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Property Transfer Fees in Thailand

Property Transfer Fees in Thailand: 2026 Reduced Rates Guide

Property transfer fees in Thailand just became cheaper to defer, but only for a select group of buyers. On 1 July 2026, the government published two Ministry of Interior notifications that extend the reduced transfer and mortgage registration fees for another full year, through 30 June 2027. For anyone buying, selling, or financing a home or condominium, understanding property transfer fees in Thailand is now essential to budgeting a transaction accurately. This guide explains the new rates, who actually qualifies, the full cost breakdown, and what foreign buyers should expect at the Land Office.

The 2026–2027 Fee Reduction at a Glance

Following a Cabinet resolution on 30 June 2026, Thailand extended a stimulus measure that has supported the residential market for several years. Two notifications published in the Government Gazette on 1 July 2026 keep the reduced registration fees in force until 30 June 2027. In short, the measure slashes two key government charges to a nominal level.

  • Transfer registration fee: reduced to 0.01%, down from the standard 2%.
  • Mortgage registration fee: reduced to 0.01%, down from the standard 1%.

Both reductions are calculated on the officially assessed value of the property. As a result, a qualifying buyer pays a few hundred baht instead of tens of thousands. However, the relief is deliberately narrow, and the eligibility conditions matter more than the headline rate.

Key Takeaway: The reduced 0.01% transfer and mortgage registration fees run from 1 July 2026 to 30 June 2027. They apply only to eligible residential purchases and are among the largest transaction savings currently available in the Thai property market.

Who Qualifies for the Reduced Property Transfer Fees in Thailand

The reduced rate is not automatic. To qualify, a transaction must satisfy every one of the following conditions. Miss one, and the standard rates apply instead.

  • Thai individual buyer. The buyer must be a natural person holding Thai nationality. Companies and foreign nationals do not qualify.
  • Value ceiling of THB 7 million. The purchase price, the official assessed value, and the mortgage amount must each not exceed THB 7 million.
  • Eligible property type. The measure covers detached houses, semi-detached houses, townhouses (row houses), commercial buildings, land sold together with such buildings, and registered condominium units.
  • Simultaneous registration for the mortgage relief. The reduced mortgage fee applies only where the mortgage is registered at the same time as the sale.

Because the buyer must be Thai, foreign purchasers cannot claim the reduced rate directly, even when buying a condominium in their own name under the foreign freehold quota. Nonetheless, the rules still shape how foreign investors structure deals, as we explain below.

Key Takeaway: Eligibility hinges on four cumulative conditions: a Thai individual buyer, a THB 7 million ceiling on price, assessed value and loan, an eligible property type, and simultaneous mortgage registration. Foreign buyers fall outside the reduced scheme.

The Full Cost Breakdown: Fees and Taxes on a Property Transfer

Registration fees are only part of the picture. A Thai property transfer typically triggers up to four separate government charges, collected at the Land Office on the day of registration. The table below sets out the standard rates alongside the reduced rates now available to qualifying buyers.

ChargeStandard rateReduced rate (to 30 Jun 2027)Usually paid by
Transfer fee2% of assessed value0.01% (if eligible)Negotiable, often split 50/50
Mortgage registration fee1% of loan amount0.01% (if eligible)Buyer
Specific Business Tax (SBT)3.3% of higher of price or assessed valueUnchangedSeller
Stamp duty0.5% (only if SBT does not apply)UnchangedSeller
Withholding tax1% (companies); progressive scale (individuals)UnchangedSeller

A few practical points deserve emphasis. First, the Land Office calculates fees and taxes on the official appraised value, not the price you negotiate, so the state valuation drives your bill. Second, Specific Business Tax applies when the seller has owned the property for less than five years or sells as a business; when SBT applies, stamp duty does not. Third, although the law assigns certain charges to the seller, the parties frequently renegotiate who pays what, and the final split belongs in the sale and purchase agreement.

Key Takeaway: Budget for the full stack, not just the transfer fee. Even with the reduced registration fees, a seller may still owe SBT or stamp duty plus withholding tax, and every charge is computed on the government appraised value.

What the Reduction Means for Foreign Buyers

Foreign investors cannot access the 0.01% rate, but the measure still affects them in three ways. Understanding these points helps foreign buyers negotiate from an informed position.

1. Condominium purchases in your own name

A foreign national buying a condominium under the Condominium Act quota pays the standard 2% transfer fee, typically split with the seller. Since the reduced rate requires a Thai buyer, the saving is unavailable, and the cost should be modelled at full rate.

2. Purchases through a Thai spouse

Where a Thai spouse acquires a house and land in their sole name, that spouse may qualify for the reduced fee if the value stays within THB 7 million. Couples should take Thai legal advice first, because ownership structure carries consequences for matrimonial property and future resale.

3. Market timing and negotiation leverage

The extension keeps entry-level housing demand active, which sellers know. Foreign buyers negotiating a resale can reasonably ask a Thai-eligible counterpart to reflect their fee saving in the price, or to absorb a larger share of the transfer fee on a non-qualifying deal.

How to Prepare Before Transfer Day

A smooth Land Office appointment depends on preparation. To avoid delays or unexpected costs, buyers and sellers should take the following steps in advance.

  • Confirm the official appraised value with the Land Department, since it sets the tax base.
  • Check the seller’s holding period to anticipate whether SBT or stamp duty applies.
  • Agree the allocation of every fee and tax in writing within the sale and purchase agreement.
  • Verify eligibility documents where the reduced rate is claimed, including proof of Thai nationality and property value.
  • Coordinate the bank so that any mortgage is registered simultaneously with the sale.
  • Instruct a Thai lawyer to conduct title due diligence and attend the transfer.
Key Takeaway: Preparation protects your budget. Confirm the appraised value, settle the cost split in the contract, and align the bank on timing before you reach the Land Office.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do the reduced property transfer fees in Thailand last?
The reduced 0.01% transfer and mortgage registration fees apply from 1 July 2026 until 30 June 2027, following the Cabinet resolution of 30 June 2026 and the notifications published in the Government Gazette on 1 July 2026.
Can a foreigner benefit from the reduced transfer fee?
No. The reduced rate is available only to buyers who are Thai natural persons. A foreign national buying a condominium in their own name pays the standard 2% transfer fee, usually split with the seller by agreement.
What is the value limit for the reduced rate?
The purchase price, the official assessed value, and the mortgage amount must each not exceed THB 7 million. If any of the three figures exceeds that ceiling, the transaction reverts to the standard fees.
Who pays the transfer fee, the buyer or the seller?
The law does not fix a single payer for the transfer fee, so it is negotiable and often split 50/50. Specific Business Tax, stamp duty, and withholding tax are ordinarily the seller’s responsibility, although parties may renegotiate the split in the sale contract.
Are transfer taxes calculated on the sale price or the appraised value?
The Land Office calculates fees and taxes on the official government appraised value, which can differ from the negotiated price. Buyers should confirm the appraised value early because it determines the tax base for every charge.

Need Guidance on Property Transfer Fees in Thailand?

Lex Bangkok advises international clients, expats, and investors on structuring property purchases, verifying title, and managing every fee and tax at the Land Office. Our lawyers ensure your transaction is compliant, cost-efficient, and protected from the outset.

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Internal resources: learn how the Thailand land appraisal value reset will affect your tax base, review the process for a condo transfer in Thailand for foreigners, and understand your ongoing obligations under the Land and Building Tax. Official references: the Department of Lands administers registration fees, and the Revenue Department oversees Specific Business Tax, stamp duty, and withholding tax.