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Thailand Property Crackdown 2026: Why Foreign Demand Is Holding Strong

June 24, 2026

In early 2026, Thai authorities intensified scrutiny of real estate transactions involving foreign buyers. The market paused briefly - then kept moving. As Bangkok Post reports, foreign demand for Thai property remains resilient despite the regulatory pressure, with Phuket's resort and luxury segment showing limited impact on overall buyer activity.

The fundamentals driving foreign interest have not changed. The price-per-square-metre gap between Bangkok and cities like Dubai, Singapore, or London remains substantial. Rental yields in Pattaya and Phuket hold steady at 5-8% per annum - above most Asian capital city averages. Meanwhile, Phuket's west coast has seen land scarcity push prices on Bang Tao and Layan to Bangkok-level highs, sustaining strong international interest from buyers across Russia, China, Europe, India, and the Middle East who view Phuket as a long-term residence and investment destination.

Quick Answer

  • Foreign demand for Thai property in 2026 remains elevated despite regulatory checks
  • Foreign ownership quota in condominiums is unchanged at 49% of total building floor area
  • Average condo price in central Bangkok sits at around 150,000-200,000 THB per sq m (CBRE Thailand data)
  • Top foreign buyer nationalities include Chinese, Russian, Myanmarese, and Middle Eastern nationals
  • Targeted enforcement is aimed at nominee loophole structures - not legitimate freehold buyers
  • Land and Building Tax rates for foreigners are identical to those for Thai nationals
  • Freehold condo purchases on Phuket grew 12-15% year-on-year in 2025-2026

Scenarios and Options

Scenario 1: Freehold Condominium Within the 49% Quota

This is the simplest and fully legal route. A foreign national purchases a unit in a condominium where the non-resident share does not exceed 49% of total floor area. Title transfers directly - no intermediaries, no nominee arrangements. This segment is essentially untouched by the current wave of enforcement checks.

The mechanics are straightforward: funds are transferred via international bank wire, and the Land Department registers the transaction. Transparent, clean, and legally secure. Freehold condo purchases by foreign nationals on Phuket grew an estimated 12-15% year-on-year in 2025-2026, reflecting continued confidence in this structure.

Scenario 2: 30-Year Land Lease (Leasehold)

For buyers who want a villa or standalone house, leasehold is the primary legal pathway. The foreign buyer leases the land for up to 30 years with the option to negotiate renewal. The building constructed on that land belongs to the buyer. This arrangement falls under Thailand's Civil and Commercial Code rather than the Condominium Act. The 2026 enforcement actions have had minimal direct impact on legitimate leasehold structures.

Scenario 3: Nominee Company Ownership

This is where the crackdown is concentrated. Establishing a Thai-registered legal entity with nominee Thai shareholders to bypass land ownership restrictions has been a widespread practice for years. In 2026, the Department of Special Investigations (DSI) and the Land Department have sharply increased scrutiny of such structures. According to data from Thailand's Department of Business Development (DBD), authorities found 11,426 companies with foreign participation on Koh Phangan and Koh Samui alone, representing nearly 68% of all registered entities there. Companies where Thai shareholders cannot demonstrate genuine capital contribution face forced asset disposal. Criminal liability under Section 96 of the Land Code is a real exposure, not a theoretical one.

Scenario 4: BOI Programme or Thailand Privilege Visa

Thailand's Board of Investment (BOI) incentive framework and the Thailand Privilege long-stay visa (formerly Thailand Elite) remain practical tools for high-net-worth buyers. The Long-Term Resident (LTR) visa grants residency rights for up to 10 years alongside specific tax benefits. This route pairs well with freehold condo ownership and presents minimal regulatory risk.

Scenarios and Options - Comparison Table

ParameterFreehold CondoLeasehold 30 YearsNominee CompanyBOI / LTR Visa
Asset typeApartment unitVilla or houseLand and buildingAny property type
Regulatory riskMinimalLowHighMinimal
Entry price - PhuketFrom 5M THBFrom 8M THBFrom 10M THBFrom 15M THB
Registration timeline1-2 months2-3 months3-6 months1-3 months
Rental yield5-7%6-8%6-8%Varies by asset
Inheritance transferYesRestrictedDisputedNot applicable
Legal transparencyHighMediumLowHigh

Main Risks and Mistakes

1. Using nominee structures without understanding the consequences. If the DSI determines that Thai shareholders are nominees, the company may be ordered to divest the land. Fines and criminal prosecution under Section 96 of the Land Code are an active enforcement tool in 2026 - not background noise.

2. Transferring funds without a Foreign Exchange Transaction Form (FETF). The Land Department requires proof that purchase funds were remitted from abroad in foreign currency. Without the FETF (formerly called Thor Tor 3), the transaction cannot be registered. This is a non-negotiable documentation requirement for all freehold purchases.

3. Buying into a project where the 49% foreign quota is already full. A developer may offer leasehold terms instead of freehold without clearly flagging the reason. Always verify the current foreign/Thai ownership ratio with a qualified lawyer before paying any deposit.

4. Ignoring rental income tax obligations. Withholding tax on rental income for non-residents stands at 15% of gross income, deducted at source. Undeclared rental income generated through platforms such as Airbnb is increasingly flagged by Thai tax authorities.

5. Relying on verbal assurances about lease renewal. A leasehold of 30 years is the maximum enforceable under Thai law. Contract clauses promising 30+30 year renewals carry no legal guarantee - renewal depends entirely on the landlord's future willingness. Do not price a property as if renewal is certain.

FAQ

Can foreigners still buy property in Thailand in 2026? Yes. The Condominium Act of 1979 (as amended) permits foreign nationals to own up to 49% of total floor area in a registered condominium on a freehold basis. This law has not changed.

Who are the 2026 enforcement actions actually targeting? Authorities are targeting schemes that circumvent land ownership restrictions - specifically nominee Thai company structures, sham marriages used to register land, and fake shareholder arrangements. Buyers of legitimate freehold condominiums are not affected.

What documents does a foreign buyer need to purchase a condo? A valid passport, proof of overseas fund remittance (FETF), and the sale and purchase agreement. Work permit holders resident in Thailand may also need an income verification letter.

Will prices fall because of the regulatory pressure? A correction is possible in the villa and land-plot segment tied to nominee structures. Freehold condo prices are continuing to rise. CBRE and Knight Frank analysts report 3-5% annual price growth in Bangkok's premium segment.

What is the minimum budget to invest in Thai property? From 3-4 million THB (approximately $85,000-115,000) for a studio or one-bedroom unit in Pattaya or suburban Bangkok. Phuket's premium segment starts from 7-10 million THB.

Should buyers wait for land ownership law reform? Discussion about expanding foreign land rights has circulated since 2022. As of early 2026, no relevant bill has cleared even a first parliamentary reading. Near-term legislative change is not a realistic planning assumption.

How do I check whether the 49% foreign quota is already exhausted in a specific project? Request a current ownership ratio certificate from the developer or juristic person manager. Alternatively, contact the local Land Office directly with the project's chanote (title deed) reference number.

Which regions of Thailand carry the lowest regulatory risk for foreign buyers? Bangkok, Phuket, and Pattaya. These markets have the highest proportion of legitimate freehold transactions and the most developed legal and agency infrastructure for international buyers.

The 2026 regulatory tightening is a market correction, not a market collapse. Investors operating within the law benefit from rising transparency. Those who built ownership structures around nominee arrangements are absorbing the consequences. The takeaway is practical: buy freehold condominiums, remit funds through a licensed bank, retain every document in the chain. That approach keeps a Thai property investment protected regardless of the political climate.

Source: Bangkok Post - https://www.bangkokpost.com/property/3275754/crackdown-unlikely-to-hit-foreign-property-demand

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