Dongtan, Yongin Giheung and Guri Face Curbs as Supply and Rates Set Prices
Dongtan, Yongin Giheung and Guri have moved into a tighter regulatory zone, making a short-term slowdown likely. Stricter lending and heavier acquisition, holding and capital gains taxes will weigh on buyers. Over the medium term, home prices will depend on new supply and interest-rate direction.

Dongtan, Yongin Giheung and Guri are set for a cooler housing market. These areas are now bound by strict rules covering overheated speculation zones, adjustment target areas and land transaction permit zones. Buyers must calculate tougher loan conditions, higher tax costs and longer transaction procedures before entering the market.
Triple Regulation Hits Demand
The main effect is a higher cost of buying and holding homes. Lending limits reduce purchasing power, while acquisition tax, holding tax and capital gains tax increase the burden across the ownership cycle. In land transaction permit zones, some deals require approval and stronger real-use justification. That makes short-term investment demand weaker and pushes genuine buyers to wait.
Dongtan has drawn demand from transport links and industrial jobs. Yongin Giheung is supported by semiconductor-related expectations and residential demand. Guri benefits from access to Seoul and redevelopment expectations. These demand bases remain, but stronger rules can delay purchases and pressure asking prices.
Supply and Rates Decide the Next Move
The next direction will depend on supply and mortgage rates. If new apartments are delivered steadily, both lease and sale prices may stabilize. If supply is delayed, prime locations may hold up even under regulation. High borrowing costs will keep buyers cautious, while rate-cut expectations could bring waiting demand back.
For households, the practical issue is affordability. Buyers need to check loan availability, tax exposure, permit requirements and real occupancy plans. For investors, betting only on future deregulation is risky. In these markets, price trends will diverge by transit access, jobs, schools and the timing of new supply.
Key points
- Dongtan, Yongin Giheung and Guri have moved into a tighter regulatory zone, making a short-term slowdown likely. Stricter lending and heavier acquisition, holding and capital gains taxes will weigh on buyers. Over the medium term, home prices will depend on new supply and interest-rate direction.
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FAQ
Will home prices in Dongtan, Yongin Giheung and Guri fall immediately?
A short-term slowdown and pressure on asking prices are likely, but the actual price path will depend on location, supply and interest rates.
What is the biggest impact on buyers?
Buyers face tighter loans, higher taxes and possible permit procedures, so they need more equity and clearer occupancy plans.
What matters most for future prices?
New housing supply and interest rates are the key variables. Ample supply and high rates add downward pressure, while delays and lower-rate expectations can support prime areas.
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