Thailand Industry Report
Real Estate, Construction & Property Development in Thailand
Comprehensive insights into the Thailand industry landscape, covering market dynamics, key trends, opportunities, and how businesses can grow and succeed in this evolving market.
Market
Intelligence
Strategic
Insights
Opportunity
Analysis
Informed
Decisions
Residential sales -27.4% H1 2025
Market Signal
Selective cycle; 6+ trends
Key Trends
Industrial, data centres, hospitality, ESG assets
Growth Drivers
High
Strategic Relevance
Thailand’s real estate and construction market is entering a more selective cycle. The broad market is not uniformly weak or uniformly strong. Residential development is constrained by household debt, mortgage caution and accumulated inventory. Office remains under pressure from oversupply and hybrid work. At the same time, industrial estates, logistics, data-centre-related land demand, hospitality assets and infrastructure-linked locations continue to create opportunity for well-capitalised investors and operators.
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Detailed analysis, data insights, and expert perspectives.
Increasing domestic and international demand across key segments.
Innovation and digital adoption are reshaping the industry.
ESG and green practices driving responsible
growth.
Government initiatives and incentives boosting investor confidence.
Strong export outlook with access to global markets.
Market Entry
End-to-end support for successful market entry.
Strategic Advisory
Actionable strategies to accelerate growth and competitiveness.
Business Matching
Connect with the right partners and opportunities.
Sourcing & Supply Chain
Reliable sourcing and efficient supply chain solutions.
Regulatory Guidance
Navigate regulations and compliance with confidence.
Growth Partnerships
Long-term partnerships to unlock sustainable growth.
Thailand’s real estate and construction market is entering a more selective cycle. The broad market is not uniformly weak or uniformly strong. Residential development is constrained by household debt, mortgage caution and accumulated inventory. Office remains under pressure from oversupply and hybrid work. At the same time, industrial estates, logistics, data-centre-related land demand, hospitality assets and infrastructure-linked locations continue to create opportunity for well-capitalised investors and operators. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The residential market in Bangkok Metropolitan Region came under heavy pressure in 2025. Krungsri Research reported a 27.4% year-on-year drop in first-half 2025 residential sales to 21,322 units and a 52.9% year-on-year fall in new units launched to 14,182 properties, with expected full-year 2025 sales contraction of 30.0%. For 2026-2027, Krungsri expects only a slight improvement, with newly launched units rising 0.5-1.5% annually to around 37,000 units per year, still far below the 2017-2019 pre-pandemic average of 110,000 new units annually. [1]
Commercial property is bifurcated. Office supply is expected to remain ahead of demand in 2026, although Grade A and A+ buildings in prime locations with ESG, smart-building features and strong management should perform better. CBRE expects office net take-up in 2026 to be around 100,000 square meters, while tenants continue to benefit from favourable market conditions and flight-to-quality options. [2] [3]
Industrial and logistics property is the stronger structural story. CBRE expects 2026 to remain active for industrial land sales, with ready-built factory demand rising, industrial vacancy below 5%, and modern logistics property vacancy forecast to rise from 10% to 13% due to new supply outpacing demand. JLL also notes that data centres and high-value industries are adding new demand drivers, with power, fibre, cooling and site-selection due diligence becoming central to investment decisions. [3] [4]
Strategic theme | Implication for investors, developers and occupiers |
Selective recovery | Market entry must be segmented by asset class, location, target buyer, financing access and supply pipeline rather than based on generic property-market optimism. |
Residential caution | Developers need disciplined feasibility, smaller launches, clearer demand targeting and careful inventory management. Entry-level and mass-market segments remain pressured. |
Office repricing and quality shift | Older buildings face pressure; modern Grade A/A+ assets with ESG, transit access, amenities and management quality remain more resilient. |
Industrial and data-driven property demand | EEC, BMR logistics, data centres, factories, warehouses and power-ready land remain more structurally supported than broad speculative real estate. |
Execution and compliance are decisive | Foreign ownership, land rights, permits, environmental controls, BOI conditions, contractor quality and local stakeholder alignment can make or break a project. |
The real estate, construction and property development sector includes land acquisition, project feasibility, design, permitting, financing, construction, sales, leasing, asset management and exit. In Thailand, the sector is deeply connected to infrastructure policy, tourism flows, household credit, foreign direct investment, industrial expansion, urbanisation, environmental standards and family-owned land structures.
2.1 Core market segments
Segment | Representative activities | Key value drivers |
Residential | Condominiums, detached houses, townhouses, low-rise communities, serviced residences and build-to-rent concepts | Mortgage access, buyer confidence, location, mass-transit connectivity, unit sizing, affordability, brand trust and after-sales service. |
Office and commercial buildings | CBD office towers, Grade A/A+ assets, older office buildings, co-working, mixed-use commercial components | Tenant demand, rental rates, ESG certification, transit access, floorplate efficiency, building technology and amenity quality. |
Retail and mixed-use | Shopping centres, community malls, lifestyle destinations, retail podiums, F&B precincts and transit-oriented projects | Footfall, tenant mix, catchment strength, tourism exposure, lease management and experiential design. |
Hospitality real estate | Hotels, resorts, serviced apartments, branded residences and wellness properties | Tourist arrivals, room supply, operator selection, destination appeal, RevPAR, service quality and asset repositioning. |
Industrial and logistics | Industrial estates, factories, warehouses, cold chain, last-mile hubs, data centre sites and built-to-suit assets | EEC/BMR connectivity, road/port/airport access, power, utilities, lease terms, compliance and customer concentration. |
Infrastructure and public works | Rail, roads, airports, ports, utilities, public facilities and PPP-linked development | Government budget, procurement, contractor capability, political continuity and long-term regional development. |
2.2 Property development value chain
- Strategy and feasibility: demand study, competitor mapping, zoning, land cost, construction cost, financing assumptions, price/rent benchmarking and sensitivity analysis.
- Land and legal: land title verification, ownership structure, encumbrances, easements, access rights, zoning, EIA requirements and foreign ownership restrictions.
- Design and approvals: concept design, architecture, engineering, permits, environmental approvals, utility coordination and local authority engagement.
- Construction and delivery: contractor selection, BOQ validation, procurement, project management, cost control, quality inspection, safety and handover.
- Sales, leasing and operations: channel strategy, brokerage, tenant acquisition, marketing, facility management, asset management and exit planning.
Thailand’s property market is shaped by a slow-growth macro environment. Krungsri Research expects Thailand’s economy to grow at an average of 2.1% per year during 2026-2028, below the country’s pre-pandemic average and below the ASEAN-5 average. High household debt, fragile income recovery and slower consumption continue to affect mass-market residential demand. [8]
At the same time, Thailand remains a regional base for manufacturing, tourism, logistics and digital infrastructure. These factors support industrial estates, logistics property, selected hospitality assets, data-centre locations and mixed-use projects in areas with genuine demand drivers rather than speculative land appreciation. [3] [4] [8]
Market driver | Current relevance to property development |
Infrastructure and EEC | Public transport, highways, ports, airports and EEC-related investment continue to influence industrial, residential and logistics locations. |
Household debt and credit caution | Elevated debt levels reduce affordability, increase mortgage rejection risk and pressure entry-level housing demand. |
Foreign investment and China+1 | Manufacturing diversification supports industrial estates, factories, warehouses and worker/service housing around industrial zones. |
Tourism recovery | Supports hotels, serviced apartments, branded residences, retail destinations and mixed-use assets in Bangkok, Phuket and selected destinations. |
Digital infrastructure | Data-centre demand is reshaping land evaluation around power availability, fibre access, environmental controls and site resilience. |
ESG and building quality | Tenants and financiers increasingly value green buildings, energy efficiency, smart operations and climate-risk readiness. |
Risk area | Description | Mitigation approach |
Demand risk | Weak household purchasing power, mortgage rejection, slow sales velocity or tenant hesitation can undermine feasibility. | Use segment-specific demand studies, conservative absorption assumptions and phased development. |
Supply risk | Office oversupply, unsold residential inventory or new logistics supply can pressure prices and rents. | Benchmark pipeline, vacancy, competing launches and tenant/buyer alternatives before committing. |
Regulatory risk | Land ownership, zoning, permits, EIA, BOI conditions and operating licenses can delay or block projects. | Conduct legal and technical due diligence before land purchase or binding JV commitment. |
Cost and contractor risk | Material, labour, energy, design changes and contractor capability affect budget and completion quality. | Validate BOQ, use experienced project management, control variations and monitor quality. |
Financing and liquidity risk | Interest rates, bank appetite, pre-sales conditions and investor confidence affect project viability. | Stress-test capital structure, debt service, working capital and exit scenarios. |
Reputation and stakeholder risk | Community objections, environmental concerns, safety incidents or poor after-sales service can damage value. | Engage stakeholders early and maintain safety, ESG and customer-service standards. |
Thailand’s property market is competitive because major developers, family-owned landholders, industrial estate operators, hotel groups, contractors, banks, REITs, brokers and foreign investors operate with different cost bases and risk appetites. Large developers have stronger balance sheets, land banks, bank relationships and brand trust, while SMEs and new entrants face higher financing, permitting and sales risks.
Competitive layer | Market behaviour | Implication for new entrants |
Large listed developers | Focus on inventory management, selective launches, premium projects, mixed-use assets and recurring income. | Competing head-on is difficult; niche, partnership or asset-light models may be more practical. |
Family landowners | Often control strategic plots and may prefer joint ventures, long leases or selective development partnerships. | Relationship building, trust and transparent feasibility are critical. |
Industrial estate operators | Benefit from infrastructure, utilities, permits, foreign-investor familiarity and BOI-adjacent demand. | Factory and industrial clients should compare total operating readiness, not only land price. |
Brokers and consultants | Provide market data, leasing, sales and transaction support, often focused on larger transactions. | Execution still requires local coordination, partner checks and post-entry operating support. |
Contractors and project managers | Capability varies widely across cost control, quality, safety, schedules and documentation. | Vendor due diligence, contract controls and quality monitoring are non-negotiable. |
Opportunity area | Why it matters | Aditya Group relevance |
Industrial estates and factory setup | FDI, EEC, China+1 and export manufacturing support demand for land, factories, warehouses and operating setup. | Market-entry structuring, BOI coordination, site shortlisting, local partner/vendor support and execution oversight. |
Data-centre enabling property | Power-ready, fibre-connected and environmentally suitable land is becoming scarce in prime locations. | Location screening, stakeholder coordination, utility due diligence support and local execution intelligence. |
Hospitality and wellness assets | Tourism and wellness recovery support selective hotel, resort, serviced apartment and wellness real estate concepts. | Feasibility, operator search, destination analysis, project packaging and business development. |
Office repositioning | Older buildings may need renovation, tenant-mix repositioning, flexible layouts, ESG improvements and technology upgrades. | Strategy, vendor coordination, tenant-market research and operating improvement support. |
Luxury / niche residential | Mass market is pressured, but premium, low-density, expat, elderly-oriented and lifestyle-led formats may remain viable. | Demand analysis, target-segment design, international buyer positioning and project coordination. |
Construction and materials partners | Contractors, materials suppliers, modular solutions, green materials and smart-building vendors need market access. | Partner identification, client introductions, sourcing, distribution and representation. |
Client need | Aditya Group support area | Typical output |
Market entry and opportunity screening | Thailand property-sector assessment, asset-class screening, location mapping and partner search | Market-entry memo, opportunity shortlist, risk map and execution roadmap. |
Site selection and feasibility | Preliminary demand study, competitor review, location comparison, operating assumptions and local intelligence | Site-comparison matrix, feasibility framework and go/no-go recommendations. |
JV and partner development | Landowner/developer/operator/contractor/vendor identification and initial engagement support | Partner shortlist, discussion framework and commercial negotiation support. |
Factory / industrial setup | Coordination of BOI, site search, industrial estate evaluation, local suppliers and setup requirements | Setup roadmap, timeline, cost checklist and coordination support. |
Hospitality / wellness projects | Destination review, concept positioning, operator search, vendor support and market-development planning | Concept refinement, operator/partner list, project plan and pre-opening support scope. |
Construction and vendor coordination | Contractor/vendor sourcing, quotation comparison, project-monitoring support and documentation control | Vendor comparison sheet, risk checklist and implementation coordination. |
Business development for real-estate solutions | Market access for materials, smart-building products, green solutions, proptech and construction services | Distributor/partner pipeline, meeting support and Thailand go-to-market plan. |
11.1 Practical engagement models
- Strategic consultation: initial opportunity diagnosis, risk assessment and market-entry direction.
- Market research assignment: asset-class, location, competitor, demand and regulatory mapping.
- Partner search and business matching: identifying developers, landowners, contractors, operators, brokers or investors.
- Execution support: coordinating local vendors, timelines, documentation, site visits, meetings and implementation follow-up.
- Virtual CEO / local representative support: strategic oversight for foreign investors or founders without a full Thailand team.
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