
Thailand’s property market offers international buyers a rare combination: world-class living at a fraction of comparable markets in Singapore, Hong Kong, or London, set within one of Asia’s most culturally rich and lifestyle-oriented countries. But navigating the legal framework—particularly the restriction on foreign land ownership—requires knowledge, independent legal advice, and a clear-eyed assessment of risk. Here is an overview of the three key segments.
Buying as a Foreigner
Foreigners can own condominiums freehold (up to 49% of any project’s total space) but cannot own land. Villas and houses require leasehold structures (30 years, renewable) or Thai company ownership. The Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FETF) is essential for registering freehold condo ownership. Transfer costs total approximately 6–7%. Always engage independent legal counsel.
Phuket Luxury Villas
The west coast—Kamala to Natai Beach—commands the island’s highest prices for pool villas (฿30M–300M+). Branded residences from Banyan Tree, Anantara, and Rosewood carry 20–40% premiums but offer professional management and rental programmes. Gross yields of 4–7% are achievable. Insist on Chanote title deeds and independent legal verification.
Bangkok Ultra-Luxury Condos
Three corridors define the top end: Wireless Road/Ploenchit, the Chao Phraya riverfront, and prime Sukhumvit (Nana–Thong Lor). Branded residences from Aman (~฿450K/sqm), Mandarin Oriental, and Four Seasons have established a new ultra-luxury tier. Rental yields of 3–5% are typical. Sansiri, Ananda, SC Asset, and Magnolia Quality lead the developer landscape.
The Bottom Line
Thailand property rewards informed buyers who understand the legal framework, engage independent professionals, and resist the temptation of structures that cannot withstand regulatory scrutiny. Within those guardrails, the kingdom offers some of the most compelling luxury real estate value in Asia.





