• 1961: The Tourism Promotion Law is enacted. • 1962: The International Tourism Corporation (ITC) is established to promote South Korea’s tourism industry through the management of major hotels, taxis and the Korea Travel Bureau, as well as by training human resources to support the travel trade. • 1968: The number of foreign visitors passes 100,000. • 1969: The Hotel Institute is opened. The first overseas office opens in Tokyo. • 1971: Development of Bomun Lake Resort in
Gyeongju begins. • 1977: London office opens in the UK. • 1978: Korea attracts over one million foreign visitors. • 1982: The International Tourism Corporation is renamed the Korea National Tourism Corporation (KNTC). • 1988: The number of foreign visitors surpasses two million. • 1991: The number of foreign visitors passes three million. • 1996: The company's name is changed from Korea National Tourism Corporation to Korea National Tourism Organization. • 1998:
Kumgangsan Diamond Mountains tour begins. • 2000: Korea attracts five million foreign visitors. • 2003: Kumgangsan Diamond Mountains land route tour begins.
Hallyu (Korea Wave) becomes the major theme of the KTO's overseas marketing.
United States branch offices issue
newsletter bulletins; offices are in
Los Angeles and
New York City. • 2005: KTO reshuffles its organizational structure into six divisions. KTO introduces its new corporate identity. Korea attracts 6.5 million visitors from abroad. • 2023:
HiKR Ground tourism center opens in Seoul. == Leadership ==