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Can Foreigners Buy Property in Thailand in 2026? Legal Rules, Nominee Risk, 49% Condo Quota, 99‑year Leases & Fee Changes

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Last updated: 6 May 2026

Can foreigners buy property in Thailand? The short answer is yes, but only within tightly defined legal channels, and the rules tightened considerably between late 2025 and early 2026. Thailand’s Land Code still prohibits direct land ownership by non‑Thai nationals, yet the Condominium Act B. E. 2522 (1979, as amended) permits freehold ownership of condominium units provided the building’s foreign‑held area stays at or below 49 per cent. Alongside that long‑standing framework, three developments are reshaping the landscape in 2026: the Department of Business Development (DBD) has escalated enforcement against nominee ownership structures, the government has cut transfer and mortgage registration fees to 0.

01 per cent for qualifying residential transactions, and market discussion continues around proposals to allow registered leases of up to 99 years. This guide, current as at 6 May 2026, walks foreign buyers, expats and their advisors through every ownership route, the compliance checks each one demands, and the practical steps needed to close a deal lawfully.

Bottom line: Foreign property ownership in Thailand remains entirely possible in 2026, but the margin for error, especially around nominee arrangements, has narrowed sharply. Buyers who understand the statutory framework and transact transparently can still acquire quality assets at competitive cost.

Can Foreigners Buy Property in Thailand? The Quick Legal Answer

The legal foundation for foreign property ownership in Thailand rests on two principal statutes. The Land Code B.E. 2497 (1954) establishes the general prohibition: aliens may not own land in the Kingdom except under specific treaty arrangements or royal decrees that have not been broadly activated for residential purchasers. In practice, this means a foreign national cannot register freehold title to a plot of land, a house built on land, or a townhouse in their own name.

The critical exception is the Condominium Act B.E. 2522 (1979, as amended). Section 19 of the Act allows foreigners to own condominium units in freehold, meaning perpetual, registrable ownership, provided the total foreign‑held area in any single condominium building does not exceed 49 per cent of the total sellable floor area. The buyer must also demonstrate that purchase funds were remitted into Thailand from abroad in foreign currency, with documentary proof from a Thai commercial bank (the so‑called Foreign Exchange Transaction Form, or “Thor Tor 3”).

Beyond condominiums, foreign buyers can lawfully access the Thai property market through registered leaseholds, usufruct rights, and, with significant caveats, Thai company structures. Each route carries distinct compliance obligations and risk profiles, detailed in the sections below. Industry observers expect that, taken together, the Thai Land Code amendments under discussion and stricter nominee enforcement are steering the market toward greater transparency rather than restricting foreign investment outright.

Condominium Ownership and the 49% Condo Quota

How the 49% foreign quota is calculated

The 49% condo quota applies on a building‑by‑building basis, measured by total sellable floor area, not by the number of units. A condominium project with 10,000 square metres of sellable space may register up to 4,900 square metres under foreign freehold ownership. The ratio is assessed at the point of transfer registration at the Land Department, not at the time a reservation agreement is signed.

This distinction matters. A developer may accept a deposit and sign a sale‑and‑purchase agreement (SPA) when the quota still has room, but by the time the buyer presents for transfer, other foreign registrations may have filled the remaining allocation. The Land Office will refuse to register the transfer if doing so would breach the 49 per cent ceiling, regardless of any contractual commitment made earlier.

Practical checks at reservation and transfer

Prudent buyers should verify the quota position at two points: before paying a reservation deposit, and again immediately before the scheduled transfer date. The following table summarises the documentation a developer or juristic person (condominium management body) should provide at each stage.

Document / check When to request Purpose
Juristic Person Certificate showing current foreign‑held area Reservation stage Confirms remaining quota headroom
Developer warranty clause in SPA guaranteeing quota availability at transfer SPA execution Allocates risk of quota shortfall to developer; triggers refund or alternative unit
Updated Land Department foreign‑ownership ratio printout 7–10 days before transfer Final confirmation before committing to transfer‑day costs
Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (Thor Tor 3) from Thai bank Before transfer Proves funds remitted in foreign currency, as required by Section 19 of the Condominium Act
Passport and valid visa / entry stamp Transfer day Land Office identification requirement for foreign transferees

Under Section 19(5) of the Condominium Act, the foreign buyer must present evidence that the purchase price was remitted into Thailand in foreign currency through a Thai authorised bank. The minimum amount shown on the Thor Tor 3 must equal or exceed the registered transfer value. Funds transferred in Thai baht from an overseas account do not satisfy the requirement.

What to do if the quota is reached

When a building’s foreign quota is fully allocated, three alternatives remain open to foreign purchasers, each with important caveats:

  • Leasehold registration. The buyer can register a lease over the unit for up to 30 years at the Land Department, with contractual options to renew. This gives exclusive possession but not freehold title.
  • Usufruct. A registered usufruct grants the right to use and derive benefit from the property for a defined term or for life. It is registrable at the Land Office and survives changes in ownership of the underlying unit.
  • Thai company structure. A Thai‑majority company can hold the unit in freehold, but this route is now subject to intense scrutiny. Where Thai shareholders are nominees who exercise no genuine control and contributed no real capital, the arrangement violates the Foreign Business Act and potentially the Land Code. The enforcement risks are discussed in the next section.

Nominee Ownership Thailand: Law, 2025–26 Enforcement & Risk Mitigation

What nominee ownership means, and why it breaks the law

Nominee ownership in Thailand typically involves a foreign buyer establishing or acquiring a Thai limited company in which Thai nationals hold the majority of shares, satisfying the 51 per cent Thai‑ownership threshold, while the foreigner retains effective control through side agreements, powers of attorney, or preferential share structures. The company then purchases land or property in its own name.

This structure potentially violates three separate statutes simultaneously. The Land Code prohibits foreign land ownership; using a nominee company to circumvent that prohibition triggers penalties including forced disposal of the land. The Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999) makes it an offence for Thai nationals to act as nominees for foreign operators, carrying fines and imprisonment. Where the funds used to capitalise nominee shareholdings cannot be traced to genuine Thai investors, the arrangement may also attract scrutiny under Thailand’s Anti‑Money Laundering Act.

2025–26 enforcement escalation

The likelihood of enforcement is no longer theoretical. Since mid‑2025, the Department of Business Development, the Anti‑Money Laundering Office (AMLO), and the Department of Lands have conducted joint inspections targeting suspected nominee structures in high‑foreign‑investment provinces including Phuket, Chon Buri (Pattaya), Surat Thani (Koh Samui), and Chiang Mai. The DBD introduced strengthened screening procedures that took effect on 1 April 2026, requiring companies purchasing land to provide more detailed beneficial‑ownership declarations and capital‑source documentation at registration.

News reports from The Nation Thailand and Pattaya Mail have documented raids on property‑holding companies, criminal prosecutions of Thai nominees, and orders for forced disposal of land held in contravention of the Land Code. Early indications suggest the government views this crackdown as a sustained policy priority rather than a one‑off campaign.

⚠ Risk alert, nominee arrangements: Any foreign buyer currently holding Thai property through a nominee company structure should obtain urgent, independent legal advice. The practical consequences of enforcement include criminal prosecution of Thai nominees, forced sale of the property at potentially below‑market value, fines, and, in serious cases, immigration consequences for the foreign beneficial owner.

Practical red flags and how to verify beneficial ownership

Buyers and their advisors should watch for the following indicators that a proposed company structure may be treated as a nominee arrangement:

  • Thai shareholders with no demonstrable source of capital. If the Thai majority shareholders cannot show bank records evidencing their investment, regulators presume nominee status.
  • Shareholders with multiple directorships in similarly structured property companies. The DBD cross‑references corporate registries to identify patterns.
  • Side agreements or undated share‑transfer forms. Documents that give the foreign party unilateral power to remove Thai shareholders or transfer shares are direct evidence of nominee control.
  • Disproportionate dividend or voting rights. Preference‑share structures that strip Thai shareholders of meaningful economic interest raise immediate flags.

Where a genuine joint venture with Thai partners is intended, the structure must reflect real capital contributions, authentic Thai management participation, and arm’s‑length governance. Escrow arrangements, notarised shareholder agreements, and independent Thai legal counsel for the Thai shareholders are essential safeguards.

Leasehold Options: Standard 30‑Year Leases, Proposed 99‑Year Leases, and Registration

For foreign buyers who cannot, or choose not to, acquire condominium freehold, the registered leasehold remains the most common lawful route to secure long‑term property rights in Thailand. Under the Civil and Commercial Code, a lease of immovable property is enforceable for a maximum initial term of 30 years. The lease must be registered at the Land Department to be binding on third parties and successive owners of the land.

In practice, many lease agreements include contractual options for two successive 30‑year renewals, bringing the theoretical total to 90 years. However, Thai courts have consistently held that renewal clauses create only a personal contractual right, not a registrable interest. If the lessor refuses to renew, the lessee’s remedy is a damages claim, not specific performance compelling registration of a new lease term. This distinction is critical for anyone relying on a 99‑year leasehold in Thailand as an ownership substitute.

Proposals to amend the Civil and Commercial Code or the Land Code to allow registration of longer lease terms, up to 99 years, have circulated in policy discussions and media reporting throughout 2025 and into 2026. As at the date of this guide, no such amendment has been enacted or published in the Royal Gazette. The likely practical effect, should such legislation pass, would be a significant improvement in foreign‑buyer security and resale liquidity for leasehold properties. Buyers considering transactions marketed as “99‑year leases” today should verify whether the arrangement is in fact a standard 30‑year registered lease with contractual renewal options, and price their risk accordingly.

Ownership structure comparison

Ownership structure How it works Key compliance risks
Freehold condominium (Condominium Act) Foreign buyer registers unit freehold if building foreign ownership is ≤ 49% at transfer; proof of foreign funds required. Quota filled prevents registration; developer may misstate quota; risk of later investigation if held via nominee company.
Leasehold (standard 30‑year; proposed 99‑year) Long‑term lease registered at Land Office; lessee has exclusive use for the term; assignable and renewable per contract. Lease expiry risk; renewal clauses not registrable; enforceability depends on lessor cooperation; potential resale liquidity issues.
Company ownership / nominee structures Thai‑majority company holds land; foreigner controls via contract or nominee arrangements. High enforcement risk: DBD / AMLO / Land Dept prosecutions, forced disposal, fines, and potential deportation for foreigners.

Step‑by‑Step Transaction Process, Due Diligence & Transfer Fees Thailand 2026

Step 1, Pre‑contract due diligence

Before signing any reservation agreement or paying a deposit, the buyer (or their Thai legal counsel) should complete the following checks:

  • Title search at the Land Department. Confirm the title certificate type. A Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor) is the only certificate that provides definitive proof of boundaries and ownership. Lesser certificates (Nor Sor 3, Nor Sor 3 Gor) may have boundary ambiguities or restrictions on transfer.
  • Encumbrance check. Verify that the land or unit is free from mortgages, liens, court seizures, or servitudes that would affect the buyer’s rights.
  • Juristic person register review. For condominiums, request the building’s juristic person registration, the current foreign‑ownership ratio, and the latest audited management accounts.
  • Developer corporate check. For off‑plan purchases, confirm the developer’s corporate registration, track record, and whether the project has obtained the required EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment) and construction permits.

Step 2, Reservation, deposit and sale‑and‑purchase agreement

Once due diligence is satisfactory, the transaction typically proceeds through a reservation agreement (with a deposit of 50,000–200,000 THB for condominiums), followed by execution of a full SPA. Critical clauses for foreign buyers include:

  • Foreign‑quota warranty. The developer warrants that the 49% foreign quota will not be exceeded at the scheduled transfer date and agrees to refund all sums paid if registration is refused for quota reasons.
  • Escrow mechanism. Instalment payments held in a third‑party escrow account until transfer conditions are met.
  • Anti‑nominee undertaking. A representation by both parties that the transaction does not involve nominee arrangements prohibited by Thai law.
  • Defect liability and completion standards. Detailed specification of the unit’s condition at handover, with a defect‑rectification period of not less than one year.

Step 3, Transfer day at the Land Office

On the scheduled transfer date, both parties (or their authorised attorneys) attend the local Land Office with jurisdiction over the property. The foreign buyer must present:

  • Passport with valid visa or entry stamp.
  • Thor Tor 3 (Foreign Exchange Transaction Form) evidencing inward remittance of foreign currency equal to or exceeding the transfer value.
  • Completed Land Office transfer application forms (provided by the office).
  • Power of attorney (if the buyer is represented), notarised and bearing the buyer’s original signature and passport copy.

The Land Officer reviews the documents, confirms the foreign quota has not been exceeded (for condominium freehold), calculates the applicable taxes and fees, and, once all amounts are paid, registers the transfer. The entire process typically takes two to four hours.

Transfer fees Thailand 2026, the 0.01% fee‑cut window

In a measure to stimulate the residential property market, the Thai Cabinet approved a reduction of transfer and mortgage registration fees from the standard 2 per cent and 1 per cent respectively to just 0.01 per cent each for qualifying transactions. The measure applies to residential properties, houses and condominium units, with a registered transfer value not exceeding 7,000,000 THB, and where the mortgage amount also does not exceed 7,000,000 THB.

💡 Opportunity, transfer and mortgage fee relief: Foreign buyers acquiring condominium units at or below the 7,000,000 THB threshold should time their transfer to fall within the active fee‑reduction window. The savings can be substantial: on a 5,000,000 THB unit, the transfer fee drops from 100,000 THB (at 2%) to just 500 THB (at 0.01%).

The following table illustrates typical cost allocation between seller and buyer for a 5,000,000 THB condominium unit transferred during the fee‑reduction period.

Cost item Standard rate Reduced rate (0.01%) Typically paid by
Transfer fee 2% (100,000 THB) 0.01% (500 THB) Buyer & seller split 50/50 (negotiable)
Mortgage registration fee 1% (50,000 THB) 0.01% (500 THB) Buyer (mortgagor)
Specific Business Tax (if held < 5 years) 3.3% of appraised or declared value No reduction Seller
Stamp duty (if SBT not applicable) 0.5% No reduction Seller
Withholding tax on seller’s gain Progressive scale No reduction Seller

Note that the fee reduction applies to the transfer and mortgage registration fees only. Specific business tax, stamp duty, and withholding tax remain at their standard rates. Buyers should confirm the exact effective and expiry dates of the fee‑reduction window with their legal counsel before scheduling a transfer, as government stimulus measures of this kind are typically enacted for limited periods.

Financing, Mortgages & Mortgage Registration Fee Changes

Obtaining mortgage finance as a foreign buyer in Thailand is possible but considerably more restricted than for Thai nationals. A small number of Thai commercial banks and international banks with Thai branches offer mortgage products to non‑Thai borrowers, typically requiring:

  • Valid work permit and Thai income. Most lenders require the borrower to demonstrate taxable income earned in Thailand.
  • Loan‑to‑value (LTV) ratios of 50–70 per cent. Foreign borrowers generally receive lower LTV ratios than Thai nationals, who may access up to 90 per cent on a first home.
  • Proof of repayment capacity. Payslips, tax returns (PND 91 or 90), and bank statements for at least six months.
  • Life and property insurance. Mandatory assignment of insurance policies to the lending bank for the loan term.

For buyers without Thai‑sourced income, financing options include offshore mortgage products (secured against assets in the buyer’s home country), developer instalment plans (common for off‑plan purchases, though these are not technically mortgages), and equity release from existing property abroad.

The mortgage registration fee changes introduced alongside the transfer fee reduction bring the mortgage registration cost down to 0.01 per cent for qualifying transactions, those where the mortgage amount does not exceed the 7,000,000 THB cap and the transfer and mortgage are registered at the same time. The practical effect for foreign buyers who can access Thai bank finance on an eligible property is a near‑elimination of one of the standard closing costs.

Tax, Inheritance & Cross‑Border Estate Planning

Foreign property owners in Thailand are subject to several tax obligations that should be factored into the total cost of ownership and, eventually, disposal or succession:

  • Transfer taxes. As noted above, a transfer fee (normally 2%, reduced to 0.01% for qualifying transactions), stamp duty (0.5%), or specific business tax (3.3% if the property is sold within five years of acquisition) apply at the point of sale.
  • Withholding tax. A progressive withholding tax is calculated on the seller’s assessed gain and deducted at the Land Office on transfer day. The rate depends on the number of years the property was held and the seller’s assessable income bracket.
  • Annual Land and Building Tax. Introduced under the Land and Building Tax Act B.E. 2562 (2019), this annual tax applies at rates that vary depending on use (residential, commercial, agricultural, vacant). Owner‑occupied residential property benefits from a lower rate and an assessed‑value exemption threshold.
  • Rental income tax. Foreign owners who let their property must file Thai personal income tax returns on the rental income. A flat withholding at source may be applied by the tenant or managing agent.

Succession and will planning

Thai succession law treats foreign‑owned property differently depending on the asset type. A foreigner who inherits land (for example, through marriage to a Thai national who dies intestate) is required to dispose of the land within a prescribed period, typically one year, because the Land Code prohibition on foreign land ownership applies equally to inherited property. Condominium freehold units, however, can be inherited by a foreign heir provided the 49% quota is not breached at the time of transfer registration.

Industry observers expect the succession question to become increasingly important as the first generation of foreign condominium investors in Thailand ages. A Thai‑law will, prepared in parallel with any home‑country will and specifically covering Thai‑situs assets, is strongly recommended to avoid probate delays and potential conflicts between multiple jurisdictions’ succession regimes.

Practical Checklist: Contracts, Notarial Steps & What to Ask a Lawyer

The following ten‑point checklist summarises the essential steps and questions for any foreign buyer transacting in the Thai property market in 2026:

  1. Title verification. Confirm the property holds a Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor) title, free of encumbrances.
  2. 49% condo quota confirmation. Obtain a current juristic‑person certificate showing foreign‑held floor area.
  3. Escrow arrangement. Require deposit and instalment payments to be held in a third‑party escrow account.
  4. Anti‑nominee wording. Include an express representation in the SPA that the transaction involves no nominee or sham structures. Do not rely on nominee or Thai‑spouse title without independent legal protections.
  5. Bank remittance proof. Arrange foreign‑currency transfer through a Thai bank and obtain the Thor Tor 3 well before transfer day.
  6. Tax certificates. Request the seller’s withholding‑tax computation and confirm specific business tax or stamp duty liability allocation in the SPA.
  7. Building bylaws and management fund. Review the condominium’s rules on foreign tenants, short‑term rentals, pet policies, and sinking‑fund adequacy.
  8. Transfer fee window. Confirm whether the 0.01% reduced‑rate transfer and mortgage registration fee window is still in effect and whether the transaction meets the 7,000,000 THB eligibility cap.
  9. Registration steps. Prepare all Land Office documents, including notarised power of attorney if the buyer cannot attend in person, at least two weeks before the transfer date.
  10. Thai‑law will. Execute a separate Thai‑situs will covering the newly acquired property, reviewed by Thai legal counsel.

Conclusion

Can foreigners buy property in Thailand in 2026? Absolutely, but the legal framework demands more careful navigation than at any point in recent memory. The 49% condo quota, the crackdown on nominee ownership, and the still‑unresolved status of 99‑year leasehold Thailand proposals mean that every transaction must be grounded in verified legal compliance. At the same time, transfer fees Thailand 2026 reductions and ongoing infrastructure investment make the market attractive for well‑advised buyers. The single most important step any foreign purchaser can take is to engage qualified Thai legal counsel before committing funds, ensuring that the chosen ownership structure is lawful, the due‑diligence trail is complete, and the documentation will withstand any future regulatory scrutiny.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sirichot Chaiyachot at LAFS Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Thai PBS, Royal Gazette / Ministry of Interior Announcement on Transfer and Mortgage Fee Reduction
  2. Thairath English, Department of Business Development Nominee Enforcement Measures
  3. REIC, Thailand Land Department Registration and Fee Guidance Summary
  4. Siam Legal, Condominium Act B.E. 2522 (1979, as amended)
  5. Pattaya Mail, Thailand’s Nominee Crackdown in 2026
  6. The Nation Thailand, Nominee Enforcement and Prosecution Reports
  7. HLB Thailand, Registration Fees for Property Transfers and Mortgages Reduced
  8. Matching Property, Cabinet Cuts Property Transfer and Mortgage Fees to 0.01%
  9. Aster of Asia, Thailand Nominee Ownership Crackdown and Confiscation Risk

FAQs

Can foreigners buy property in Thailand in 2026?
Yes. Foreigners can buy condominium units in freehold under the Condominium Act, provided the building’s foreign‑owned area does not exceed 49 per cent and the buyer remits purchase funds in foreign currency through a Thai bank. Land and houses cannot be owned directly by foreigners under the Land Code, but registered leaseholds of up to 30 years and usufruct arrangements are lawful alternatives.
The quota is calculated as a percentage of the building’s total sellable floor area, not by unit count. The Land Office checks the ratio at the moment of transfer registration. Buyers should request a current juristic‑person certificate confirming available quota before paying any deposit and again before the transfer date.
Nominee ownership Thailand arrangements, where Thai nationals hold shares in a company on behalf of a foreign buyer to circumvent land‑ownership restrictions, violate the Land Code, the Foreign Business Act, and potentially anti‑money‑laundering laws. Since 2025, the DBD, AMLO, and Land Department have conducted joint enforcement operations, resulting in criminal prosecutions and forced property disposals. The risks include fines, imprisonment (for Thai nominees), asset seizure, and immigration consequences for foreign beneficial owners.
Under current law, the maximum registrable lease term is 30 years. Proposals to allow registration of longer leases, up to 99 years, have been discussed in policy circles but, as at May 2026, no such amendment has been enacted or published in the Royal Gazette. Leases marketed as “99‑year” arrangements are typically 30‑year registered leases with contractual renewal options that are not independently registrable and depend on the lessor’s future cooperation.
Yes. The Thai Cabinet approved a reduction of transfer fees from 2 per cent to 0.01 per cent and mortgage registration fees from 1 per cent to 0.01 per cent for residential transactions where the transfer value and mortgage amount each do not exceed 7,000,000 THB. Both Thai nationals and foreigners purchasing qualifying condominium units or houses can benefit, but buyers should confirm the measure’s exact effective and expiry dates with their lawyer, as these stimulus windows are time‑limited.
A limited number of Thai and international banks offer mortgages to foreign nationals, generally requiring a valid work permit, Thai‑sourced income, and loan‑to‑value ratios between 50 and 70 per cent. Buyers without Thai income typically rely on offshore financing, developer instalment plans, or equity from assets in their home country.
A foreigner who inherits land is required by the Land Code to dispose of it within a prescribed period, generally one year, because the prohibition on foreign land ownership extends to inherited property. Condominium units, however, may pass to a foreign heir in freehold provided the 49 per cent quota is not exceeded at the time of succession registration. A Thai‑law will covering Thai‑situs assets is strongly recommended to facilitate the process.

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Can Foreigners Buy Property in Thailand in 2026? Legal Rules, Nominee Risk, 49% Condo Quota, 99‑year Leases & Fee Changes

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