Buying property in Korea as a foreigner involves navigating the Foreigner's Land Acquisition Act, the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act, local government permit systems, and a tax code that changes frequently. This step-by-step guide walks through the complete process as it stands in 2026.
First, determine which category your target property falls into. Officetels and commercial property: no government permit required, process is straightforward. Residential apartments and houses in Seoul/Gyeonggi/Incheon: Foreign Land Transaction Permit required before signing any contract, plus 2-year residency commitment. Property outside designated zones (Busan, Daegu, most regional cities): 60-day post-purchase report only. Choose your category before doing anything else.
Three professionals are non-negotiable: a licensed realtor (곡μΈμ€κ°μ¬) experienced with foreign clients, a judicial scrivener (λ²λ¬΄μ¬) for title search and registration, and a tax accountant (μΈλ¬΄μ¬) familiar with foreign buyer tax obligations. For English-speaking professionals, search "foreign buyer real estate Seoul" or contact your country's embassy trade desk for referrals.
Required for the transaction. Visit a Woori, Shinhan, or KEB Hana global banking center with your passport. English service available. Process takes 1β2 days. You'll need this account to receive fund transfers and pay acquisition tax.
Submit to the district (ꡬμ²) office where the property is located. Required documents: passport copy, proof of funding source, visa status documentation, property information, written residency commitment. Processing time: 2β4 weeks. Never sign a purchase contract before permit approval β doing so makes the transaction legally invalid.
Remit purchase funds to your Korean bank account, designated as "Real Estate Acquisition." Transfers over $50,000 USD must be reported under the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act β your bank handles this automatically. For large transfers, use a foreign exchange broker (not your regular bank) to get competitive rates β savings of 1β2% on $200,000+ are significant.
Your judicial scrivener searches the property's registration certificate (λ±κΈ°λΆλ±λ³Έ) confirming clean title, no outstanding mortgages, liens, or legal disputes. Once clear, sign the purchase contract and pay a deposit (κ³μ½κΈ) of typically 10% of the purchase price. This deposit is forfeit if you withdraw without cause.
Pay the remaining 90% on the agreed closing date. Acquisition tax is due within 60 days of the contract date β your tax accountant files this. Rates: 1.1% for first home under β©600M; 3.5% for homes over β©900M; 4.6% for officetels.
Your judicial scrivener files ownership transfer at the district court registry (typically within 2β3 days of closing). Simultaneously, file the Foreign Real Estate Transaction Report with the local district office within 30 days. Since February 2026, this report must include visa status, funding sources, and cryptocurrency disclosures if applicable.
βοΈ For informational purposes only. Always consult a licensed Korean attorney before making investment decisions.