A two-bedroom home in Seoul is the sweet spot for couples, sharers and small families — enough room for a guest or a home office without the cost of a full family apartment. The listings here cover 2-bedroom and larger homes to rent or buy, all handled by verified, English-speaking realtors.


































Two bedrooms work well for a couple who wants a study or guest room, two flatmates sharing, or a small family with one child. In Seoul you'll find this layout across apartments (아파트), larger officetels, and villas (빌라) — each with a different trade-off on price, space and location.
Most 2-bedroom homes in Seoul run roughly 45–85㎡ (about 14–26 pyeong), often with one or two bathrooms. Newer apartment complexes add parking, security and management; villas and officetels can be more central and better value per month. Listings here are 2-bedroom or larger, so you'll also see 3-bedroom homes if a little more space fits your budget.
You can rent on monthly terms (월세 — deposit plus monthly rent) or via jeonse (전세 — a large, fully-refundable lump-sum deposit), or buy outright (매매) with no residency requirement for foreigners. For the numbers, see the cost of renting in Seoul and the Seoul home prices guide.
Foreign residents often choose Gangnam and Seocho for schools and business access, Yongsan (Itaewon/Hannam) for international community, and Mapo for value and nightlife. Browse all apartments in Seoul, or step up to 3-bedroom family homes.
Every listing above is handled by a verified, English-speaking realtor who can explain the 관리비, deposit structure and all-in monthly cost before you decide.
It varies widely by district, age and lease type. Two-bedroom homes can be rented monthly (월세 — a deposit plus monthly rent), on a large refundable jeonse deposit, or bought outright. See the Seoul home prices guide for current ranges, and ask your realtor for the all-in monthly cost including 관리비.
Most run roughly 45–85㎡ (about 14–26 pyeong) with one or two bathrooms. Newer apartment complexes include parking and management; villas and officetels can be more central and cheaper per month.
Yes. Foreigners can rent on monthly (월세) or jeonse (전세) terms, or buy outright (매매) — there is no residency requirement to purchase property in Korea. Verified English-speaking realtors handle the paperwork.
Apartments (아파트) sit in managed complexes with parking and security; villas (빌라) are smaller low-rise buildings, often more central and better value; officetels are compact mixed-use units near subway stations. All can offer a two-bedroom layout.