Notary attorneys
End-to-end legal services for foreigners who want to own or use real estate in Thailand: condominium purchase
49% condo quota + 30-year lease + superficies + usufruct + BOI / IEAT / EEC land + AML / UBO + PDPA
End-to-end legal services for foreigners who want to own or use real estate in Thailand: condominium purchase within the 49% foreign quota under Condominium Act § 19 bis; 30-year leases of land or buildings under CCC § 540 and commercial / industrial leases of 50 + 49 years under the Commercial Lease Act B.E. 2562; registration of superficies, usufruct, habitation and servitude under CCC §§ 1410–1428; BOI land ownership under § 27 (up to 10 rai per company for executive residences plus operational land as needed); IEAT land under § 44 (unlimited within industrial estates); EEC 50 + 49 industrial leases; title due diligence on chanote, nor.sor.3, sor.kor.1 and sor.por.kor.4-01 deeds; AML / UBO filings under AMLO Notification 2566 for transactions over THB 10 million; escrow under the Escrow Act B.E. 2551; PDPA § 24 compliance and cross-border data transfers. **We do not accept nominee shareholding** (Land Code § 96 bis carries up to two years' imprisonment, a THB 20,000 fine and forced disposal within 180 days), sham marriages designed to circumvent the foreign land ban, or any structure that ultimately puts beneficial ownership of land in foreign hands without statutory authority.
The Thai real estate market sold to foreign buyers is worth roughly THB 240 billion per year (REIC 2566). Roughly 75% is condominium sales in Bangkok, Phuket, Pattaya, Chiang Mai and Hua Hin; about 20% is commercial leasing and industrial estate property; about 5% is BOI / IEAT land. The top five buyer nationalities are China, Russia, the USA, the UK and Germany. The biggest risks for foreign buyers are: (1) **nominee structures** — a Thai company nominally 51% Thai-owned but actually controlled by the foreigner, which is a criminal offence under Land Code § 96 bis and triggers forced sale within 180 days; (2) **sham marriages** entered into purely to allow a Thai spouse to hold land, which the Land Department screens by requiring the foreign spouse to sign Tor.Dor.7 disclaiming co-ownership; (3) **forged or overlapping title deeds**, especially on Nor.Sor.3 land or land carved out of mountain or protected forest zones. Our title search runs at the Provincial Land Office before any due diligence opinion is issued.
Our practice is led by real estate counsel registered with the Lawyers Council of Thailand (verify at /trust/credentials), working with conveyancers, notarial services attorneys (for powers of attorney authenticated abroad), former senior Land Department officials, and an AML compliance officer registered with AMLO. Title deeds and SPAs are held on ISO/IEC 27001 servers with HSM-backed encryption inside Thailand. We can run title searches at any of Thailand's 77 provincial Land Offices and their branches. The service covers pre-purchase title due diligence, SPA drafting in parallel Thai and English versions, escrow setup at AMLO-licensed commercial banks, foreign currency wire and FET form verification, deed registration at the Land Office, AML / UBO reporting to AMLO where the transaction exceeds THB 10 million, and post-closing property tax and building tax registration.
Closing costs to budget: **transfer fee** 2% of the appraised value (typically split 50:50 between buyer and seller); **stamp duty** 0.5% (held more than five years and not a developer), or **specific business tax (SBT)** 3.3% (held less than five years or by a developer — Revenue Code § 91/2); **withholding tax** progressive 0–35% for individual sellers and 1% for corporate sellers, calculated against the appraised value; **land and buildings tax** 0.02–0.30% for residential, 0.30–0.70% for commercial and 0.50–1.20% for vacant land under the 2562 Act. We present a transparent cost estimate before every engagement.
End-to-end legal services for foreigners who want to own or use real estate in Thailand: condominium purchase
Provinces · 50+77
16,168+ clients · 60+ nationalities
Send title deed, sale and purchase agreement, and passport via LINE — receive title search, AML/UBO memo, and
**Deed types**: (1) **Chanote (Nor.Sor.4 Jor.)** — full freehold, freely transferable and mortgageable, the safest deed; (2) **Nor.Sor.3 Kor.** — certificate of use right with an aerial-photo land plot, transferable and mortgageable but subject to a 30-day public notice; (3) **Nor.Sor.3** — transferable subject to 30-day notice but without a precise plot — higher risk of overlap; (4) **Sor.Kor.1** — pre-Land Code possession declaration, not a freehold, cannot be transferred to foreigners; (5) **Sor.Por.Kor.4-01** — land reform plots, transfer only by inheritance; (6) **Nor.Sor.Lor.** — state-treasury land, lease only; (7) protected forest, mountain and mangrove land — not transferable.
**Title search at the Land Office**: current owner, encumbrances, mortgages, attachments, 30-year transfer history, pending litigation, actual use, town-planning colour (yellow residential, red commercial, purple industrial, green agricultural, brown institutional), building setbacks under the Building Control Act, and environmental easements such as mangroves and public watercourses.
**Physical inspection**: a boundary survey reconciling the pins on the ground with the deed, public road or servitude access, utilities (water, electricity, internet), flood elevation, and beach setback rules under the National Parks Act and local town-planning ordinances.
**Special searches**: general and specific town plans (for example Pattaya, Phuket and Hua Hin prohibit buildings taller than 12 metres within 200 metres of the beach), aviation zones (building-height restrictions near airports), heritage zones (Rattanakosin in Bangkok), and Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for projects with 80 or more units or more than 4,000 sqm of floor area.
**30-year lease (CCC § 540)**: maximum 30-year term; leases over three years must be registered at the Land Office (CCC § 538) for 1% of total rent plus 0.1% stamp duty. **Important**: a contractual 'renewal for another 30 years' clause is **not binding on heirs** of the lessor per Supreme Court 2526/2541, but the original lessor is bound (Supreme Court 482/2549). Assignment to heirs depends on the contract.
**Commercial / industrial lease of 50 + 49 years (Act B.E. 2562)**: for investments of at least THB 20 million or inside industrial estates — 50 years plus a 49-year renewal totalling 99 years. Registers as a real right (binding on a subsequent purchaser of the land, unlike an ordinary CCC lease) and is freely assignable.
**Superficies (CCC §§ 1410–1416)**: the right to own buildings or structures on someone else's land for life or for up to 30 years. Registered at the Land Office for a 1% fee. Transferable and inheritable. Useful for building a home on a Thai spouse's land.
**Usufruct (CCC §§ 1417–1428)**: the right to use and take fruits from land and buildings for life or up to 30 years. **Not inheritable** — it ends when the usufructuary dies. Useful for a foreign spouse over land held by the Thai spouse.
**Habitation (CCC §§ 1402–1409)**: the right to occupy a dwelling personally — not to rent it out — for life or up to 30 years. Not transferable and not inheritable.
**AMLO Notification 2566**: real estate transactions over THB 10 million require developers, agents and lawyers acting as reporting entities under AMLA § 16 to perform KYC and CDD, declare the Ultimate Beneficial Owner above 25%, verify the source of funds, screen for politically exposed persons, run UN / OFAC / EU sanctions checks and file Suspicious Transaction Reports within seven days.
**Foreign Exchange Transaction (FET) form**: purchase funds for a foreign-name condominium must arrive from abroad in foreign currency in the buyer's name. Thai banks issue a FET form for transfers at or above USD 50,000 (BOT Notification SorNorChor. 13/2563). This form is filed with the Land Office at transfer to prove the source.
**Source of wealth documentation**: three years of foreign tax returns, employment contracts, business sale agreements, inheritance certificates, or investment portfolio statements; banks may ask for more for properties over THB 25 million.
**AML penalties**: individuals face fines of THB 50,000–500,000 and up to two years' imprisonment under AMLA § 64. Reporting entities face fines of up to THB 500,000 plus THB 10,000 per day of default.
Risks and reservations
Can foreigners own land in Thailand?
**As a rule, no** under Land Code § 86, except: (1) **BOI § 27** allows promoted companies to hold operational land plus up to 10 rai of executive residences; (2) **IEAT § 44** allows unlimited land inside industrial estates; (3) **Land Code § 96 bis** allows a foreign individual who invests at least THB 40 million in approved Thai government securities for at least five years to hold up to one rai for residential use with Ministry of Interior approval; (4) **EEC 50 + 49 leases** for commercial / industrial use; (5) **Treaty of Amity** for wholly American-owned companies through BOI endorsement. The common lawful alternatives are a 30-year lease, superficies, usufruct, or a condominium unit in the 49% foreign quota. **Strictly prohibited**: nominee Thai shareholders holding land for a foreigner — § 96 bis carries criminal liability and forced sale within 180 days.
How is the 49% condo foreign quota calculated?
Condo Act § 19 bis: foreigners may hold no more than **49% of the total saleable floor area** of the project (not unit count). The juristic person must issue a Foreign Quota Letter before transfer. If the quota is full, foreigners cannot register a unit in their own name until another foreign owner sells. Holding through a Thai company (at least 51% Thai) is heavily scrutinised under Land Code § 96 bis and DBD nominee tests and should not be used to circumvent the quota.
What is the FET form and is it required?
The Foreign Exchange Transaction form (formerly Tor.Tor.3) is issued by a Thai commercial bank when it receives an inbound foreign-currency transfer at or above USD 50,000 (BOT SorNorChor. 13/2563). It evidences that the funds came from abroad in the buyer's name. **It is required to register a foreign-name condominium** because Condo Act § 19 obliges the Land Office to see proof of source. Without it the unit can only be sold to a Thai. If you wire less than USD 50,000, ask the bank to issue a voluntary FET for a fee of THB 1,000–2,500.
Is a 30 + 30 year lease (60 years) really enforceable?
**Reality**: Thai leases are capped at **30 years** under CCC § 540. A 'renew for another 30 years' clause **is not binding on the lessor's heirs** per Supreme Court 2526/2541 — only the original lessor is bound (Supreme Court 482/2549). If the lessor dies and the heirs refuse, the lease ends at 30 years. **Workarounds**: (1) **Commercial / industrial lease 50 + 49** under the Act B.E. 2562 (requires at least THB 20 million investment or inside an industrial estate); (2) **superficies** for life (you own the building on the land and can transfer or bequeath it); (3) heavy **penalty clauses** for non-renewal plus a right of first refusal.
How does superficies differ from usufruct?
**Superficies (CCC § 1410)**: the right to be the **owner of a building or structure** on someone else's land — no time limit (for life) or up to 30 years — **transferable and inheritable** — useful when building a house on a Thai spouse's land and passing it to children. **Usufruct (CCC § 1417)**: the right to **use and take the fruits** of land and buildings — for life or up to 30 years — **not inheritable** (ends on the usufructuary's death) — transferable to others but ends with the original holder. A common combination on a Thai spouse's land is a lifetime usufruct for the foreign spouse plus superficies for the children, both registered at the Land Office for 1% of appraised value.
Is buying a condo through a Thai company safe?
**Highly risky** if the Thai company was set up purely to hold real estate for a foreigner: (1) **Land Code § 96 bis** — up to two years' imprisonment, a THB 20,000 fine and forced disposal within 180 days; (2) **DBD nominee investigation** — examines capital source, director salaries and the real office; (3) **AMLO STR** triggered when the foreign beneficial owner exceeds 25%; (4) if the foreigner is the sole authorised signatory, a presumption of nominee arises under FBA § 36. The safe path is to buy in the foreign individual's name within the 49% quota, or to use a lease, superficies or usufruct over the land.
I'm married to a Thai national — can my name appear on the land deed?
**No** — Land Code § 86 and Land Department Order 2552: a foreign spouse **cannot** be co-owner of land. The Thai spouse holds alone and must sign **Tor.Dor.7** confirming that the purchase funds are the Thai spouse's separate property and that the foreign spouse has no joint title. **Divorce risk**: under CCC §§ 1471–1474, land bought during marriage with matrimonial funds is matrimonial property, and the foreign spouse can claim half **in money** (not title) per Supreme Court 6515/2548. Protection: a pre-nuptial agreement (registered at marriage under CCC § 1465) plus usufruct or superficies over the land.
How many rai can a BOI company hold under § 27, and what is the investment threshold?
A BOI-promoted company may hold (1) **operational land** for office and factory in line with the Promotion Card and actual project size, and (2) **executive residences up to 10 rai per company** (1 rai per person × 10 people). **Conditions**: registered capital meeting the Promotion Card requirement (THB 5–200 million by category), investment capital of at least THB 1 million excluding land, and a project in BOI category A1+ / A1 / A2 / A3 / A4. **Process**: apply after the Promotion Card → BOI issues S.BOT.5 → Land Office transfers in 30–60 business days. **Constraint**: if BOI promotion is withdrawn, the land must be transferred back or sold within one year (§ 27 paragraph 4).
Who qualifies for an EEC 50 + 49 lease, and how does it differ from the 2562 commercial lease?
**EEC lease 50 + 49 (EEC Act B.E. 2561 § 52)**: only inside EEC zones (Chachoengsao, Chonburi, Rayong) for operators with EEC promotion or EEC-iA / EEC-OZ endorsement — 50 years plus 49 years = 99 years — with CIT exemption of up to 13 years, Smart Visa and an EEC OSS one-stop service. **Commercial / industrial lease 2562**: nationwide — 50 + 49 = 99 years — for businesses with at least THB 20 million invested or inside an IEAT estate — no promotion required, but no EEC tax privileges. Both register as real rights (binding on a subsequent landowner), and both are transferable, inheritable and mortgageable.
What is UBO disclosure under AMLO Notification 2566?
AMLO Notification 2566: real estate transactions over THB 10 million require reporting entities (developers, agents, notaries, lawyers) to report the **Ultimate Beneficial Owner** — the natural person who holds or controls more than 25% of the buying / selling entity, including (1) direct shareholding above 25%, (2) indirect shareholding through trusts, foundations or holding companies above 25%, (3) management control (a director or CEO who is the sole authorised signatory), and (4) ultimate economic beneficiaries. **Required documents**: passport / ID of the UBO, a Beneficial Ownership Declaration, source of wealth, PEP check and sanctions screening. **Penalty for non-reporting**: entity fine of up to THB 500,000 plus THB 10,000 per day plus licence revocation.
How is land and buildings tax applied to a foreign owner of a condo or house?
Land and Buildings Tax Act B.E. 2562 (effective 1 January 2563): (1) **owner-occupied residential** up to THB 50 million is **exempt** for a detached home with the owner on the house registration; up to THB 75 million 0.03%; over THB 100 million 0.10%; (2) **residential not used by owner / rented out**: 0.02–0.10% by value band; (3) **commercial**: 0.30–0.70%; (4) **vacant land** (unused for at least three years): 0.30%, then +0.30% every three years up to 3%; (5) **a foreign-name condo** is treated as residential because a condo unit is a dwelling, but the foreign owner does not enjoy the THB 50 million exemption available to Thai owners actually living there — typically 0.02–0.10% on appraised value. **Payment**: at the local administrative organisation (municipality or SAO) by April every year.
Off-plan condos — what are the risks and how do you mitigate them?
**Main risks**: (1) developer insolvency before handover; (2) delivery delayed by more than a year; (3) actual spec different from the brochure; (4) abnormal common-area fee inflation; (5) title defects on the underlying developer land. **Mitigation**: (i) verify the **Real Estate Project Licence** at OCPB / CB and confirm that the developer uses an **escrow account under the Escrow Act B.E. 2551** (down payments are held at a bank and released against construction milestones); (ii) verify EIA approval and building permits; (iii) the SPA must specify a 0.01–0.02% per-day late-delivery penalty, a right to rescind if delay exceeds one year, and defect liability of at least one year (five years for structural defects under Building Control Act § 49); (iv) **stage payments tied to real construction progress**, not front-loaded; (v) full title search of the developer land.
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Send title deed, sale and purchase agreement, and passport via LINE — receive title search, AML/UBO memo, and fixed-fee quote within one business day.