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Thai housing demand recovering but outlook clouded by energy shock risks

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 12:21 AM

BANGKOK, May 27 (Reuters) – Thailand’s housing market showed recovery signs in the first quarter of 2026, the state house leader said on Wednesday, with transaction volumes rising on ​government stimulus even as gains in value lagged, underscoring weak ‌purchasing power.

• The outlook remains fragile, with rising energy costs linked to Middle East war, soft domestic demand and a pullback in foreign buying expected to weigh on the sector through the rest of the year, the ‌Government ​Housing Bank said in a statement.

• The ⁠housing market is expected to ⁠decline slightly in 2026 due to energy costs and inflation, though declines will be limited by government stimulus, an extended loan-to-value easing for another year and fee cuts for certain ​homes, the bank said.

• Foreign condominium demand weakened sharply in January-March, with transfers down about 17% year-on-year in both volume and ⁠value, though foreigners still accounted for ⁠a significant share of transactions.

• Chinese buying declined steeply, ​by 43% in value, while Russian demand grew, with foreign activity ​concentrated in Bangkok, Chonburi and Phuket, particularly in higher-end ‌segments.

• The bank expects a mild contraction in 2026, with transfers seen down 1.1% in volume and 2.3% in value, and new mortgage lending projected to fall 1.6%.

• Residential unit transfers rose 11.2% ⁠year-on-year in the first quarter, while value increased a more modest 3.1%, highlighting a shift towards lower-priced homes.

• Higher energy and construction costs, driven ⁠by geopolitical tensions, ‌are weighing on household purchasing power, it said.

• ⁠Thailand’s household debt was 16.44 trillion baht  ($504.45 billion) ​at ‌the end of last year, or 86.7% of ​GDP, among ⁠Asia’s highest levels, dragging on consumption and growth.

• Housing loans are starting to recover after a prolonged downturn, with new mortgage lending rising 11.1% year-on-year to about 122 billion baht in the first quarter.

($1 = 32.5900 baht)

(Reporting by Kitiphong Thaichareon, Orathai Sriring and Chayut Setboonsarng; Editing ​by Martin Petty)