# Can Foreigners Buy Property in Chiang Mai? An Honest Guide

> A clear, balanced look at how foreigners can and cannot buy property in Chiang Mai, Thailand, from the Ada House team.

Few places tempt you to stay quite like Chiang Mai. After a season of mountain mornings and night-market evenings, the thought arrives almost on its own: *could we buy a place here?* It is a wonderful question, and a complicated one. So before anything else, a clear word: what follows is **general information only, not legal advice**. Thai property law is specific and unforgiving of assumptions, and you must engage a **qualified, independent Thai property lawyer** before signing or paying anything. With that said, here is the honest picture as we understand it.

## The one rule that shapes everything

Start here, because it governs the rest: under Thai law, **foreigners cannot own land** in their own name. Not a rice field, not a garden, not the plot beneath a house. This single rule explains nearly every workaround you will hear about, and why some of those workarounds are wiser than others. It feels strict at first, yet once you accept it, the genuine options become much clearer, and far less stressful to weigh.

![Can Foreigners Buy Property in Chiang Mai? An Honest Guide](/blog/buying-property-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## What you genuinely can own: a condominium

The cleanest path for a foreigner is a **condominium unit**, which you can hold **freehold** in your own name. The catch is a quota: under Thailand's condominium framework, foreigners may collectively own up to **49% of the total floor area** of a given building, with the remaining 51% reserved for Thai owners. Before you commit, your lawyer should confirm the building still has **foreign quota** available, as a unit cannot be registered to you if the quota is full. For many of our long-staying guests, a well-managed condo is the only ownership route that is both legal and genuinely simple.

## Houses and land: leasehold and the grey areas

Wanting a house with a garden is natural, and here the trade-offs sharpen. The most established route is a long **leasehold**, typically registered for up to **30 years**, sometimes with renewal clauses written into the contract, though it is wise to treat further terms as a hope rather than a guarantee. You may then own the *house* (the structure) while leasing the land beneath it.

You will also hear about **Thai company structures**, where a company nominally owns the land. Be cautious: arrangements that use Thai **nominee shareholders** purely to sidestep the foreign-ownership rule are **illegal**, and authorities do scrutinise them. A genuine, trading company is a different matter, but it is not a casual decision. Buying **via a Thai spouse** is common too, though the land is legally theirs, and any such purchase usually involves a declaration that the funds were their separate property. None of this is a reason to despair, only a reason to get proper advice.

## Due diligence is not optional

Whatever the route, this is where money is saved or lost. Insist that your lawyer verifies the **title deed**, ideally a full **chanote** (Nor Sor 4 Jor), the strongest form of title, and checks for mortgages, liens or access disputes. Use a **lawyer who is independent of the seller and the agent**, consider an **escrow** arrangement so funds are released only on registration, and **never hand over cash blindly** against a promise. With **off-plan** purchases, the risks compound: you are trusting a developer's timeline and finances, so check their track record and how your deposits are protected.

A house-hunt should never be rushed from a hotel lobby with a suitcase by the door. Stay with us at Ada House while you explore neighbourhoods at a human pace, and you will make calmer, better decisions.

![Can Foreigners Buy Property in Chiang Mai? An Honest Guide](/blog/buying-property-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Costs, taxes and the small print

Beyond the headline price, budget for **transfer fees and taxes** at the Land Office, which commonly include a transfer fee, stamp duty or a specific business tax, and withholding tax. The exact figures shift with policy and with how long the seller has held the property, so we will not quote numbers here; ask your lawyer for a current, itemised estimate. Agree early, in writing, **who pays what**, as this is often negotiable and frequently misunderstood.

## Our honest recommendation: rent first, buy slowly

If we could offer just one piece of advice, it would be this: **rent first**. Live through a hot season and a rainy one, learn which side of the moat feels like home, and let the romance settle into something steadier. Our guides to [renting an apartment in Chiang Mai](/blog/renting-apartment-chiang-mai) and the real [cost of living here](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) are a gentle place to begin, and if you are weighing a longer chapter, our notes on [retiring in Chiang Mai](/blog/retiring-in-chiang-mai) and [settling in](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai) may help you picture the day-to-day. Buying can be a joy, but only once the city has truly become yours.

Take your time, ask the awkward questions, and let Chiang Mai earn your trust. We will keep the kettle on.
