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Thailand Keeps VAT at 7%: What It Means for Property Investors

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Thailand Keeps VAT at 7%: What It Means for Property Investors

April 1, 2026
Thailand VATThailand property taxesbuying property in ThailandThailand real estate investment 2025Thailand VAT rate

Thailand has once again postponed its VAT increase from 7% to 10%. For property buyers, this is far more than a macroeconomic headline — it translates into direct savings of hundreds of thousands of baht on every transaction.

Why Thailand Is Holding VAT at 7%

In mid-2025, Thailand's government confirmed an extension of the reduced VAT rate of 7%, effective from 1 October 2025 to 30 September 2026. Deputy Finance Minister Julapun Amornvivat stated clearly that the increase was being deferred to prevent a sharp rise in consumer prices.

This is not a new development. The 7% rate has been in place since 1999 — technically as a temporary measure. Over 26 years, no government has moved to restore the standard 10% rate. The reason is always the same: the economy isn't ready. With export sectors under pressure from global trade tensions and domestic consumption recovering slowly, a 3-point VAT hike would ripple instantly through construction costs, utilities, and everyday spending.

How the 7% VAT Rate Affects Property Purchases

For investors, VAT is a direct line item in every deal.

  • New developer sales are subject to VAT. On a 5M baht unit, the gap between 7% and 10% equals 150,000 baht — roughly $4,200. On a 15M baht villa, that rises to 450,000 baht.
  • Construction and fit-out costs include VAT on all materials, keeping build costs — and final prices — lower.
  • Ongoing ownership expenses — utilities, management fees, maintenance — all carry VAT. The 3-point difference compounds meaningfully over years of ownership.
  • Rental income: If annual rental revenue exceeds 1.8M baht, VAT registration is required. At 7% rather than 10%, net margins are directly stronger.

Will VAT Rise in 2026?

Unlikely — but not impossible. Thailand faces a fiscal dilemma: public debt is approaching 70% of GDP, yet raising taxes risks consumer confidence and political capital. The IMF and World Bank have both recommended restoring the 10% rate, but the political cost remains prohibitive.

For investors, the practical takeaway is clear: the low-tax window is open, but it won't last indefinitely. The current combination of reduced VAT, a stable baht, and rising tourism creates a compelling entry point — whether you are considering a Phuket condo, a Samui villa, or Bangkok apartments. Locking in before October 2026 guarantees the savings.

Ready to invest in Thailand? Our experts will help you find the perfect property.


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