Townhouses for Sale in Phuket

234 active listings · from ฿959K

Active:Townhouse

Property listings

Phuket Townhouses Market Overview

Phuket townhouses bridge condo and villa: 2–3 storey row-houses with shared side walls, 100–250 m² interior, small private garden or rooftop. Mostly Thai-resident product (foreign ownership runs via leasehold or Thai company, same as villas). Inventory concentrates in Kathu, Chalong, Phuket Town interior — value-buy zones with limited tourist traffic but full year-round liveability. Price range ฿4–18M.

Important: foreign ownership of townhouses and houses runs via leasehold or Thai company. See our freehold vs leasehold guide for Thailand.

Frequently Asked

Can foreigners own a townhouse in Phuket?

Same as villas — direct land freehold is restricted under the Land Code. Standard routes: 30-year leasehold + renewal, or Thai limited company. Some town-house developments offer building-only freehold (superficies) over a leasehold land structure — this works legally but is uncommon. Verify with the developer before purchase.

Why are townhouses cheaper than villas?

Smaller land footprint (100–200 m² plot vs 400–600 m² for villas), shared walls reduce build cost, denser plot ratios mean more units per land area. Townhouses also concentrate in non-tourist inland zones (Kathu, Chalong) where land prices are 40–60% below west-coast tourist zones.

What's the rental yield for townhouses?

LTR (long-term) yield: 4–6% net to Thai-resident tenants (English teachers, expat families, Thai professionals). STR yield is weak (non-tourist location, no pool, no view) — townhouses are LTR-rental plays, not Airbnb-rental plays. Net stability often beats STR-condo volatility.

Are townhouses a good first investment for foreigners?

Usually no — leasehold-structured townhouses face the same legal complexity as villas without the trophy upside. Most foreign first-buyers go condo (clean freehold, lower entry price, higher STR yield potential). Townhouses make sense for long-term residents who plan to occupy, not investors.