Rental market overview
Thailand's rental market is mature and liquid in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, Pattaya, Hua Hin and Koh Samui. Supply ranges from studio condos in high-rise towers to standalone houses with gardens. Most landlords accept 12-month leases as standard; 6-month leases are negotiable at a 10-20% premium. Month-to-month rentals exist (especially serviced apartments) but at higher per-month rates.
Typical rental costs (monthly, THB)
Indicative ranges as of May 2026:
Bangkok
- Studio/1-bed condo (30-50 m²) in central BTS/MRT area: 12,000-25,000 THB (330-690 EUR)
- 2-bed condo (60-90 m²) in central area: 25,000-50,000 THB (690-1,380 EUR)
- 3-bed house with garden in outer suburb: 30,000-60,000 THB (830-1,660 EUR)
- Serviced apartment (monthly): 20,000-50,000 THB (550-1,380 EUR)
Chiang Mai
- Studio/1-bed condo near old city or Nimman: 6,000-15,000 THB (165-415 EUR)
- 2-bed house in city area: 10,000-25,000 THB (275-690 EUR)
- 3-bed house with garden: 15,000-35,000 THB (415-970 EUR)
Phuket
- 1-bed condo near beach: 15,000-30,000 THB (415-830 EUR)
- 2-bed villa with pool: 30,000-70,000 THB (830-1,930 EUR)
Lease terms
- Standard lease: 12 months, with a 1-month deposit (refundable at end, minus utility arrears) plus 1-month advance rent.
- You pay utility bills (electricity, water, internet) separately. Electric rates vary: government rate (about 4-5 THB/unit) vs apartment rate (6-8 THB/unit). Clarify before signing.
- Contracts are usually in Thai with an English translation; the Thai version is legally binding. Have a Thai-speaking friend or lawyer review the Thai text.
- Early termination: most contracts allow early exit with forfeit of the deposit, or a penalty of 1 month's rent. Negotiate a 6-month break clause.
Finding accommodation
- Online portals: DDproperty, Hipflat, Renthub [1,2,3]. All have English interfaces.
- Facebook groups: "Bangkok Expats", "Chiang Mai Rental", "Phuket Property": active; filter carefully.
- Agents: common for condo rentals. The landlord typically pays the agent fee (1 month's rent). Using an agent costs the tenant nothing.
- Walk-in: many condo buildings have a rental office or a board with available units in the lobby.
- Short-term trial: stay in a serviced apartment or Airbnb for the first 1-2 months while searching in person.
Property purchase for foreigners
The Condominium Act allows foreigners to own up to 49% of the total floor area in a condominium building [4]. Ownership is fee simple (freehold). Foreigners cannot own land directly. Common structures for house ownership:
- Leasehold (30-year lease with renewal options) on the land.
- Setting up a Thai company to own the land (legally permissible but scrutinised by the Land Department for nominee arrangements).
- Buying a condo outright: minimum 51% of the units must be Thai-owned at any time.
Transfer fees for condos are roughly 2% of the registered value, split between buyer and seller. Withholding tax for the seller depends on their tax status.
Utilities and internet
- Electricity: connection requires a rental contract or proof of ownership. Meter deposit 2,000-10,000 THB. Rates 4-5 THB/kWh (government).
- Water: MWA (Bangkok) or PWA (provinces). Rates roughly 8-15 THB per unit.
- Internet: AIS, TrueOnline, 3BB. Fibre broadband starting at 500 THB/month for 300 Mbps.
Common issues
- Furnished vs unfurnished: most condos are semi-furnished (kitchen, bathroom, bed frame, wardrobe). Verify the inventory list.
- Mould: common in Bangkok and coastal areas due to humidity. Check for it in bathrooms and wardrobes before signing.
- Air conditioning: check that AC units are serviced and working. Landlord is responsible for maintenance.
- Rental scams: avoid paying deposits to "agents" without viewing the property. Verify ownership via the Land Office (fee 20-50 THB per check).
This page is not legal advice. Consult a qualified lawyer before signing contracts.