
When a friend visiting Korea tells me they want to eat “real Korean beef” in Busan, I don’t hesitate: I send them here, to Haeundae. This is not a flashy new spot in the middle of the tourist strip. It is a 54-year-old galbi institution tucked into a quiet alley, the kind of restaurant locals save for hosting guests or treating their parents. Here is everything a first-timer needs to know, explained the way I’d explain it to a friend.
First: what exactly is “saeng-galbi”?
In Korean BBQ, beef short rib comes in two main styles, and knowing the difference makes the menu much easier.
🍶 Yangnyeom-galbi (양념갈비) — short rib marinated in a sweet-savory sauce of soy, pear and garlic. It is familiar and crowd-pleasing, but the marinade masks the beef. This restaurant’s signature is saeng-galbi — meat that has nowhere to hide.
And “Hanwoo” — why is it so expensive?
The “amso” (암소) in the restaurant’s name means female cattle, traditionally considered more tender and flavorful, which is why long-standing galbi houses proudly put it on the sign.
Location & how to get there

🚇 Subway About a 10-minute walk from Jungdong Station (Exit 7) or Haeundae Station (Exit 1), Line 2
🚗 Parking Private lot available — a real plus in busy Haeundae
🌊 Nearby Close to Haeundae Beach, Mipo and Dalmaji-gil, so it fits neatly before or after sightseeing
It sits not on Haeundae’s bright main road but down a calm side street, in a traditional hanok-style building. The first time you go you may wonder if there is really a famous restaurant here — then you step inside and the atmosphere tells you why it has been loved for decades.
Inside & atmosphere


The old-fashioned hanok mood carries through to the interior. Private rooms, floor-seating areas and regular tables are all separated, so it is easy to talk over dinner. It fills up every time I go, buzzing and lively, but the “imo” (the veteran women servers who are a warm fixture of old Korean restaurants) move fast and keep everything running smoothly.
Can you go with kids?

Yes. There are high chairs, and the rooms and floor seating make it easy for a child to settle in. Saeng-galbi is unmarinated and tender, so it is easy for kids to eat too. When I went with my child there was very little to fuss over.
Menu & prices


· Inside skirt (angeomi), 110g — ₩68,000
· Saeng-galbi (fresh short rib), 180g — ₩62,000
· Yangnyeom-galbi (marinated), 200g — ₩58,000
· Beef sashimi (yuk-sashimi), 110g — ₩50,000
· Beef tartare (yukhoe), 120g — ₩50,000
To finish
· Cold noodles (mul-naengmyeon) — ₩7,000
· Soybean-paste stew in earthen pot — ₩10,000
· Potato-starch noodles (gamja-sari) — ₩3,000
Prices may change, so confirm on the day. Budget roughly ₩50,000–70,000 per person — normal for a Hanwoo specialist.
The banchan (side dishes)


Once you order, a tidy set of individual banchan is laid out — fresh-cut kimchi, pickles, salad and more, all chosen to go with beef. One thing that surprises many first-time visitors: banchan is included, and usually refilled for free.
The main event — grilling Hanwoo saeng-galbi


Bright red beef, marbling spread across it like snowflakes, and evenly spaced knife scoring — you can predict the tenderness just by looking. Staff will often start the grilling for you, but this is fundamentally a cook-it-yourself experience at your own grill.




1. Lay the beef on the hot grill — listen for the sizzle and the rush of aroma
2. Once one side is done, flip only once (don’t keep turning it)
3. Eat the first bite plain, no dip — this is the moment you taste the beef itself
4. After that, a light touch of salt-and-sesame-oil, or wrapped in lettuce (ssam)
5. Saeng-galbi is best a touch under — around medium; grill it hard and it turns tough

Take one well-grilled piece with no sauce and you immediately understand why locals say “for galbi in Haeundae, it’s this place.” It melts with almost no chewing and a savory juiciness spreads through your mouth. It is genuinely not cheap, but if you are looking for truly tender, delicious short rib in Haeundae, this is my first pick.
The hidden gem — gamja-sari

Finishing the meal — cold noodles & soybean stew



A Korean beef meal usually ends with naengmyeon or a stew with rice. The cold mul-naengmyeon refreshes your palate after all that fat, while the earthen-pot doenjang (soybean-paste) stew is hearty yet clean and pairs beautifully with rice. I had the doenjang stew, and it was the perfect crisp finish after the beef.
The verdict — who it’s for
✅ Hosting guests, a business dinner, or treating your elders (private rooms, floor seating and parking all sorted)
✅ Families wanting a quiet, traditional setting for a special meal
⚠️ Prices are premium — but this is a place that wins on the beef alone, so it earns it.
It is not flashy, but it is the kind of restaurant Koreans take the people they care about. If you want one special meal on your Busan trip, experience Hanwoo saeng-galbi at this Haeundae institution.
Where to stay nearby
Practical tips for foreign visitors
· Payment Cards accepted.
· Menu Printed with English, Japanese and Chinese, so ordering is easy.
· Minimum Galbi is normally ordered for two or more, so bring company rather than dining solo.
· Grilling Ask the staff and they will help get you started.
