South Korea Landlord Maintenance Obligations: Repair Duties, Cost Allocation, and Tenant Remedies

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Complete guide to landlord maintenance obligations under Civil Act Art. 623 including repair scope, landlord vs. tenant responsibilities, special clause limits, and remedies.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

Under Article 623 of the Civil Act, South Korean landlords bear a statutory duty to maintain rental properties in a condition suitable for the tenant's use and enjoyment. This guide clarifies the scope of this obligation, how repair costs are allocated, and what remedies are available when obligations are not met.

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 Basis

Civil Act Article 623

"The lessor shall deliver the object of the lease to the lessee and maintain it in a condition suitable for its use and enjoyment during the period of the lease."

This is considered a near-mandatory provision. Comprehensive waiver clauses in the lease are limited in their enforceability.

Landlord Responsibilities (Major Repairs)

CategoryExamplesNotes
Structural defectsWall cracks, ceiling subsidence, floor collapseBuilding safety-related
Waterproofing / leaksRoof leaks, exterior wall water infiltration, bathroom waterproofingCritical habitability issue
Heating systemBoiler failure or replacementEssential for winter habitation
PlumbingMain pipe burst, aged pipe replacementBuilding infrastructure
Electrical / gasWiring deterioration, gas system defectsSafety-critical systems
Windows / doorsWindow frame damage, condensation-caused rotWhen structural integrity is affected

Tenant Responsibilities (Minor Repairs)

CategoryExamplesNotes
ConsumablesLight bulbs, LEDs, batteriesRoutine replacement
Minor damageWallpaper stains, floor scratchesWhen caused by tenant use
Simple repairsDoor handles, showerhead replacementLow-cost, straightforward fixes
Routine cleaningDrain unclogging, air conditioner filter cleaningRegular maintenance
Tenant-caused damageAll damage from tenant negligenceTenant's restoration obligation

How Courts Determine Responsibility

Korean courts evaluate repair obligations based on:

  1. Scale of damage — large-scale vs. minor
  2. Cost — whether significant expense is required or the issue is fixable at minimal cost
  3. Impact on habitability — whether normal residential use is impossible
  4. Cause — aging/deterioration vs. tenant negligence
  5. Normal wear and tear — natural degradation from ordinary use

Tenant Remedies When Repairs Are Not Made

RemedyDescriptionLegal Basis
Rent reductionReduce rent proportional to the unusable portionCivil Act Art. 627
Rent withholdingWithhold rent until repairs are completedCivil Act Art. 623, precedent
Self-repair and reimbursementTenant makes urgent repairs, then claims costsCivil Act Art. 626 (necessary expense reimbursement)
Lease terminationTerminate if defects make the property uninhabitableCivil Act Art. 625

Special Clause Limitations

Enforceable Clauses

  • "Consumable replacement and minor repairs are the tenant's responsibility" — generally enforceable
  • "Specific appliance repair scope agreement" (e.g., landlord-owned air conditioner) — enforceable when specific

Unenforceable Clauses

  • "All repairs are the tenant's burden" — comprehensive repair waivers covering major structural repairs are consistently rejected by courts
  • "Leaks and aging-related defects are the tenant's responsibility" — structural defect waivers are unenforceable

The Supreme Court has consistently held that the landlord's obligation to repair major structural components and essential building systems cannot be fully waived, even by explicit contract terms.

Restoration Obligations at Move-Out

Tenant's Duty

Upon vacating, the tenant must restore the property to its original condition.

What Must vs. Must Not Be Restored

Must RestoreNeed Not Restore (Normal Wear)
Fixtures installed by tenantFaded wallpaper due to age
Damage from tenant negligenceFloor indentations from furniture
Unauthorized structural changesNatural wallpaper/flooring degradation

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Document property condition at move-in — photograph and video all rooms, noting any pre-existing issues
  2. Respond promptly to repair requests — delays can lead to rent reduction claims and potential liability
  3. Keep repair records — document contractor details, costs, and dates for each repair
  4. Conduct regular inspections — schedule annual checks of key systems (boiler, plumbing, waterproofing)
  5. Set reasonable special clauses — clearly and specifically define the repair scope for each party

How Landager Helps

Landager helps you track maintenance requests for each property, schedule recurring inspections, and maintain organized repair cost records for full compliance oversight.

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