South Korea Landlord-Tenant Laws: Complete Guide for Property Owners
Comprehensive overview of South Korean rental property laws including jeonse deposits, eviction procedures, rent increase caps, and the 2026 reporting mandate.
Teisinis atsisakymas
Šis turinys skirtas tik bendram informaciniam ir švietimo tikslui. Jis nėra teisinis patarimas ir neturėtų būti juo laikomas. Įstatymai dažnai keičiasi – visada patikrinkite dabartinius reglamentus ir pasikonsultuokite su licencijuotu teisininku jūsų jurisdikcijoje, kad gautumėte patarimų, atitinkančių jūsų situaciją. Landager yra nekilnojamojo turto valdymo platforma, o ne advokatų kontora.Informacija paskutinį kartą patvirtinta: April 2026.
South Korea's rental market features the unique Jeonse (lump-sum deposit) and Wolse (monthly rent) systems. The Housing Lease Protection Act (HLPA) provides powerful statutory protections, including the "2+2" renewal right.
1. The Jeonse and Wolse Systems
- Jeonse (Lump-sum): The tenant pays a large deposit (50-80% of property value) and no monthly rent. The landlord returns the full principal at the end of the term.
- Wolse (Monthly): A smaller deposit plus monthly rent payments.
- Ban-Jeonse (Hybrid): A moderate deposit combined with reduced monthly rent.
2. Statutory Renewal Rights (2+2)
Tenants have a one-time right to request a 2-year extension after their initial 2-year lease (totaling 4 years). Landlords can only refuse if they or their immediate family intend to move into the property, or for serious tenant breaches.
3. Rent Increase Caps (5%)
For contract renewals (including the 2+2 extension), rent or deposit increases are capped at 5%. Landlords cannot implement another increase within one year of a prior adjustment. This cap does not apply to new contracts with different tenants.
4. Eviction and Arrears
Landlords can terminate a lease if rent is two months or more in arrears. Termination also applies for unauthorized subletting or serious property damage. Self-help evictions (changing locks) are strictly illegal.
5. Maintenance and Repair
- Landlord: Responsible for structural integrity, boiler systems, plumbing, and major electrical.
- Tenant: Responsible for consumables (filters, bulbs) and minor damages caused by negligence.
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