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Koh Phangan Land Crackdown 2026: What Foreign Property Owners Need to Know

April 21, 2026
недвижимость Панганпроверки земли Таиланд 2026номинальное владение Таиландинвестиции Ко Панганпокупка земли в Таиланде иностранцем

Thai police helicopters are circling the hillsides of Koh Phangan, mapping every construction site on the island. The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment has launched a large-scale land investigation following local residents' complaints about alleged illegal occupation of state land by foreign nationals — with particular scrutiny on Israeli and Russian citizens.

Nine plots have already been inspected by a dedicated task force. Evidence of construction or land preparation was found on every single one. In one case, a court has already handed down a guilty verdict against officials charged with issuing fraudulent title documents. The investigation is ongoing, with authorities actively tracing nominee ownership chains.

For international investors considering Koh Phangan as a real estate destination, this is a direct signal: the regulatory environment is tightening, and the risks attached to nominee ownership schemes are multiplying fast.

Quick Answer

  • 9 plots on Koh Phangan are under active investigation by the Ministry of Natural Resources task force
  • 8 out of 9 plots fall outside forest reserves or national park boundaries
  • 4 plots hold title documents; 2 others are presumed to have documentation
  • 1 plot is linked to a criminal case — officials convicted under Thai Penal Code Articles 151, 157, 83, and 86 for issuing fraudulent documents
  • Thai authorities are deploying helicopters for aerial photography and monitoring of construction activity
  • The central focus of the crackdown is nominee ownership — the structure commonly used by foreigners to circumvent Thai land ownership law

Scenarios and Options

Scenario 1: Targeted Inspections Escalate Into a Nationwide Campaign

Thailand periodically intensifies enforcement of its foreign land ownership restrictions. Similar crackdown waves hit Phuket and Koh Samui in 2023. Koh Phangan is the logical next step. If political pressure from local communities continues to build, inspections will expand to cover all areas of the island popular with foreign nationals.

What this means for investors: any plot with a complex or unclear ownership history is a potential target. Structures where a Thai company exists solely to circumvent foreign ownership restrictions — with foreign beneficiaries and nominal Thai shareholders — are especially exposed.

Scenario 2: Tougher Scrutiny Without Mass Confiscation

Eight of the nine inspected plots fall outside protected or conservation zones. This means that where legitimate title documentation exists, there may be no grounds for outright seizure. However, authorities are expected to demand proof of genuine — not nominal — Thai participation in the ownership structure.

What this means for investors: if you already hold land through a Thai company, a full corporate structure audit is essential. Formal legal compliance is not sufficient on its own. The company must demonstrate real economic activity and authentic Thai stakeholder involvement.

Scenario 3: Rising Prices for Legally Sound Ownership Formats

Condominium units within the foreign ownership quota (up to 49% of total project floor space) and long-term leasehold arrangements (30 years with renewal options) remain the only fully transparent and legally secure routes for foreign buyers. As grey-area schemes face mounting pressure, demand for legitimate structures will increase — and so will prices.

Comparison Table

Ownership FormatLegal for Foreigners?Risk Under InvestigationTypical Property Type on Koh PhanganApprox. Entry Price
Condominium — freehold (foreign quota)Fully legalMinimalApartments in registered developmentsFrom 3–4M THB (~$85,000)
Leasehold — 30-year termFully legalMinimalVillas, private housesFrom 8–12M THB
Thai company (nominee structure)Legal grey zoneHighLand plots, villasVaries
Purchase via Thai spouseLegal with caveatsMediumHouses, land plotsVaries
Direct land ownership by foreignerProhibitedMaximum

Main Risks and Mistakes

1. Nominee Ownership — the Primary Legal Trap

Thai law prohibits foreigners from holding land directly. The nominee company structure — where a Thai-registered company purchases land on behalf of a foreign beneficiary, with Thai shareholders acting as stand-ins — is technically illegal. The Department of Lands has the authority to void such transactions. Criminal liability for all parties involved is a real and documented risk.

2. Underestimating the Local Social Context

Koh Phangan is a small island. The formation of exclusive foreign enclaves has generated significant resentment among local communities. Resident complaints were the direct trigger for the current investigation. Investors who overlook the social and political dynamics of the communities they invest in are exposing themselves to politically motivated enforcement action.

3. Skipping Full Due Diligence on Title History

One of the nine plots under investigation is directly linked to a criminal case, with the officials who issued the documents already convicted. Any buyer who failed to trace the complete chain of title back to the original land allocation could lose both the property and their capital. A clean-looking title document is not the same as a clean title history.

4. Building on Forest Reserve Land

Even plots that fall outside national park boundaries may be classified as forest reserve land. One of the plots currently under investigation sits within such a zone. Construction on forest reserve land constitutes a criminal offence under Thai law — regardless of what any title document may state.

5. Relying on Verbal Agreements

Informal arrangements and handshake deals are common on Thai islands. Without a written contract reviewed and verified by a licensed Thai lawyer, any verbal promise is legally worthless. This is not a minor procedural point — it is a fundamental risk management requirement.

FAQ

Can foreigners own land in Thailand? No. Under the Land Code Act, foreign nationals cannot own land directly in Thailand. Exceptions are extremely narrow and generally require a minimum investment of 40 million THB under BOI-approved programmes.

What is nominee ownership and why is it dangerous? Nominee ownership is a structure in which a Thai-registered company with stand-in Thai shareholders purchases land on behalf of a foreign national. This arrangement is formally illegal. Both the Department of Lands and the Public Prosecutor's Office have the authority to initiate annulment of the transaction and pursue criminal charges against those involved.

Which ownership formats are legally safe for foreign buyers on Koh Phangan? Condominium units within the foreign freehold quota and long-term leasehold arrangements (typically structured as 30+30+30 years) are both fully legal and provide genuine legal security. Neither is dependent on political conditions or enforcement cycles.

Will the crackdown affect condominium buyers? No. The current investigations are focused specifically on land plots showing signs of nominee ownership. Condominium units held under a properly registered freehold title within the foreign quota are outside the scope of this enforcement action.

Will similar crackdowns spread to Phuket and Koh Samui? This is highly likely. Thai media sources indicate that comparable foreign enclaves exist in Phuket, Koh Samui, and the Pai district of Mae Hong Son province. If the Koh Phangan campaign delivers political results, it will almost certainly be replicated elsewhere.

What should I do if I already hold land through a Thai company? Contact a licensed Thai property lawyer immediately to conduct a corporate structure audit. In a number of cases, it is possible to bring an existing structure into legal compliance by introducing genuine economic activity and authentic Thai stakeholder participation — but early action is essential.

What budget is needed for a legitimate purchase on Koh Phangan? On the secondary market, condominium units start from approximately 3–4 million THB (around $85,000–$115,000). Leasehold villas begin at roughly 8–12 million THB, depending on location and sea views.

Will prices fall as a result of the crackdown? Unlikely. The enforcement action targets the grey market segment. The legitimate market — freehold condominiums and properly structured leasehold — may actually appreciate as demand shifts away from higher-risk formats.

The events unfolding on Koh Phangan are not a reason to abandon investment in Thailand. They are a reason to invest through the right structures. Freehold condominium units and professionally structured leasehold agreements offer genuine legal protection that no nominee scheme can replicate. The core principle remains simple: if a deal appears unusually straightforward or inexpensive, the risk is almost certainly hidden inside it.

Ready to invest in Thailand? Our experts will help you find the perfect property.


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