North Korean donju convert apartments into duplexes to shelter wealth from state seizure

Wealthy entrepreneurs in North Korea are buying adjacent apartment units and converting them into private duplexes, a trend driven less by lifestyle aspiration than by fear that accumulated cash could be seized by the state at any moment, Daily NK has learned. The pattern, observed in Hyesan, the ca

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North Korean donju convert apartments into duplexes to shelter wealth from state seizure
Apartment buildings in Hyesan, the capital of Ryanggang province, North Korea, photographed in August 2018.
A view of apartment buildings in Hyesan, the capital of Ryanggang province, North Korea, photographed in August 2018. Photo: Daily NK

Wealthy entrepreneurs in North Korea are buying adjacent apartment units and converting them into private duplexes, a trend driven less by lifestyle aspiration than by fear that accumulated cash could be seized by the state at any moment, Daily NK has learned. The pattern, observed in Hyesan, the capital of Ryanggang province, points to a deepening shift in how North Korea’s moneyed class manages and conceals its assets.

A source in Ryanggang province told Daily NK on Friday that donju (North Korea’s class of private entrepreneurs and moneyed traders) in Hyesan have been simultaneously purchasing upper and lower floors of upscale apartment buildings and connecting them with interior staircases to create two-story private residences. The apartments involved in these conversions are high-end units priced above 300,000 Chinese yuan (approximately $41,300 USD).

Renovation work is typically carried out by small crews of demobilized soldiers, veterans with construction experience who form labor teams of around four workers and compete for contracts on the basis of their reputation for quality and attention to detail.

Fear of confiscation fuels a shift from cash to property

The source said the trend reflects the influence of Chinese residential culture, where duplex-style housing carries connotations of wealth and status. But the deeper driver, the source explained, is a structural anxiety about holding cash in North Korea. The wealthier a person becomes, the more visible a target they present for state surveillance and enforcement. Donju increasingly believe that large cash holdings can be confiscated in a single enforcement action, making all their effort worthless.

The source noted a shift in behavior over time: in the past, donju deliberately projected a modest public image to avoid scrutiny. That caution has given way to more open consumption and investment, reflecting a changing atmosphere in which the display of wealth has become more normalized, at least within certain circles.

High-end apartments are valued not just for their comfort but as a hedge. Even in the event of political trouble, property is seen as harder to strip away than cash, and retains value that can help rebuild a financial foundation as long as the owner avoids the most severe punishments such as forced relocation or banishment.

Duplex conversions currently fetch upward of one million Chinese yuan (approximately $137,700 USD) on the resale market, according to the source.

Surveillance cameras and diversified property holdings

Some donju are going further, acquiring one or two additional properties as a way of spreading and protecting their asset base. The source said North Korea’s wealthy are no longer passive about protecting what they have and are deploying multiple strategies simultaneously.

One increasingly common tactic is the installation of Chinese-made CCTV cameras on the exterior of residences. The source said this serves as an early-warning system against unannounced raids by law enforcement, giving owners enough time to move incriminating valuables out of sight before inspectors enter.

Taken together, the duplex conversions, additional property purchases, and surveillance camera installations reflect a broader adaptation by North Korea’s wealthy to an environment of intensifying state crackdowns and asset insecurity. The pressure of living under constant threat of confiscation is reshaping not just where and how the wealthy invest, but the physical form of the homes they inhabit.

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Reporting from inside North Korea

Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.

Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.

Maintaining these secure communication channels and protecting source identities requires specialized protocols and constant vigilance. Daily NK serves as a bridge between North Koreans and the outside world, documenting what’s happening inside one of the world’s most closed societies.

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