Bangkok's condo and house market supports thousands of agents of wildly varying quality. This guide covers established agencies for buying, selling and renting, where their offices sit, how to verify DBD registration, typical commission ranges in Thailand, and how to vet a firm before you view a property, sign a lease or hand over a deposit.
Bangkok is Thailand's largest and most liquid property market, which means it also has one of the largest and most uneven fields of real estate agencies — from single-agent freelancers to established, DBD-registered firms with over two decades in the capital. Thailand has no single licensing body for real estate agents, so vetting is on you: DBD company registration, years of operation in Bangkok specifically, and independent reviews matter more here than anywhere a formal license would otherwise do the work. Below are established agencies covering different parts of the city, typical commission ranges, and how to protect yourself — especially around the 49% foreign condo-ownership quota and leasehold/company structures used for houses and land.
Office at 2525 FYI Center Building 2, 11th Floor, Rama 4 Road, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110. The Agent focuses on condominiums close to BTS and MRT stations across the city, handling sales and rentals plus tenancy management for owners. Multilingual team; phone +66 2 056 2333.
Office at 3388/93 Sirinrat Building, 25th floor, Rama IV Road, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110. AccomAsia has served buyers, landlords and tenants in Bangkok's central business district since 2002, covering detached houses, townhouses, condos/apartments and commercial space such as home offices and shophouses.
Office at 170/48, 15th Floor, Ocean Tower 1, Ratchadapisek Road, Khlong Toei, Bangkok. Bangkok CitiSmart handles condo and house sales and rentals across the city with an established brokerage team; phone +66 2 661 8999.
These are general Thailand market conventions, not fixed or agency-specific rates. Always confirm the exact commission and fee structure with the agency in writing before viewing a property.
| Service | Typical range | Notes |
| Sales commission | ~3% (commonly 3-5%) | Usually paid by the seller; negotiable, get it in writing |
| Rental agency fee | ~1 month's rent | Sometimes split between landlord and tenant |
| Ongoing property management | ~10-20% of monthly rent | For agencies offering full management; confirm scope and inclusions |
| Property viewings | Usually free | No charge to buyers or tenants at most agencies |
Real estate agents in Thailand aren't required to hold a government-issued broker's license the way lawyers must register with the Lawyers Council of Thailand. Vetting is on you: ask for the agency's Department of Business Development (DBD) company registration number and verify it directly on the DBD portal, check how long it has operated in Bangkok specifically, read independent reviews, and visit the office in person before committing to anything.
Foreigners can hold freehold title on a condo unit only within a building's 49% foreign-ownership quota (by total floor area); the remaining 51% must be Thai-held. A reputable Bangkok agency will confirm a specific unit's quota status in writing before you pay a reservation deposit — houses and land, by contrast, generally require a leasehold or Thai company structure, so ask which structure applies to any property before you commit.
Use your own lawyer for the title search, condo quota confirmation, or lease/company-structure review, even if the agency offers in-house legal support. Their job is to close the sale; your lawyer's job is to protect you. See our Bangkok lawyers guide for typical fees and how to choose one independently.
Thailand-wide, sales commission is typically negotiated around 3% of the sale price (commonly quoted in a 3-5% range) and is usually paid by the seller; rental agency fees commonly run about one month's rent, sometimes split between landlord and tenant. Full property-management services are typically priced separately, often as a percentage of monthly rent collected. Get the fee structure and any exclusivity terms in writing before you commit — these are typical market ranges, not fixed or agency-specific rates.
Agencies routinely help structure a house or land purchase through a Thai limited company when foreign ownership of land is involved. A company that genuinely trades with active Thai shareholders can lawfully hold land; a company set up purely as a nominee to hold land for a foreigner's benefit is illegal under Thai law. Get an independent legal opinion on any structure an agency proposes.
There's no single government licensing body for real estate agents in Thailand the way there is for lawyers. Vet an agency yourself: ask for its Department of Business Development (DBD) registration number and verify it on the DBD portal, check how long it has operated in Bangkok, read independent reviews, and visit its office in person before committing to a purchase, rental or deposit.
Foreigners can hold freehold title on a condo unit, but only within a building's 49% foreign-ownership quota; the remaining 51% must be Thai-held. Houses and land generally require a leasehold or Thai company structure instead. A reputable agency will confirm which structure applies to a specific property before you pay a deposit — always verify independently with your own lawyer.
Thailand-wide norms apply: sales commission (typically around 3%, sometimes quoted 3-5%) is usually paid by the seller, and rental agency fees (commonly around one month's rent) are sometimes split between landlord and tenant. Always confirm the exact fee structure with the specific agency in writing before viewing properties.
Ask the agency for its Department of Business Development (DBD) company registration number, then look it up directly on the DBD's business registration certificate portal to confirm the company's legal status, registered capital and filing history.
Yes. Agencies market and negotiate; your lawyer independently checks title, confirms a condo unit's foreign-quota status, and reviews any lease or Thai company structure. See our Bangkok lawyers guide for typical legal fees.
Primary and official sources are cited above. Government rules, fees and procedures in Thailand change over time and vary by office; always confirm current requirements with the relevant authority before relying on them. BAANLYY never takes paid placement in editorial content.
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Compare verified agencies, then line up independent legal review before you commit to a lease, purchase or condo reservation deposit.
Hero photo by Kampus Production on Pexels. General information only, not legal or investment advice; fees, listings and agency details change — confirm directly with the agency and with a licensed Thai lawyer before committing.