Home Living in South Korea Finding Housing in Korea — Jeonse vs Wolse for Foreigners
Living in South Korea Updated April 2026

Finding Housing in Korea — Jeonse vs Wolse for Foreigners

How Korea's unique rental system works, which option suits foreigners, and how to find and sign a lease without getting scammed.

InfoSouthKorea.com · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Jeonse vs Wolse — The Two Rental Systems

Korea has two rental structures unlike anywhere else. Jeonse requires a single massive deposit — typically 50-80% of the property's market value — in exchange for zero monthly rent. The deposit is returned in full at the end of the lease (usually 2 years). Wolse is closer to Western renting: a smaller deposit (₩5-20 million) plus monthly rent (₩500,000 to ₩2,000,000+ depending on the property).

FeatureJeonseWolse
Deposit₩100M-₩500M+₩5M-₩20M
Monthly rent₩0₩500K-₩2M+
Lease length2 years typical1-2 years typical
Good forLong-term residentsShort & medium stays
Foreigner accessDifficult without ARC + creditStandard for foreigners
Most foreigners choose wolse because jeonse deposits are hard to fund, risky without understanding Korean property law, and require a long residency commitment.

Where Foreigners Live in Korea

In Seoul, popular expat areas include Itaewon, Haebangchon (HBC), Yongsan, Gangnam, Apgujeong, Seongsu, Mapo/Hongdae, and Gwanghwamun. In Busan, most foreigners settle in Haeundae, Gwangan, or Seomyeon. In Daegu, the Suseong-gu and Dalseo-gu districts are foreigner-friendly. University towns around major schools (Sinchon, Anam) are good for students.

  • Itaewon / HBC — international scene, English widely spoken
  • Gangnam / Apgujeong — upscale, expensive, close to international business
  • Mapo / Hongdae — youth culture, nightlife, cheaper than Gangnam
  • Haeundae (Busan) — beach, expat-friendly, international schools
  • Sinchon / Anam — university areas, cheapest studios

How to Find a Place

Three main channels work for foreigners: Korean rental apps (Zigbang, Dabang, Peterpan's — mostly Korean-language), English-speaking real estate agencies (bugintong, expat Facebook groups, relocation specialists), and Craigslist or Expats.kr for informal sublets. Direct landlord contact through a trusted agent is safer than sight-unseen bookings.

Always view the property in person or via live video call before paying any deposit. Scams targeting foreigners — fake listings, deposits for properties that do not exist — are common on English-language platforms.

The Lease Process & Fees

Korean leases are signed at the agent's office with the landlord (or their representative). The tenant, landlord, and agent all sign, and you receive the signed contract plus a copy of the property's registration certificate (deungibu) proving the landlord's ownership. Agency fees are legally capped at roughly 0.3-0.9% of the total lease value and are paid by both tenant and landlord.

  • ARC and passport (or passport alone for short contracts)
  • First month rent + full deposit in cleared funds
  • Agent fee (0.3-0.9% of total value)
  • Contract in Korean — ask for an English summary
  • Request the registration certificate (deungibu)
  • Confirm no liens or mortgages above your deposit
Never hand over a large deposit without first verifying the landlord's name on the deungibu matches the person signing the lease. This is the #1 protection against Korean rental fraud.
Back to Living in South Korea

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner get jeonse?

Technically yes, but practically difficult — banks rarely lend jeonse deposits to foreigners without long-term visas and Korean credit history.

How much deposit do I need for wolse in Seoul?

Typically ₩5-20 million. The higher the deposit, the lower the monthly rent — landlords often let you negotiate the ratio.

Can I sign a lease without an ARC?

Yes, short-term contracts (officetels, serviced apartments, monthly rentals) accept passport-only. Long-term leases often require an ARC.

What's a reasonable agency fee?

Capped by law at 0.3-0.9% of total lease value depending on the deal structure. Ask the agent to show you the fee schedule.