Highways congested on first day of extended holiday

Highways across South Korea were congested on May 1, the first day of an extended holiday starting with Labor Day. A drive from Seoul to Busan was expected to take up to 9 hours and 10 minutes. About 1.3 million people were estimated to use Incheon International Airport through Tuesday.

Earlier this year, the government designated Labor Day as a national holiday, allowing workers a day off. Taking Monday off enables up to five days of holiday, including the weekend and Children's Day on Tuesday.

More than 6 million vehicles were estimated to travel nationwide on Friday, according to the state-run Korea Expressway Corp. A drive from Seoul to the southeastern port city of Busan was expected to take up to 9 hours and 10 minutes. Trips to southwestern Gwangju and eastern coastal Gangneung were projected at 7 hours 30 minutes and 6 hours 20 minutes, respectively, at peak times.

The agency expected outbound traffic to ease from around 9 to 10 p.m. and inbound traffic to Seoul from 10 to 11 p.m. Some 1.3 million people were estimated to be taking flights at Incheon International Airport from the previous day through Tuesday amid rising demand for international trips.

Related Articles

Night scene of the completed demolition of the Seosomun Overpass in Seoul with construction equipment and workers.
Image generated by AI

Demolition of collapsed Seoul overpass completed

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The Seoul city government said Friday that emergency demolition work on the upper structure of the Seosomun Overpass was completed at 9:40 p.m.

On the night of April 30, 2026, São Paulo's state highways accumulated 634.7 km of simultaneous slowdowns, according to Artesp data from Waze. The capital hit a peak of 1,231 km of congestion at 5:30 p.m., dropping to 718 km around 7 p.m. Heavy traffic was driven by the exodus for the extended Labor Day holiday on May 1.

Reported by AI

Traffic at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge hit peak levels in the first two days of the holiday, with passenger flows exceeding 192,000 and vehicles surpassing 30,000, leading to checkpoint queues sometimes over an hour. Ringo Lee Yiu-pui, honorary life president of the Hong Kong, China Automobile Association, said on Monday it marked one of the busiest periods in recent years.

Transportation Secretary Giovanni Lopez forecasts more than five million passengers per day during Holy Week amid ongoing preparations, including LTFRB's special bus permits.

Reported by AI

South Korea's exports jumped 43.7 percent from a year earlier in the first 10 days of May. Data from the Korea Customs Service showed outbound shipments reached 18.4 billion dollars.

Head of Korlantas Polri Irjen Pol Agus Suryonugroho predicts the peak of the second wave Idul Fitri return flow on Saturday (March 28, 2026). They are preparing traffic engineering options up to a national one-way scheme to manage the surge of vehicles heading to Jakarta on the Trans Java Toll. Early Saturday traffic remains controlled.

Reported by AI

Indonesia's Traffic Corps estimates just 15 percent of Lebaran 2026 return vehicles remain outside Jakarta as of Saturday night. The peak return flow has passed, with traffic managed through measures like one-way systems and contraflows.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline