June 30 deadline: who can still save on a Phuket property purchase
Phuket has a rare window where buying is not only about choosing the right asset, but also about timing. Until 30 June 2026, Thailand keeps a temporary cut in transfer and mortgage registration fees for homes priced up to THB 7 million. For some buyers, that is real money saved; for the market, it is one more reason to close qualified deals without delay.
The idea is simple: eligible transactions are charged a token 0.01% transfer fee and 0.01% mortgage registration fee. In practice, this matters most for ready apartments, family purchases, and deals that need a clean, fast transfer at the Land Department.
Phuket matters here for two reasons. First, many island buyers look at the full entry budget, not just the unit price: deposit, legal review, taxes, furniture, renovation, and ongoing ownership costs. Second, with supply growing and buyers becoming more selective, any clear upfront saving can help a good deal move forward faster.
As a rough example, on a THB 7 million purchase, the transfer fee saving is about THB 139,300 and the mortgage registration saving is about THB 69,300. Combined, the difference versus normal fees can exceed THB 200,000. That is enough to fund furnishing, finishing work, or a healthy first-year reserve.
There is one important catch: the benefit is not identical for everyone. It applies only to qualifying property types and within the price cap. So the first questions are simple: does the property qualify, who is the buyer on the paperwork, and will the transfer be completed before the deadline?
For investors, the conclusion is straightforward. If you are already near a decision on a ready condo or financing-based purchase, June is a good month to move the paperwork forward. If you are looking at a villa, land, or a higher-value asset, the fee cut is unlikely to be the deciding factor. Then the focus should stay on ownership structure, title quality, and location liquidity.
Phuket remains a strong market, but it is a more mature one. That means the winners are not the loudest promises, but assets with clean legal status, clear entry costs, and a believable rental or resale path. In that setting, a temporary fee cut is not a reason to rush blindly; it is a reason to close a good deal more efficiently.






