
Estate split confirmed in the 120 billion won range, but how much do Koo Jun-yeup and their children get?
The late “Hsu Hsi-yuan”’s “120 billion won”-level “estate division” map—shocking not only Taiwan’s entertainment scene but Asia at large—has finally been laid bare. What put an end to weeks of speculation was an abrupt official announcement from the side of the former husband “Wang Xiaofei”. The late person’s remaining assets, estimated by local legal circles and the media, total roughly 600 million yuan—an astronomical sum of 119.7 billion won in won terms.
The biggest question—how the division would be calculated—followed clear legal standards and an agreement. The side of “Wang Xiaofei” arranged for a special administrator in court to fully protect the rights of two minor children. As a result, two-thirds of the entire estate are attributed to the children’s shares and are tied up in dedicated trust accounts to ensure strict safeguards. The fate of the remaining one-third goes to “Koo Jun-yeup”, described as the late person’s final love. The former-husband side said it maintains a firm position of fully respecting “Koo Jun-yeup”’s legal share of inheritance and disposal rights. Earlier, “Koo Jun-yeup” said he would delegate all authority over asset management to his mother-in-law, dismissing the shallow curiosity surrounding the couple’s property.
A string of malicious rumors—rumors of real estate auctions, unpaid loans, and more—also got the boot. It was confirmed that among the remaining balances of housing-secured loans tied to prime land near the Taipei National Palace Museum and a high-end penthouse, “Wang Xiaofei” covers in full the portions owed by the children. In addition, a rumor that the late person’s mother would be forced out of the family home was also definitively debunked as fake news, with a statement saying, “I have never once requested relocation, and I fully support continued residence in the current home.”
From the 2011 marriage to “Wang Xiaofei”, to the divorce, and then to the remarriage with “Koo Jun-yeup”—which felt even more like a movie than the 2022 film. The late “Hsu Hsi-yuan”, who lived a dramatic life, sadly passed away last February as her pneumonia worsened. Those left behind now face the true test of protecting the late person’s honor and the peaceful future of her minor children—not just inheriting a massive fortune.

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