Thailand’s property market is one of Southeast Asia’s most attractive for international buyers—but it comes with rules that differ fundamentally from freehold markets like Singapore or the UK. Understanding the legal framework before you commit a single baht is not just advisable; it is essential. Here is the complete guide to buying property in Thailand as a foreigner, covering what you can own, how to structure ownership, and where the genuine opportunities lie.
What Foreigners Can and Cannot Own
The fundamental rule is simple: foreigners cannot own land in Thailand. This is enshrined in the Land Code Act and applies without exception. However, foreigners can own condominium units outright in their own name, provided the total foreign ownership in any given condominium project does not exceed 49% of the total unit space. This is freehold ownership—genuine, registered, and legally enforceable—and it represents the cleanest and most secure route to Thai property for international buyers.
For those wanting a villa or house, the building itself can be owned by a foreigner, but the land beneath it cannot. Common workarounds include long-term leases (typically 30 years, renewable), forming a Thai limited company to hold the land (legal but requiring careful structuring with genuine Thai shareholders), or the Board of Investment (BOI) route for qualifying investors. Each approach carries different risk profiles, and independent legal advice from a firm specialising in Thai property law is non-negotiable.
The Buying Process
For condominiums, the process is relatively straightforward. After selecting a unit, you sign a reservation agreement and pay a deposit (typically 1–5% of the purchase price). A sale and purchase agreement follows, with the balance payable on transfer. Crucially, funds must be transferred into Thailand in foreign currency and converted to baht by a Thai bank to obtain a Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FETF)—a document required by the Land Department to register foreign freehold ownership. Without this form, the transaction cannot be registered in your name.
Transfer fees, stamp duty, specific business tax, and withholding tax are split between buyer and seller as negotiated, typically totalling 6–7% of the registered value. Due diligence should include title verification, confirmation of foreign ownership quota availability, and review of the condominium juristic person’s financial health.
Where to Buy
Bangkok offers the deepest market, from ultra-luxury Sukhumvit and Wireless Road condominiums to riverside developments along the Chao Phraya. Phuket dominates the villa and resort-residence segment, particularly along the west coast from Kamala to Natai Beach. Koh Samui and Chiang Mai serve niche markets for lifestyle buyers. Pattaya and Hua Hin offer more affordable coastal options with established foreign-buyer infrastructure.
Risks and Protections
The two greatest risks for foreign buyers are nominee structures (using Thai individuals as shareholders in a company to circumvent land ownership restrictions, which is technically illegal and can result in the company being wound up) and off-plan purchases from developers who fail to deliver. Mitigate both by working exclusively with reputable developers with completed track records, engaging independent legal counsel, and never using nominee arrangements that cannot withstand regulatory scrutiny.
Practical Information
Foreign ownership: Condominiums only (freehold, up to 49% of project); land ownership prohibited
Alternative structures: 30-year leases (renewable); Thai company ownership (requires legal advice)
Key requirement: Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FETF) for freehold condo registration
Transfer costs: Approximately 6–7% of registered value (split negotiable)
Prime markets: Bangkok (Sukhumvit, Wireless Road, riverside), Phuket (west coast), Koh Samui
Essential: Independent legal counsel specialising in Thai property law
Avoid: Nominee structures, off-plan purchases from unproven developers




