Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

South Korea Commercial Landlord Disclosures: Property Information, Key Money, and Agent Obligations

Also available in:

Guide to commercial lease disclosure requirements in South Korea including property registry review, converted deposit information, key money, and the agent'...

Melvin Prince
4 min read
Verified May 2026South Korea flag
Commercial-disclosuresProperty-confirmationKey-moneyBuilding-registerConverted-deposit

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.Information last verified: May 2026.

Disclosure Requirements
Per Lease and Local Law

Commercial lease transactions in South Korea, governed primarily by the Commercial Building Lease Protection Act (effective 29 December 2001), require landlords and real estate agents to disclose specific information to prospective tenants. In addition to the standard property disclosures, commercial leases involve unique considerations around converted deposits, permitted uses, and key money.

Landlord Disclosure Obligations (Upon Request)

Under the Commercial Building Lease Protection Act and tax collection statutes, commercial landlords do not have a broad, proactive "material fact" disclosure duty in the same manner as licensed agents. However, they are legally required to provide or consent to the following specific information:

ItemDescription
Prior lease informationFixed date (Hwak-jeong-il-ja), deposit amounts, and rent of existing tenants in the building (CBLPA Article 4)
Tax arrears statusNational and local tax delinquency status of the landlord (National Tax Collection Act Article 109)

Note: Prospective tenants may request to view tax arrears with the landlord's consent. However, if the deposit exceeds 10 million KRW, the tenant has the right to view these arrears without the landlord's consent from the date the contract is signed until the lease commencement date.

Commercial-Specific Considerations

While not strictly statutory proactive disclosures for the landlord, these items are critical for commercial leases and are typically negotiated or disclosed during contracting:

ItemDescription
Reconstruction plansDetailed plan (timing/duration) disclosed at contracting to preserve renewal refusal rights (CBLPA Art 10(1)7)
Permitted usesBusiness types allowed under building management rules
Converted deposit statusWhether the lease exceeds the regional threshold and its implications
Management feesItemized breakdown (common electricity, cleaning, elevator, etc.)
ParkingAvailability, spaces, additional costs

Property Confirmation and Explanation Document (Agent's Duty)

When a licensed real estate agent brokers the transaction, the agent—not the landlord—has the statutory obligation under Article 25 of the Licensed Real Estate Agents Act to prepare and deliver a detailed "Property Confirmation and Explanation Document" (중개대상물 확인·설명서) covering:

CategoryContents
Basic property statusAddress, area, structure, floor, year built

| Rights | Ownership, mortgages, seizures, liens | | Use restrictions | Zoning, urban planning limitations | | Facilities | Electricity, water, gas, HVAC, fire safety | | Transaction terms | Expected deposit and rent |

Commercial-Specific Agent Obligations

  • Business type restrictions — notify if building rules or zoning prohibit certain businesses
  • Business licensing feasibility — whether the location supports required permits
  • Illegal construction status — unauthorized additions or use changes
  • Nearby development plans — redevelopment or reconstruction projects

Key Money Disclosures

ItemDescription
Remaining renewal periodHow many years remain of the 10-year renewal right

A separate key money agreement specifying the type (facility, business, location) and amount is recommended. Note that key money is typically a private agreement between outgoing and incoming tenants; landlords have no statutory duty to disclose interference history or prior key money amounts.

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Verify building register status — business registration may be denied for illegal constructions
  2. Explain converted deposit implications — affects the scope of tenant protections
  3. Disclose permitted use restrictions — prevents post-contract disputes
  4. Itemize management fees transparently — distinguish common charges from individual charges
  5. Address reconstruction and key money clearly — document 10-year renewal period, reconstruction plans, and key money recovery rights

Back to South Korea Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

Enjoyed this guide? Share it:

📬 Get notified when these laws change

We'll email you when landlord-tenant laws update in No spam — only law changes.

We are actively mapping laws for South Korea. Join the waitlist, and you'll be the first to know when it drops!

Discussion