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British Tenant Trashes Pattaya Rental, Landlord Seeks Legal Action


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Posted

 

image.jpeg

Picture courtesy of Khaosod.

 

A landlord has been left devastated after a British tenant abandoned her Pattaya rental property, leaving it damaged and littered with rubbish. The home, located in Bang Lamung district of Chonburi province, was also reported to have a strong smell of cannabis throughout and signs of possible cultivation inside.

 

Mrs Chudanat Penampipinyo, 52, shared images and video footage on social media showing the appalling condition of her property, both inside and out. The rented house, once newly renovated and attractively furnished, was found in a state of disarray, with nearly every item damaged or destroyed. Over ten black bags of rubbish were left behind, decorative features were vandalised, and security cameras had been deliberately obstructed with stickers.

 

Mrs Chudanat told reporters that she had leased the property to a British man named Alexander William and his Thai wife in December 2024 through a rental agent. The one-year contract quickly fell into difficulty when the tenant failed to pay rent on time and accrued three months of unpaid electricity and internet bills, resulting in the disconnection of services.

 


She attempted to terminate the lease in March 2025. However, the tenant refused to vacate the property, even when she returned accompanied by police officers. Mrs Chudanat said he promised to leave by 30 April but fled the scene without notice, leaving air conditioning units and lights running.

 

“Nothing could prepare me for what I saw,” said Mrs Chudanat. “The smell of marijuana was overwhelming. Everything was destroyed, it was as if someone had deliberately ruined every part of the house.”

 

Following the incident, Mrs Chudanat filed a formal complaint at Nongprue Police Station and is cooperating with officers by submitting video clips, photos, contracts, and bills as evidence. After sharing her experience online, others came forward reporting similar dealings with the same tenant, although no legal action had previously been taken.

 

Mrs Chudanat is now calling on the authorities to track down the individual and hold him accountable. “This must not happen to other landlords. We need to thoroughly vet prospective tenants, especially foreign nationals, and insist on stronger protections.”

 

 

image.png  Adapted by Asean Now from Khoasod 2025-05-04.

 

 

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Posted
55 minutes ago, Georgealbert said:

Everything was destroyed, it was as if someone had deliberately ruined every part of the house.”

 

Ok yes whoever did this left a bunch of damage garbage and is a filthy animal. Gross.

 

But........

 

Every part of the house ruined ? Really ? Did you hear her gag at the washing machine. 

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Posted

doesn't look that bad, perhaps they had an issue with the landlord that they're excluding, at least the rubbish was put in bags, no mention of his thai wife, I suspect there is more to this story

 

we've all see the state some rentals are left by Thai residents, this place looks pristine in comparison 

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Posted

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Posted

Normal wear and tear innit.

(Joke alert.)

 

Also don't get the power turned off but AC left on story.

 

It's a power balance between owners and renters.

Things are fine as long as both sides are being reasonable but more often than not it's the owners abusing their power.

 

An example that I still find hard to believe but it came from a very credible source from a long term always renting always moving American expat in Colombia.

 

He says tenants are required to bring the place back to the exact condiition as before even for tenancies as short as six months to a year.

 

For example a requirement that the tenant literally REPAINT the entire place before leaving and if/not will be on a <deleted> list with future landlords.

 

I asked him if you could just offer to pay the landlord the money it would take to repaint with contractors and he said that would be not taken well. Bizarre, huh?

 

If that's really true, I would find that very hard to stomach.

 

One of the main joys of renting is not ever needing to worry about that level of maintenance. 

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Posted
8 hours ago, HappyExpat57 said:

Some landlords in the US are requiring references from previous landlords before they will take on a new renter.

If you have not rented previously what is the situation then? Cant ever get to rent?

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Posted
4 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:

Worst tenants I've had so far in UK have been doctors, total PITA, agent said they are the worst

Was about to say similar. To begin with, while there are certainly some nice digs, the average "Victorian" flat in London is usually a dump at best. I used to laugh at the estate agent advertisements. "double bed flat (means one bedroom that can handle something bigger than a single bed), WC with high-level (high-level means the cistern is above your head when you pull 'the chain')."

 

But as basic as some of those flats are, the tenants in them can be real pigs. Not just filthy, but noisy - very noisy. I'd never live in one of them again, that's for sure.

Posted

Just a reflection of the changing times that we live in. The quality of both tenants and landlords has  gone into the gutter.   I have a hunch that a closer look at the tenants will show at least one mentally ill person.

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Posted
21 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

So you don’t think they may of had it reconnected?

 

Or do you think they continued to live there for a month without electricity?

Usually they come and take the meter away. Outstanding balance must be paid and a reconnection fee. If that was the case there would not really be unpaid bills....did the property owners perhaps cover it?

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