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LEGOLAND Korea Hotel Kingdom Room, Pool & Breakfast Review | 1 Night with Kids

LEGOLAND Korea Hotel Kingdom Room, Pool & Breakfast Review | 1 Night with Kids

💡 A 1-night stay at LEGOLAND Korea Hotel Kingdom Room with our kids — in-room padlock quiz event, a pool where kids build boats from floating LEGO bricks, and the staff LEGO swap our kids loved most. The pool runs on timed slots (reserve on check-in day), and park tickets are usually separate — confirm before booking.

Quick Facts

LEGOLAND Korea Hotel sits inside the LEGOLAND resort in Chuncheon, connected right to the park. Here are the essentials from our 1-night stay with our two kids.

  • Location: Inside LEGOLAND Korea Resort, Chuncheon (shuttle-connected to the park)

  • Rooms: Themed rooms — Kingdom, Pirate, Ninjago. We stayed in the medieval-castle Kingdom Room

  • Special event: Kingdom Room padlock quiz (win a small LEGO gift box)

  • Pool: Timed-slot reservation — build boats from floating LEGO bricks

  • Breakfast: Buffet (included in our package)

  • Parking: Large lot, but the hotel–park shuttle is far more convenient

  • Convenience: Luggage storage available after checkout

  • Rates & park tickets: Vary by season/package — check the official site (tickets are often separate)

A little girl laughing with a brochure in the LEGOLAND Korea Hotel lobby

Kingdom Themed Room — Cheers the Moment We Opened the Door

The Kingdom Room is decorated like a medieval castle. The kids cheered the second they opened the door. LEGO props fill every corner and LEGO cartoons play on the TV, so the children were glued to it. The room was clean throughout.

The Kingdom Room's signature event is the padlock quiz. Clues are hidden around the room, and following them to open a padlock earns a small LEGO gift box. The kids kept asking 'when can we solve it?' and their reaction to the reward was priceless.

Two siblings sitting on the bed in the medieval-castle themed Kingdom RoomInside the LEGOLAND Hotel Kingdom Room with a yellow beanbag and LEGO decor

The Pool — Building Boats from Floating LEGO Bricks

The pool runs on timed slots and needs a reservation, which kept it uncrowded and relaxed during our slot. I recommend booking right at check-in.

The highlight here is building a boat from giant floating LEGO bricks. Watching the kids assemble their own boats and set them afloat was the best moment of the whole trip. That said, an older child who loves rough water play may find it a bit tame — our son soon went looking for something more active.

A girl floating a boat she built from giant floating LEGO bricks in the hotel poolA boy in a life vest playing in the LEGOLAND Hotel pool

LEGO Play Zone — Short but Fully Absorbing

Alongside the pool program, there was a LEGO play zone for building your own creations. The session was on the short side, which was a slight letdown, but even in that short time the kids focused hard and beamed with pride holding up what they made.

Kids building creations at the LEGO brick play zoneA boy smiling brightly while holding LEGO bricks at the play zoneLEGO creations the children built themselves at the play zone

Food — LEGO-Brick Bun Burger & Breakfast Buffet

After check-in we had lunch at the 2nd-floor restaurant. The LEGO-brick shaped bun burger stood out. The taste was more solid-than-special, but there were plenty of kid-friendly options to make a full meal.

A LEGO-brick shaped bun burger with fries at the LEGOLAND Hotel restaurant

Breakfast is a buffet. Fine for adults, and with sausage, rice, seaweed and fruit on offer, the kids ate really well.

A boy eating sausage, rice and seaweed at the LEGOLAND Hotel breakfast buffet

Don't-Miss Tip — the Staff LEGO Swap

One tip you must catch: staff wear a LEGO brick on their uniform. If your child asks to swap it for their own LEGO, they'll happily trade. Our son called it the most memorable part of the trip — so bring a spare LEGO brick from home.

Day two at the park was easy too. The hotel stored our luggage so we moved around light, and LEGO bricks scattered throughout the park kept the kids busy in ride queues. Plenty of rides suit younger kids. The lot is large but far from the park, so the shuttle is much easier.

A girl riding a wagon in front of the LEGOLAND Korea park ticket boothA boy snacking in front of a LEGO sculpture in the LEGOLAND Korea park

Before-You-Go Checklist

  • 🧱 Bring 1–2 LEGO bricks from home — for the staff swap; best reaction from the kids

  • 🏊 Reserve a pool time slot the moment you check in (slots fill fast)

  • 🎟️ Confirm whether park tickets are included or separate before booking

  • 🚌 Use the shuttle between hotel and park (walking from the lot is far)

  • 🧳 Leave your luggage with the hotel after checkout and head to the park light

  • 👶 The padlock quiz & LEGO boats fit ages 4–10 best (a bit tame for older kids)

FAQ

Q. What age is the Kingdom Room best for?

A. Based on our kids, ages 4–10 fit best. The padlock quiz, LEGO boat building, and the LEGO play zone are all built for that age group to jump right in.

Q. Can I use the pool without a reservation?

A. It runs on timed slots and needs a reservation. Book right at check-in — the system kept it uncrowded and relaxed.

Q. Is breakfast an extra charge?

A. It was included in our package. Package terms vary by booking period, so confirm before you book.

Q. Are park tickets bought separately?

A. Hotel stays and park tickets are generally separate. Some packages include them, so check when booking.

Q. How does the staff LEGO swap work?

A. Staff wear a LEGO brick on their uniform. If your child asks to swap it for their own, they will. Bring a spare LEGO brick from home — kids love it.

Q. How many days should we plan?

A. We did 1 night — one day for the hotel, one for the park. The hotel alone offers half a day-plus of fun, so 1 night is ideal for younger kids. Add a day if you want to explore the park fully.