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Knowing how to check title deed in Thailand online is the single most important preliminary step any property buyer, Thai or foreign, can take before committing funds to a transaction. The Royal Thai Department of Lands (กรมที่ดิน) now offers several digital tools that allow you to check property ownership in Thailand remotely, including map overlays, title-type identification, and basic encumbrance flags. However, online checks remain a fast pre-screen, not a replacement for official Land Office verification or lawyer-led due diligence. This guide walks through every official portal, explains the critical differences between Chanote and Nor Sor 3 titles, and sets out the red flags you must catch before signing anything.
Before you visit a Land Office or instruct a lawyer, you can run a fast preliminary title search in Thailand using publicly accessible tools. The entire pre-screen takes roughly three minutes and covers five essential data points. If any of these raise concerns, pause the transaction immediately and seek professional advice.
This quick checklist answers the most common question, how to check property ownership in Thailand, at a high level. The sections below explain each step in detail and show you exactly where to click on the Land Department’s online portals.
Thailand does not yet offer a single, fully digitised land registry search portal equivalent to those in Australia or the United Kingdom. Instead, several government-operated tools handle different aspects of a title search. Understanding which tool to use, and its limitations, is essential for anyone learning how to check title deed in Thailand online.
The Royal Thai Department of Lands operates its main portal at dol.go.th. The site offers e-services (บริการออนไลน์) including appointment booking for Land Office visits, queue management, and, crucially, a preliminary data-extract request function. To navigate the relevant section:
Note that the Land Department online system does not display the current registered owner’s name to public users in every province. In many cases, you can confirm title type and location but must visit the local Land Office, or instruct a lawyer to do so, to obtain a certified ownership extract.
Each province operates a local Land Office (สำนักงานที่ดิน) under the Department of Lands. Some provincial offices have launched their own e-appointment and queue-check systems. These allow you to:
Availability varies by province. Bangkok and major tourist provinces such as Phuket, Chon Buri (Pattaya) and Chiang Mai tend to have more developed e-services than rural offices.
The Department of Lands also maintains a geographic information system, sometimes referred to as the Land Map service, that plots surveyed land parcels on a satellite-image overlay. This is the tool to use when you want to verify that the plot boundaries on a Chanote match the physical land. To use it:
This mapping tool is particularly valuable for land plots. For condominiums, land parcel boundaries are less critical, the focus shifts to the unit number, floor plan and the condominium’s overall title.
Understanding what each title type actually proves is fundamental to any Thailand land registry search. Thailand’s Land Code establishes a hierarchy of land documents, and the practical difference between them affects price, mortgage eligibility, and transferability. Below is a breakdown of the three most commonly encountered types.
A Thai title deed is an official document issued by the Department of Lands that records a person’s or entity’s rights over a specific parcel of land. It is not a contract of sale, it is the state’s acknowledgement of who holds registered rights. The strongest form of title deed is the Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor, commonly abbreviated NS4J). Lesser documents, such as Nor Sor 3 and Nor Sor 3 Gor, record possessory rights rather than full surveyed ownership.
| Document Type | Market Effect / Certainty | Key Features and Red Flags |
|---|---|---|
| Chanote (Nor Sor 4 Jor / NS4J) | Highest certainty, equivalent to survey-certified freehold ownership | Contains a surveyed map with GPS coordinates and corner markers; certified by the Land Department; unique deed number. Red flags: mismatched coordinates between map and physical land, missing or altered officer stamp, erasures or manual amendments to owner name. |
| Nor Sor 3 / Nor Sor 3 Gor | Lower certainty, indicative of possessory rights; may be upgraded to Chanote | Shows approximate boundaries but lacks full GPS survey; Nor Sor 3 Gor includes aerial-survey confirmation, giving it slightly more weight than basic Nor Sor 3. Red flags: overlapping boundary claims with adjacent landholders, pending upgrade application not completed, 30-day public-notice requirement for transfer (Nor Sor 3 only). |
| Nor Sor 4 / Other older documents (Sor Kor 1, Tor Bor series) | Conditional or historical records, limited market value | Useful for understanding land history; may evidence tax-payment records or usage permits but do not confer freehold. Red flags: no survey data at all, faded or illegible seals, manual handwritten amendments, possible government-reserved or forest land overlap. |
Every Chanote contains a small map on the left side of the front page showing the parcel shape and its relationship to neighbouring plots. The map includes UTM (Universal Transverse Mercator) coordinates for each corner marker. To verify these:
When comparing Chanote vs Nor Sor 3 documents, the absence of GPS coordinates on Nor Sor 3 titles is the most material practical difference. Without coordinates, boundary disputes are far more likely, and the encumbrance check for a Nor Sor 3 property must extend to interviewing neighbours and reviewing the local Land Office’s survey records.
An encumbrance check in Thailand goes beyond simply looking at the front page of the title deed. The reverse side (ด้านหลัง) of the document is where the Land Office records every transaction, mortgage, lease, servitude, seizure and annotation that affects the property. This section explains what each type means and how to spot problems early.
The back of a Chanote or Nor Sor 3 document contains chronological entries stamped and signed by Land Office officials. Each entry records:
During your encumbrance check, watch for these warning signs:
Thailand’s Condominium Act restricts foreign ownership to a maximum of 49% of the total saleable area of a registered condominium project. This makes the condo foreign quota check a mandatory step for any non-Thai buyer. The title for a condominium unit is a separate document (often a Chanote for the individual unit) but the quota constraint sits at the project level, not the unit level.
To check whether foreign quota remains available:
This is where the question “Is there a land registry in Thailand?” becomes most relevant for condo buyers: yes, there is, and it tracks not only ownership but also the nationality composition of condominium unit holders.
Online tools for checking a title deed in Thailand are improving, but they have significant limitations that every buyer must understand:
For these reasons, online checks should always be treated as a fast preliminary screen. When the transaction progresses to contract stage, a physical visit to the Land Office, or instruction to a Thai property lawyer to attend on your behalf, is essential. This is also the appropriate point to ask: how to transfer owner title in Thailand? The answer involves a formal appointment at the Land Office with both parties present, payment of transfer fees and taxes, and registration of the new owner on the title deed. A licensed conveyancer should manage this process end to end.
The following workflow consolidates everything in this guide into a practical sequence. It applies whether you are purchasing a condominium unit, a landed house, or a vacant land plot.
Industry observers expect the Department of Lands to expand online verification features over the coming years, but the in-person transfer ceremony at the Land Office is unlikely to be replaced any time soon. For now, a knowledgeable property lawyer remains your most important safeguard.
Below is an anonymised example illustrating how to cross-check the key fields on a Chanote against online records. Suppose you are considering a plot in Tambon Bang Lamung, Amphoe Bang Lamung, Chon Buri Province.
Enter the Chanote number and survey page into the Land Department’s online system. The system should return a location in Bang Lamung and an appraised value per square wah. Next, use the mapping service to plot the parcel. Overlay the result on satellite imagery: does the parcel shape match the fenced area you visited? Check the approximate area, 1 rai 2 ngan 50 square wah equals 2,100 square metres. Does the plotted area appear roughly correct?
Now examine the reverse side of the title provided by the seller. Look for the most recent transfer entry: it should show “นายสมชาย ใจดี” as the transferee. If a mortgage to a bank is recorded, confirm with the seller that a discharge letter will be produced before transfer day. If everything aligns, name, location, area, and no adverse encumbrances, the preliminary online check is clear, and you can proceed to instruct a lawyer for formal due diligence.
Learning how to check title deed in Thailand online gives buyers and investors a powerful preliminary tool, but it is only the first step in a proper due-diligence process. Online portals operated by the Land Department allow you to verify title type, cross-reference map coordinates, and flag obvious encumbrances before spending money on lawyers or deposits. However, the limitations of digital records, incomplete digitisation, transliteration gaps, and the absence of real-time updates, mean that in-person Land Office verification and professional legal advice remain indispensable.
Whether you are purchasing a Chanote-titled plot in Chon Buri or a condominium unit in Bangkok, engaging a qualified Thai property lawyer to conduct a formal title search, review encumbrances, and manage the transfer at the Land Office is the only way to protect your investment with confidence.
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.
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