REVIEW · SEOUL
N Seoul Tower + Namsan Cable Car Ticket (Collect in Myeongdong)
Book on Viator →Operated by WONDER TRIP INC. · Bookable on Viator
A ride up Namsan feels like a shortcut to Seoul’s best views. This combo pairs a round-trip cable car with admission to the N Seoul Tower Observatory, so you get both the journey and the payoff in one plan. I like that it’s built as a simple, “do it once” ticket bundle, and you spend time where the skyline actually opens up.
I also like that the timetable is flexible enough for real travel pacing. The cable car portion is listed at about 30 minutes, and the whole experience runs roughly 1 to 5 hours, depending on how long you linger at the tower. One thing to watch: the hill and queues can turn this into a waiting game, and some directions around the ticket pickup point can feel vague if you arrive late or without a plan.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You Should Know First
- What You Get: Cable Car Ride + N Seoul Tower Observatory Admission
- Price and Value: Is $29.50 a Smart Deal?
- Where You Collect Tickets: Rednow Studio Near Myeongdong
- Namsan Cable Car: The Part That Sets the Mood
- N Seoul Tower Observatory: The Views You’re Actually Paying For
- Walking, Lines, and Timing: How to Make This Less Painful
- Where This Fits in Your Seoul Day
- Who Should Book This Combo Ticket?
- Weather and When to Go
- Quick FAQ
- FAQ
- How much does this N Seoul Tower and Namsan Cable Car combo cost?
- How long does the experience take?
- What’s included in the ticket?
- How long is the cable car ride?
- Where do I collect the tickets?
- Are there set opening hours for the ticket collection point?
- Is pickup offered?
- Is the tour area easy to reach using public transportation?
- What if the weather is bad?
- Can I change or cancel after booking?
- Should You Book This Tour?
Key Highlights You Should Know First

- Myeongdong collection point: You redeem at Rednow Studio in Jung District, so you’re not hunting across multiple neighborhoods.
- Cable car + tower in one ticket: Round-trip cable car ride plus admission to the N Seoul Tower Observatory.
- Hilltop views, day or night: Expect wide city views in daylight and twinkling lights after dark.
- Real-world time range: The experience is listed as 1 to 5 hours, so build buffer for lines and walking.
- Watch the queue factor: Reviews point to big lines on the cable car and while moving through the tower.
What You Get: Cable Car Ride + N Seoul Tower Observatory Admission

This is a straight-up “two hits, one ticket” deal: you ride up Namsan using the Namsan Cable Car, then you go to the N Seoul Tower Observatory for panorama views across Seoul.
The value here is not just that these are famous sights. It’s that the combo connects the experience from start to finish. The cable car gets you into the Namsan Park hill area without exhausting yourself from street level. Then the tower takes you the rest of the way—basically the built-in reason people come to this spot: a wide, iconic vantage over the city grid.
The ticket bundle also helps you avoid the scatter of separate purchases and separate planning. You’re not trying to line up “when to ride” with “when to enter the tower” using two different sources. For a first-timer, that’s a real convenience.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seoul
Price and Value: Is $29.50 a Smart Deal?

At $29.50 per person, this combo isn’t the cheapest option in Seoul, but it’s also not priced like a private tour. The practical way to judge value is to look at what’s actually included:
- Admission to the N Seoul Tower Observatory
- A round-trip cable car ticket (the ride time is listed as about 30 minutes)
If you were planning both anyway, the bundle price starts to make sense. If you only care about the tower views and you’re already confident you can handle the cable car portion on your own, then you might question whether you’re paying for convenience. Based on queue-related frustrations mentioned in the provided feedback, don’t assume booking ahead will magically shorten lines. This ticket looks most valuable as a planning tool rather than a line-skipping guarantee.
My bottom line take: it’s good value if you want a clean, simple plan and you’re comfortable arriving early enough to handle walking and waiting.
Where You Collect Tickets: Rednow Studio Near Myeongdong

Your ticket redemption point is Rednow Studio (레드나우 스튜디오) at 15 Toegye-ro 14-gil, Jung District, Seoul. That matters because this is what you’ll rely on before you ever reach the cable car area.
Here’s what I’d plan around: reviews highlight that the ticket office can be hard to find and that once you’re at the start point, you still have a long walk up a steep hill toward the cable car. If you show up without time buffers—or you’re expecting your redemption point to be right beside the cable car gates—you’ll feel the gap.
Rednow Studio’s opening hours are listed as 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM for both 2025 and 2026 (Monday through Sunday). Since the redemption location closes at 6 PM, late arrivals can compress your time on the tower.
Practical tip: treat this like a “start early, not on a whim” activity. If you’re visiting in the afternoon, build in extra time for the uphill transfer and the on-site lines.
Namsan Cable Car: The Part That Sets the Mood
The cable car is your first taste of Namsan’s scale. The experience description gives you a round-trip ticket, with the ride itself listed at about 30 minutes.
Even without fancy details, the point is clear: this isn’t just transportation. It’s your scenic transition from busy streets toward the hilltop. You’re moving from city noise toward open-air views and the kind of viewpoint climb people associate with Seoul’s signature photo spots.
What to expect in real life: the provided feedback points to massive queues both on and off the cable car. That means the ride time you’re told (about 30 minutes) is not the full story. You’ll also spend time lining up, then time handling the flow toward the tower entrance and viewpoints.
If you’re sensitive to standing around, plan your day so this isn’t the last stop you have to rush. I’d much rather have you finish here calmly with enough time to enjoy the tower lights than hurry and miss your favorite views.
N Seoul Tower Observatory: The Views You’re Actually Paying For

Once you reach N Seoul Tower, the main event is the observatory admission included in your ticket. The tower sits above Namsan Park, and the whole reason people come is the wide-angle perspective over Seoul.
The description makes the day-versus-night contrast pretty direct:
- During the day, you’ll see across the city toward hills beyond.
- At night, you’ll see city lights mixing with the starry sky.
This is where you should slow down. A lot of “tower experiences” become a quick photo-and-go exercise. Here, the layout and the viewpoint are the product. If you want the best payoff, give yourself at least enough time to look in more than one direction and to shift between lighter and darker city scenes (when possible).
Real-world caution from the provided feedback: there are lines not just for the cable car but also while moving up and around the tower. That means your enjoyment depends heavily on timing and how long you’re willing to wait.
My recommendation: if you can, choose a time when you’re not stuck in peak crowds. You don’t need to be early-morning early, but you do need more than “right on time.”
Walking, Lines, and Timing: How to Make This Less Painful

This is the part that can make or break your day. The provided feedback repeatedly circles two themes:
- Queues
- Steep, uphill walking after ticket redemption
So here’s what you can do to protect your time.
Give yourself a buffer. The listed experience length is 1 to 5 hours, which is a huge range because waiting varies. If you plan dinner, sunset, and shopping too tightly around this, you’ll feel stressed.
Arrive with directions sorted. Reviews mention unclear instructions and difficulty finding the ticket office. Don’t walk in hoping you’ll figure it out in the moment. Save the exact Korean address for Rednow Studio, and screenshot it in case your phone loses signal underground or on busy streets.
Don’t assume this booking bypasses lines. One review directly questions whether there’s any advantage compared with buying on-site. The safest approach is to treat it as a convenience plan, not a queue hack.
Where This Fits in Your Seoul Day

This stop plays nicely with a very common Seoul pattern: base yourself in or near Myeongdong, then take a short trip up toward iconic views.
It’s also a good “anchor activity” because:
- You can plan it as either daytime sightseeing or evening scenery.
- The observatory gives you a clear payoff even if the rest of your day is messy or you lose time elsewhere.
The only mismatch: if you dislike crowds or standing in lines, Namsan Tower can feel like a trade-off. You’re paying for views, but you’re also buying yourself a higher likelihood of waiting.
Who Should Book This Combo Ticket?
This is a strong fit if you:
- Want a simple bundle that pairs Namsan Cable Car with N Seoul Tower admission.
- Care about panoramic skyline views and the day-to-night shift.
- Are staying around Myeongdong and prefer redeeming tickets near a central area.
This may be less ideal if you:
- Hate queues and prefer low-wait experiences.
- Want a relaxed, walk-up-and-go plan with minimal logistics.
- Arrive late and don’t want your tower time squeezed by the redemption location’s 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM hours.
Weather and When to Go
The experience requires good weather. If it gets canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
That matters because you’re not just visiting a building—you’re riding up a hill and planning a viewpoint. Poor visibility can also ruin the “day to night skyline contrast” you came for.
If your travel dates are flexible, aim for a day with clear skies so you can actually enjoy the skyline stretch and starry night views.
Quick FAQ
FAQ
How much does this N Seoul Tower and Namsan Cable Car combo cost?
It costs $29.50 per person.
How long does the experience take?
The duration is listed as approximately 1 to 5 hours.
What’s included in the ticket?
You get N Seoul Tower Observatory admission and a round-trip Namsan Cable Car ticket.
How long is the cable car ride?
The cable car segment is listed as about 30 minutes.
Where do I collect the tickets?
You collect at Rednow Studio (레드나우 스튜디오), 15 Toegye-ro 14-gil, Jung District, Seoul.
Are there set opening hours for the ticket collection point?
Yes. The listed hours are 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM, Monday through Sunday.
Is pickup offered?
Yes, pickup is offered.
Is the tour area easy to reach using public transportation?
It’s listed as near public transportation.
What if the weather is bad?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Can I change or cancel after booking?
This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed.
Should You Book This Tour?
I’d book this if you want one organized ticket that covers both the cable car experience and the observatory admission, especially if you’re based around Myeongdong. It’s a practical way to do the signature Namsan skyline views without stitching together two separate plans.
I’d pause if you’re queue-averse or if you’re planning this as a late-day rush job. The provided feedback makes it clear that this can involve steep walking and big lines, so your enjoyment will hinge on timing. If you can show up with extra buffer, you’ll get the best version of what this combo is meant to deliver: the hilltop ride up, then the city spread out below.












![Andong Hahoe Folk Village [UNESCO World Heritage] Private Tour from Seoul - UNESCO Andong Hahoe Folk Village: slow walking through Joseon life](https://2.letsgoseoul.com/wp-content/uploads/andong-hahoe-folk-village-unesco-world-heritage-private-tour-from-seoul-400x266.jpg)















