Long-term rental in Thailand is the default legal structure for residential property income. Unlike short-term rental, which falls under the Hotel Act with its current enforcement complications, long-term residential leases (30 days or longer) operate under the standard Civil and Commercial Code rules with well-understood norms.
For foreign Phuket property owners, long-term rental is typically the more durable income strategy in 2026 — legally clean, supported by the DTV / LTR / retirement tenant pools, and not exposed to the regulatory risk that’s reshaping the short-term rental market. This article covers the standard contract structure, what to negotiate, and the practical mechanics of being a long-term landlord in Thailand.
The 30-day boundary
The single most important distinction: 30 days is the boundary between short-term rental (Hotel Act regime) and long-term rental (standard lease regime).
- Under 30 days: Hotel Act applies. Hotel license required (foreigners typically can’t obtain). See Short-term rental in Thailand — Hotel Act 2004 reality and Phuket enforcement.
- 30+ days: Civil and Commercial Code applies. Normal residential lease, no special licensing.
For owners structuring around the boundary: 31-day minimum rentals are sometimes marketed as “monthly” while staying outside Hotel Act. The structure works if the lease is genuinely 31+ days and not back-to-back daily extensions disguised as monthly. Revenue Department audits do scrutinize patterns.
Standard long-term rental terms in Phuket
Term: 12 months is the most common. Common variations:
- 6 months — for shorter expat stays, often with renewal option
- 24 months — sometimes offered with rent discount
- Month-to-month after initial term — common for established tenants
Rent: typically THB/month, paid in advance monthly. Phuket monthly rents vary meaningfully by area — Bang Tao and Cherngtalay sit at the top of the foreign-tenant market, Rawai and Nai Harn meaningfully below, and premium villas at the very top. Get current rent benchmarks from a Phuket-resident agent or recent comparable listings.
Deposit and advance: standard structure is 2 months’ rent as security deposit + 1 month’s advance rent = 3 months upfront. Security deposit returnable at end of lease, less documented damages. Some landlords accept reduced deposits from corporate tenants or established expats.
Furnishings: most Phuket long-term rentals are furnished (the foreign tenant pool expects it). Inventory list at move-in, signed by tenant; checked at move-out for damages.
Utilities: typically tenant pays — electricity, water, internet billed directly. CAM (common area maintenance) is usually landlord’s responsibility (the owner pays the juristic person; tenant doesn’t see it).
Renewal: standard contract includes a renewal option, often with a defined rent escalation (5–10% per renewal year, or market-rate-as-determined).
Contract elements
A defensible Thai residential lease should include:
Parties
- Landlord’s full name and ID/passport details
- Tenant’s full name, ID/passport, contact details
- Address of the property
Property description
- Specific unit number or address
- Furnished items list (annexed)
- Common areas the tenant has access to
- Parking spaces, storage areas
Term
- Start date and end date
- Renewal mechanism if any
- Termination notice period (typical 30 days for both parties)
Rent and payment
- Monthly rent amount
- Payment due date (typically 1st of month, with 5–7 day grace)
- Payment method (bank transfer to specified account; cash discouraged for tax reasons)
- Late payment interest (typically 1–1.5% per month on overdue)
Security deposit
- Amount (typically 2 months)
- Held in landlord’s account (no escrow requirement under Thai law)
- Refund mechanism at end of lease — within how many days, less what deductions
- What deductions are permitted (damages beyond ordinary wear and tear, unpaid utilities)
Landlord obligations
- Property in habitable condition at move-in
- Major repairs (structural, building systems) — landlord’s cost
- Insurance for the building/structure
- Quiet enjoyment — landlord cannot enter without notice except emergencies
- Comply with juristic person rules
Tenant obligations
- Pay rent on time
- Pay utilities directly
- Maintain property in cleanliness and minor repairs
- Not damage the property
- Not sublet without landlord consent
- Comply with juristic person rules
- Return property in original condition (less ordinary wear and tear)
Termination
- Standard grounds for early termination (with notice)
- Penalty for tenant’s early termination (typically forfeiture of security deposit)
- Penalty for landlord’s early termination (typically refund of security deposit + advance, sometimes additional)
- Force majeure scope
Dispute resolution
- Governing law: Thai law
- Venue: Thai courts
- Language: bilingual (Thai and English) recommended for foreign tenants
Lease registration — the 3-year line
Under Section 538 of the Civil and Commercial Code:
- Leases of 3 years or longer must be registered at the Land Office to be enforceable for the full term. Without registration, only the first 3 years are enforceable.
- Leases under 3 years (typical 12-month residential): enforceable as written, no registration required.
For most long-term residential rentals (12-month or shorter), no Land Office registration. Just signed contract.
For longer commercial-use or specialized residential arrangements (3+ years), registration is required and incurs:
- 1% of total rent over the term as registration fee
- 0.1% stamp duty
Customarily lessee pays. Add to the contract who pays.
Tenant screening
For foreign owners renting to foreign tenants in Phuket:
- Passport copy and visa documentation (verify visa allows long-stay)
- Proof of income or financial standing (bank statements, employment letter, pension statement)
- Reference from previous landlord if available
- Background check for high-value properties (typically via professional agency)
For Thai tenants:
- Thai ID copy
- Proof of employment or income
- Tabien Baan (house registration) reference
The Phuket DTV/LTR/retiree tenant pool is generally low-risk — established foreign visitors with documented financial standing. Verifying basics (passport, visa, income source) is usually sufficient.
Typical landlord and tenant disputes
The most common Phuket disputes:
1. Security deposit deductions. Tenant says “ordinary wear and tear”; landlord says “damage.” Document conditions thoroughly at move-in (photos, signed inventory) and move-out (joint inspection, photos, signed list).
2. Utility bills at exit. Final electricity and water bills sometimes arrive after tenant has left. Hold a portion of the security deposit (typically 1 month) for 30 days to settle final utilities.
3. Furniture or fixture damage. Stains, scratches, broken items. Inventory list with condition notes at move-in is the prevention.
4. Early termination by tenant. Tenant wants to leave before lease end. Standard contract permits with forfeiture of security deposit. Be willing to release the deposit if a replacement tenant is found within a reasonable window.
5. Late or non-payment. Send written notice after first missed payment. Apply late fees per contract. After 30+ days non-payment, formal notice of breach. Eviction process if uncured.
Eviction process
For a non-paying or breaching tenant, the formal eviction process:
1. Written notice of breach. Specifies the breach (non-payment, contract violation), gives a cure period (typically 7–14 days for non-payment).
2. Notice of termination. If breach not cured, formal termination of lease.
3. Demand to vacate. Specific date by which tenant must leave the property.
4. If tenant refuses to leave: file civil court action for possession. Court order required to remove tenant; self-help eviction (changing locks, removing belongings) is illegal and exposes the landlord to counter-claims.
5. Court proceeding: 1–3 months typical for an uncontested case; longer if disputed. Court orders possession; bailiff enforces if needed.
Realistic timeline from first missed payment to vacant possession: 2–4 months for a cooperative tenant; 4–8 months for a contested case. The cost is meaningful — lost rent, legal fees, possible damage during the dispute.
The practical lesson: screen tenants well at the start, communicate quickly when problems emerge, be willing to negotiate early termination rather than enforce through court.
Tax treatment of rental income
Long-term residential rental income is taxable for foreign owners. Mechanics in Rental income tax for foreign property owners in Thailand:
- 30% standard deduction or actual expenses
- Progressive PIT 0–35%
- Mid-year (PND.94) and annual (PND.90) filings
- 5% tenant withholding for corporate tenants only (rare for residential)
- Pure residential rental: VAT exempt
For Thai-resident foreign owners with one or two rental properties: effective tax rate typically 5–10% of gross rent. For non-residents not filing properly: 15% flat WHT default.
Long-term vs short-term — which makes more sense in 2026
For Phuket property owners weighing the choice:
| Dimension | Long-term (30+ days) | Short-term (Airbnb-style) |
|---|---|---|
| Hotel Act exposure | None | High for non-licensed buildings |
| Gross yield | Lower headline | Higher headline |
| Net yield | Closer to gross (lower drag) | Higher drag from cost stack and OTA fees |
| Management complexity | Low | High |
| Tax treatment | Standard PIT, 30% deduction | Same, plus VAT once revenue exceeds the THB 1.8M threshold |
| Tenant pool | DTV/LTR/retiree, growing | Tourist, seasonal |
| Legal risk | None | Real (enforcement since 2023) |
| Capital appreciation impact | Neutral | Slightly positive in good buildings |
The realistic framing: long-term rental is the durable base case; short-term is upside that may be regulated away.
For most foreign Phuket owners, the long-term rental thesis (DTV/LTR tenants, predictable monthly income, no Hotel Act risk) is the right floor. Short-term rental on top in buildings with proper licensing or where the owner accepts the regulatory risk.
What to actually do
A few rules:
- Default to long-term rental as your income strategy. Hotel Act enforcement makes short-term the riskier bet for non-licensed buildings.
- Use a defensible bilingual contract. Thai law applies and Thai courts hear disputes regardless of any “language governs” clause. The drafting goal is bilingual consistency — same meaning in English and Thai, vetted by the same lawyer — plus Thai-governing legal terms. A bilingual contract helps the foreign owner understand what was signed, not override Thai-court framing.
- Screen tenants, document the property condition, and communicate early when issues emerge. The eviction process is workable but slow and expensive. Prevention is much cheaper than enforcement.
For broader rental context: Rental yields in Phuket — what investors actually earn and Short-term rental in Thailand — Hotel Act 2004 reality and Phuket enforcement. For property management options: Property management fees in Phuket — what to expect for short-term and long-term rental. For tax mechanics: Rental income tax for foreign property owners in Thailand.