Can Foreigners Buy Property in Thailand?
Yes — but with specific legal structures. Thai law restricts foreign land ownership, yet there are well-established, fully legal pathways that thousands of international buyers use every year. Understanding these options is the first step toward a smooth purchase.
Condominiums — Freehold Ownership
Foreign nationals can own condominium units outright in their own name, provided the building maintains at least 51% Thai ownership. This is the simplest and most popular route. You receive a chanote (title deed) in your name with full ownership rights.
Villas and Houses — Leasehold or Company Structure
For landed property (houses, villas, townhomes), foreigners typically use a 30-year registered lease (renewable up to 90 years) or a Thai limited company structure. Both have legal precedent and are widely used across Phuket.
The Buying Process Step by Step
1. Choose Your Property and Structure
Decide on the type of property and ownership structure that fits your goals. An experienced local agent can walk you through the pros and cons of each option based on your situation.
2. Reserve and Sign a Contract
Once you've chosen a property, you'll pay a reservation deposit (typically ฿50,000–200,000) and sign a reservation agreement. For off-plan projects, a formal sale and purchase agreement follows, outlining the payment schedule and completion timeline.
3. Due Diligence
Hire an independent lawyer to verify the title deed, check for encumbrances, confirm the developer's permits, and review all contracts. This step is essential — do not skip it regardless of how reputable the seller seems.
4. Transfer Funds
For freehold condo purchases, funds must be transferred from overseas in foreign currency via a Thai bank. The bank issues a Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FETF/Thor Tor 3), which is required for registering foreign ownership at the Land Office.
5. Transfer at the Land Office
The final step is the ownership transfer at the local Land Office. Transfer fees and taxes (typically 1-2% of registered value) are paid, and the title deed is registered in your name. Your lawyer should accompany you for this step.
Key Costs to Budget For
- Transfer fee: 2% of registered value (often split 50/50 with seller)
- Stamp duty: 0.5% (or specific business tax of 3.3% if seller owned less than 5 years)
- Withholding tax: 1% of appraised value (paid by seller)
- Legal fees: ฿30,000–80,000 for independent lawyer
- Sinking fund: One-time fee for condo common area maintenance
Professional Support Makes the Difference
The process is straightforward when you have the right guidance. We work with buyers through every stage — from initial property selection to post-purchase management — ensuring nothing is missed and your interests are protected throughout.