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Seoul 2027 · August 3–8

World Youth Day

“Take courage! I have overcome the world.”
John 16:33 · Theme for Seoul 2027
Dates
August 3–8, 2027
Host
Seoul, South Korea
Holy Father
Pope Leo XIV
Seoul, South Korea
The First Road

A Pilgrimage for a Generation

Some journeys happen once in a lifetime, and for most young Catholics, World Youth Day is that journey. For six days in Seoul, an estimated half a million pilgrims from every continent — teenagers, young adults, clergy, and families — will gather to stand with the Holy Father, pray together, and discover that their faith is wider than their parish, their country, or their generation.

Tekton Ministries has guided Catholic groups to every major World Youth Day for more than two decades. We have walked Madrid in 2011, Kraków in 2016, Panama in 2019, and Lisbon in 2023 alongside thousands of pilgrims whose lives were quietly reshaped on the road. Many of them are now leading parishes, raising Catholic families, and forming the next generation of pilgrims themselves.

Seoul 2027 will be the first World Youth Day in Asia since Manila in 1995, the first ever hosted in a country where Catholics are a minority, and the first under the papacy of Pope Leo XIV. The theme — “Take courage! I have overcome the world” — was chosen by Pope Francis before his passing in April 2025. It is a charge to a generation forming its faith in uncertain times.
A Singular Story in Church History

The Self-Evangelized Church

Korea is the only country in the world whose Catholic faith was not brought by missionaries. In the late 1700s, a small group of Korean scholars encountered Catholic writings and, without a single priest among them, began practicing what they read. They baptized one another. They gathered for prayer. They began to teach their neighbors.

By the time missionaries finally arrived decades later, thousands of Koreans had already embraced the faith on their own. What followed was a century of persecution that produced more than 10,000 martyrs — ordinary men and women who chose the faith they had discovered over their own lives. In 2018, the Vatican formally designated the Seoul Catholic Pilgrimage Route as the first international pilgrimage site in all of Asia.

That is the soil Seoul 2027 is planted in. The theme — Take courage — is not abstract here. It is the inheritance of the place.
227
Korean Saints & Blesseds
103 canonized by Saint John Paul II in 1984 · 124 beatified by Pope Francis in 2014
10,000+
Korean Martyrs
Killed for the faith during a century of persecution, 1791–1888
1st
International Pilgrimage Site in Asia
Vatican-designated Seoul Catholic Pilgrimage Route, 2018
WYD Seoul 2027 · Quick Facts

What You Should Know

WHERE

Seoul, South Korea — the first WYD on mainland East Asia and the first hosted by a Christian-minority nation. The heart of events will surround Myeongdong Cathedral and the Tagus-like riverfront gathering sites identified by the Korean organizing committee.

When

August 3–8, 2027. The Youth Festival begins Tuesday, August 3, with the Holy Father's Welcome Ceremony on Thursday, August 5, the Way of the Cross on Friday, the Vigil on Saturday, and the Closing Mass on Sunday, August 8.

Theme

“Take courage! I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Chosen by Pope Francis in 2024, the theme echoes through a Korean Church shaped by the witness of its martyrs and the call to courage in a fractured world.
Why Seoul 2027 Matters

A Church That Began with Laypeople

The Catholic Church in Korea is unusual in the whole of Church history: it was not founded by missionaries. In the late 1700s, a group of Korean scholars encountered Catholic writings and, without a single priest among them, began practicing the faith. When persecution came — and it came for a century — more than 10,000 Korean Catholics were martyred for refusing to renounce what they had discovered.

That is the soil Seoul 2027 is planted in. The theme — Take courage — is not abstract here. It is the inheritance of the place. Saint Andrew Kim Taegon, the first Korean-born priest, was beheaded in 1846 at the age of twenty-five. When Saint John Paul II visited Korea in 1984, he canonized 103 Korean martyrs — the largest canonization ceremony in the history of the Church — in the very year he inaugurated World Youth Day.

Pilgrims arriving in Seoul in 2027 will walk ground that was watered with the blood of Catholics who chose the faith without anyone telling them they had to. That is a formation a young person does not forget.
“Encountering Christ changes lives and gives courage to overcome the challenges they face.”
Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life · 2025
For the young people who go, something similar tends to happen. They return home not with souvenirs but with a sense that the faith they were handed is their own now — and that the world is not as small or as lonely as it felt before they left.
Plan Your Pilgrimage

Join Tekton for WYD Seoul 2027

Tekton Ministries is finalizing pilgrimage itineraries for World Youth Day Seoul 2027, including direct pilgrimages, pre-/post-event extensions through East Asia, and dedicated parish and youth group departures.

Reserve your place on the priority notification list to receive dates, pricing, and registration details as soon as they are released. Groups traveling with their parish priest or youth minister are encouraged to inquire about leading a group.

  • Catholic and Christian guides fluent in local culture and Church history
  • Daily Mass at Catholic and martyr sites throughout Korea
  • Participation in all official WYD events with Pope Leo XIV
  • Optional Japan, Philippines, or Extended Korea extensions
  • Dedicated pilgrimage manager supporting you from registration to return
Estimated Starting From
$4,300
per pilgrim
Based on a group of 50 in quad occupancy, departing from cities in the Midwest. Includes airfare, hotel, charter bus, WYD registration, most meals, guide, and insurance. Final pricing confirmed once WYD registration opens and airfares are published.

WYD Seoul 2027 Updates

Receive pilgrimage dates, pricing, and early-registration access as soon as details are released.
 
Sample Itinerary

The Six Days in Seoul

The Korean Local Organizing Committee has released the official program structure for World Youth Day Seoul 2027. Tekton itineraries are designed around this schedule, with additional Days in the Dioceses experiences beforehand and optional pre-/post-pilgrimage extensions.
Tuesday
Aug 3, 2027

Opening · Youth Festival Begins

Official welcome and opening Mass celebrated by local bishops of the Korean Church. Pilgrims are introduced to the host dioceses and to the Korean Catholic community that has prepared for years to welcome the world.
Wednesday
Aug 4, 2027

Catechetical Sessions

Morning catechesis by language groups with bishops from around the world. Afternoon and evening cultural, musical, prayer, and reconciliation opportunities throughout Seoul. Vocations Fair and Reconciliation Center open all week.
Thursday
Aug 5, 2027

Welcome Ceremony with the Holy Father

Catechetical sessions in the morning. In the late afternoon, Pope Leo XIV arrives in Seoul and greets pilgrims during the Welcome Ceremony — the moment a million strangers become one assembly.
Friday
Aug 6, 2027

Way of the Cross with the Holy Father

Catechetical sessions by language group in the morning. In the evening, the Way of the Cross is prayed with Pope Leo XIV — a tradition that has marked every WYD since the gathering began.
Saturday
Aug 7, 2027

Vigil · Walking Pilgrimage · Eucharistic Adoration

Walking pilgrimage to the Vigil site and evening Vigil with the Pope, culminating in Eucharistic Adoration. Pilgrims sleep under the stars at the Vigil site in preparation for Sunday's closing Mass.
Sunday
Aug 8, 2027

Closing Mass with Pope Leo XIV

Concluding Mass celebrated by the Holy Father, followed by the announcement of the location of the next World Youth Day. Pilgrims depart Seoul over the following days.
Days in the Dioceses: Most Tekton pilgrimages include 2–3 days before WYD opens, hosted by Korean dioceses, for catechesis, cultural exchange, and pilgrimage to Korean martyr shrines. Specific inclusions vary by itinerary; contact our team for detailed day-by-day programs.
Korean Catholic Heritage

Walking with Saint Andrew Kim Taegon

Saint Andrew Kim Taegon was the first Korean-born Catholic priest. Ordained in Shanghai in 1845, he returned to Korea during active persecution and was beheaded the following year at age twenty-five. His final words were: “This is my last hour of life; listen to me attentively. If I have communicated with foreigners, it has been for my religion and for my God.”

In 1984 — the same year he founded World Youth Day — Saint John Paul II traveled to Seoul to canonize 103 Korean martyrs, including Saint Andrew Kim. It was the first canonization Mass celebrated outside Rome in nearly a millennium. Thirty years later, in 2014, Pope Francis returned to Seoul to beatify 124 additional Korean martyrs. Tekton itineraries for WYD Seoul 2027 devote two full days to walking these sites before the WYD events begin.
103 + 124
Canonized & Beatified by Saints John Paul II and Pope Francis
Jeoldu-san Martyrs' Shrine, Seoul — memorial to Korean Catholic martyrs
Jeoldu-san Martyrs' Shrine, Seoul — memorial to Korean Catholic martyrs
Six Martyr Sites on the Seoul Pilgrimage Route

The Sites You Will Walk

Jeoldusan Martyrs' Shrine

Jeoldusan Martyrs' Shrine

1866 · Han River
Site of mass executions during the Byeongin Persecution and the first shrine visited by Saint John Paul II on his 1984 visit. Houses the relics of 28 canonized saints.
Myeongdong Cathedral

Myeongdong Cathedral

1898 · Seoul City Center
Korea's first Catholic parish church and the seat of the Archdiocese of Seoul. The Gothic Revival cathedral stands on the ground of the Kim Beom-u household, where Korea's earliest Catholics were martyred.
Saenamteo Martyrs' Chapel

Saenamteo Martyrs' Shrine

1846 · Yongsan District
The execution site where Saint Andrew Kim Taegon, Korea's first native-born priest, was martyred at age 25 in September 1846. A quiet shrine on the banks of the Han River.
Danggogae Martyrs' Shrine

Danggogae Martyrs' Shrine

December 1839
Memorial to ten Catholics executed in a single day during the Gihae Persecution, including Blessed Mary Yi Seong-rye, a young mother who refused to renounce the faith even when offered her children's lives.
 darkened room with a light display, inside the Seosomun Shrine History Museum, Seoul

Seosomun Shrine & Museum

Korea's Largest Execution Site
The underground museum beneath Seosomun Park commemorates the site where more Korean martyrs were beheaded than anywhere else — the central stop on the Vatican's "Way of Life" pilgrimage course.
Ethan Doyle White, Photo: CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons/cropped
Yakhyeon Catholic Church

Yakhyeon Catholic Church

1892 · First Western Church
The first Western-style Catholic church built in Korea, completed in 1892 just four years after the last great persecution ended. A physical testament to the faith that endured.
Elsa0806, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons/cropped
Vatican-Designated Pilgrimage Routes

Three Courses Walked by Pilgrims Worldwide

Course 1

The Good News Road

4 miles · about 2 hours
Traces how Korean laypeople voluntarily received the Gospel — a story unprecedented in Church history. Includes the residence of Thomas Kim Beom-u, Korea's first evangelist, and the Seokjeong Well, where Korea's first baptisms were celebrated in secret.
Course 2

The Way of Life

3.7 miles · about 2 hours
Passes through Seosomun, where more Korean Catholics were beheaded than at any other site in the country, and continues past the torture and execution grounds at Hyeongjo, Woopodocheong, and Gyeonggi Gamyeong.
Course 3

The Accord Trail

4.3 miles · about 2.5 hours
Connects the Danggogae, Saenamteo, and Jeoldusan shrines along the Han River. Named to inspire unity in faith, following the example of Korean Catholics who stood together through a century of persecution.
All three routes are fully walkable within central Seoul and are incorporated into the pre-WYD pilgrimage days on Tekton itineraries.
Pre- and Post-WYD Extensions

While You're Across the World

Seoul is a long journey from the United States, and many pilgrims choose to extend their time in Asia before or after World Youth Day. Tekton designs each extension to honor the pilgrimage character of the trip — these are not sightseeing add-ons, but continuations of the encounter.
Pre or Post Pilgrimage

Japan

The Hidden Christians
Nagasaki is one of the most consequential Catholic sites in Asia. Twenty-six Christians — including Saint Paul Miki — were crucified here in 1597. For the next 250 years, Japan's persecuted Catholics kept the faith underground, passing it from parents to children without priests, until missionaries discovered them still praying in 1865.
Nagasaki · Twenty-Six Martyrs Museum · Ōura Church · Kyoto · Tokyo
Pre or Post Pilgrimage

Philippines

Asia's Catholic Heart
The Philippines is the only Catholic-majority country in Asia and hosted World Youth Day 1995 — the largest in history, with an estimated five million attendees. Pilgrimage to Manila Cathedral, the Shrine of Our Lady of Manaoag, and the historic walled city of Intramuros offers a powerful complement to the Korean martyr narrative.
Manila Cathedral · Our Lady of Manaoag · Quiapo Church · Intramuros
Pre or Post Pilgrimage

Extended Korea

Beyond Seoul
For pilgrims who prefer to stay in Korea, an extended itinerary visits the principal martyr shrines outside Seoul — Haemi in the west, the Daegu martyrs in the south, and the Solmoe Shrine, birthplace of Saint Andrew Kim Taegon — along with an optional DMZ prayer visit to pray for the reunification of the Korean peninsula.
Solmoe Shrine · Haemi · Daegu Martyrs · DMZ · Busan
Tekton Pilgrims at Past World Youth Days

A Quarter-Century on the Road

Photographs from Tekton Ministries groups at World Youth Days. Many of the pilgrims in these images are now parents, priests, and parish leaders.
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Madrid 2011
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RIO 2013
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Krakow 2016
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions About WYD Seoul 2027

For Priests, Deacons, and Youth Ministers

Leading a Group to Seoul?

Seoul 2027 is a generational opportunity for the young people in your care. Tekton provides custom parish itineraries, bulletin and pulpit announcement materials, pre-pilgrimage catechesis support, and complimentary arrangements for qualifying group leaders. Over thirty years of experience, and a team that treats your group like its own.