Pattaya Property Rent, Buy, Compare
Rent or buy a condo in Pattaya: complete guides, area comparisons, legal info, and tools. Updated 2026.
Can foreigners own property in Pattaya?
Best for
- Renting first while you learn the city
- Buying after at least 6-12 months on the ground
- Choosing area before specific building
- Hiring a Thai lawyer (5-15k THB) for any purchase
Avoid if
- You think you can use a Thai 'nominee' to bypass the foreign quota — illegal
- You can't see/visit the unit in person before buying
- Resale is your near-term plan (Pattaya resale velocity is slow)
- You're buying off-plan from an unknown developer
Tools
Renting
Renter's guide
Standard 1+1 deposit, lease terms, inspections
Condo vs hotel monthly
Which is cheaper for 1-3 month stays
Airbnb vs long-term
Legality, costs, practicalities
Serviced apartments
Best for medium-stay (1-6 months)
Villa rentals
Pool villas in East Pattaya and Huay Yai
Apartment rental
Older non-condo buildings, cheaper rents
Co-living spaces
For digital nomads and short-stay singles
Buying
Condo buying guide
49% quota, FET, transfer fees, due diligence
Property ownership
Foreigner ownership rules, options, restrictions
Invest in property
Investment angles, yield, risks
Property investment guide
Pattaya-specific market analysis
Real estate market
Market overview and trends
Property market trends
Pattaya property market 2026
Areas & comparisons
Legal
Common mistakes to avoid
Trusting a verbal lease.
Do this instead: Always sign a written contract in Thai and English. Specify deposit, utilities, exit clauses.
Not photographing existing damage at handover.
Do this instead: Photo/video every wall, appliance, and fitting on day one. Email it to the landlord with date stamps.
Paying a year's rent up front.
Do this instead: 1+1 (1 month deposit + 1 month advance) is the standard. Up-front year is rare and reduces your leverage.
Buying from a developer without checking the foreign quota.
Do this instead: Ask for the building's current foreign quota status in writing before signing.
Ignoring common-area fees.
Do this instead: Sinking fund and monthly CAM fees can be 30-80 THB/sqm. Factor these into total monthly cost.
Related guides
Sources
- Thailand Condominium Act B.E. 2522 (with amendments)
- Pattaya Real Estate Association data
- Editorial review of current FazWaz and Hipflat listings