guide · Thailand

Apartments vs Villas in Thailand: Which Is the Better Investment?

Updated 5 min readBy Global Investments

Thailand's residential property market presents international investors with a fundamental legal question before any financial comparison can begin: foreigners cannot directly own land in Thailand. This single fact shapes the entire apartments-versus-villas decision in ways that have no parallel in most Western property markets. Understanding the legal framework first is essential to making a sound investment choice.

The Ownership Law Divide

Condominiums (apartments): Under Thailand's Condominium Act, foreigners may own condominium units outright in freehold, provided that foreign ownership within the building does not exceed 49% of total unit area. This is clean, straightforward freehold ownership — the title deed (Chanote) is issued in your name personally. It is the only form of direct freehold property ownership available to foreign nationals in Thailand.

Villas and houses: Foreigners cannot own land in Thailand. A villa is a house on a plot of land — and the land cannot be held in your name. The practical structures used are:

  • Long-term leasehold: typically 30 years, with contractual options to renew for two further 30-year terms (though only the initial 30 years is legally enforceable as a registered right)
  • Thai company structure: a Thai limited company can hold land, with the foreigner as a director and shareholder — but Thai nominees must hold a majority of shares, and the use of nominees purely to circumvent land ownership law is legally questionable
  • Thai spouse: ownership in the name of a Thai national spouse — carries obvious personal risk

The leasehold structure is the most commonly used for villa investment. It provides secure use rights for 30 years (registered at the Land Department) and is widely accepted in the market, but it is not freehold and should be evaluated accordingly.

Rental Yields

Thailand's most active investment markets are Bangkok (condominiums), Phuket (villas and condominiums), Koh Samui (villas), Chiang Mai (condominiums), and Pattaya (condominiums). Indicative gross yields as of 2026:

  • Bangkok city condominiums (Sukhumvit, Silom, Sathorn): 4–6%
  • Phuket branded/managed condominiums: 5–8% (guaranteed rental schemes from developers vary widely)
  • Phuket villas (leasehold, short-term rental): 6–10% gross when actively managed
  • Koh Samui luxury villas: 5–8% gross

Villas in prime resort locations can generate exceptional gross yields through short-term holiday rental — a well-appointed four-bedroom pool villa in Phuket's Kamala or Surin can achieve THB 80,000–180,000 per week during high season. However, occupancy rates, management fees (typically 20–30% of gross revenue for villa management companies), and the cost of maintaining a private pool, garden, and structure significantly reduce net returns.

Condominiums in Bangkok's central business districts attract long-term expat tenants, providing steadier income with lower management intensity.

Developer Guaranteed Rental Schemes

Many Thai condominium and villa developments are marketed internationally with guaranteed rental returns — typically 5–8% per year for three to seven years. These schemes require careful scrutiny:

  • The guarantee is backed by the developer, not an independent insurer
  • Guaranteed schemes may inflate the headline purchase price to fund the guaranteed return
  • After the guarantee period expires, actual rental yields may be lower
  • Developer solvency risk is real — research the developer's track record and financial standing

Guaranteed returns are not the same as market rental income. Treat them as a marketing feature, not an investment fundamental.

Capital Growth

Thai property markets show very different capital growth dynamics by location and asset type:

Bangkok condominiums: Pockets of strong capital growth exist in premium locations (Thonglor, Ekkamai, Sathorn), but the Bangkok condominium market overall has shown moderate growth, with significant oversupply in mid-range segments. Foreign buyers can only purchase in the foreign quota (49% of units) — when this quota is reached, resale becomes harder as you are competing only within a limited buyer pool.

Phuket villas (leasehold): Capital growth for leasehold assets is inherently capped by lease term erosion. A villa with 25 years remaining on a 30-year lease is worth less than one with 30 years remaining, and a villa with 10 years remaining is difficult to sell at any meaningful price. Track the lease term carefully.

Branded residences: A growing segment — villas and apartments affiliated with international hotel brands (Four Seasons, Anantara, Rosewood) — have shown stronger capital retention and a broader international resale market.

Liquidity

The Thai resale market for foreign buyers is constrained by the 49% foreign quota in condominium buildings. If the foreign quota is full, you must sell to a Thai buyer (who can purchase outside the quota), typically at a discount. In buildings with strong demand, this is manageable; in oversupplied markets, it is a real exit risk.

Leasehold villas are less liquid than freehold assets. The pool of buyers for a leasehold villa with diminishing term is narrower, and some buyers (particularly those seeking a permanent second home) will not consider leasehold.

Tax and Costs

Thailand imposes several taxes on property transactions:

  • Transfer fee: 2% of appraised value (typically split 50/50 between buyer and seller, though negotiable)
  • Specific Business Tax (SBT): 3.3% of sale price (if seller has owned fewer than 5 years)
  • Withholding tax: progressive on seller's gain
  • Stamp duty: 0.5% (only payable if SBT does not apply)

There is no annual property tax for individual owners below a basic threshold, but the Land and Building Tax Act (2020) introduced a tax on commercial use properties and high-value residential properties. Rental income is subject to personal income tax in Thailand for tax residents; non-resident landlords have withholding tax deducted at source.

Which Is Right for You?

Choose a condominium if:

  • You want clear freehold ownership in your own name
  • You prefer urban markets (Bangkok) with stable long-term rental demand
  • You value liquidity and a lower-complexity exit
  • You are investing at lower absolute price points

Choose a villa if:

  • You want high gross rental returns in a resort market (Phuket, Koh Samui)
  • You intend to use the property personally for extended periods
  • You are comfortable with leasehold ownership and understand its limitations
  • You have the budget for a quality asset — undercapitalised villa investment in Thailand is rarely rewarding

Always engage an independent Thai property lawyer to review any purchase contract, lease documentation, or company structure. Do not rely solely on the developer's legal team.

Property values can fall as well as rise. Thai property and land ownership laws may change. Leasehold rights are not equivalent to freehold. This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice.

How Global Investments Can Help

We work with independent lawyers, licensed estate agents, and experienced property managers across Bangkok, Phuket, and Koh Samui. Our Thailand team can help you navigate the legal framework, evaluate developer credentials, and structure your purchase to protect your interests. Contact us to discuss your Thailand investment strategy.

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal or tax advice. Programme rules, prices and tax rates change; verify current requirements with a qualified adviser before acting.