Changeflow GovPing Banking & Finance FSC Korea: Household Loans Increased KRW2.9 Tri...
Routine Notice Amended Final

FSC Korea: Household Loans Increased KRW2.9 Trillion in February 2026

Favicon for www.fsc.go.kr FSC Korea News
Published March 11th, 2026
Detected March 18th, 2026
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Summary

The Financial Services Commission (FSC) Korea reported that outstanding household loans increased by KRW2.9 trillion in February 2026, driven by mortgage loans. The FSC noted the need for continued monitoring of household loans and the real estate market.

What changed

The Financial Services Commission (FSC) Korea has released preliminary data indicating that outstanding household loans across all financial sectors rose by KRW2.9 trillion in February 2026. This increase was primarily fueled by a KRW4.2 trillion rise in home-backed mortgage loans, with both banking and non-banking sectors contributing. Other loan types, such as credit loans, saw a decline.

The FSC highlighted that the upcoming end of the capital gains tax exemption for multiple-home owners on May 9th may lead to increased housing supply in March. Consequently, the FSC emphasizes the necessity of rigorous monitoring of household loan trends and the real estate market. The government plans to take preemptive steps to prevent concerns over household loan volatility from impacting real estate market stability.

What to do next

  1. Monitor household loan trends
  2. Monitor real estate market conditions

Source document (simplified)

Press Releases

Household Loans, February 2026 Mar 11, 2026
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In February 2026, the outstanding balance of household loans across all financial sectors increased KRW2.9 trillion (preliminary), growing at a faster pace compared with the previous month (up KRW1.4 trillion).

(By Type) Home-backed mortgage loans rose KRW4.2 trillion, growing at a faster pace compared with the previous month (up KRW3.0 trillion). Mortgage loans turned back up in the banking sector (down KRW0.6 trillion → up KRW0.4 trillion) and expanded at a slightly faster pace in the nonbanking sector (up KRW3.6 trillion → up KRW3.8 trillion).

Other types of loans edged down KRW1.2 trillion, declining at a slower pace compared with the previous month (down KRW1.6 trillion), as credit loans dropped at a slower pace (down KRW1.1 trillion → down KRW1.0 trillion).

(By Sector) In February 2026, household loans in the banking sector saw a drop of KRW0.3 trillion, declining at a slower pace compared with the previous month (down KRW1.0 trillion). Banks’ own mortgage loan products fell at a slower pace (down KRW1.7 trillion → down KRW1.1 trillion), while policy-based mortgage loans rose at a faster pace (up KRW1.1 trillion → up KRW1.5 trillion). Other types of loans including credit loans declined at a faster pace (down KRW0.4 trillion → down KRW0.7 trillion).

In the nonbanking sector, household loans rose KRW3.3 trillion, growing at an expanded level from a month ago (up KRW2.5 trillion). Mutual finance businesses (up KRW2.3 trillion → up KRW3.1 trillion) saw household loans edging up more rapidly, while insurance companies (down KRW0.2 trillion → up KRW0.2 trillion) and specialized credit finance businesses (down KRW0.01 trillion → up KRW0.1 trillion) saw household loans growing back up from declines seen a month ago. Savings banks (up KRW0.3 trillion → down KRW0.1 trillion) saw household loans edging back down from an increase seen in the previous month.


(Assessment) In February 2026, the outstanding balance of household loans edged up KRW2.9 trillion led by an expanded level of growth seen in policy-based mortgage loans in the banking sector (up KRW1.1 trillion → up KRW1.5 trillion) and a growth in the nonbanking sector (up KRW2.5 trillion → up KRW3.3 trillion), due to the effects of the spring moving season and the continued growth of group lending in the nonbanking sector.

With the scheduled end (May 9) to the provision of capital gains tax exemption for multiple-home owners, there may be an increased supply of house listings in the real estate market in March. Thus, it is necessary to continue to maintain rigorous monitoring over trends of household loans and housing market situations across different regions.

The government will continue to work to take preemptive and immediate steps to make sure that concerns over increased volatility in household loans do not translate into instability in the real estate market.

  • Please refer to the attached PDF for details.

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
FSC
Published
March 11th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks Insurers
Geographic scope
National (South Korea)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Real Estate Mortgage Lending

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