Complete Guide

Buying Land in Thailand as a Foreigner — Everything You Need to Know

Written by the Pai Land Solutions team — 10 years on the ground in Mae Hong Son Province.

📅 Updated May 2026 ⏱ 15 min read 📍 Focused on Northern Thailand

Thailand's land laws can feel impenetrable for foreign buyers. The short version: you can't own freehold land in your personal name — but you absolutely can secure land legally, safely, and for the long term. Thousands of foreigners have done it. Here's exactly how.

The Good News

A properly structured 30-year leasehold gives you the practical equivalent of ownership — you can build, rent out, sell your improvements, and live freely on your land. The land just stays in a Thai name.

Option A: 30-Year Leasehold (Most Common)

A leasehold gives you the legal right to occupy and use land for 30 years, registered at the Land Office under Civil and Commercial Code §538. Most leases include a contractual renewal clause for an additional 30 years, giving you 60-year security in practice. Note that renewal clauses do not automatically bind future owners of the land — they are personal obligations of the original lessor.

  • Registered at the Land Office — legally binding against subsequent owners
  • You can build permanent structures that belong to you (a separate "right of superficies" can be registered to make this explicit)
  • You can sublease, sell your lease, or transfer it
  • Lower cost and simpler than a company structure
  • Renewal clause should be in the contract (not automatic)

Our recommendation: For most buyers looking for a home or small farm in Pai, the 30-year leasehold is the cleanest, most transparent option.

Option B: Thai Limited Company

You can set up a Thai company (min. 51% Thai shareholders) that owns the land freehold. As a director and minority shareholder, you control the company and effectively control the land.

  • Company owns freehold — strongest long-term protection
  • Requires annual accounting and tax filing
  • Ongoing cost: ฿15,000–30,000/year in accounting fees
  • Thai shareholders must be genuine. Nominee shareholders are illegal under the Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999). Enforcement audits run periodically in tourist provinces — Pai included.

We work with qualified lawyers in Chiang Mai who can set this up correctly. Ask us for a referral.

Option C: Usufruct

A usufruct grants you the right to use and profit from land owned by someone else, often for your lifetime (Civil and Commercial Code §1417). It can be registered at the Land Office but is less flexible than a leasehold for development purposes — and ends at your death rather than transferring.

2. Understanding Thai Title Deeds

Not all land in Thailand has equal legal protection. The type of title deed determines what you can do with the land and how securely you hold it.

Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor) ★★★★★

The gold standard. GPS-mapped, fully registered, exact boundary measurements. Can be freely bought, sold, mortgaged, and leased. Always insist on Chanote for any significant investment. Approximately 70% of valley plots in Pai are now chanote.

Nor Sor 3 Gor ★★★★☆

Good title — can be developed and transferred. Boundaries are surveyed but measured from aerial photographs rather than GPS-fixed monuments. Can usually be upgraded to Chanote through a Land Office process taking 6-12 months. We source both Chanote and Nor Sor 3 Gor plots.

Nor Sor 3 / Sor Por Gor ★★☆☆☆

Older, weaker titles. Avoid unless you have expert legal advice. We don't list plots with these title types. Anything below Nor Sor 3 (Sor Kor 1, Por Bor Tor 5/6) is not a title at all — only a tax or possessory document — and cannot be reliably leased.

Our Due Diligence Process

Before any listing goes live, we visit the Land Office in Mae Hong Son to verify the title, confirm the owner's identity, check for encumbrances or mortgages, and confirm the plot boundaries on the ground. You get a full report.

3. Real Costs of Buying Land in Pai

Here's a realistic breakdown for a ฿1,500,000 leasehold plot:

Cost Item Amount
Lease price฿1,500,000
Lease registration fee (1%)฿15,000
Stamp duty (0.1%)฿1,500
Legal/translation fees฿10,000–25,000
Total approx.฿1,526,500–1,541,500

Our service is free to buyers — we're compensated by sellers via a transparent finder's fee. There is no buyer's commission.

4. The Purchase Process Step by Step

  • Week 1–2: Viewings, questions, shortlisting
  • Week 2–3: Due diligence — title verification, site check, water and road assessment
  • Week 3–4: Reservation deposit (typically 10%), lease draft agreed
  • Week 4–6: Thai lawyer reviews, any structure setup (if using company)
  • Week 6–8: Land Office registration day — lease signed, fees paid, title transferred

5. Pai-Specific Considerations

Pai is in Mae Hong Son Province — the most remote province in northern Thailand, ~135 km northwest of Chiang Mai via Route 1095 (the famous 762 curves). This creates some unique factors:

  • Seasonal road access: Some plots have limited road access in rainy season (June–October). We always note this clearly.
  • Water planning: Many plots rely on bore wells (typical depth 60-100m, ฿80,000-200,000 to drill) or rainwater. See our water systems guide.
  • Solar viability: Northern Thailand averages 5.0-5.5 peak sun hours/day — excellent for off-grid solar. A 5kW + 10kWh battery system runs ฿250,000-350,000 installed. See our solar guide or the deeper off-grid resource at paioffgrid.com.
  • Land Office location: The Mae Hong Son Land Office processes all title transfers. Allow a full day for registration.

6. Red Flags to Watch For

  • Agent can't show you the actual title deed
  • No Land Office registration offered (verbal lease only — collapses to 3 years under §538)
  • Seller is in a rush and discounting heavily without explanation
  • Plot boundary doesn't match what's on the title document
  • Agent won't visit the land with you in person
  • No mention of seasonal water or flood history
  • Pressure to use a "Thai company nominee" structure (illegal under Foreign Business Act)
Our Promise

Every listing on our site has been personally visited. We show up at the land, not just the photos. We tell you the seasonal road situation, the water source, the flood history if any, and the neighbour situation. Our business runs on referrals — we can't afford to disappoint a buyer.

New to Pai?

pailiving.com covers the practical side of life in Pai — visa runs, healthcare, schools, cost of living, and what it's actually like to relocate here. A useful read before committing to land.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Buying Land in Thailand

No — foreigners cannot own freehold land in Thailand in their personal name. However, you can legally secure land through a 30-year leasehold (the most common path), a Thai Limited Company structure (you can own shares), or usufruct rights. Each has pros and cons depending on your situation.
A Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor) is the strongest form of land title in Thailand — equivalent to freehold ownership. The boundaries are GPS-measured and registered with the Department of Lands. Always insist on Chanote title for any significant purchase.
Land in Pai ranges from ฿200,000 per rai for remote agricultural land to ฿2-5M+ per rai for prime valley or view plots near town. Our current listings start from ฿180,000 for a 30-year leasehold. Price per rai varies enormously by location, access, and views.
At the Land Office, you'll pay transfer fee (2% of assessed value), specific business tax (3.3%) or stamp duty (0.5%), and withholding tax. For a foreigner using a leasehold, you also pay lease registration fee (1% of total lease value). We walk every client through the exact costs before commitment.
For simple leaseholds, many buyers proceed without a lawyer — we prepare standard lease documents and register at the Land Office. For Thai company structures or complex deals, we strongly recommend a qualified property lawyer in Chiang Mai. We can connect you with trusted professionals.
Yes. Once a lease is registered at the Land Office, you can build permanent structures. The building is legally yours and can be sold, rented, or transferred separately from the land lease. You can also include a right to build (superficies) in the lease agreement.
From first viewing to completed Land Office registration: typically 4-8 weeks. This includes due diligence (2 weeks), drafting and agreeing the lease (1-2 weeks), and Land Office registration (1 day, booked 1-2 weeks ahead). We coordinate everything.

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