A real estate tax hike looms post-election episode artwork

EPISODE · May 12, 2026 · 6 MIN

A real estate tax hike looms post-election

from Korea JoongAng Daily - Daily News from Korea

Joo Jung-wan The author is an editorial writer at the JoongAng Ilbo The government announced that it would impose heavy capital gains taxes on owners of multiple homes and gave them a grace period of several months. Not long after that grace period ended, local elections were held. The ruling party won in a landslide. Once the elections were over, the government began raising real estate taxes in earnest. It pressured owners of multiple homes to sell quickly, saying it would impose heavy holding taxes — property taxes and comprehensive real estate taxes — on them. But the government's high-intensity regulations produced massive side effects in the market, and housing prices only continued to rise. This may sound like a preview of the current real estate market and what may lie ahead. In fact, it is a summary of a failed experience that left deep scars on Korean society. More precisely, it is what happened around the June 2018 local elections under the Moon Jae-in administration. Since that was already eight years ago, many people may no longer remember the details clearly. Let us look back at the situation more closely. In August 2017, the Moon administration announced heavier capital gains taxes on owners of multiple homes, with a grace period until the end of March 2018. At a media briefing at the time, then-Land Minister Kim Hyun-mee declared, "The government will not tolerate homes being reduced from places to live into tools of speculation." Once the grace period ended, owners of multiple homes began withholding properties from the market in earnest, and the real estate market grew unstable again. Perhaps the Moon administration wanted to immediately play the card of raising holding taxes. But local elections were scheduled for June that year. The government was not reckless enough to commit the self-inflicted mistake of raising taxes just ahead of an election. Once the elections were over, the time for real estate tax hikes arrived. In July that year, the Ministry of Economy and Finance — the predecessor to today's Ministry of Finance and Economy and the Planning and Budget Office — announced a tax revision bill. It included an increase in the comprehensive real estate tax under the name of "normalizing the real estate tax system." It was exactly what many real estate experts had predicted before the elections. And that was not the end of it. In September, the government announced a second round of comprehensive real estate tax hikes. The market situation had become so serious that the government had to play the tax hike card twice in just two months. As everyone remembers, the Moon administration ultimately failed to stop housing prices from soaring. The current real estate market bears a striking resemblance to the situation eight years ago. The word "déjà vu" does not feel out of place at all. The government, of course, insists that "this time is different." That is not entirely wrong. But it does not mean the current situation is any better. Above all, there is an enormous difference between then and now in housing supply. At least on the supply side, conditions are moving in a far worse direction. Let us compare the housing statistics regularly released by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport. In the first quarter of 2018, the number of housing construction permits in Seoul stood at 13,559 units. Even then, there were concerns because the figure had fallen 37 percent from a year earlier. In the first quarter of this year, the number of permits in Seoul was 5,632 units — just 41 percent of the level eight years ago. Supply across the greater Seoul area, including Gyeonggi and Incheon, has also fallen sharply. In the first quarter of this year, the number of permits in the capital region stood at 27,471 units, less than half of the 60,914 recorded eight years ago. Seoul does face the limitation of having little land available for new housing. In Gyeonggi and Incheon, by contrast, it is relatively ea...

Joo Jung-wan The author is an editorial writer at the JoongAng Ilbo The government announced that it would impose heavy capital gains taxes on owners of multiple homes and gave them a grace period of several months. Not long after that grace period ended, local elections were held. The ruling party won in a landslide. Once the elections were over, the government began raising real estate taxes in earnest. It pressured owners of multiple homes to sell quickly, saying it would impose heavy holding taxes — property taxes and comprehensive real estate taxes — on them. But the government's high-intensity regulations produced massive side effects in the market, and housing prices only continued to rise. This may sound like a preview of the current real estate market and what may lie ahead. In fact, it is a summary of a failed experience that left deep scars on Korean society. More precisely, it is what happened around the June 2018 local elections under the Moon Jae-in administration. Since that was already eight years ago, many people may no longer remember the details clearly. Let us look back at the situation more closely. In August 2017, the Moon administration announced heavier capital gains taxes on owners of multiple homes, with a grace period until the end of March 2018. At a media briefing at the time, then-Land Minister Kim Hyun-mee declared, "The government will not tolerate homes being reduced from places to live into tools of speculation." Once the grace period ended, owners of multiple homes began withholding properties from the market in earnest, and the real estate market grew unstable again. Perhaps the Moon administration wanted to immediately play the card of raising holding taxes. But local elections were scheduled for June that year. The government was not reckless enough to commit the self-inflicted mistake of raising taxes just ahead of an election. Once the elections were over, the time for real estate tax hikes arrived. In July that year, the Ministry of Economy and Finance — the predecessor to today's Ministry of Finance and Economy and the Planning and Budget Office — announced a tax revision bill. It included an increase in the comprehensive real estate tax under the name of "normalizing the real estate tax system." It was exactly what many real estate experts had predicted before the elections. And that was not the end of it. In September, the government announced a second round of comprehensive real estate tax hikes. The market situation had become so serious that the government had to play the tax hike card twice in just two months. As everyone remembers, the Moon administration ultimately failed to stop housing prices from soaring. The current real estate market bears a striking resemblance to the situation eight years ago. The word "déjà vu" does not feel out of place at all. The government, of course, insists that "this time is different." That is not entirely wrong. But it does not mean the current situation is any better. Above all, there is an enormous difference between then and now in housing supply. At least on the supply side, conditions are moving in a far worse direction. Let us compare the housing statistics regularly released by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport. In the first quarter of 2018, the number of housing construction permits in Seoul stood at 13,559 units. Even then, there were concerns because the figure had fallen 37 percent from a year earlier. In the first quarter of this year, the number of permits in Seoul was 5,632 units — just 41 percent of the level eight years ago. Supply across the greater Seoul area, including Gyeonggi and Incheon, has also fallen sharply. In the first quarter of this year, the number of permits in the capital region stood at 27,471 units, less than half of the 60,914 recorded eight years ago. Seoul does face the limitation of having little land available for new housing. In Gyeonggi and Incheon, by contrast, it is relatively ea...

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A real estate tax hike looms post-election

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This episode was published on May 12, 2026.

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Joo Jung-wan The author is an editorial writer at the JoongAng Ilbo The government announced that it would impose heavy capital gains taxes on owners of multiple homes and gave them a grace period of several months. Not long after that grace period...

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