In this blog we will examine the Land Office’s appraised value of condominium units. The appraised value of a condominium unit is of significant importance for the calculation of fees and taxes upon transfer of such a unit. Like land and other general buildings/structures, a condominium unit is transferred by a written registration at the authorized Land Office. The current fees and taxes applicable to and payable upon the registration of ownership thereof are: (1) transfer fee; (2) income tax (payable as withholding tax); and (3) stamp duty or specific business tax/local development tax.
The transfer fee and the (individual) seller’s income withholding tax that is required to be deducted and paid to the authorities upon transfer are calculated based on the Land Office’s appraised value of the condominium unit. The stamp duty or specific business tax/local development tax is calculated based on the Land Office’s appraised value of the condominium unit or the sales price of the unit, whichever is higher.
Section 30 of the Condominium Act (1979) (“CA”) provides that the provisions of the Land Code (1954) (“LC”) regarding land registration and the Ministerial Regulations issued under said provision shall be applied to the registration of rights and juristic acts of the condominium unit mutatis mutandis. In addition, Section 62 of the CA provides that the relevant provisions of the LC regarding fees, such as Sections 104, 105, and 106, shall be applied to the fees under the CA mutatis mutandis.
The assessment of the appraised value of a condominium unit is made periodically by the Valuation Committee in accordance with Sections 105 and 105 unique of the LC.
Pursuant to Chapter 3 of the Valuation Committee’s Regulations for Determining the Criteria and Procedures for Valuing the Immovable Properties for Purposes of Levying Fees for Registering the Rights and Juristic Acts (1992) (amended in 1998) issued under Section 105 unique of the LC, the criteria to be taken into account by the Valuation Committee in determining the appraised value of a condominium unit can be summarized as follows:
(1) Sale and purchase price, terms and conditions of the sale and purchase agreement, or rental amount of unit(s) on each floor of that particular condominium and of other same/similar style condominiums nearby;
(2) Quantity and quality of the common property of the condominium;
(3) Facilities and services provided in the condominium;
(4) Quality of the materials and built-in decorations of the unit;
(5) Purpose of use of the unit, e.g., for commercial, residential, or office space, etc.;
(6) Style of the unit and where it is located within that particular condominium;
(7) Common property management system of the condominium; and
(8) Market price of the land upon which the condominium is located, which is the common property of the condominium, and construction costs as of the date of condominium registration.
After the Valuation Committee has gathered such information, it then determines the official appraised value of a condominium unit by using one or more of the following methods:
- Comparing it with the market price of the same/similar style condominium unit nearby; or
- Comparing it with the rental amount of the same/similar style condominium unit nearby; or, if (1) and (2) are insufficient or incomparable,
- Using the construction costs and the depreciation of the unit for the determination.
Usually the appraised value is designated floor by floor or, alternatively, unit by unit. But note that if the condominium comprises several buildings, the appraised value of the floors and units in each building may well be different.
Thus, each condominium in Thailand has its own official appraised value. Below are two examples of the appraised values applicable to the transfer of ownership of two specific condominiums in Phuket Town and in Rawai, Phuket Province (referred to here, without disclosing their actual names, as “Condominium X” and “Condominium Y”):
| Unit Type | Condominium X (Phuket Town) — THB/m² | Condominium Y (Rawai) — THB/m² |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Floor, Commercial Unit | 48,500 | 49,000 |
| 1st Floor, Commercial Unit, Balcony | 20,250 | 24,500 |
| 1st Floor, Residential Unit | 40,500 | 41,000 |
| 1st Floor, Residential Unit, Balcony | 20,250 | 20,500 |
| 5th Floor, Residential Unit | 41,500 | 43,000 |
| 5th Floor, Residential Unit, Balcony | 20,750 | 21,500 |
In general, the appraised value of each condominium must be re-evaluated by the Valuation Committee every four years. The appraised value of Condominium X cited above was announced in 2009 and that of Condominium Y in 2010, with the following re-evaluation and announcement cycle landing in 2012 and 2013 respectively.
The higher the appraised value, the more expensive the fee applicable to and payable upon the registration of ownership of the condominium unit at the authorized Land Office will be. By way of example, the highest appraised value of a residential condominium unit in Phuket at the time of writing was 91,000 THB/m². Taking that appraised amount into account, the registration fee payable upon the registration of ownership of a 200 m² unit would be THB 364,000 [91,000 × 200 = 18,200,000 × 2% = 364,000].