← All guides
Buying safelyJuly 11, 2026 · 6 min read

How to Vet a Thai Property Developer Before You Buy Off-Plan

In a market without mandatory escrow, the developer's strength is your deposit's real protection. Here is how professionals assess a Thai developer before signing anything.

Why the developer matters more than the project

In Thailand, off-plan installments are generally paid straight to the developer — there is no mandatory escrow shielding your money until completion. That single structural fact reorders your due diligence: before you fall in love with a floor plan, you are effectively extending unsecured credit to a construction company for one to three years. Underwrite the company first.

Start with the SET listing

Thailand's major residential developers — names like Sansiri, AP (Thailand) and Supalai — are listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand. A listing is not a guarantee, but it buys you three concrete protections: audited annual financial statements you can actually read; continuous disclosure obligations, so material problems surface publicly; and a brand whose damage would cost far more than any single project. Unlisted developers can be excellent, but verifying them requires private information a listed company must publish.

This is why BaanScope tracks projects exclusively from SET-listed developers: the baseline financial transparency is structural, not promised.

  • Audited, public financial statements
  • Ongoing disclosure of material events
  • Reputational capital that disciplines behaviour

Read the delivery history, not the brochure

The best predictor of a developer completing your building on time is having completed many buildings on time. Look for a long record of delivered condominium projects — specifically condos, since high-rise delivery is a different skill from landed housing. Check how past projects were received: chronic complaints about handover quality, juristic management or defect handling follow developers from project to project.

Judge the pipeline against the balance sheet

A strong developer can still overreach. Compare what the company currently has under construction with its scale and history: a developer suddenly running triple its usual number of towers is stretched — in management attention if not in financing. Pre-sales rates matter here too: a project selling slowly strains the very construction financing your completion depends on.

BaanScope's developer pages assemble each developer's live tracked Bangkok pipeline in one view — how many projects, where, at what price points and completion dates — so this comparison takes minutes instead of a research project.

The after-sales test

Your relationship with the developer does not end at transfer: defect-warranty claims, common-area completion and the early years of building management all run through them. Visit a project the developer completed three to five years ago. Is the lobby maintained? Are the facilities working? Owners' groups and juristic reputations are searchable — and revealing. A developer that manages its finished buildings well is showing you what your building will be.

  • Visit an older completed project — its condition is the forecast
  • Ask about the defect-warranty terms and claims process
  • Check who operates building management after handover

Frequently asked questions

What does SET-listed mean and why does it matter?
SET-listed means the developer's shares trade on the Stock Exchange of Thailand, which obliges it to publish audited financial statements and disclose material events. For off-plan buyers — whose deposits are not escrowed — this transparency is the most practical baseline protection available.
Which are the biggest property developers in Thailand?
Thailand's major listed residential developers include Sansiri, AP (Thailand), Supalai, Origin Property, Noble Development and Pruksa, among others. BaanScope tracks the live Bangkok off-plan pipelines of leading SET-listed developers with structured data on every project.
Can a big developer still fail to deliver?
Delays happen even at strong developers, which is why contract delay-penalty and refund clauses still matter. Outright non-completion, however, is overwhelmingly concentrated among small, thinly capitalised developers — the risk your developer selection is designed to avoid.

Related guides