SEOUL, December 09 (AJP) - The number of single-person households in South Korea surpassed 8 million for the first time last year, with people aged 70 and older accounting for the largest share, according to government data released on Tuesday.
A report by the National Data Agency showed the country recorded 8.045 million one-person households, representing 36.1 percent of all households. The proportion has risen steadily since 2019.
People aged 70 and above accounted for 19.8 percent of single-person households, overtaking those under 29, who made up 19.2 percent. The gap widened to 2 percentage points from 0.5 percentage points the previous year.
Among elderly households living alone, women accounted for a significantly larger share. About 1.165 million women aged 70 and older lived alone, compared with 425,000 men. The agency said higher life expectancy among women was a key factor behind the gap.
Regionally, nearly 40 percent of single-person households were concentrated in the Seoul metropolitan area. Gyeonggi Province recorded the largest number at 1.775 million, followed by Seoul with 1.661 million.
Busan and South Gyeongsang Province reported 548,000 and 502,000 households, respectively. Seoul recorded the highest proportion of single-person households at 39.9 percent.
Average annual income for single-person households stood at 34.23 million won, up 6.2 percent from a year earlier, while average monthly spending was 1.689 million won, or 58.4 percent of spending by multi-person households. Their average assets were valued at 223.02 million won, equivalent to 39.3 percent of the national household average.
* This article, published by Aju Business Daily, was translated by AI and edited by AJP.
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