Top 5 time-travelling K-dramas if you love Bon Appétit, Your Majesty

Promotional photo from Bon Appétit, Your Majesty | Image via: tvN | Collage by Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central
Promotional photo from Bon Appétit, Your Majesty | Image via: tvN | Collage by Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central

Bon Appétit, Your Majesty builds a world where food becomes power, memory, and survival. Recipes turn into declarations of selfhood, and every table becomes an arena for love and ambition.

Time-travel K-dramas often use a similar grammar. They send characters back to moments they thought were lost, letting them reclaim identity, heal old wounds, and create futures that were once denied.

The five dramas below do more than move between eras. They explore regret, agency, and the way tenderness can survive when history itself feels unkind. With Bon Appétit, Your Majesty soon coming to an end, maybe you'd like to visit those.

Rooftop Prince

Crown Prince Lee Gak begins within the rigid order of the Joseon court, where betrayal and the mysterious death of his wife leave him desperate for answers. In the middle of that search, a twist of fate transports him and his three loyal attendants to modern Seoul.

The early episodes play with the absurdity of royal etiquette colliding with skyscrapers and smartphones. He tries to command a world that no longer follows his rules, and the fish-out-of-water humor is sharp and warm.

Beneath the comedy lies grief that refuses to fade. The prince is drawn to a modern woman who feels like an echo of his lost princess, yet she belongs to a time he cannot claim.

Corporate plots, fragile trust, and love that transcends centuries turn what seemed like a playful fantasy into something moving and profound. Each ordinary act, from eating together to adapting new customs, becomes a thread holding two lives apart yet close.

Fans of Bon Appétit, Your Majesty will recognize the pull toward ritual and continuity. Food and shared domestic space become anchors when time has fractured identity. The drama believes that love can outlast eras, even if the cost of trying is heartbreak.

Lovely Runner

Im Sol survives her adolescence because of Ryu Sun Jae, an artist whose music once pulled her from despair. His sudden death years later unravels her life. An accident throws her back to her teenage self long before tragedy can strike. At first, the chance feels like a miracle. She can meet the boy behind the celebrity and perhaps keep him alive.

Hope quickly grows heavy. Sol discovers that every effort to change destiny reshapes the present in ways she cannot predict. Protecting Sun Jae means risking her friendships, her own dreams, and the fragile balance of a future that once seemed set. Saving him is not an act of nostalgia but a battle against the machinery of fate.

The show’s raw heart matches the defiant spirit of Bon Appétit, Your Majesty. It values tenderness as resistance and insists that a woman’s love and will can push back against the paths laid out for her. Sol’s fight to rewrite loss speaks to anyone drawn to stories where care itself is power.

A Time Called You

Han Jun Hee is broken by grief after the man she loves dies. One ordinary day she wakes up in 1998 inside the body of Kwon Min Ju, a girl living decades before her birth. The shock gives way to a mystery where the past holds clues to the pain that shaped her present. Each step through that borrowed life risks altering what she will one day return to.

The series is drenched in nostalgia yet never sweet without consequence. Cassette tapes, school hallways, and first love feel vivid, but every memory hides danger. Jun Hee must navigate a web of secrets that could heal her loss or deepen it. The romance that blooms is layered with longing for what was and fear of what might disappear.

Viewers who appreciate the reflective mood of Bon Appétit, Your Majesty will feel at home here. The drama treats memory as both shelter and battlefield. It asks if rewriting one heartbreak is worth unraveling an entire life and whether love can survive when time itself is unstable.

Marry My Husband

Kang Ji Won spends her first life erased by duty and betrayal until murder ends it violently. In her final moments, she wishes for another chance and wakes a decade earlier, armed with the knowledge of every cruelty to come. This return is not a gift. It is an opportunity she must shape into safety and survival.

Her transformation is deliberate. Ji Won studies the world that once destroyed her and bends it to protect herself. Revenge fuels her early steps but evolves into something more complex. She seeks dignity and connection as much as payback. Each careful move builds a life that cannot be stolen again.

The story resonates with Bon Appétit, Your Majesty because both center on women reclaiming control in spaces built to silence them. Domesticity turns strategic. Knowing the future becomes a shield, but love and self-respect create the real escape.

Mr. Queen

Jang Bong Hwan, a celebrated modern chef, wakes up in the body of Queen Cheorin during the Joseon dynasty. Chaos follows as a contemporary mind is trapped within strict court politics. At first, the series revels in humor and absurdity. A man accustomed to freedom must bow, curtsy, and maneuver through lethal intrigue while searching for a way back.

Beneath the surface lies a sharp analysis of power and identity. Bong Hwan adapts through food, turning the kitchen into a space of resistance and authenticity in a palace determined to erase individuality. The queen’s survival depends on transforming creativity into subtle rebellion and finding allies where she can.

For anyone moved by the artistry and subversion of Bon Appétit, Your Majesty, Mr. Queen is a natural follow-up. It honors cooking as both art and self-preservation, and it shows how love can take root even when tradition tries to dictate every choice.

Promotional photo from Bon Appétit, Your Majesty | Image via: tvN | Collage by Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central
Promotional photo from Bon Appétit, Your Majesty | Image via: tvN | Collage by Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central

Savoring time, memory and power beyond Bon Appétit, Your Majesty

Time travel in these dramas is more than an escape from pain. It's a way to confront what went wrong and to imagine lives that could have unfolded differently. Characters face betrayal and regret but find ways to act rather than accept. They step back into history not to watch but to change the terms of their existence.

This storytelling thrives on emotional detail. It lets romance grow in the cracks left by power and fate, and it uses everyday acts like sharing a meal or writing a note to claim space in a hostile timeline. That intimacy is what links these series to Bon Appétit, Your Majesty. The table becomes a battleground where selfhood is fiercely defended.

Each drama also plays with cultural texture. They weave Joseon court rituals (both Bon Appétit, Your Majesty and Mr. Queen), 1990s nostalgia, modern celebrity culture, and family obligations into stories about agency. They remind us viewers that history is not static. It can be argued with, remade, and lived again with new courage.

Most of all, they share a belief that love and self-definition survive even when time refuses to cooperate. Watching them after Bon Appétit, Your Majesty feels like extending the same conversation about power and care. They invite you to walk back into the past and cook a new future with your own hands.

Edited by Beatrix Kondo