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    Neighborhoods & Supply
    4 min readUpdated 2026-04-14

    공급이냐 입지냐: 왜 집을 더 짓는다고 모든 문제가 해결되지 않을까

    Supply vs. Location in Korean Housing: Why More Homes Do Not Solve Every Problem

    Why more housing supply does not solve every Korean housing problem. A deeper look at location quality, commute, school demand, and urban mismatch.

    Note

    This guide is for information and explanation, not legal, tax, lending, or investment advice. It is written for English-speaking readers, but decisions still need current official-source and qualified-professional confirmation.

    Housing debates in Korea often become too binary.

    One side says prices are high because there is not enough supply. The other says supply is not the issue because there are already enough homes nationally.

    Both arguments miss the real problem: housing mismatch.

    Not all supply is equal

    A new home in a weak-demand location is not a substitute for a well-connected apartment in a district with strong schools, fast transit, and job access. National housing totals can look comfortable while buyers still feel intense scarcity in the small number of places they actually want to live.

    That is why "build more" is necessary but insufficient.

    Korean demand is location-heavy for structural reasons

    Location matters more in Korea because daily life is highly compressed:

    • long commutes are costly
    • school quality is intensely valued
    • child logistics matter
    • elder-care access matters
    • apartments in good zones are easier to finance and sell

    This means that even large supply programs can disappoint if they miss the geography of actual demand.

    Why policy often struggles

    Policymakers understandably focus on units delivered. But households care about effective access to opportunity. If new supply is too far from job concentration or carries weak social and transport appeal, demand may not translate into pricing relief where the pressure is greatest.

    This is why the Korean housing problem is partly a city-structure problem, not just a construction problem.

    Final view

    Korea needs supply. But it needs the right supply in the right places with the right product type.

    That sounds obvious, but it is the difference between reducing housing stress and merely increasing unit counts.

    Sources

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