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Thailand’s early‑2026 rollout of a property‑linked long‑stay visa, commonly known as the THB 3 million route, has given foreign buyers a tangible pathway to secure renewable residency through qualifying real‑estate investment. For anyone evaluating a property visa Thailand strategy, the timing is significant: the new route sits alongside concurrent reforms to transfer fees and the Land & Building Tax that directly affect acquisition costs. This guide breaks down every element a foreign buyer, immigration adviser or in‑house counsel needs, eligibility criteria, qualifying property types, conveyancing procedures, tax implications and risk mitigation, to make a fully informed decision.
All policy references in this article are stated as of 11 June 2026; readers should verify current rates with the relevant Thai government agencies before transacting.
The Thailand property visa is a one‑year, renewable long‑stay visa available to foreign nationals who purchase qualifying Thai real estate valued at a minimum of THB 3,000,000 (approximately USD 83,000 at mid‑2026 exchange rates). Launched in early 2026 and administered through Thai immigration channels, the scheme is designed to attract foreign capital into the residential property market while offering buyers a legal basis for extended stays in the Kingdom.
The programme sits between two existing long‑stay options, the Thailand Elite (Privilege) membership and the Long‑Term Resident (LTR) visa administered by the Board of Investment (BOI). Unlike those alternatives, the THB 3M property route ties residency directly to a tangible real‑estate asset rather than a membership fee or a diversified investment portfolio.
Key points at a glance:
Before committing to the THB 3M property route, investors should understand how it compares to Thailand’s other residency‑by‑investment programmes. Each route serves a different profile of applicant, and the right choice depends on budget, desired length of stay and whether work rights are required. The comparison table below summarises the three principal options for Thailand residency by investment as of mid‑2026.
| Route | Minimum Investment / Qualifying Condition | Typical Visa Length & Work Rights |
|---|---|---|
| THB 3M property route | Purchase of qualifying property (condo, registered lease or rental commitment) from THB 3,000,000. Funds must be remitted from overseas with documentary proof. | 1‑year renewable long‑stay. No automatic work authorisation. |
| LTR Visa (BOI) | Investment threshold varies by sub‑category (e.g., USD 250,000 in Thai government bonds, FDI or targeted securities for certain tracks). Additional income or pension requirements apply. | 10‑year visa (5+5 renewable). Digital work permit available for eligible categories; flat 17 % personal income tax rate for qualifying professionals. |
| Thailand Elite (Privilege) | Membership fee ranging from THB 600,000 to THB 5,000,000 depending on the package tier. Not a property purchase per se, though developers sometimes bundle membership with a unit sale. | 5‑ to 20‑year membership visa. No work rights unless separately authorised. |
Source: BOI LTR portal (ltr.boi.go.th); Henley & Partners Thailand Privilege overview; Thai Embassy visa guidance, all accessed June 2026.
The property investment visa Thailand framework centres on a straightforward proposition: buy qualifying real estate worth at least THB 3,000,000, prove the funds came from abroad, and apply for a renewable long‑stay visa. In practice, the evidentiary requirements are strict and procedural missteps can delay, or derail, an application. This section details each element.
Thai immigration and the Land Department require documentary proof that the purchase price was remitted in foreign currency from an overseas account. The critical documents are:
Industry observers emphasise that the FET form is non‑negotiable: without it, the Land Office will not register a foreign‑name transfer of a condominium unit, and immigration will not accept the purchase as qualifying evidence for the visa.
Buyers considering off‑plan condominiums should note that the THB 3M threshold applies to the total contract value, but the property must typically be registered in the buyer’s name at the Land Office before the visa application can be finalised. Staged payments during construction are acceptable provided all remittances are documented with FET forms and the cumulative value meets or exceeds THB 3,000,000. Early indications suggest that immigration may require a completed title transfer before issuing the visa, so buyers should factor construction timelines into their residency planning.
Spouses and minor children of the primary visa holder may be eligible for dependent long‑stay endorsements, subject to standard Thai immigration requirements including proof of relationship (marriage certificate, birth certificates) and financial support. Dependants do not need to be named on the property title, but the primary applicant must remain the qualifying property owner throughout the visa term.
The THB 3M visa does not include automatic work authorisation. Holders who wish to work in Thailand must obtain a separate work permit through conventional channels (e.g., employer sponsorship under the Foreign Business Act). This is a critical distinction from the BOI’s LTR visa, which offers a digital work permit for qualifying professional categories.
Not all Thai real estate is equally accessible to foreign buyers. Thai law restricts outright land ownership by non‑Thai nationals, which means the structure of a purchase directly determines whether it qualifies for the property visa Thailand programme. The table below summarises the three main acquisition models.
| Property Type | Ownership Structure for Foreigners | Visa Qualification Status |
|---|---|---|
| Condominium (freehold unit) | Foreign freehold ownership permitted up to 49 % of total sellable area per project (Condominium Act B.E. 2522). Title registered at Land Office. | Qualifies, provided value ≥ THB 3M, foreign quota not exceeded, and FET proof supplied. |
| Registered leasehold | Lease of up to 30 years, registered at the Land Office. Renewal options are contractual but not guaranteed by statute. | Qualifies, lease must be registered (not merely contractual), and the declared lease value must meet the THB 3M threshold. |
| Landed property (house & land) | Foreigners cannot own land directly. Workarounds include long‑term registered leases on the land plus ownership of the structure, or acquisition through a Thai‑majority company (carries significant legal risk). | May qualify via registered lease route, Thai company structures risk being classified as nominee arrangements and are subject to enforcement action. |
A freehold condominium unit remains the most straightforward way to buy property for a Thai visa. The buyer receives a title deed (Chanote) in their own name, the foreign‑ownership quota is verified by the building’s juristic person and the Land Office, and the FET form documentation aligns directly with the purchase price. Buyers must confirm that the project has not already reached its 49 % foreign‑ownership ceiling before signing a reservation agreement.
A leasehold visa Thailand strategy can work, but only if the lease is formally registered at the District Land Office. Unregistered “contractual” leases, even those exceeding THB 3M in value, are not recognised for visa purposes. The lease term is capped at 30 years under the Civil and Commercial Code, though contractual options to renew for additional 30‑year periods are common. For visa qualification, the declared and registered lease value must meet or exceed THB 3,000,000, and the lessee should retain a certified copy of the registered lease plus the Land Office receipt.
Foreign nationals cannot hold freehold title to land in Thailand. Two common workarounds exist: (1) a registered 30‑year lease on the land combined with outright ownership of the building (sometimes called a “lease‑and‑build” structure), and (2) purchasing the land through a Thai‑majority limited company. The second approach carries serious legal exposure, the Department of Business Development actively investigates companies suspected of acting as nominee vehicles for foreign land ownership, and penalties include forced dissolution. The likely practical effect of relying on a Thai company structure is increased scrutiny and the risk that the visa application itself is flagged for review.
Robust due diligence and correct property conveyancing in Thailand are non‑negotiable for any foreign buyer seeking to link a purchase to a long‑stay visa. A procedural error, an unreported encumbrance, a missed foreign‑quota check or an improperly documented fund transfer, can invalidate the purchase for visa purposes even if the transaction otherwise completes.
| Stage | Key Actions | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre‑contract due diligence | Title search at Land Office (verify Chanote, check encumbrances, liens, mortgages). Confirm foreign‑ownership quota with juristic person. Verify developer licences (off‑plan). Review vendor’s ownership history. | Days 1–14 |
| 2. Reservation and SPA | Sign reservation agreement and pay deposit (typically 1–5 % of purchase price). Lawyer reviews SPA, inserts clauses requiring FET‑compliant fund transfers and visa‑eligible documentation. | Days 7–21 |
| 3. Funds transfer | Remit purchase price from overseas bank account in foreign currency to buyer’s Thai bank account. Bank issues FET form. Retain SWIFT confirmation and credit advice. | Days 14–30 (allow for compliance checks) |
| 4. Pre‑completion checks | Final title search. Confirm no new encumbrances. Calculate transfer fees and taxes. Prepare documents for Land Office (passport, FET, SPA, vendor ID). | Days 25–35 |
| 5. Completion at Land Office | Both parties attend District Land Office. Title transfer registered. Transfer fee, stamp duty and/or withholding tax paid. Buyer receives new Chanote in their name. | Day 30–45 |
| 6. Post‑completion | Collect certified copies of all Land Office documents. Notify juristic person of ownership change. Begin visa application with full document pack. | Day 45+ |
Foreign documents required for the purchase or visa application, including criminal‑background checks, powers of attorney and marriage certificates, must typically be notarised, apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or consularised through the Thai embassy in the country of origin. An improperly authenticated document can stall the Land Office transfer or delay visa processing by weeks. Buyers who are not physically present in Thailand during the purchase phase should execute a specific power of attorney, notarised and consularised, authorising their Thai lawyer to act at the Land Office on their behalf.
Thailand imposes several transaction‑based taxes and fees on property transfers, all of which are calculated at the Land Office on the day of completion. The 2026 fiscal year has introduced adjustments to certain rates and thresholds that directly affect buyer costs. The breakdown below uses a worked example based on a THB 3,000,000 condominium purchase, the minimum qualifying threshold for the property visa.
| Tax / Fee | Standard Rate | Illustrative Cost on THB 3M Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer fee | 2 % of appraised value (often split 50/50 between buyer and seller by agreement) | THB 60,000 (THB 30,000 if split) |
| Stamp duty | 0.5 % of appraised or sale value (whichever is higher). Exempt if Specific Business Tax applies. | THB 15,000 |
| Specific Business Tax (SBT) | 3.3 % of appraised or sale value. Applies if seller has owned the property for fewer than 5 years (or if seller is a company). | THB 99,000 (seller’s liability in most cases) |
| Withholding tax | Calculated on a progressive scale based on appraised value and the seller’s holding period. Varies by seller type (individual vs corporate). | Varies, typically THB 15,000–45,000 for an individual seller |
| Annual Land & Building Tax | Residential rate: 0.02–0.10 % of appraised value (tiered). Reduced rates may apply for owner‑occupied units below certain value thresholds. | THB 600–3,000 per year (estimated) |
Figures illustrative as of 11 June 2026. Rates are subject to change, confirm with the Thai Revenue Department (rd.go.th) and the District Land Office before transacting.
The 2026 reforms have adjusted the tiered thresholds for the Land & Building Tax and introduced transitional relief measures for certain categories of residential property. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a modest reduction in annual holding costs for owner‑occupied condominiums below THB 10,000,000 in appraised value, though the precise savings depend on local appraisal figures. Buyers should also note that transfer fee reductions or incentives periodically announced by the Thai government (such as temporary cuts to the 2 % transfer fee) may or may not be in effect at the time of their purchase, legal counsel should confirm the applicable rate at the point of transaction.
Foreign buyers pursuing a Thailand property visa face a distinct set of legal risks that do not typically arise for Thai nationals. Awareness of these risks, and early mitigation, is essential to protect both the investment and the visa status.
Foreign condominium owners should execute a separate Thai‑language will drafted under Thai law to govern the disposition of their Thai property. This will should be coordinated with any existing will in their home country to avoid conflicting provisions. Usufruct rights can provide additional protection for a surviving spouse or partner who is not a Thai national and therefore cannot inherit freehold land. A qualified Thai property lawyer can advise on the optimal structure, early planning is far less costly than retroactive probate litigation.
The visa application process follows a sequential workflow that begins well before the property purchase is finalised. The checklist below maps the typical timeline from initial legal instruction to visa issuance.
| Phase | Actions | Estimated Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1: Pre‑purchase | Instruct Thai property lawyer. Confirm visa eligibility. Identify qualifying property. Begin due diligence. | Weeks 1–3 |
| Phase 2: Purchase and funds transfer | Sign SPA. Remit funds from overseas. Obtain FET form from Thai bank. Complete Land Office transfer and receive Chanote. | Weeks 3–8 |
| Phase 3: Document gathering | Compile full document pack: FET, Chanote, SPA, bank letter, criminal‑background check (apostilled/consularised), passport copies, photographs. | Weeks 6–10 |
| Phase 4: Visa submission | Submit application to Thai immigration (via local immigration office or TLS centre as applicable). Pay application fee. Attend interview if requested. | Weeks 8–12 |
| Phase 5: Issuance and compliance | Receive one‑year visa endorsement. Note 90‑day reporting obligation. Set calendar reminder for annual renewal (submit renewal application before expiry). | Weeks 10–14 |
90‑day reporting: All long‑stay visa holders in Thailand must report their address to Thai immigration every 90 days, either in person, by post or via the online system. Failure to report carries a fine of up to THB 5,000 per instance and can complicate visa renewal.
Annual renewal: The THB 3M property visa is typically issued for one year and must be renewed before expiry. At renewal, immigration may require updated proof that the applicant still owns the qualifying property and retains a valid Thai address. Selling the property mid‑visa may result in the visa not being renewed.
For foreign buyers ready to pursue the property visa Thailand route, the practical next steps are:
Thailand‑qualified property lawyers can be located through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory, filter by jurisdiction (Thailand) and practice area (Property) to identify practitioners with relevant experience. For comparative guidance on residency‑by‑property routes in other jurisdictions, see our guides to residency by property purchase in Turkey and buying residential property in Malaysia as a foreigner.
The THB 3M property visa Thailand route offers foreign buyers a practical, asset‑backed pathway to renewable long‑stay residency, but only if every procedural requirement is met. The three pillars of a successful application are: acquiring the right type of property (freehold condo or registered lease at or above THB 3,000,000), documenting the funds transfer with FET forms and bank confirmations, and completing the conveyancing process with visa‑protective legal safeguards in place. Buyers who cut corners on due diligence, rely on nominee structures or fail to register their lease will find that the visa pathway closes before it opens.
The concurrent 2026 reforms to transfer fees and the Land & Building Tax make early professional advice more valuable than ever, tax savings and compliance obligations are both in flux. Engaging a Thailand‑qualified property lawyer at the outset is the single most effective step any foreign buyer can take to protect both their investment and their residency status.
This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should retain qualified Thai legal counsel before making any property purchase or visa application. All figures and policy references are stated as of 11 June 2026 and should be reverified with the relevant Thai government agencies.
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.
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