Viaje de Corea a EE.UU.: guía de adaptación a zonas horarias

The Korea–USA Time Gap

Korea Standard Time (KST, UTC+9) sits far from US time zones:

  • Korea → US East Coast (EST, UTC-5): 14 hours behind (13 hours during US DST)
  • Korea → US West Coast (PST, UTC-8): 17 hours behind (16 hours during US DST)

This is one of the most challenging time zone crossings for jet lag — nearly a complete day reversal, especially for Korea to East Coast travelers.

The Flight: What to Expect

Seoul Incheon (ICN) to major US airports:

  • ICN → JFK (New York): ~14 hours
  • ICN → LAX (Los Angeles): ~11 hours
  • ICN → ORD (Chicago): ~13 hours
  • Most flights depart in the afternoon/evening KST and arrive the same day in US time

Pre-Travel Preparation (5 Days Before)

For East Coast destinations:

  • Day 5: Go to bed 1 hour later than usual
  • Day 4: 2 hours later
  • Day 3–1: Continue delaying by 1 hour/day (flying westward)
  • Seek light in the evening; avoid morning light

The Korea-to-USA direction is westward — you are delaying your clock.

On the Flight

  • Set watch to US destination time at boarding
  • If it's nighttime at your destination during the flight: sleep
  • Eat meals according to US destination time, not Korean time
  • Stay hydrated — 14 hours of cabin air is very dehydrating

First 3 Days in the US

  • Day 1: Stay awake until 10 PM local time, get outdoor light in the afternoon
  • Day 2: Set alarm for 7–8 AM; morning outdoor activity is critical
  • Day 3: Most travelers feel significantly better; afternoon energy dip is normal
  • Avoid napping longer than 20 minutes during the day

Return Trip: USA to Korea

The return is eastward — generally harder. Flying back from the US to Korea means advancing your clock by 13–17 hours. Pre-shift your sleep earlier in the last 3–4 days of your US stay, and prepare for the first 2–3 days back in Korea to feel groggy.