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how to renew a 30‑year lease in Thailand

How to Renew a 30‑year Lease in Thailand (2026): Step‑by‑step, Timeline & Costs

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Thailand’s Civil and Commercial Code (CCC), Section 540, caps the maximum duration of any lease of immovable property at 30 years, and any lease registered for that term will expire without automatic extension unless the parties negotiate and register a fresh agreement. Understanding how to renew a 30‑year lease in Thailand is therefore essential for every foreign lessee, Thai landlord, and property investor approaching the end of an existing term. This guide sets out the complete lease renewal Thailand 2026 procedure: who is eligible, what documents you need, how the Land Office registration works, realistic timelines, current costs, and the jurisprudential and tax changes that affect renewals this year.

Whether you hold a villa lease in Phuket, a commercial plot in Bangkok, or agricultural land in Chiang Mai, the steps below apply.

Overview of the Lease Renewal Process and Who It Applies To

Section 540 of the CCC is unambiguous: “The duration of a hire of immovable property cannot exceed thirty years. If it is made for a longer period, such period shall be reduced to thirty years.” Once a registered 30‑year lease reaches its expiry date, the lease terminates by operation of law. The lessee has no statutory right to extend; renewal depends entirely on a fresh agreement between lessor and lessee, followed by re‑registration at the competent Land Office.

This procedure applies whenever a lessee, Thai or foreign, wishes to continue occupying land or buildings beyond the original 30‑year term. It equally applies to lessees who negotiated so‑called “30 + 30 + 30” arrangements at the outset: Thailand’s Supreme Court has consistently held that a pre‑agreed promise to renew a lease beyond 30 years is unenforceable as a lease obligation, because it would circumvent the statutory cap. Early indications suggest that post‑2025 court decisions continue to follow this line, meaning that any renewal clause drafted into the original contract functions, at best, as a personal promise that binds only the original landlord and cannot be enforced against a successor owner of the land.

This guide is written for three audiences: (1) foreign lessees holding registered leases that will expire within the next 24 months, (2) Thai landlords considering whether and on what terms to offer a renewal, and (3) investors conducting due‑diligence on leasehold properties where the remaining term is short. If you fall into any of these categories, the procedural steps below outline exactly what is required to secure a valid, enforceable 30‑year lease extension.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for a 30‑Year Lease Extension

Before initiating the renewal process, confirm that you meet the eligibility requirements. A renewal is, in legal terms, a brand‑new lease, so the same statutory conditions that applied to the original registration apply again. The key prerequisites are set out below.

First, the existing lease must have been registered at the Land Office to be enforceable beyond a three‑year term. Under CCC Section 538, a lease of immovable property for a period exceeding three years is enforceable only for three years unless it is made in writing and registered with the competent official. If your original lease was never registered, its enforceability is limited, and you should address this deficiency before attempting a renewal. Second, the landlord must voluntarily consent to the new term. There is no mechanism under Thai law to compel a lessor to renew.

Third, the land in question must carry a title that permits registration of leases, typically a Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor) or, in limited circumstances, an NS3 or NS3K possessory certificate.

Who Must Sign and Who Can Act by Power of Attorney

Both the lessor and lessee (or their authorised representatives) must appear at the Land Office or act through a notarised Power of Attorney (POA). Where a foreign lessee cannot attend in person, a Thai lawyer or agent holding a POA, notarised and, if signed abroad, legalised by the Thai consulate or apostilled, may file on the lessee’s behalf. If the lessor is a company, a board resolution authorising the signatory is required.

Title Types and Their Impact on Lease Registration

Only land with a full title deed, a Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor), guarantees straightforward lease registration. Land held under NS3 or NS3K certificates may permit registration at the relevant Land Office, but practice varies by province and some offices require an additional survey or conversion to Chanote before they will register a long‑term lease. Verify the title type with the Land Office before commencing document preparation.

Check for Pre‑Agreed Renewal Clauses and Successor‑Owner Risk

Many original lease agreements contain clauses promising automatic renewal for a further 30 years. As noted above, Thailand’s Supreme Court, including analysis of decisions such as Dika 4655/2566, has treated such clauses as personal obligations of the original landlord rather than enforceable real‑property rights. The practical consequence is significant: if the landlord has sold or transferred the land to a successor owner, that new owner is generally not bound by the renewal promise. Lessees approaching renewal should therefore confirm current land ownership by obtaining a fresh title search at the Land Office and engage directly with the registered owner well in advance of expiry.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure: How to Renew a 30‑Year Lease in Thailand

The Land Office lease renewal procedure follows four principal stages. Each stage is detailed below, together with what to bring and who is responsible.

Step 1: Agree Renewal Terms and Obtain the Landlord’s Written Consent

Renewal negotiations should begin at least 12–24 months before the current lease expires. The parties need to agree on the following commercial terms:

  • Lease duration. Up to 30 years under Section 540. Parties commonly negotiate the full 30‑year term, but shorter terms are permissible.
  • Rent. The new annual or monthly rent, any escalation mechanism, and the payment schedule. The declared rental amount also affects registration fees and stamp duty.
  • Lump‑sum premium. Many lease renewals involve a one‑time key‑money payment. This must be documented and will be examined by the Land Office for fee‑calculation purposes.
  • Renewal promise language. If the parties wish to include a further renewal option, they should understand the enforceability limits discussed above and draft the clause as a personal contractual obligation with appropriate remedies (such as a monetary penalty for breach) rather than as a registrable real‑property right.

Once terms are agreed, the landlord should provide written consent to the renewal, ideally a signed side‑letter or term‑sheet, which the lawyer will use as the basis for drafting the formal lease agreement. This written consent is not a Land Office requirement in itself, but it crystallises the parties’ intentions and reduces the risk of last‑minute withdrawal.

Step 2: Prepare Legal Documents, Translations, and Notarisation

With commercial terms settled, the next stage is document preparation. A qualified property lawyer will draft the new lease agreement in Thai (and typically a bilingual Thai‑English version for the foreign lessee’s reference). In parallel, the following documents must be assembled:

  • Lease agreement, in Thai, executed by both parties.
  • Power of Attorney, if either party will not attend the Land Office in person. Must be notarised; if signed abroad, legalised by the Thai consulate or bearing an apostille.
  • Identification documents, certified copies of passports (foreign parties) and Thai ID cards (Thai parties).
  • Company documents, if a Thai company is the lessor or lessee: company affidavit, shareholder list, and board resolution, all certified by the Ministry of Commerce and translated into Thai.
  • Certified Thai translations, all foreign‑language documents must be translated into Thai and certified in accordance with the receiving Land Office’s requirements.

Allow 3–14 days for this stage, depending on whether documents need to be sent overseas for consular legalisation or apostille. Where the lessee is outside Thailand, the POA process alone may take 7–10 working days to complete through a Thai embassy or consulate.

Step 3: File at the Land Office, Complete Tor.Dor.11 and Register the New Lease

The Land Office lease renewal filing is the critical procedural step. It takes place at the provincial or district Land Office that has jurisdiction over the land in question. The process is as follows:

  1. Book an appointment. Some Land Offices, particularly in Bangkok, Phuket, and popular tourist provinces, operate appointment‑based systems. Others accept walk‑in filings. Confirm the system with the relevant office in advance.
  2. Submit the application form. The official Land Department lease registration form is known as Tor.Dor.11 (ท.ด.11). It is completed at the Land Office and signed by both parties (or their POA holders). The form captures the essential terms: parties’ identities, land description (by title deed number), lease term, and declared rental amount.
  3. Present supporting documents. Hand over the executed lease agreement, original title deed (Chanote), certified ID copies, POA (if applicable), company documents, evidence of payment (bank transfer receipts for any lump‑sum premium), and certified Thai translations.
  4. Pay fees and duties. The Land Office clerk will calculate the registration fee and stamp duty based on the declared lease amount. Payment is made on the spot. Keep all receipts.
  5. Land Office officer records the lease. The officer endorses the lease on the reverse of the Chanote as an encumbrance, stamps the Tor.Dor.11, and issues a certified copy of the registered lease to each party.

For straightforward renewals where all documents are in order, same‑day processing is possible at smaller Land Offices. In busier offices, particularly in Bangkok, processing may take 1–4 weeks from the appointment date. If the Land Office raises queries (for example, about discrepancies in the declared amount or missing translations), expect additional back‑and‑forth that extends the timeline.

Step 4: Post‑Registration, Obtain Certified Copies and Update Records

Once the Land Office completes registration, the lessee should immediately:

  • Collect certified copies of the registered lease and the endorsed title deed. Store originals in a secure location (safe deposit box or lawyer’s custody).
  • Update utility and municipal records. Notify the local Tambon (sub‑district) Administrative Organisation and any relevant utility providers of the renewed lease term.
  • Review tax implications. Consult a tax advisor to confirm the treatment of the lease premium and annual rent under the Land and Building Tax Act and any applicable withholding tax obligations.

Lease Renewal Timeline Summary

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Agree renewal terms and collect landlord consent Lessee / Landlord / Lawyer 1–8 weeks (negotiation‑dependent)
2. Document preparation (POA, notarisation, translations) Lessee / Lawyer / Notary public 3–14 days
3. Land Office filing (Tor.Dor.11 and registration) Lawyer or agent attends Land Office 1–4 weeks (depends on Land Office backlog)
4. Registration certified and copies issued Land Office clerk Immediate to 7 days post‑acceptance
5. Follow‑up tax notices and record updates Lessee / Tax advisor 2–6 weeks (tax office processing)

Required Lease Renewal Documents: Complete Checklist

The table below lists every document typically required for a lease renewal registration at a Thai Land Office. Specific Land Offices may request additional items (such as a developer’s consent letter for land within a managed estate), so confirm requirements with the relevant office before your appointment.

Document Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity)
Original title deed (Chanote / NS3 / NS3K) Issued by Land Office. Provide the original, the lease will be endorsed on the reverse as an encumbrance.
Tor.Dor.11 (Land Department lease registration form) Official Department of Lands form. Completed in Thai at the Land Office; signed by both parties or their POA holders.
Executed lease agreement In Thai. A bilingual Thai‑English version may be provided for reference, but the Thai text governs.
ID card or passport (lessor and lessee) Certified copies. Foreign passports: notarised copy; Thai parties: Thai national ID card.
Power of Attorney (POA) Notarised. If signed abroad, legalised by Thai consulate or apostilled. Must specify scope: “to file and receive documents at the Land Office.”
Company documents (if a Thai company is a party) Company affidavit, shareholder list, and board resolution, certified by Ministry of Commerce within the preceding 30 days. Include Thai translation.
Evidence of payment Bank transfer receipts for any lump‑sum premium or prepaid rent. Amounts must match the declared lease amount on the Tor.Dor.11.
Certified Thai translations All foreign‑language documents must be translated into Thai and certified per Land Office requirements.
House registration book (if applicable) Required where the leased property includes a registered structure. Issued by local district office.

Missing or improperly certified documents are the single most common cause of delay. Before attending the Land Office, have your lawyer conduct a final review of every document against the office’s published checklist.

Lease Renewal Timeline and Key Deadlines

The total duration of a lease renewal in Thailand, from first negotiation to certified registration, typically ranges from 6 to 16 weeks. The primary variable is the negotiation phase: where the parties have a pre‑existing relationship and agreed terms, this can be completed in days rather than weeks. Document preparation adds 3–14 days, depending on whether foreign‑executed documents require consular legalisation. The Land Office filing itself may be processed on the same day for straightforward applications at smaller provincial offices, but in high‑volume offices (Bangkok District Land Offices, Phuket, Koh Samui) the queue typically extends to 1–4 weeks.

The key hard deadline is the statutory registration requirement under CCC Section 538: any lease with a term exceeding three years must be registered at the Land Office to be enforceable beyond three years. Failure to register means the lease is legally enforceable for a maximum of three years, regardless of what the written agreement states. This is a non‑negotiable procedural requirement that lessees overlook at their peril.

A practical scheduling note: Land Offices are closed on public holidays and weekends. Thailand observes approximately 16–19 gazetted public holidays per year, and the Songkran period (mid‑April) and year‑end holiday season can effectively close offices for extended periods. Plan submissions around these windows. If the Land Office requests additional documents or raises a query, the lease renewal timeline typically extends by a further 1–3 weeks.

Lease Renewal Cost: Fees, Duties, and 2026 Tax Considerations

The total cost of renewing a 30‑year lease comprises government fees, taxes, and professional charges. The declared rental amount in the lease agreement is the principal driver of government‑imposed costs, because both registration fees and stamp duty are calculated as a percentage of that amount. The table below sets out the main cost items.

Item Typical Basis Notes
Land Office registration fee 1% of the total declared rent for the entire lease term Calculated on the aggregate rent stated in the lease. Paid at the Land Office on the day of registration.
Stamp duty 0.1% of the total declared rent for the entire lease term Applies unless specific business tax is payable instead (they are mutually exclusive). Paid at the Land Office.
Specific business tax (if applicable) 3.3% (including municipal surcharge) Applies where the lessor is engaged in the business of leasing and the transaction falls within the Revenue Code’s scope. Where SBT applies, stamp duty is not payable.
Withholding tax on rental income Variable, based on a graduated scale for individuals; flat rate for companies The Land Office withholds income tax from the lessor at the point of registration. Rates depend on the lessor’s tax status.
Legal fees (lawyer) THB 20,000 – 150,000+ Covers negotiation, document drafting, POA preparation, Land Office attendance. Complexity and property value drive the fee.
Notarisation / consular legalisation / apostille THB 500 – 3,000 per document Costs vary by issuing country. Thai embassy notarisation fees are set by each consular post.
Certified Thai translation THB 300 – 1,500 per page Depends on document length and translator’s certification.

For a worked example: on a lease declaring total rent of THB 3,000,000 over 30 years, the registration fee would be THB 30,000 (1%) and stamp duty THB 3,000 (0.1%). Legal fees for a moderately complex renewal with POA preparation and Land Office attendance might add THB 50,000–80,000.

The 2026 tax environment adds a further layer. Thailand’s Land and Building Tax Act B.E. 2562 (2019) imposes annual property taxes on landowners, and industry observers expect that the Revenue Department’s emphasis on enforcement and accurate property valuations in 2026 will increase the effective holding cost for lessors. The likely practical effect for lessees is upward pressure on rents and lease premiums during renewal negotiations, as landlords seek to pass through higher tax obligations. Lessees should factor potential rent escalation into their financial planning and consider negotiating a fixed escalation cap within the lease agreement.

What Changes in 2026: Jurisprudence and Tax Policy Impact on Lease Renewal

Two developments make the 2026 renewal landscape materially different from prior years.

Supreme Court position on stacked renewals. Thai Supreme Court jurisprudence, including analysis of rulings such as Dika 4655/2566, has firmly established that a contractual promise to renew a lease for successive 30‑year terms (the “30 + 30 + 30” structure) is not enforceable as a real‑property right. Such clauses bind only the original contracting landlord, and only as a personal obligation. A successor owner who purchases the land is generally not bound to honour the renewal promise. Industry observers expect this judicial position to remain stable in 2026, meaning that foreign lessees relying on pre‑agreed renewal clauses face significant exposure if the land is sold before the renewal is registered.

Land and Building Tax enforcement. The Revenue Department has signalled continued emphasis on accurate property valuations and timely collection of the annual Land and Building Tax. For lessors, this raises holding costs and may influence their willingness, and pricing, for renewals. For lessees, the practical implication is that lease renewal negotiations in 2026 may involve higher upfront premiums or steeper rent escalation schedules than in previous cycles.

Practical actions for lessees approaching renewal in 2026:

  • Conduct a fresh title search. Confirm that the current registered landowner is the same party named in your original lease. If the land has changed hands, your renewal clause may be unenforceable.
  • Review tax classification. Confirm whether the property is classified as residential, commercial, or agricultural under the Land and Building Tax Act, as this affects the lessor’s holding cost and, consequently, negotiation dynamics.
  • Add contractual safeguards. Consider including penalty clauses, rights of first refusal, or escrow arrangements in the renewal agreement to mitigate the risk of landlord default or sale to a third party during the lease term.
  • Model total cost of occupation. Factor in registration fees, duties, legal fees, and any projected rent increases driven by the lessor’s higher tax burden before committing to renewal terms.

Common Pitfalls in the Thai Lease Renewal Process and How to Avoid Them

  • Failing to register the renewal lease. A lease exceeding three years that is not registered at the Land Office is enforceable for only three years under CCC Section 538. This is the most consequential error a lessee can make. Mitigate: insist on Land Office registration immediately upon execution of the new agreement, treat it as a condition precedent to any payment of premium or rent.
  • Relying on a pre‑signed “automatic renewal” clause. As discussed above, Supreme Court jurisprudence renders such clauses unenforceable as real‑property obligations. Mitigate: negotiate the renewal as a standalone transaction; if a promise clause is included, add a monetary penalty for landlord breach and consider registering a right of first refusal (where permissible).
  • Under‑declaring the lease amount to reduce fees. Some parties are tempted to declare a lower rental amount on the Tor.Dor.11 to minimise registration fees and stamp duty. This creates significant legal risk: the declared amount governs the enforceable lease terms, and a discrepancy between the real and declared amounts can be grounds for challenge by either party or by the Revenue Department. Mitigate: declare the true consideration and budget the correct fees from the outset.
  • Not checking for land ownership changes. If the landlord sold the land after the original lease was registered, the new owner inherited the existing registered lease (which runs until expiry) but is not bound by any renewal promise. Mitigate: obtain a title search no more than 30 days before the renewal filing to confirm ownership.
  • Submitting improperly notarised or untranslated foreign documents. Land Offices are strict about document requirements. A POA notarised but not consularly legalised, or a passport copy lacking certification, will be rejected. Mitigate: use a lawyer experienced with cross‑border lease transactions to prepare and verify all documentation before the Land Office appointment.
  • Ignoring provincial Land Office variations. Procedural requirements can differ between Land Offices. Some accept walk‑ins; others require appointments. Some insist on specific translation formats; others accept any certified translation. Mitigate: contact the specific Land Office in advance to confirm local requirements and appointment procedures.

Conclusion

Knowing how to renew a 30‑year lease in Thailand is a matter of following the correct sequence: confirm eligibility, negotiate terms, prepare documents to Land Office standards, file the Tor.Dor.11, and register the new lease before the existing term expires. The 2026 environment, shaped by Supreme Court jurisprudence limiting the enforceability of stacked renewal promises and by heightened Land and Building Tax enforcement, makes it more important than ever to approach this process with proper legal guidance. Start negotiations early, verify land ownership independently, declare the true consideration, and register without delay. If you need assistance from a qualified Thai property lawyer, contact Global Law Experts to be connected with an experienced practitioner.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sirichot Chaiyachot at LAFS Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Office of the Council of State (Krisdika), Civil and Commercial Code
  2. Thailand Law Online, Tor.Dor.11 (Land Department Lease Registration Form)
  3. Thailand Law Online, Leasehold and Lease Renewal
  4. Thai Law Online, Supreme Court Decision Analysis (Dika 4655/2566)
  5. PwC Thailand, Tax News Flash 2026
  6. Thailand Law Online, CCC Sections 537–571 (Lease of Property)
  7. Thailand Condo Shop, Foreign Ownership Law Guide

FAQs

How do I get my lease extended?
You negotiate fresh terms with your landlord, draft a new lease agreement in Thai, prepare all required documents (including the Tor.Dor.11 form), and register the new lease at the Land Office that has jurisdiction over the property. The full step‑by‑step procedure is set out in the procedural section above. There is no automatic extension: a renewal requires both parties’ active participation and a new registration.
From initial negotiation to certified registration, the process typically takes 6 to 16 weeks. The negotiation phase is the primary variable. Document preparation requires 3–14 days, and Land Office processing takes 1–4 weeks depending on the office’s backlog. Same‑day processing is possible for straightforward files at less busy provincial offices.
The maximum lease term under CCC Section 540 is 30 years. Any lease drafted for a longer period is automatically reduced to 30 years by operation of law. A renewal lease is likewise capped at 30 years, giving a practical maximum of 60 years across two consecutive registered terms, provided the landlord agrees to renew.
At expiry, the lease terminates automatically. The lessee’s options are: (1) negotiate and register a renewal with the landlord, (2) vacate the property and remove personal belongings, (3) negotiate a purchase of the freehold (if the landlord is willing), or (4) pursue a contractual claim if the landlord breaches a renewal promise. Starting negotiations 12–24 months before expiry is strongly recommended.
Yes. Foreign nationals may be named as lessees on registered leases and may register renewals. The foreign lessee must provide a certified passport copy, and if acting through an agent, a notarised and consularly legalised POA. All documents in foreign languages must be translated into Thai and certified. Lease renewal for foreigners follows the same Land Office procedure as for Thai lessees, with the additional documentation requirements noted above.
Engage a property lawyer when you are within 12–24 months of lease expiry, when the renewal involves a large lump‑sum premium, when the title type is complex (NS3 or NS3K rather than Chanote), or when you suspect the land may have changed ownership. A lawyer will conduct the title search, draft the agreement, prepare the Tor.Dor.11 filing, and attend the Land Office on your behalf. For a directory of qualified property lawyers in Thailand, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
In Thai law, the terms are functionally interchangeable for 30‑year leases. Because the statutory maximum is 30 years, you cannot “extend” an existing lease beyond that cap. What is commonly called an “extension” is, in legal effect, a brand‑new lease agreement registered at the Land Office for a fresh term of up to 30 years. The procedural requirements, negotiation, documentation, registration via Tor.Dor.11, are identical.
By Dr. Bini Saroj

posted 2 hours ago

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How to Renew a 30‑year Lease in Thailand (2026): Step‑by‑step, Timeline & Costs

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