Cheongju International Airport (CJJ) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Cheongju International Airport is the air gateway for central South Korea — the Chungcheong provinces, the administrative city of Sejong, and the science-and-industry corridor around Ochang. It is a joint civil-military field, modest in size, and for most foreign travellers it is the cheaper, quieter alternative to Incheon for flights from China, Japan, Taiwan and a handful of Southeast Asian leisure routes. The terminal sits about 11 km north of central Cheongju, which makes the city a 20-minute bus ride rather than an expedition. This guide covers the Korean entry rules that actually apply here — including the K-ETA waiver and the arrival-card change that took effect on 1 January 2026 — how to get into the city, the lounge reality (there isn’t a network lounge), and whether a layover gives you enough time to see anything.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Cheongju International Airport (CJJ / RKTU)
About 11 km north of central Cheongju, Chungcheongbuk-do
Joint civil-military airport (ROKAF 17th Fighter Wing based here)
About 4.6 million in 2024
South Korean won (KRW, ₩). ≈ ₩1,500 to US$1, ≈ ₩1,750 to €1 (May 2026)
Express bus 747 to Cheongju Bus Terminal / Osong KTX Station, ₩1,900 cash (₩1,800 by card), ~20 min to the city
Korea visa-free + e-Arrival Card (mandatory from 1 Jan 2026); K-ETA waived for many nationalities through 31 Dec 2026
Aero K (based here); Korean Air, Asiana, Jeju Air, Jin Air, T’way also operate
No Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass lounge. Airport-run business lounge only (08:00–20:00)
Cards and T-money accepted widely; carry some cash for buses and small vendors
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. The Terminal & the Aero K Base
- 🛂 2. Korea’s Border Rules at CJJ: the e-Arrival Card, the K-ETA Waiver & Visas
- 🚌 3. Bus 747, Intercity Coaches & Taxis Into the City
- 🛋️ 4. Lounges: What You Actually Get
- 🍴 5. Food, Tax Refunds & Duty-Free
- 🗺️ 6. Layover Reality: Is Cheongju Worth Leaving the Airport For?
- 🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. The Terminal & the Aero K Base
Cheongju runs out of a single passenger terminal that handles both domestic and international flights, with the international side concentrated on the third floor. It is a compact building — the kind where the walk from kerb to gate is measured in minutes, not corridors — and that is the main reason people fly through it instead of Incheon. Domestic traffic is dominated by the Jeju shuttle; international service reaches China, Japan, Taiwan and seasonal Southeast Asian leisure points such as Thailand and, recently, Bali.
The airport is the base for Aero K, a low-cost carrier headquartered in Cheongju that runs the most departures here and has built out the international network from this field. The legacy and other low-cost names — Korean Air, Asiana, Jeju Air, Jin Air and T’way Air — also operate, mainly the Jeju route and a thin band of regional international flights. Several Chinese carriers serve the China routes. If you are connecting rather than flying point-to-point, treat Cheongju as an origin-and-destination airport more than a transfer hub: the international schedule is built around leisure demand, not onward connections.
One detail that surprises first-timers: this is a joint civil-military airport, home to the Republic of Korea Air Force’s 17th Fighter Wing and its F-35A aircraft. For the traveller that means one practical rule — do not photograph the apron, the military side, or aircraft movements. Security around a shared base takes that seriously.
Because many of the international tickets sold here are cheap point-to-point fares with no through-checked baggage, a self-transfer through Cheongju means clearing immigration, collecting your bag and re-checking it — which makes the border section below relevant even if you only meant to connect.
🛂 2. Korea’s Border Rules at CJJ: the e-Arrival Card, the K-ETA Waiver & Visas
Entry here runs on South Korea’s national system, and nothing else applies. There are three things to get straight before you fly: the arrival card, the K-ETA, and whether you need a visa at all.
The e-Arrival Card — the real 2026 change
From 1 January 2026, every foreign traveller arriving in Korea must submit a Korea e-Arrival Card online — including nationalities that are otherwise exempt from everything else. It replaces the old paper landing card. You complete it free of charge within 72 hours (three days) before arrival at the official portal (e-arrivalcard.go.kr) and show the confirmation at immigration. This is the one genuinely new rule for 2026, and it catches people who assume visa-free means paperwork-free. It is not. Do it before you fly.
K-ETA — waived for many nationalities through 31 December 2026
The K-ETA (Korea Electronic Travel Authorization) is Korea’s pre-travel clearance for visa-free visitors. The important fact for 2026 is that Korea has temporarily waived the K-ETA requirement for a list of nationalities — including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and EU member states such as France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands, among others — and that waiver has been extended through 31 December 2026. If you hold one of these passports, you do not apply for a K-ETA at all in 2026; you arrive visa-free and submit the e-Arrival Card instead.
Nationalities not covered by the waiver still need a K-ETA before boarding. It costs ₩10,000 (roughly US$7–8), is valid for up to three years (or until passport expiry, whichever is sooner), and assessment can take up to 72 hours — so apply several days ahead, not at the gate. Because the waiver list is reviewed periodically and the dates have moved before, check your own passport’s current status at the official site (k-eta.go.kr) before you book rather than assuming.
Visa-free entry and standard visas
Most of the waiver-list nationalities above also enter visa-free for short stays of up to 90 days for tourism or business — the K-ETA waiver and the visa-free allowance are separate things that happen to overlap for these passports. Travellers whose nationality is not on the visa-free list need a Korean visa arranged in advance through a Korean embassy or visa centre; there is no general visa-on-arrival for tourism at Cheongju.
The cleanest way to think about it: confirm your visa-free status first, then your K-ETA status, and complete the e-Arrival Card regardless. All three are decided by your nationality, not by which airport you land at.
🚌 3. Bus 747, Intercity Coaches & Taxis Into the City
The airport is about 11 km north of central Cheongju, so getting in is short and cheap — and there is no rail or metro station at the airport itself, despite the KTX line passing nearby.
⭐ Express bus 747 — the standard way in
The 747 express bus is the workhorse route. It runs from the terminal to Cheongju Bus Terminal in the city and out to Osong Station, the nearest KTX (high-speed rail) stop. The fare is ₩1,900 in cash or ₩1,800 with a transport card (T-money or a similar rechargeable card), and the run into central Cheongju takes about 20 minutes. If your onward plan is the high-speed train, the 747 to Osong puts you on the KTX network for Seoul, Daejeon and the south. Tap on with a card if you have one; otherwise have small notes and coins ready, because Korean buses are strict about exact-ish cash.
🚍 Intercity coaches to Seoul, Daejeon & beyond
Direct intercity coaches leave from the stop in front of the terminal to Seoul (Nambu Terminal, Central City and the COEX area), Daejeon (the main complex and Yuseong), and on to Cheonan, Chungju and Incheon. The Seoul run is roughly 1.5 hours. Tickets are sold from a self-service machine that takes cash or card. Departure times are spaced through the day rather than frequent, so check the board on arrival — and because coach fares change, confirm the current price at the machine instead of trusting an old figure.
🚕 Taxis
Metered taxis wait outside arrivals and are the obvious choice into central Cheongju given the short distance — a sensible option late in the evening once the buses thin out. Use the official rank rather than anyone approaching you inside the terminal offering a ride; an unmarked car quoting a flat “airport price” is the standard overcharge trap. For Seoul or Daejeon a taxi is far more expensive than the coach and not worth it unless you have no alternative.
🛋️ 4. Lounges: What You Actually Get
Here is the honest answer, because the task readers most want it straight: Cheongju has no Priority Pass, LoungeKey or DragonPass lounge. Those networks operate at Korea’s bigger airports — Incheon, Gimpo, Jeju and Busan/Gimhae — but not here. If your credit card or membership entitles you to lounge access, it will not get you into anything at CJJ.
What the airport does have is a small airport-run business lounge on the third floor of the international side, open roughly 08:00–20:00, with basic seating, beverages and meeting facilities rather than a hot buffet and showers. It is a place to sit, not a destination. Treat Cheongju as a terminal where you wait at the gate or eat landside, and save the lounge expectations for whichever bigger airport is at the other end of your trip.
🍴 5. Food, Tax Refunds & Duty-Free
The terminal’s food is functional Korean airport fare — a landside selection of Korean staples and coffee, priced above what you would pay in the city. If you have time before security, eat in Cheongju rather than at the airport; the city has the usual range of Korean restaurants at normal prices, and the 20-minute bus makes it feasible on a generous connection.
For shopping, international departures have a duty-free run with the standard liquor, tobacco, perfume and cosmetics. The more useful facility for many visitors is the tax-refund desk: Korea operates a VAT-refund scheme for foreign visitors on qualifying purchases made in the country, and Cheongju’s international departures area handles refunds for eligible receipts — keep the tax-free paperwork from your in-country shopping and process it here before you leave. Confirm the current threshold and procedure at the desk, as the rules are set nationally and adjust periodically.
🗺️ 6. Layover Reality: Is Cheongju Worth Leaving the Airport For?
Cheongju is not a marquee tourist city, but it is close, and that changes the math in its favour. The airport sits 11 km north of the centre, the 747 bus does the run in about 20 minutes, and the city has three genuine things worth a few hours.
The Cheongju Early Printing Museum is the most distinctive. It sits on the old grounds of Heungdeoksa Temple, where the Jikji — the world’s oldest surviving book printed with movable metal type, dated 1377, some 78 years before Gutenberg’s Bible — was produced. The museum is the reason Cheongju calls itself a city of printing. Sangdang Sanseong, a Joseon-era mountain fortress with walls running over 4 km, gives you a long ridge walk and views over the city; it is reached by local bus from town rather than directly from the airport. Further out, Cheongnamdae, a former presidential retreat on a lake, is a longer trip and better suited to a half-day than a tight connection.
Now the honest layover arithmetic. The bus into the city is 20 minutes each way, call it 45–50 minutes of round-trip transit once you account for waiting and walking, plus the international check-in and security buffer you need back at the terminal. On a layover of around five hours or more, cleared through immigration with a confident return buffer, the Early Printing Museum is a realistic single target — it is in the city, not out in the hills. Sangdang Sanseong and Cheongnamdae need more like a full half-day, because the in-city transfers to reach them eat the time the short airport distance saved you; on anything under about six hours, skip them. Under about three hours, stay in the terminal — the city is close, but it is not close enough to make a dash for one museum worthwhile against a boarding clock.
Seoul and Daejeon are the wrong target on a layover here. Seoul is roughly 1.5 hours each way by coach, which is three hours of travel before you have seen anything — only worth it if you are deliberately ending the trip in the capital, not as a sightseeing detour between flights.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
Payment. Korea is heavily card-based, and contactless cards work almost everywhere — shops, restaurants, taxis. The reliable exception is local buses, where a T-money or similar transport card (or cash) is the smooth option; buy and top up a T-money card at a convenience store. Carry some won as a backup for small vendors and bus fares.
Connectivity. Korea has fast, widely available mobile data and public Wi-Fi, and the usual global apps work normally — there is no national app-blocking to plan around. A travel eSIM or a SIM bought on arrival will keep you online; airport and city Wi-Fi covers the gaps.
Currency. The won trades at roughly ₩1,500 to the US dollar and ₩1,750 to the euro as of May 2026. Airport exchange counters give a poorer rate against a markup, so change only what you need at the airport and rely on a card or a city ATM for the rest.
Border. Re-read section 2 before you fly. The single most common 2026 mistake is assuming visa-free means nothing to do in advance — the e-Arrival Card is now mandatory for everyone within 72 hours of arrival, and that is separate from the K-ETA. Match your nationality to the visa-free, K-ETA-waiver and visa rules before check-in, not at the immigration desk.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | CJJ / RKTU |
| Distance to centre | ~11 km north of central Cheongju |
| Terminal | Single terminal; international on the 3rd floor |
| Type | Joint civil-military (ROKAF 17th Fighter Wing, F-35A) |
| Passengers (2024) | ~4.6 million |
| Bus to city | Express 747 → Cheongju Bus Terminal / Osong Station, ₩1,900 cash (₩1,800 card), ~20 min |
| Intercity coaches | Seoul (Nambu / Central City / COEX, ~1.5 hr), Daejeon, Cheonan, Chungju, Incheon |
| Rail at airport | None; nearest KTX is Osong Station via 747 bus |
| Taxi | Metered rank outside arrivals; practical for the short city hop |
| Currency | KRW (₩); ≈ ₩1,500/US$1, ≈ ₩1,750/€1 (May 2026) |
| Payment | Cards widely accepted; T-money or cash for buses |
| Border | e-Arrival Card mandatory (from 1 Jan 2026) · K-ETA waived for many nationalities through 31 Dec 2026 · visa-free up to 90 days for listed nationalities |
| Hub carrier | Aero K (based); Korean Air, Asiana, Jeju Air, Jin Air, T’way also operate |
| Lounges | No Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass; airport business lounge only (08:00–20:00) |
| Layover verdict | Stay airside under ~3 hrs; Early Printing Museum viable at ~5 hrs+; fortress/Cheongnamdae need a half-day; Seoul too far |



