

We will try and get it translated as soon as we can, if anyone can assist please post here.
I don't believe that I have seen anyone on this forum ever state that a foriegner could buy the freehold of land, as that is the whole point of the Thai Law, with just the one exception, when you invest 40 million baht in a government scheme. I would hope that everyone who has bought, is buying or thinking of buying was aware of this, even before all the current furore. What this thread, and others have now done is to actually clarify and apparently formally allow the 'company route' as an acceptable, and more importantly legal way for foriegners to purchase a property and live here, as long as the company has been set up in the correct way, with genuine Thai shareholders, and not as a 'shell' company. The only questions I have ever had in my mind regarding this procedure has been the risk of doing this as regards trusting the Thai shareholders, and the potential hassle of running an active company, along with the tax implications. If someone else is happy with that scenario and level of risk then good luck to them, but it's not for me.johnrxx99 wrote:Lev - it appears this thread has gone some way to lay to rest the notion that a farang can at reasonable risk buy a "freehold" by use of a minority shareholding in a Thai company.
Please do me a favour and make this a sticky.