Pyeong to Square Meters Converter

Convert Korean pyeong to square meters (m²) instantly. Essential for real estate documents and official use.

1 Pyeong (pyeong) = 0 Square Meter (m²)

Conversion Table

Pyeong (pyeong)Square Meter (m²)
1 0
5 0
10 0
25 0
50 0
100 0
500 0
1000 0

What Is Pyeong to Square Meters Conversion?

Converting pyeong to square meters translates the traditional Korean area unit to the international metric standard. One pyeong equals approximately 3.3058 square meters. This conversion is necessary for official property documents, building permits, and any legal transaction in South Korea, which requires metric measurements. While Koreans use pyeong colloquially, all official documents such as registration deeds, contracts, and government filings must use square meters.

Conversion Formula

Square Meters = Pyeong × 3.3058

When Do You Need This Conversion?

You need pyeong to square meters conversion when filing official property documents in South Korea, when applying for building permits, when comparing Korean property sizes with international standards, or when communicating apartment sizes to non-Korean speakers who use the metric system.

Frequently Asked Questions

One pyeong equals approximately 3.3058 square meters. Common Korean apartment sizes: 10 pyeong = 33.1 m² (studio/officetel), 18 pyeong = 59.5 m², 25 pyeong = 82.6 m², 34 pyeong = 112.4 m², 50 pyeong = 165.3 m², 60 pyeong = 198.3 m².

In Korean real estate, exclusive area (전용면적) is the actual usable floor area inside your apartment, while supply area (공급면적) includes shared spaces like hallways and stairs. For example, a '25-pyeong apartment' often refers to the supply area, while the exclusive area might be about 59 m² (approximately 18 pyeong). Always check which area type is being referenced.

Since 2007, South Korean law requires property listings and official documents to use square meters as the primary unit. However, pyeong may be displayed alongside square meters as a supplementary reference. Most Korean real estate platforms show both units. Fines can be imposed for using pyeong as the sole unit in official advertisements, though enforcement varies.