South Korea Commercial Eviction Process: 3-Month Arrears, Key Money Obligations, and Court Procedures
Guide to commercial tenant eviction in South Korea including the 3-month arrears threshold, renewal refusal grounds, key money recovery duties, and eviction lawsuit procedures.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Evicting a commercial tenant in South Korea follows similar procedural requirements to residential eviction but with a higher arrears threshold and additional obligations around key money (gwolligeum) protection.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in South Korea for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Legal Grounds for Termination
| Ground | Statute | vs. Residential |
|---|---|---|
| 3 or more months of cumulative rent arrears | Art. 10-8 | Residential is 2 months |
| Unauthorized subletting | Civil Act Art. 629 | Same |
| Serious property damage by negligence | Civil Act Art. 654, 610 | Same |
| Use for unauthorized purposes | Civil Act Art. 654, 610 | Same |
| Breach of contractual obligations | Lease-specific terms | Same |
Key difference: Commercial leases require 3 months of cumulative rent arrears for termination, compared to 2 months for residential leases.
Renewal Refusal Grounds
When a tenant exercises the Contract Renewal Request Right, the landlord may refuse only for:
- 3 or more months of rent arrears
- Obtaining the lease by fraud or improper means
- Unauthorized subletting
- Serious property damage through willful or gross negligence
- Planned demolition or reconstruction (with compensation or equivalent offer)
- Material breach of tenant obligations after reasonable cure period
- Other statutory grounds
Key Money and Eviction
Landlord's Obligation
From 6 months before lease termination through the termination date, the landlord must not interfere with the tenant's ability to recover key money from an incoming tenant.
Prohibited Interference
- Refusing to contract with a prospective tenant introduced by the outgoing tenant without just cause
- Demanding significantly higher rent or deposit from the prospective tenant
- Demanding significantly higher key money from the prospective tenant
- Other acts that obstruct key money recovery
Key Money Protection After 10 Years
Per Supreme Court precedent, key money recovery protection continues even after the 10-year renewal period has expired. This is a significant consideration for landlords.
Damages for Interference
Landlords who interfere with key money recovery face damages liability, calculated based on the lower of the agreed key money or the market-rate key money at lease termination.
Eviction Procedure
Step 1: Certified Notice
Send formal termination and vacate notice via certified mail.
Step 2: Preliminary Injunction
File for an order preventing possession transfer during litigation.
Step 3: Eviction Lawsuit
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Duration | Approximately 6–12 months |
| Court | District court where the property is located |
| Key evidence | Rent arrears records, certified notice, lease contract |
Step 4: Forced Execution
After final judgment, apply for court-supervised forced vacating.
Deposit and Eviction Relationship
- Deposit return and premises surrender are simultaneous obligations
- An eviction without offering deposit return may be dismissed
- Overdue rent may be deducted from the deposit
Best Practices for Landlords
- Track the 3-month arrears threshold carefully — cumulative, not necessarily consecutive
- Understand key money obligations — interference exposes you to significant damages
- Verify renewal refusal grounds before sending notice
- Define restoration scope upfront — especially for tenant-installed interiors
- Engage specialized legal counsel — commercial disputes tend to involve large sums
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks commercial rent collection, sends arrears alerts, and manages contract expiration and renewal timelines for smooth compliance.
Sources & Official References
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