Guide · Foreigner eligibility
Updated 2026-06-23 · ZIBEX
A foreign individual or a foreign-owned company can acquire Korean real estate, including auctioned property.
Ownership rights are broadly the same as for Korean nationals. What differs is reporting: acquisitions by foreigners are reported under the foreigner land-acquisition rules, and any money moved into Korea is handled under the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act. ZIBEX manages these filings as part of the process.
Most property is freely acquirable. Advance reporting or a permit may apply in specific cases:
We check the specific lot against these before you ever place a bid.
No. You do not need residency, a visa, presence in Korea, or Korean-language ability to buy at auction.
Korean court auctions run in person, in Korean, on fixed sale dates, which is the practical barrier, not the law. Under an agreed mandate, an agent prepares the deposit and documents and bids on your behalf, then handles registration and reporting.
Non-residents can sometimes obtain Korean mortgage financing, but terms are more limited and depend on documentation and whether you buy personally or through a Korean entity. A local entity can simplify bidding, banking and tax in some cases, we assess this individually.
From a single consultation, we confirm your eligibility for the exact property and zone, set up any required structure, run rights analysis, bid for you, and complete registration, tax and reporting, entirely in English.
This guide is general information for 2026 and not legal or tax advice; rules change and depend on your nationality, status and the specific property. Confirm your case in a consultation.
FAQ
Yes. Foreign nationals can acquire most Korean real estate, including via court auction. Some zones require prior reporting or a permit, and acquisitions are reported under foreign-acquisition and foreign-exchange rules.
No. Residency is not required to own property, and you do not need to be present to bid, an agent can bid on your behalf.
Most areas are open. Military, cultural-heritage and land-transaction-permit zones may need advance approval, checked case by case.
Sometimes, financing is more limited for non-residents and depends on residency, income proof, and whether you buy personally or via a Korean entity.
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