A three-bedroom home is the standard family choice in Seoul — room for two or more children, a study and guests. The listings here cover 3-bedroom and larger apartments, villas and houses, with the proximity to international schools that relocating families need, all via verified English-speaking realtors.






Three bedrooms is the typical relocating-family layout: bedrooms for the children, a study or guest room, and often two bathrooms. You'll find it mainly in apartments (아파트) inside managed complexes — with parking, security, playgrounds and management — and in larger villas and detached houses for those who want more space.
This is the deciding factor for most foreign families. The main English-curriculum schools cluster around a few areas, so families concentrate in Yongsan (Itaewon/Hannam, near YISS), Gangnam and Seocho to keep the commute short. See the international schools in Seoul guide for the full map of schools and neighborhoods.
Three-bedroom homes typically run from around 85㎡ (26 pyeong) upward, with two bathrooms common. You can rent monthly (월세) or on a large refundable jeonse deposit (전세), or buy outright (매매) — foreigners face no residency requirement. For the numbers, see the cost of buying property in Seoul and the Seoul home prices guide.
Browse all apartments and houses in Seoul, or, if a smaller home fits, 2-bedroom apartments.
Every listing above is handled by a verified, English-speaking realtor who can explain school commutes, the 관리비, deposit structure and all-in cost before you decide.
It depends heavily on district, building age and lease type. Three-bedroom homes can be rented monthly (월세), taken on a large refundable jeonse deposit (전세), or bought outright (매매). See the Seoul home prices guide for current ranges and ask your realtor for the all-in cost.
Foreign families usually choose Yongsan (Itaewon/Hannam), Gangnam and Seocho to stay close to international schools and keep commutes short. The international schools in Seoul guide maps the schools to neighborhoods.
Typically around 85㎡ (26 pyeong) and upward, usually with two bathrooms. Apartments in managed complexes add parking, security and playgrounds; villas and houses offer more space.
Yes. There is no residency requirement for foreigners to buy property in Korea. You can also rent on monthly (월세) or jeonse (전세) terms. A verified English-speaking realtor handles the paperwork.