If you've just started looking for a place to rent in Seoul, you've probably come across two words you can't find in any English-language real estate glossary: jeonse (전세) and wolse (월세). Korea's rental system is genuinely unlike anything in the US, Europe, or most of Asia — and understanding the difference before you walk into a broker's office will save you a lot of confusion, and potentially a lot of money.
This guide covers everything a foreign renter needs to know: how each system works, the real risks, what to check before signing, and how to decide which one is right for your situation.
What is Jeonse?
Jeonse is a deposit-only lease. You pay a large lump sum — typically 50–80% of the property's market value — directly to the landlord at the start of the lease. In exchange, you pay zero monthly rent for the duration of the contract, usually two years. When the lease ends, the landlord returns the full deposit.
The logic behind it: the landlord uses your deposit as interest-free capital (historically to invest or run a business), and you get to live rent-free. It's a system that made a lot of sense during Korea's high-interest-rate decades. It's still widely used today, though the math has shifted.
Example:
- Deposit: ₩300,000,000 (approx. $220,000 USD)
- Monthly rent: ₩0
- Lease term: 2 years (automatically renewable)
- At lease end: full deposit returned
Who it's good for: Long-term expats with significant capital who want to eliminate monthly rent costs. If you're staying 2+ years and can park a large sum, jeonse can work out cheaper than paying monthly rent over the same period.
The catch: The deposit amounts are enormous by international standards, and jeonse fraud has become a serious problem in recent years. More on that below.
What is Wolse?
Wolse is the closer equivalent to what most foreigners think of as "renting." You pay a smaller upfront deposit — anywhere from ₩5,000,000 to ₩50,000,000 depending on the property — plus a fixed monthly payment. At the end of the lease, you get your deposit back.
The key difference from Western rentals is that deposit. It isn't first/last month's rent — it's a separate security deposit that can be substantial even in the wolse model.
Example:
- Deposit: ₩10,000,000 (approx. $7,300 USD)
- Monthly rent: ₩900,000 (approx. $660 USD)
- Lease term: 1–2 years
- At lease end: deposit returned
Who it's good for: Most foreigners, especially those new to Seoul, staying less than two years, or who don't have a large lump sum available. Lower upfront exposure, more predictable monthly costs, and less risk if something goes wrong with the landlord.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Jeonse | Wolse | |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | Very high (50–80% of property value) | Low to moderate (₩5M–₩50M) |
| Monthly payment | None | Fixed monthly rent |
| Deposit returned? | Yes, in full at lease end | Yes, in full at lease end |
| Typical lease term | 2 years | 1–2 years |
| Fraud risk | High (jeonse scams are common) | Low |
| Best for foreigners? | Long-term, capital-heavy | Most foreigners — start here |
The Jeonse Fraud Problem — Read This Before You Sign
Jeonse fraud (전세 사기) surged dramatically in 2022–2024 and became one of Korea's most-covered domestic news stories. Thousands of tenants — Korean and foreign alike — lost their deposits when landlords couldn't return them, often because the property was over-mortgaged or the landlord had collected deposits from multiple tenants on the same unit.
As a foreigner, you're at higher risk because:
- You may not be able to read the legal documents in Korean
- You're less likely to know the "tells" of a suspicious listing
- You may not know which government checks to run before signing
This doesn't mean avoid jeonse entirely — but it does mean doing every check below without exception.
Four Things to Do Before Signing Any Rental Contract
1. Pull the Deungi (등기부등본)
The deungi is Korea's property registry document. It shows the legal owner, any outstanding mortgages, and any liens against the property. You can pull it yourself at iros.go.kr for a small fee (around ₩1,000). Your broker should show it to you before you sign — if they resist, walk away.
For jeonse specifically: if the property has a large mortgage already registered, your deposit is subordinate to that debt. If the landlord defaults, the bank gets paid first. Calculate: (existing mortgage) + (your deposit) should not exceed 70–80% of the property's market value.
2. Get a Confirmed Date (확정일자, Hwakjeong Ilcha)
After signing, take your contract to the local 주민센터 (community center) and get a confirmed date stamp. This single step gives you legal priority as a creditor if the landlord goes bankrupt or sells the property. It costs almost nothing and takes 10 minutes. Don't skip it.
3. Register Your Move-In (전입신고, Jeonip Shingo)
Within 14 days of moving in, register your address at the 주민센터. Foreigners with an Alien Registration Card (외국인등록증) can do this. Without jeonip shingo, you are not protected under Korea's Housing Lease Protection Act — meaning you lose your legal right to the deposit if things go wrong.
4. Use a Licensed Broker (공인중개사)
Always transact through a licensed 공인중개사. Their license number should be posted on the office wall and verifiable on the Korea Real Estate Agency website. Private deals (직거래) dramatically increase your fraud exposure. Every property on Seoul Homes is listed by a verified, licensed realtor.
How to Negotiate Between Jeonse and Wolse
One thing most foreigners don't know: jeonse and wolse deposits are often interchangeable through a conversion formula. If a unit is listed as jeonse at ₩300M, you can often negotiate a wolse equivalent — a smaller deposit with monthly payments — using the landlord's expected return rate (typically 3–5% annually).
Example conversion:
- Jeonse deposit: ₩300,000,000
- Conversion rate: 4% annually
- Monthly equivalent: ₩300M × 4% ÷ 12 = ₩1,000,000/month
- So you could offer: ₩50M deposit + ₩833,000/month (converting ₩250M at 4%)
Your broker can run this calculation and negotiate on your behalf — it's a standard part of the process in Korea.
The Bottom Line
For most foreigners arriving in Seoul, wolse is the right starting point. Lower upfront exposure, simpler contracts, and significantly less fraud risk. Once you've lived in Seoul for a year, have a trusted broker, and understand the local market, jeonse becomes worth considering — especially if you're planning a longer stay and have the capital available.
Whatever you choose, do the four checks above without exception. The paperwork takes a few hours. The deposit you're protecting can be years of savings.
Browse verified Seoul Homes listings by neighborhood, property type, and lease structure — and connect with a licensed broker who's worked with foreign residents before.