Jump to content

Buying a house without using a lawyer


Recommended Posts

I am in the process of buying a house and would like to know your thoughts on whether I should engage a lawyer or not?

 

The house is in a Thais name and will be going into my Thai wife's name. On the face of it a straight forward purchase.

 

I have been quoted 45,000 baht lawyers fees. House price 5.5 million.

 

I would like to know your experiences buying houses with and without lawyers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

IMHO you need an experienced Thai person or a farang who can read and write Thai who you can trust. It does not have to be a lawyer.

I had the help of a farang friend who used to be a property agent in Thailand - and his Thai is nearly perfect. He knows all the details, and I know I can trust him.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Make sure who ever it is that is selling the house is also the owner.

Do they have the chanote at hand?

Take some one who buys and sells a lot and give them some cash to help you.

From a Thai seller to a Thai buyer should be straight forward but there is cheating going on all the time.

They may have some one at the land office who is willing to help you.

  • Thumbs Up 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

50 minutes ago, OnTheLash said:

I am in the process of buying a house and would like to know your thoughts on whether I should engage a lawyer or not?

 

The house is in a Thais name and will be going into my Thai wife's name. On the face of it a straight forward purchase.

 

I have been quoted 45,000 baht lawyers fees. House price 5.5 million.

 

I would like to know your experiences buying houses with and without lawyers.

First of all, is the lawyer the sales agent for the seller? Or is it a lawyer you have chosen? Thats two different things, and where the loyality going to be during the sale and handover. 

 

When I was looking for appartment in Hua Hin, the real estate agent also came with a package with their lawyer, and it was up to me to choose a lawyer for my self to finalize the take over, but they did not recomend it, and many do not even care and trust the real estate agent 100% 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, Hummin said:

Thats a very good solution when the land have chanote to have mortage. 

 

Have you considered recording a usufruct on the back of the chanut document?

 

It would mention that even thought you personally are not the owner, the actual (new) owner agrees that you have the right to live in the property until YOU revoke that right.

 

It should also mention that the property cannot be sold without your written permission. And you would be the only person who can cancel / remove the usufruct.

 

I have a usufruct on the land and house I bought for my Thai son in a moo bahn village.

 

Son was keen for the usufruct to be be put in place. Why? 1). Respect for me. 2). Because he doesn't trust his in-laws (for very good reasons) and his wife is frightened of her unpleasant corrupt siblings.

 

Son and his wife had fears her siblings would try to get the owners name changed from son's name to son's wife's name then changed to their names.

 

They would have no hesitation to strongly pressure sons' wife and no hesitation to offer / pay big money to a lawyer or to the local lands title office to get the chanut changed. 

  • Like 1
  • Love It 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, scorecard said:

 

Have you considered recording a usufruct on the back of the chanut document?

 

It would mention that even thought you personally are not the owner, the actual (new) owner agrees that you have the right to live in the property until YOU revoke that right.

 

It should also mention that the property cannot be sold without your written permission. And you would be the only person who can cancel / remove the usufruct.

 

I have a usufruct on the land and house I bought for my Thai son in a moo bahn village.

 

Son was keen for the usufruct to be be put in place. Why? 1). Respect for me. 2). Because he doesn't trust his in-laws (for very good reasons) and his wife is frightened of her unpleasant corrupt siblings.

 

Son and his wife had fears her siblings would try to get the owners name changed from son's name to son's wife's name then changed to their names.

 

They would have no hesitation to strongly pressure sons' wife and no hesitation to offer / pay big money to a lawyer or to the local lands title office to get the chanut changed. 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, OnTheLash said:

 

Thanks for the response. I've never considered an usufruct. If it all goes pear shaped I just walk away, its not an issue to me.

Everybody's circumstances are different. This will be my 7th house purchase in Thailand with the same woman. I have signed my life away 6 times in the past at the land office.

I was looking for recent experiences of posters using and not using a lawyer (I have never used one in the past).

Lawyers certainly seem to be charging a premium now when a foreigner is involved, unfortunately I have to be there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, OnTheLash said:

Thanks for the response. I've never considered an usufruct. If it all goes pear shaped I just walk away, its not an issue to me.

Everybody's circumstances are different. This will be my 7th house purchase in Thailand with the same woman. I have signed my life away 6 times in the past at the land office.

I was looking for recent experiences of posters using and not using a lawyer (I have never used one in the past).

Lawyers certainly seem to be charging a premium now when a foreigner is involved, unfortunately I have to be there.

Might want to lead with that next time.  Save people from replying, as you have more experience at the land office than most members on AN.  Makes me wonder why you even asked.

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/4/2024 at 2:00 PM, OnTheLash said:

I am in the process of buying a house and would like to know your thoughts on whether I should engage a lawyer or not?

 

The house is in a Thais name and will be going into my Thai wife's name. On the face of it a straight forward purchase.

 

I have been quoted 45,000 baht lawyers fees. House price 5.5 million.

 

I would like to know your experiences buying houses with and without lawyers.

No need for a lawyer. I bought 3 properties through a real estate agent and a 4th property directly from seller, and recently sold 1 directly to the buyer without an agent\lowyer.

As you're married to a Thai woman, she should be able to read and understand what's going on.

Things you have to do before buying:

1. Get a copy of the chanot, go to the relevant land office and check if the title is a freehold or had any debt\leaes or other issues that might prevent the selling of the property.

2. Check the boundaries of the property to make sure they match the chanot.

3. If the seller wants a deposit, write a contract with all the agreed upon conditions (total price, who pays the fees for the transfer of the title, time frame to complete the deal). 

4. Set an appointment with the seller at the land office. Seller and buyer have to present their ID card, and if married the spouse has to sign a consent for the sell\buy. Seller has to bring the original chanot.

 

At the land office they will check all documents and get both parties to sign a sell\buy agreement form (this happens whether or not you already signed another agreement between the 2 parties). Once the officer ok's all the documents whoever has to pay the fees goes to the cashier and brings the receipt back to the officer. The officer will ask the seller if they got paid on full for the property (full payment should be made after the officer approved all the docs) and then the officer will put the buyer's name on the chanot and give you a copy of the sell\buy agreement.

Congrats, your wife is now the owner of the property.

 

On a side note - agents fee is normally 3% of the sell price, and a lawyer shouldn't charge more than that as well.

Edited by LukKrueng
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, OnTheLash said:

Thanks for the response. I've never considered an usufruct. If it all goes pear shaped I just walk away, its not an issue to me.

Everybody's circumstances are different. This will be my 7th house purchase in Thailand with the same woman. I have signed my life away 6 times in the past at the land office.

I was looking for recent experiences of posters using and not using a lawyer (I have never used one in the past).

Lawyers certainly seem to be charging a premium now when a foreigner is involved, unfortunately I have to be there.

Being that experienced you should not need a lawyer. Your wife can probably check the paper work and do the due diligence on the land office – like checking name on title deed and any servitudes registered on the back, hereunder mortgage – before paying deposit. Pay the balance when name is changed on the title deed; best is to agree it in the sales-contract, how payment is settled, for example as cash or cashier's cheque.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...