Dalseo-gu 1 vetted hotel Theme parks and families. a solid suburban base.
Theme parks and families. a solid suburban base.
Dalseo-gu is in the western part of Daegu and hosts E-World Theme Park and the 83 Tower. It's a big draw for families and younger Korean visitors. Hotel 1 Daegu sits here and does the family angle well at $130-185/night.
The 83 Tower observation deck charges around 12,000 KRW entry and has solid city views. E-World is a full day out for kids. That said, you're a solid 25-30 minutes from Jung-gu by metro (Line 2 from Duryu Station).
Don't base yourself here unless the theme park is a priority. The food and nightlife scene is thin compared to Jung-gu. But if you have kids, Hotel 1 Daegu makes it work well.
Browse all Dalseo-gu hotels → Buk-gu 1 vetted hotel Quieter north, best for Palgongsan access.
Quieter north, best for Palgongsan access.
Buk-gu is the northern district and your launchpad for Palgongsan Mountain. one of Daegu's best day trips, with Gatbawi Buddha statue and Donghwasa Temple. Hotel Insignia Daegu sits here at $105-155/night, well-reviewed and genuinely underrated by visitors who overlook it.
The Anjirang Makchang Alley. Daegu's most famous grilled intestine district. is also in Buk-gu. That alone is a good reason to sleep here at least one night. It's a 10-minute taxi ride from Hotel Insignia.
Metro connectivity isn't as tight as Jung-gu. You'll rely on buses and taxis more. But the slower pace and lower tourist density are the trade. and for the right traveler, that's exactly the point.
Browse all Buk-gu hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel.
Romantic
Suseong Lake in Suseong-gu is the pick. lakeside restaurants, evening promenades, and upscale hotels that don't feel like chains. Grand Hotel Daegu sits right here and sets the mood perfectly for a couple's stay.
Culture
Jung-gu's Yangnyeongsi Herb Medicine Market has been running for 350 years and is genuinely unlike anything else in Korea. Pair it with Kim Kwang-seok Street near Bangcheon Market for a full cultural day. both are walkable from Banwoldang Station.
Family
Dalseo-gu is the family base. E-World Theme Park and the 83 Tower keep kids occupied for a full day. Hotel 1 Daegu is right in the middle of it and priced at $130-185/night, which is reasonable for what you get.
Budget
Jung-gu lets you eat well for 3,000-6,000 KRW at Seomun Market's night stalls and sleep decently for $45/night at Daegu Youth Hostel. It's the only neighborhood where being broke doesn't mean missing out.
Foodie
Buk-gu's Anjirang Makchang Alley is the one non-negotiable stop for serious eaters. Daegu's grilled intestine scene is the best in Korea. Get there by 7pm, order makchang and soju, and skip dinner anywhere else that night.
Local Experience
Suseong-gu feels like the Daegu that Koreans actually live in. residential blocks, local markets, and a lake most tourists walk straight past. InterBurgo Hotel Daegu puts you inside that world at $120-180/night.
We reviewed 8,000+ options across the main regions of Daegu. Most got cut fast. The biggest offenders: budget guesthouses near Dongdaegu Station that photograph well but smell like a wet towel, mid-range hotels in Buk-gu that charge Jung-gu prices for half the location, and 'boutique' spots around Seomun Market with paper-thin walls and no English signage. We kept only hotels with verified reviews, honest photos, and real value at their price point.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Every hotel on this page earned its spot through this process.
When to Visit Daegu
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary by season.
Spring (March-May)
Cherry blossoms hit Duryu Park and Apsan Park in late March and peak around early April. Temperatures are comfortable and hotel rates haven't spiked yet. mid-range rooms in Jung-gu run $100-160/night. The Daegu International Marathon happens in April and books out hotels near Dongseongno fast, so plan around that if you're not racing.
Summer (June-August)
Daegu is officially Korea's hottest city in summer. it regularly hits 37°C in July and August. The Daegu Chimac Festival in mid-July (chicken and beer) draws big crowds and spikes hotel rates by 25-30%. If you're visiting for the festival, book 6-8 weeks ahead. Otherwise, this is the worst time to visit and we'd push you toward October instead.
Autumn (September-November)
October is arguably Daegu's best month. The Daegu International Musical Festival runs through October, the foliage on Palgongsan Mountain peaks in early November, and temperatures sit comfortably at 12-18°C. Hotel rates dip slightly from summer highs. expect $100-150/night for solid mid-range options in Jung-gu. Book at least 3 weeks out for October weekends.
Winter (December-February)
Cold, dry, and quiet. Daegu winters are milder than Seoul but still sharp. temperatures drop to -3°C at night in January. Hotel rates hit their floor in January and February, with budget rooms at $45-70/night and mid-range dipping to $90-130/night. The Seomun Market and indoor food scene stay lively, so if you want Daegu without the crowds, this is actually a decent shout.
Booking Tips for Daegu
Smart booking strategies for Daegu.
Get a T-money card before you leave the airport
Pick one up at Daegu International Airport or at any GS25 or CU convenience store for 3,000 KRW. Load it with 20,000-30,000 KRW. Metro rides cost 1,400 KRW, and T-money works on buses and taxis too. Don't bother buying single-use tickets. they cost more and waste time.
Book for October weekends at least 3 weeks early
The Daegu International Musical Festival draws visitors across October and mid-range hotels in Jung-gu around Dongseongno sell out on weekends. Hotels within walking distance of the Daegu Opera House near Suseong-gu go first. If you're flexible on dates, weekdays in October offer the same weather at 15-20% lower rates.
Don't trust 'near the station' claims without checking
Several hotels near Dongdaegu Station advertise '5-minute walk' to the KTX terminal. Many are closer to 15-20 minutes, uphill, with luggage. Use Naver Maps (not Google Maps. it's far more accurate for Korean addresses) and confirm the walking time yourself before booking. The Toyoko Inn Dongdaegu is one of the honest ones at roughly 3 minutes.
Stay in Jung-gu for your first visit, full stop
We've seen this mistake hundreds of times. visitors book a cheaper hotel in Seo-gu or outer Dalseo-gu to save $20/night, then spend that $20 daily on taxis to reach anything worth seeing. Jung-gu puts you 10 minutes walk from Seomun Market, Dongseongno, and Banwoldang Station. The slight premium pays for itself by day 2.
The Chimac Festival in July is chaotic. plan accordingly
The Daegu Chimac (chicken and beer) Festival runs for about a week in mid-July at Duryu Park. It draws 600,000+ visitors across the event. Hotels in Jung-gu and Dalseo-gu book out 4-6 weeks in advance. Rates jump by 20-35% during that week. Go if you love the energy, but book months out and budget for surge pricing on taxis.
Eat outside the hotel every single morning
Hotel breakfasts at mid-range properties in Daegu are expensive and uninspired. typically 15,000-25,000 KRW for a mediocre buffet. Walk 5 minutes to any local kimbap place near Gongpyeong-dong or Jungang-daero and eat a full breakfast for 3,500-6,000 KRW. It's better food, faster service, and more local than anything the hotel will plate up.
Hotels in Daegu, FAQ
Straight answers from our team.
What's the best area to stay in Daegu?
Jung-gu is the clear winner for most visitors. You're within a 10-minute walk of Dongseongno Street, Seomun Market, and the Yangnyeongsi Herb Medicine Market. Hotels here run $45-210/night depending on what you need. Skip Buk-gu or Dalseo-gu unless you have a specific reason to be there.
How much does a hotel in Daegu cost per night?
Budget options near Dongdaegu Station start around $45-78/night. Mid-range hotels in Jung-gu and Suseong-gu land at $105-185/night. Luxury spots like Hotel Lotte Daegu or Grand Hotel Daegu hit $265-450/night. You get a lot more for your money here than in Seoul or Busan.
Is Daegu easy to get around without a car?
Totally manageable. Daegu Metro Lines 1 and 2 cover most of the city. a single ride costs 1,400 KRW. Taxis are cheap, typically 4,000-7,000 KRW for most cross-city trips. Staying in Jung-gu near Banwoldang Station puts you on both metro lines at once.
When is the best time to visit Daegu?
April and October are the sweet spots. Spring brings cherry blossoms along Apsan Park and mild temps around 14-18°C. October sees the Daegu International Musical Festival and comfortable 12-17°C weather. Avoid late July through August. Daegu is consistently Korea's hottest city, hitting 35-37°C with brutal humidity.
What's Daegu's food scene actually like?
It's seriously underrated. Daegu is known for makchang (grilled intestines) and napjak mandu (flat dumplings). both best found near Seomun Market and along the alleys off Gongpyeong-dong. The night market at Seomun runs until 2am and street food averages 3,000-6,000 KRW per dish. Don't leave without trying the local medicinal teas from Yangnyeongsi Market.
Are there good budget hotels in Daegu?
Yes, and better quality than you'd expect. Daegu Youth Hostel in Jung-gu starts at $45/night and sits about 12 minutes walk from Seomun Market. Toyoko Inn near Dongdaegu Station runs $52-78/night with clean, reliable rooms. Both are solid picks if you're keeping costs down.
Is Daegu worth visiting or just a stopover?
Worth a proper stay. 3 nights minimum. Seomun Market alone takes a full day if you do it right. Palgongsan Mountain north of the city needs a half-day and is one of Korea's better temple hikes. Daegu has a slower pace than Seoul, and honestly, that's the point.
Which Daegu neighborhoods should I avoid?
Seo-gu and the outer parts of Dalseo-gu are mainly residential with no tourist infrastructure. you'll spend half your trip commuting. Some guesthouses near Dongdaegu Station look fine online but sit on loud commercial streets with zero character. Also avoid anything advertised as 'near the KTX station' without checking actual walking times, since many listings exaggerate by 15-20 minutes.
Do Daegu hotels include breakfast?
Most mid-range and budget hotels don't include breakfast. it's Korea, not Europe. The Novotel Ambassador Daegu offers breakfast packages for around 25,000-35,000 KRW per person, which isn't bad. Honestly, skip it and eat at the pojangmacha stalls near Gongpyeong-dong for 4,000 KRW and a much better experience.
How far is Daegu from Seoul and Busan?
Seoul to Daegu by KTX takes about 1 hour 40 minutes from Seoul Station, costing 35,000-50,000 KRW. Busan to Daegu is 55 minutes by KTX and around 22,000-28,000 KRW. Both routes run frequently from Dongdaegu Station, making day trips very doable from either city.
What's the luxury hotel scene like in Daegu?
Smaller than Seoul but genuinely impressive at the top end. Grand Hotel Daegu in Suseong-gu sits right near Suseong Lake and runs $280-450/night with a rating that justifies every won. Hotel Lotte Daegu in Jung-gu is the business and event crowd's pick at $265-420/night. Both are worth the splurge if you can swing it.
Is Daegu good for families traveling with kids?
Better than most Korean cities for it, actually. E-World Theme Park and the 83 Tower in Dalseo-gu are solid full-day options for kids. Hotel 1 Daegu in Dalseo-gu is well-positioned for families at $130-185/night, about 15 minutes from E-World. Suseong Lake has good walking paths and weekend markets that kids enjoy.
Useful links for Daegu
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