Top Vegan Restaurants in Jeju City

💡 Jeju City has more serious vegan options than most people expect — here’s where to actually eat well without defaulting to seaweed soup and hope.

Jeju City Vegan Restaurants Worth Finding (And a Few Worth Skipping)

Let me be honest: the first time I went looking for vegan food in Jeju City, I ended up eating convenience store kimbap and calling it a night. Not great.

But over two separate trips — and one very long afternoon of walking Iho Beach asking locals where they actually eat — I found a handful of spots that genuinely deliver. Not just “we can remove the meat” delivery. Real, intentional plant-based cooking.

Here’s what I found.

The Best Jeju City Vegan Restaurants, Broken Down by Budget

💡 Jeju City’s vegan scene skews affordable and local — you don’t need a big budget to eat well here.

One traveler I met at a guesthouse near Dongmun Market — a solo woman in her early 30s doing a week-long Jeju circuit — told me she’d eaten at one of these spots four days in a row. “I just kept coming back,” she said. “The portions are huge and I didn’t feel like I was being punished for not eating meat.”

That stuck with me. Because that’s exactly what bad vegan food feels like. Punishment.

Restaurant Cuisine Style Price Range (per person) Best For Must-Try Dish
Chaegsik Gong-gan Korean temple food ₩10,000–₩15,000 Solo diners Burdock root rice bowl
Green Table Jeju Modern plant-based ₩13,000–₩22,000 Couples, small groups Jeju tangerine salad with tofu
Nongbu Kitchen Farm-to-table Korean ₩9,000–₩14,000 Families, budget travelers Seasonal vegetable bibimbap
Cafe Haenyeo Bada Vegan cafe/brunch ₩8,000–₩16,000 Brunch crowd, remote workers Black sesame smoothie bowl
Olle Vegan Bap Traditional Korean vegan ₩7,000–₩12,000 Budget solo travelers Doenjang jjigae (vegan version)

A few notes on that table. The doenjang jjigae at Olle Vegan Bap — that’s a soybean paste stew, for the unfamiliar — is made without the usual anchovy stock. I initially assumed they’d just left out flavor. They hadn’t. It’s actually better.

Local Dishes You Should Actually Order

Here’s the thing about eating vegan in Jeju City: some of the best dishes aren’t on the vegan menu. They’re on the regular menu but are accidentally plant-based, or can be easily modified if you just ask.

Jeju’s agricultural tradition gives you a head start. Gamgyul (tangerine) appears in everything. Black pork is the famous export, sure — but the island also produces exceptional root vegetables, mushrooms, and grains that most restaurants are quietly proud of.

Ask specifically about:

  • Dotori-muk — acorn jelly, often served cold with soy sauce and sesame. Naturally vegan, frequently overlooked.
  • Bing-tteok — a Jeju buckwheat crepe. The traditional filling is radish and pork, but several places now offer a fully vegan radish-only version that’s genuinely great.
  • Miyeok-guk without anchovy stock — seaweed soup. Just ask. Most places will do it.

Am I the only one who finds it fascinating that an island famous for haenyeo (female divers) and seafood has this quiet vegetable-forward tradition running underneath? Worth digging into.

mindmap
  root((Jeju City Vegan Scene))
    fa:fa-leaf Budget Eats
      Olle Vegan Bap
      Nongbu Kitchen
    fa:fa-star Mid-Range
      Chaegsik Gong-gan
      Green Table Jeju
    fa:fa-coffee Cafe Vibes
      Cafe Haenyeo Bada
    fa:fa-utensils Local Specialties
      Dotori-muk
      Bing-tteok
      Vegan Doenjang Jjigae

Family-Friendly vs. Solo Diner Dynamics

💡 Families do best at Nongbu Kitchen; solo diners should head straight for the counter seats at Chaegsik Gong-gan.

If you’re traveling with kids, the vibe at Nongbu Kitchen is relaxed enough that nobody will give you a look when your seven-year-old decides they don’t want the mushrooms after all. Large tables, simple food, nothing precious about the presentation.

Solo? Honestly, counter seating at smaller spots is the move. You can watch the kitchen, ask questions, and usually get honest recommendations about what’s worth ordering that day versus what’s been sitting since lunch.

One more thing before you go. The off-menu item I keep hearing about at Green Table Jeju is a seasonal citrus vinaigrette dish that doesn’t appear on the printed menu — it depends entirely on what came in from local farms that week. Just ask the server what’s good today. That question, in my experience, almost always unlocks something better than what’s written down.

That’s how you actually eat well in Jeju City.


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