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The 49% Foreign Quota in Thai Condominiums: What Every Buyer Must Know in 2026
One number determines whether you gain full legal ownership of a Thai condominium — or walk away with a contract that protects far less than you think. That number is 49%. Under Thailand's Condominium Act B.E. 2522 (1979), foreign nationals may collectively own no more than 49% of a condominium building's total registered floor area on a freehold basis. The remaining 51% must be held by Thai citizens or Thai-registered legal entities. In high-demand projects across Phuket and Pattaya, this quota fills months before construction is complete — leaving late buyers scrambling for less secure alternatives.
This is not a bureaucratic footnote. It is the structural foundation of Thailand's foreign property market, and understanding it before you sign anything is non-negotiable.
Quick Answer
- 49% — the maximum share of total floor area a condominium may sell to foreign nationals on a freehold basis
- 51% — must remain under Thai ownership at all times
- The quota is calculated by floor area (sq.m.), not by number of units
- Current quota availability can be verified through the condominium's management office or the local Land Office (Land Department)
- If the quota is exhausted, a foreign buyer's only registered options are leasehold (30 years) or purchase through a Thai company structure
- Freehold registration requires that purchase funds be remitted from overseas in foreign currency — this is a legal prerequisite, not a formality
Scenarios and Options
Scenario 1: Quota Available — Freehold Purchase
This is the optimal outcome. You remit funds from a bank account outside Thailand; the receiving Thai bank issues a Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FET / Thor Tor 3). With this document, your passport, and the sale-and-purchase agreement, you register full ownership at the Land Office. Your name is inscribed on the Chanote — Thailand's strongest title document, equivalent to a Torrens title in common-law jurisdictions.
Freehold purchase checklist:
- Request a written confirmation of current foreign ownership percentage from the developer or management company
- Ensure the transfer originates from a bank account held outside Thailand
- The remitted amount must match the contract price (USD, EUR, GBP, and other major currencies are accepted)
- Payment reference must state: 'purchase of condominium unit [unit number]'
- Obtain the FET form from the Thai receiving bank before proceeding to registration
- Verify the Chanote for encumbrances through the Land Office prior to completion
Scenario 2: Quota Exhausted — Leasehold
When the 49% foreign quota is fully allocated, a foreign buyer may register a 30-year leasehold. This is recorded on the reverse of the Chanote and is legally enforceable. However, renewal beyond 30 years is not guaranteed by statute — it depends entirely on the contractual terms agreed with the lessor. Market pricing typically reflects this uncertainty.
Scenario 3: Purchase via a Thai Company
Some buyers register a unit through a Thai limited company (Thai Co., Ltd.), holding 49% of its shares personally. Since the unit is owned by a Thai legal entity, it falls outside the foreign quota. However, the Land Office and the Revenue Department actively scrutinize nominee structures. Since 2024, Phuket's Land Office has substantially increased due-diligence checks. If Thai shareholders cannot demonstrate genuine capital contribution and real participation, registration can be refused and completed transactions may be unwound.
Scenario 4: Resale of a Freehold Unit from One Foreign Owner to Another
The quota is transferable between foreign parties. If you purchase a freehold unit from an existing foreign owner, their quota allocation passes to you — no additional quota space is consumed. The buyer must still provide a valid FET form to complete registration.
Comparison Table
| Parameter | Freehold (Foreign Quota) | Leasehold (30 Years) | Thai Company Structure | Secondary Freehold (Resale) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ownership Type | Full title — Chanote | Long-term registered lease | Corporate ownership | Full title — Chanote |
| Duration | Indefinite | 30 years + negotiated renewal | Indefinite (while company exists) | Indefinite |
| Legal Protection | Maximum | Moderate | High risk of challenge | Maximum |
| FET Form Required | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| Resale Flexibility | Unrestricted | Restricted by lease terms | Via share or asset sale | Unrestricted |
| Registration Costs | ~6.3% of assessed value | ~1.1% | ~6.3% + company costs | ~6.3% of assessed value |
| Market Liquidity | High | 15–25% lower than freehold | Low | High |
| Mortgage Access | Very limited for foreigners | Not applicable | Possible for the company | Very limited for foreigners |
Main Risks and Mistakes
1. Paying a deposit before confirming quota availability. Developers routinely accept reservation deposits before quota status is formally verified. If the quota is exhausted by the time of registration, recovering your deposit requires negotiation or litigation. Always obtain written confirmation of available foreign quota before signing any contract or transferring any funds.
2. Remitting funds from a Thai bank account. Funds already held in Thailand — regardless of their origin — do not qualify for freehold registration. The law requires cross-border remittance. If your money is already in a Thai account, it must first be sent abroad and then remitted back to Thailand with the correct FET documentation.
3. Incorrect payment reference. Thai banks will not issue an FET form if the transfer reference does not clearly state the purpose as a condominium purchase. Amending the reference after the fact is rarely possible. This is a common and costly clerical error.
4. Nominee shareholders in a Thai company. Since 2024, the Phuket Land Office has intensified scrutiny of Thai company ownership structures. Thai shareholders who are household employees or individuals with no verifiable capital will trigger a block on registration. Nominee arrangements carry legal risk under Thai law and are not a reliable long-term ownership strategy.
5. Confusing the foreign quota with voting rights. The foreign quota governs ownership area — it has no bearing on governance. Even if foreign owners hold the full 49% of floor area, voting at condominium general meetings is based on unit count and share ratios, ensuring Thai owners retain majority control in all collective decisions.
6. Purchasing in a building without a proper Chanote. Freehold foreign ownership only applies to condominiums registered under a full Chanote title. Buildings held under Nor Sor 3 or Nor Sor 3 Gor titles cannot be registered as condominiums. Verify the title type before any purchase commitment.
FAQ
What is the foreign quota in a Thai condominium? It is the statutory cap under Condominium Act B.E. 2522 that limits foreign freehold ownership to a maximum of 49% of a condominium building's total registered floor area. The remaining 51% must be Thai-owned.
How do I verify whether quota space is available in a specific project? Three methods: request an official written statement from the developer or management company; attend the local Land Office directly; or instruct a qualified Thai property lawyer to conduct the check. Verbal assurances from sales staff carry no legal weight.
Can I buy freehold if the quota is already full? Only if you purchase from an existing foreign freehold owner — their quota allocation transfers to you. If no such unit is available, your registered options are leasehold or a Thai company structure.
What happens if I have paid a deposit and the quota runs out before registration? This depends entirely on your contract. A well-drafted sale-and-purchase agreement should include an explicit clause providing for deposit refund if freehold registration is impossible. Without this clause, recovery becomes a dispute.
Why must funds be remitted from overseas? Thai law requires foreign buyers to demonstrate that purchase funds originated from outside Thailand. The FET form issued by the Thai receiving bank is the official evidence of this cross-border transfer, and it is a mandatory document for Land Office registration.
Is leasehold safe for a foreign buyer? A 30-year lease registered at the Land Office is legally protected. However, renewal for a further 30 years is a contractual right, not a statutory one — it depends on what your agreement specifies. Leasehold units typically trade at 15–25% below comparable freehold prices, reflecting this uncertainty.
What are the costs of registering freehold in a foreign name? On a secondary market transaction, total government fees are approximately 6.3% of assessed value: transfer fee 2%, specific business tax 3.3% (or stamp duty 0.5% if exempt), and withholding tax approximately 1%. Allocation of these costs between buyer and seller is subject to negotiation.
Can a foreign buyer own more than 49%? In rare cases, the Board of Investment (BOI) may grant exceptions to attract strategic investment. These approvals are exceptional, complex, and entirely outside the scope of standard residential purchases.
Freehold or leasehold — which is better for investment returns? For capital appreciation and resale: freehold is clearly superior — higher liquidity, simpler transfer process, and a larger buyer pool. For rental yield, the distinction is minimal, as tenants are indifferent to the landlord's title structure.
The 49/51 rule is not an obstacle — it is the framework within which Thailand's condominium market operates for international buyers. Investors who understand the quota mechanism, verify availability before committing funds, and structure their remittance correctly from the outset secure an asset with the highest level of legal protection available to a foreign national in Thailand.
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