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S. Korea's household credit hits fresh high in Q3 on rising mortgages

By IANS | Updated: November 18, 2025 09:10 IST

Seoul, Nov 18 South Korea's household credit reached a record high in the third quarter, though its growth ...

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Seoul, Nov 18 South Korea's household credit reached a record high in the third quarter, though its growth slowed due to tighter lending regulations, central bank data showed on Tuesday.

Outstanding household credit had stood at 1,968.3 trillion won ($1.34 trillion) as of end-September, up 14.9 trillion won from three months earlier, according to the preliminary data from the Bank of Korea (BOK), reports Yonhap news agency.

The reading marks the highest since the BOK began compiling relevant data in 2002.

It also marks the sixth consecutive quarterly increase, though the growth slowed sharply from a 25.1 trillion-won rise in the second quarter.

Household credit refers to credit purchases and loans given to households by financial institutions.

In detail, household loans stood at 1,845 trillion won at the end of September, up 12 trillion won from three months earlier. Of the total, mortgage lending rose 11.6 trillion won to 1,159.6 trillion won, slowing from a 14.4 trillion-won increase in the previous quarter.

Credit purchases climbed 3 trillion won on-quarter to 123.3 trillion won, accelerating from a 1.5 trillion won rise in the second quarter.

"The increase in credit purchases was driven by heightened summer holiday spending and greater demand for paying property taxes," BOK official Kim Min-soo told a press briefing.

"Overall, the slower growth in household credit was largely attributable to government regulations. The additional measures announced in October to ease conditions in the property market are expected to help stabilize the pace of mortgage lending," he added.

The government has implemented a series of measures to cool the overheated housing market and curb household debt. Under the latest policy package announced on Oct. 15, the government designated 21 additional districts in Seoul as speculative zones, bringing all 25 districts in the capital under stricter regulations.

The measures also tightened lending rules, lowering the cap on mortgage loans to as little as 200 million won, down from the 600 million-won limit set in June.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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