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Proposal Needed for Legal Revisions to Foreign Land Leases


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Posted

I believe that Thailand has to do what ever it can to discourage foreign ownership to avoid the ridiculous prices that are paid for property in the west .

The idea of leasing land for 99 years and at the end of the lease the ownership goes to the government will mean that not too many would want to get involved.

Posted

Sounds like a state land grab to me.

you can buy your land but if you want to lease it to the people who have cash to pay, then you give your land to the State.
 

You may get your lease money. But will it cover cost of purchase and it’s new value in 99 years?

 

As the land increases in value over 99 years, the state takes it and any builldings improvements on your land done by lessee.

 

State land grab triggered by jingoism

  • Agree 2
Posted
26 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

The only thing needed for a lease to be legal, would be a registration at Department of Land & Transportation (DLT).

I think you are confused again.

 

The Land Office (grom tee din) is not the same place as the transport office (grom kon song)

 

To make a legal lease you are required to go to the Land Office, nothing to do with the transport office.

 

Glad I could clear that up for you.

Yet again.

  • Confused 1
Posted
3 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Image by Freepik

 

A proposal to allow foreigners to lease land in Thailand for up to 99 years may require significant legal amendments, according to Finance Permanent Secretary Lavaron Sangsnit. This proposal involves transferring privately-owned land to state property managed by the Treasury Department.

 

Mr Lavaron highlighted the necessity of a comprehensive study, potentially leading to the amendment of related laws. Under the constitution, public consultations would also be required for any new legislation.

 

The concept, initially proposed by former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, suggests that Thai landowners could lease their land to foreigners for up to 99 years by first transferring the title deed to the Treasury Department. During the lease period, the Thai landowner would receive full payment but relinquish ownership, with the land becoming state property.

 

Foreign lessees would gain the right to lease land for a maximum of 99 years, after which the property would revert to state ownership. To address specific concerns, conditions would prohibit foreigners from leasing land for agricultural use or developing low-cost housing for low-income individuals without requiring a down payment.

 

However, no official policy level action has been undertaken on this proposal. Implementing such a scheme would require revising multiple laws, including Treasury Department regulations that currently cap leases at 30 years.


"Extending the lease to 99 years would require legal amendments," said Mr Lavaron. "Additionally, laws concerning the transfer of state property would need to be reviewed to determine whether land can be transferred from private ownership, with specific leasing conditions for foreigners. Amendments to the Civil and Commercial Code would also be necessary, along with defining types of land use restrictions."

 

According to the 2021 ministerial regulation under the State Property Act of 2019, leasing state property is generally limited to 30 years, unless for commercial or industrial purposes approved by the finance minister. For utilisation of state property involving more than 500 million baht from private entities, rental rates must match or exceed rates approved by the State Property Committee, reported Bangkok Post.

 

A Finance Ministry source, who wished to remain anonymous, noted that similar proposals had faced opposition in the past, with critics arguing it could lead to effectively "selling the country" to foreigners. However, allowing long-term leases while maintaining Thai ownership might address these concerns.

 

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-- 2024-09-30

 

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The proposal remains at a conceptual stage, requiring further legislative and public scrutiny before any implementation can proceed.

Bonkers-why should the state/treasury department get the land at the end of the lease, why does it even need to involve them, lease should be a contractual process between leaser and lease 

  • Agree 2
Posted
24 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

I think you are confused again.

 

The Land Office (grom tee din) is not the same place as the transport office (grom kon song)

 

To make a legal lease you are required to go to the Land Office, nothing to do with the transport office.

 

Glad I could clear that up for you.

Yet again.

Don´t know why I wrote that. Land Office, of course. 

Glad you understood that. Over my expectations.

Posted
4 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

Don´t know why I wrote that. Land Office, of course. 

Glad you understood that. Over my expectations.

You really struggle here don’t you. 
 

I can just see you lining up at the Land Office to renew your drivers license. 😂

 

Anything else you want to know feel free to ask me before posting.

  • Haha 2
Posted
1 hour ago, Tarteso said:

Don’t trust  a word from this People. Imagine a new Crack Down, with new Military Coup. New rule and new  change.
 

I wouldn’t buy a land in Thailand.

Is that not the same in any country with new rules and new changes?

Best you buy land on Mars to avoid  change to laws

Posted (edited)
11 minutes ago, itsari said:

Is that not the same in any country with new rules and new changes?

Best you buy land on Mars to avoid  change to laws

2 Nonsenses in the same reply 👍

Edited by Tarteso
Posted
2 minutes ago, Tarteso said:

2 Nonsenses in the same reply 👍

A matter of opinion.

I am asking you where you can go on earth and buy land not expecting changes.

Thank you for your reply

Posted (edited)
53 minutes ago, itsari said:

A matter of opinion.

I am asking you where you can go on earth and buy land not expecting changes.

Thank you for your reply

Land law in Thailand is not the same as Roman law, Civil and Criminal Law like in most of Western countries. Although it is true that in some countries there are limits on the rights of foreigners to buy a land. 

Edited by Tarteso
  • Thanks 1
Posted
57 minutes ago, connda said:

Yep.  The Thai government will become the exact conduit for expropriating "Thai" land from Thai commoners.  Once the government "owns" the land, the original owners will never get it back.  Imho, they are paving the way to the privatization of Thai lands and the transfer of those lands to large multinational corporations like Blackrock.  Then there is no coming back.  Once a significant proportion of those lands are leased to foreign corporate interests, they'll be pressure from those ฿฿฿ Stakeholders ฿฿฿ to make those leases permanent.  Who benefits?  Large multinationals and the likes of HiSo Thais such a Thaksin. 

Buy up the lands from Thai peasants promising them 99 years of fixed income (inflation will eat that in less than a decade as the price of the physical land skyrockets), then kick the peasants into cities and then apply the economic thumbscrews. 

Don't fall for it.

Couldn't say it better

  • Agree 1
Posted
5 hours ago, webfact said:

Foreign lessees would gain the right to lease land for a maximum of 99 years, after which the property would revert to state ownership.

Most Thais would likely rather keep the land for family than a limited 99 years lease-income. With the freedom to renegotiate a lease after 30 years – which also can be for a new leaseholder – they can raise the price with for example inflation. If inflation is the preferred 2% annually, then they can almost, if not fully, double their lease prise; with 2% inflation prices will double in around 36 years. Furthermore, 30 years can be long time and progress can make both land and lease price raise more than inflation.

Posted

What nonsense, they should do what every other country has done when making new laws in the entire history of the modern world.

Take a few examples which have been in place and working in other countries for centuries without major problems, combine and customise them to suit any local 'issues' and copy them.

Posted

Sounds like a recipe for tyranny to me....
I can easily see people who only look to the here and now and to me, myself, and I not having a problem signing on. They don't care what happens 99 years from now, let alone 50 or less. What does a 60 year old care, as long as he gets an easy income off his property, and with no property tax now, until he dies. I haven't come across many here who plan or even care to think much about the generations that follow, other than maybe their immediate children. Most people I've asked, don't even hardly know much at all about anyone beyond their grandparents, so it makes sense that they wouldn't think much about the future of their own progeny.

  • Like 1
  • Confused 1

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