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Korea Furniture Rental vs Buying: Cost and Convenience Explained
Furniture rental in Korea explained. Compare costs, contracts, and options for students, workers, and long-stay expats.


Table of contents
Furniture in Korea: Rent, Buy, or Other Options?
1. How Furniture Rental Works in Korea
- Contract length: From 1 month (rare, premium cost) up to 60–84 months (cheaper monthly fee).
- Pricing: A basic bed can cost ₩30,000–₩40,000/month; a full package (bed, sofa, fridge, washer) may run ₩250,000–₩350,000/month.
- Deposit: Usually 1 month’s rent for contracts over 6 months; sometimes waived for students or foreigners with credit cards.
- Maintenance: Repairs and replacements included. Many companies offer quarterly check-ups.
- Delivery: 7–14 days on average; fast-delivery options exist in Seoul.
- Support for foreigners: Some services (e.g., Ziptoss, The Arrival) provide English consultation and catalogs with staged room photos.
“I only stayed for 5 months in Seoul. Renting furniture saved me from buying a bed and then struggling to sell it on 당근마켓. Everything was picked up the day I moved out.” — Foreign student in Mapo
2. Buying Furniture: When Does It Make Sense?
- Cheaper for long stays (3+ years).
- Greater variety—Korean brands (Hanssem, Enex) or IKEA Korea.
- Possibility to resell or transfer to the next tenant.
- Up-front cost can be high.
- Disposal is complicated; large items require city hall “bulky waste” stickers.
- Warranty is limited (1–2 years), after which repair is on you.
3. Other Ways to Furnish Your Home
Option | How it works | Best for | Downsides |
Secondhand apps (당근마켓, 번개장터, Craigslist Seoul) | Buy from locals, often very cheap. | Budget stays, quick finds. | Must arrange pickup; Korean language helps. |
Free donation groups (Facebook “Seoul Freecycle,” expat forums) | Expats leaving Korea often give away furniture. | Ultra short stays, students. | Limited selection, fast claim needed. |
Discount retailers (IKEA, Gmarket, Naver Shopping) | Buy low-cost new items, sometimes same-day delivery. | 1+ year residents. | Assembly required; quality varies. |
Serviced/fully furnished apartments | Monthly rent includes furniture, appliances, linens. | 2–12 month contracts, hassle-free. | Higher monthly rent. |
4. Cost Comparison by Duration
Stay Length | Best Option | Why |
2–3 months | Short-term rental package OR furnished apartment | No need to buy or resell; pickup arranged at end. |
6 months | Rental (negotiated 6-month contract) OR used furniture | Costs balanced; easier disposal later. |
1+ year | Mix of purchase + rental (buy cheaper items, rent expensive appliances) | Saves money, while avoiding repair burden on key appliances. |
3+ years | Purchase | Up-front cost pays off; resale possible. |
5. Practical Tips for Foreign Tenants
- Check contract terms carefully: Some rental companies impose heavy cancellation fees for ending early.
- Ask about delivery speed: Especially important if you arrive mid-semester or for a short work contract.
- Budget for disposal: When buying, factor in bulky waste sticker fees (~₩5,000–₩20,000/item).
- Look at credit card discounts: Rental contracts often give ₩10,000–₩20,000/month off if tied to a partner card.
- Consider hybrid strategy: Rent expensive appliances (washer, fridge), buy inexpensive or portable items (chairs, lamps).
6. Voices from Residents
- “The rental company arranged everything before I landed. Bed, desk, even bed linens. It was like checking into a hotel but cheaper.” — Exchange student, Seoul
- “I bought a couch on 당근마켓 for ₩50,000 and sold it back when I left. Great deal, but moving it without a car was tricky.” — English teacher, Incheon
- “Serviced apartments are expensive, but for 6 months they saved me the headache of dealing with contracts and disposal.” — IT worker, Gangnam
Conclusion
- Staying under 6 months? → Rental or furnished housing is simplest.
- Around 1 year? → Consider used + small purchases.
- Several years? → Buying outright is cheaper.
- Affordable listings across Korea
- Low, transparent service fees
- Seamless communication with landlords (pre- and post-move-in)
- Responsive, human support when you need it
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