Pick a district to see every bus stop ad inventory item in that area with price and foot-traffic data. All prices include VAT, production and installation.
Tap a card to see the full bus stop inventory and average pricing for that district.
Seocho-gu is a premium district dense with legal, financial, and high-income professionals. Centered around Gangnam-daero and Seocho Station — ideal for healthcare, finance and legal service ads.
Songpa-gu features Lotte World, Lotte World Tower and Seokchon Lake — a mixed commercial district with strong family visitor traffic. Effective for entertainment, F&B and family-oriented ads.
Gangnam-gu is Seoul’s largest business and shopping hub centered around Gangnam, Samseong and Yeoksam Stations. Ideal for premium brand, B2B and beauty campaigns targeting professionals and shoppers in their 20s–40s.
Gangdong-gu (Cheonho, Gil-dong, Godeok) is an eastern residential and redevelopment district with strong 30s–50s family demographics.
Eunpyeong-gu (Yeonsinnae, Bulgwang, Nokbeon) is a northwest residential district with growing population from Eunpyeong New Town.
Gangseo-gu hosts Gimpo Airport and the Magok R&D belt, with strong IT/research professional and airport traveler traffic.
Yangcheon-gu (Mok-dong, Sinjeong, Sinwol) is a residential district known for top school districts — strong for education, hagwon and family-service ads.
Jungnang-gu (Sangbong, Myeonmok, Junghwa) is a northeast residential belt with strong family demographics — well suited for hyperlocal ads.
Dongdaemun-gu (Cheongnyangni, Hoegi, HUFS) is a university and transit-hub district. Effective for student, single-household and education-service ads.
Nowon-gu (Nowon, Sanggye, Junggye) is a large residential district with dense hagwon clusters and strong family demographics.
Gwanak-gu (Seoul Nat’l Univ., Sillim, Bongcheon) has one of Seoul’s highest shares of single-person and youth households — strong for value-oriented consumer ads.
Mapo-gu covers Hongdae, Hapjeong and Sangsu — a cultural and entertainment hub packed with younger consumers and foreign tourists. Great for K-content, fashion and F&B ads.
Yongsan-gu includes Itaewon, Hannam and Yongsan Station — a mix of international residents, trend-sensitive consumers and high-end housing. Great for lifestyle, F&B and luxury ads.
Seongbuk-gu combines university clusters (Korea, Sungshin, Hansung) with residential Jeongneung/Gireum. Good for education, hagwon and career-service ads.
Gangbuk-gu (Mia, Suyu, Ui-dong) is a northern residential district — best for local commerce and everyday-service ads.
Dongjak-gu (Noryangjin, Sadang, Isu) is a hagwon belt and transit hub — great for exam-prep and career-readiness ads.
Jongno-gu is Seoul’s historic, cultural and tourist core (Gwanghwamun, Jonggak, Insadong) with heavy foreign tourist and downtown professional traffic.
Guro-gu (Guro Digital Complex, Sindorim, Gasan) is an IT industrial belt with heavy professional and tech-worker traffic.
Gwangjin-gu (Konkuk Univ., Guui, Jayang) has a young residential base in their 20s–30s plus active F&B and entertainment retail.
Seongdong-gu features the Seongsu café & fashion scene plus the Wangsimni transit hub. Popular for F&B, fashion and lifestyle ads.
Jung-gu (Myeongdong, Euljiro, Seoul Station) has the highest foreign tourist density in Seoul. Especially strong for beauty, fashion and travel advertising.
Yeongdeungpo-gu includes the Yeouido financial district and Yeongdeungpo Station / Times Square retail belt. Effective for B2B, financial and premium professional ads.
Seodaemun-gu (Sinchon, Ewha, Yonsei) is a university belt with heavy 10s–20s traffic — strong for F&B, fashion and beauty ads.
Geumcheon-gu (Gasan Digital, Siheung-daero, Doksan) mixes IT/manufacturing professionals with new residential developments.
Hanam (Misa, Wirye) is an emerging eastern metro residential hub.
Dobong-gu (Changdong, Ssangmun) is a residential district anchored by an ongoing northeast new-economy redevelopment.
Seongnam includes the Pangyo IT cluster (Bundang) and the older Sujeong/Jungwon districts.
Bucheon (Jungdong, Sangdong, Songnae) is a western metro hub with strong foot traffic.
Commercial districts (Gangnam-gu, Seocho-gu, Songpa-gu) run KRW 1.0M–1.5M/month, sub-centers (Mapo-gu, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Yongsan-gu) KRW 700K–1.0M/month, other areas KRW 400K–700K/month. All prices include VAT, production and installation.
Many bus shelters are physically a two-panel unit — both panels go up together. A "1-panel price" elsewhere is a hook; at checkout you pay for 2 panels + production + VAT. DUKPLACE always lists the actual final price.
Gangnam-gu reaches working professionals and shoppers (20s–40s). Seocho-gu has more legal, financial and high-income professionals.
Booking → design → review → printing → installation takes about 10–14 days. Campaigns start on the 1st of each month or your agreed start date.
Yes. Fan-club campaigns commonly use stops near agencies for 2–4 weeks, costing KRW 300K–1.2M depending on location and duration.
Just upload a print-ready file (JPG, PNG, PDF, PSD, or AI). CMYK color is generally required. Production, installation, and removal are all included.