
I got into Hotel Naru on a rainy Saturday, a friend stays in the connected officetel building (a Seoul-specific rental structure where residents get hotel-facility access through 2025) and invited me up for breakfast and the pool. The river was gray, the view was muted, and the place still managed to be one of the more impressive new properties I’ve been in this year.
Quick answer: Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery, The Han River Pool Hotel.
Quick FAQ
How much does Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery cost?
Around KRW 300,000–600,000/night
What is Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery known for?
Han River infinity pool, riverfront Voisin restaurant, Yeouido skyline view
Who should stay at Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery?
Han River views, design-forward travelers, photo-worthy river-view weekends
What are check-in and check-out times at Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery?
3:00 PM / 12:00 PM
Quick Facts: Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery
- Location: 8 Mapo-daero, Mapo-gu, Seoul (Han River north bank)
- Nearest Subway: Mapo Station (Line 5)
- From Incheon Airport: ~70 min via Airport Railroad + transfer
- Star Rating: 5-star, Accor M Gallery
- Best For: Han River views, design-forward travelers, photo-worthy river-view weekends
- Price Range: Around KRW 300,000–600,000/night
- Standout: Han River infinity pool, riverfront Voisin restaurant, Yeouido skyline view
- Check-in / Check-out: 3:00 PM / 12:00 PM
Why Hotel Naru Seoul Matters
Seoul has plenty of 5-star hotels. What it doesn’t have many of is 5-star hotels right on the Han River with a clean line of sight to the Yeouido skyline. The Conrad has the angle from across the water; Hotel Naru has the angle from the north bank, looking south. The hotel sits in Mapo, Hongdae’s quieter, more grown-up neighbor, and the property has clearly been designed for the moment Korean travel marketing is having around “Han River luxury.”

Accor’s M Gallery brand sits between the mid-tier Sofitel and the ultra-luxe Raffles, and it skews toward design-forward properties with local character. Hotel Naru reads that direction, European-leaning interior design, slightly theatrical lighting, lots of marble and gold accents that would feel at home in a Singapore or Hong Kong M Gallery.
Arrival & First Impressions
The arrival experience starts at the valet, a small but real moment. Polished interior, ambient lighting, the staff that nail the “look up, make eye contact, smile” sequence that separates 5-star service from 4-star going through the motions. The lobby is more compact than at the Shilla or Westin Chosun, but the design is more current.


Breakfast at Voisin (The Surprise of the Stay)
Saturday morning breakfast at Voisin, the hotel’s main restaurant. Got there around 9 AM, not crowded, easy to find a window seat, and the moment you sit down with a Han River view through floor-to-ceiling glass, you understand the property’s positioning. The restaurant has the same brass-and-marble M Gallery aesthetic as the lobby; it photographs ridiculously well.
The breakfast spread is the real surprise, international standards executed well, with proper cheese and charcuterie stations, made-to-order eggs, a small but considered Korean section, and pastries that taste like a pastry shop made them. The egg-to-order menu has French omelette, Korean street-style egg toast, eggs Florentine, solid options for any direction your morning is going.


Sit by the window if you can. The river view at breakfast is half the experience.
The Famous Han River Pool
This is what people book Hotel Naru for. The pool isn’t huge, but the view is, direct line of sight straight to the Han River and Yeouido, no buildings in between. On a clear day with the sunset hitting the Yeouido skyline, it’s one of the more cinematic moments in Seoul that doesn’t require a hike or a drone.


Caveat: on overcast or rainy days, you lose a lot of the magic. The pool is still nice, but the view is what makes the pool. Check the forecast and try to book around it if your travel dates are flexible. Pool slots can fill up fast on weekends, reserve a time at check-in.
Rooms & Common Spaces
I didn’t stay in a guest room this trip, but my friend’s officetel unit (also designed by Accor) gives a strong indication of the room aesthetic, neutral palette, brass fixtures, river-facing windows where applicable. River-view rooms command a meaningful premium and are absolutely worth it for a 1-night Seoul stay. The hotel pairs well with a Hongdae nightlife evening (one subway stop away) or a Yeouido riverside picnic afternoon.


Surroundings
Mapo is one of Seoul’s more underrated districts. Not as touristy as Hongdae or Itaewon, but two subway stops gets you to either. The Han River park sits directly outside the hotel, rent a Ttareungi (Seoul’s public bike share) for a sunset ride along the river, easily the best free thing to do in the city. The riverside parks are also where you’ll find casual chimaek (chicken + beer) culture in summer evenings.
Final Take on Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery
Hotel Naru Seoul M Gallery is the strongest pick for travelers who specifically want a Han River 5-star moment. The pool and the Voisin breakfast are the two non-negotiable experiences. On a clear day, it delivers some of the most photogenic Seoul moments you can get without leaving the city center. On cloudy days, you’re paying for the design alone, still good, but think about timing if it matters. Browse our other Korea hotel reviews for comparison.
Nearby: Mapo-gu & Hongdae
Hotel Naru sits in Mapo-gu, the neighborhood connecting Hongdae to the west and Yongsan to the east. Walkability is genuinely strong. The Gyeongui Line Forest Park (a converted railway greenway) is a 10-minute walk and one of Seoul’s better urban strolls. The Han River path is 10 minutes south, rent a Ttareungyi bike near Hapjeong and ride east toward Yeouido if you have an afternoon free.
Mangwon Market is a 20-minute walk and worth making the trip for, fresh produce, tteokbokki, hotteok, and home-cooking at local prices. The area’s restaurants are Korean-only, which is exactly why they’re good. Papago or Google Translate on your phone is non-negotiable here.
Best Season to Visit Hotel Naru
Spring (April): Han River cherry blossom season, the path from Hapjeong to Yeouido is one of Seoul’s most genuinely beautiful walks. Book the hotel early; the whole riverside area fills up fast.
Summer: Han River evening culture season, outdoor cinema, night markets, and riverside barbecue spots all within a short ride. The hotel rooftop bar, if open, comes into its own at this time of year.
Autumn: The Gyeongui Line forest walk is at its best in October when the trees turn. The combination of autumn colour and the converted-railway aesthetic is better than you’d expect.
Winter: Low season means lower rates and a quieter Mapo-gu. Hongdae is lively year-round, so the neighbourhood energy doesn’t die in December, the crowds just thin to a manageable level. Good option for a winter city break.
Getting to Hotel Naru
From Incheon Airport: Take the AREX Express to Seoul Station (43 min), then transfer to Metro Line 6 toward World Cup Stadium, Mapo-gu is 2–3 stops. The trip takes around 70 minutes door-to-door. From Gimpo Airport, it is even closer: Metro Line 9 → transfer at Gayang, under 30 minutes. If you are traveling with luggage and arriving late, a Kakao T taxi from either airport is the most practical choice, expect around ₩45,000–65,000 from Incheon, ₩18,000–25,000 from Gimpo.
Tips for Foreign Visitors to Hotel Naru Seoul
- Check the weather before booking, the views are weather-dependent.
- Reserve your pool slot at check-in. Weekend afternoons book up fast.
- Swim cap is required at the pool (Korean standard), front desk has them.
- Book a window table at Voisin for breakfast, the river view is the experience.
- One subway stop to Hongdae for nightlife, ten minutes by taxi to Itaewon for international restaurants.
- Rent a Ttareungi bike at the riverside park for a sunset Han River ride, it is the move.
- Accor Live Limitless members earn points and get perks; sign up before booking if you’re not already in.
To make a reservation, visit the Hotel Naru Seoul MGallery official website.

