MoneyKH · Hub 8 · Expat Finance
Cambodia Foreign Ownership Rules 2026: What Expats Can (and Can’t) Buy
Land, condominiums, businesses, long-term leases, strata title, and the legal structures foreigners actually use in Cambodia — clearly explained without the jargon.
❌ Land
Foreigners cannot own land
✓ Condos
Strata title — up to 70% foreign per building
⏱ 50yr
Max registered lease term
✓ Business
100% foreign ownership (most sectors)
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🇰🇭 Kingdom of Cambodia · Land Law
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Not legal advice — consult a licensed Cambodian lawyer
Quick Answer — Cambodia Foreign Ownership 2026
Foreigners cannot own land in Cambodia — this is a constitutional prohibition. However, foreigners can legally own strata title condominium units (units above ground floor in registered co-ownership buildings), subject to a building-wide cap of no more than 70% foreign ownership. For land and non-strata property, the main legal options for foreigners are: long-term leases (up to 50 years, renewable, registerable), or operating through a Cambodian-majority company. A third option — using a Cambodian “nominee” to hold title — is widely practised but carries significant legal risk and is not recommended by MoneyKH. For businesses, foreigners can own 100% of most service and manufacturing companies registered in Cambodia. The rules are complex, frequently misunderstood, and have real financial consequences. Always engage a licensed Cambodian lawyer before any property transaction.
MoneyKH publishes this guide for general informational purposes only. This is not legal advice. Cambodian property and business law changes regularly. Consult a licensed Cambodian lawyer before any transaction.
In This Guide
The Legal Framework — What Cambodia’s Law Actually Says
Cambodia’s property ownership rules for foreigners are primarily governed by three legal instruments:
⚖️ The Constitution (1993)
Article 44 states that the right to own property is guaranteed — but only for Khmer nationals. This is the constitutional foundation of the land ownership prohibition for foreigners.
📋 Land Law 2001 (amended 2010)
The core legislation governing property rights. The 2010 amendment introduced strata title (co-ownership), which opened legal condominium ownership to foreigners for the first time. Prohibits foreigners from owning land.
🏢 Sub-decrees & Regulations
Implementation sub-decrees govern strata registration, the 70% cap, lease registration, foreign investment (LOLC), and Special Economic Zones (SEZs). These change more frequently — always verify current rules.
What Foreigners Can and Cannot Own — At a Glance
Important disclaimer: Cambodian property law is complex, evolving, and the gap between what is written in law and what happens in practice can be significant. MoneyKH provides this guide for general orientation only. Before purchasing any property or entering any ownership structure in Cambodia, engage a licensed Cambodian lawyer. This is not optional advice — it is essential.
Land — Why Foreigners Cannot Own It and What That Means in Practice
The prohibition on foreign land ownership in Cambodia is not administrative red tape that can be worked around with the right structure — it is a constitutional protection. Cambodia’s constitution reserves land ownership for Khmer nationals. No legal structure, company, or instrument can fully eliminate this prohibition if land title is in scope.
Understanding what “land” means in this context is important. In Cambodia’s property system, every plot of land has a title that separates it from any building constructed upon it. When people talk about “buying a house” in Cambodia, what they are really buying is:
❌ The Land Title (what foreigners cannot own)
The ground and what is beneath it. The “Hard Title” (LMAP certificate) or “Soft Title” that represents legal ownership of the land plot. Foreigners cannot hold this in their own name under any circumstances.
⚠ The Building (more nuanced)
The structure above the ground. In theory, building ownership can be separated from land ownership in Cambodia — but this is legally complex and rarely provides clean protection without also controlling the land beneath it via a long-term lease.
Title types in Cambodia: Understanding title types is essential before any property transaction:
Condominiums — The Strata Title Route for Legal Foreign Ownership
Purchasing a strata title condominium unit is the cleanest, most legally defensible form of property ownership available to foreigners in Cambodia. Introduced by the 2010 amendment to the Land Law, strata title (also referred to as co-ownership title) allows foreigners to hold individual title to a unit within a registered multi-storey building.
The Rules for Foreign Strata Title Ownership
✓ Requirements for Valid Foreign Strata Purchase
⚠ Common Strata Title Risks to Watch For
Due diligence checklist for strata purchases: (1) Verify MLMUPC registration of the building as strata. (2) Check current foreign ownership ratio. (3) Confirm your unit is above ground floor. (4) Engage a Cambodian lawyer to review the sale agreement before signing. (5) Pay into escrow or use a trusted lawyer’s client account rather than directly to the developer where possible. (6) Obtain your individual co-ownership title certificate — do not accept “we’ll issue it later.”
Long-Term Leases — The Main Legal Alternative to Ownership
A long-term lease is the most widely used legal structure for foreigners who want to control land or non-strata property in Cambodia without violating the ownership prohibition. Done correctly, a long-term lease can provide a reasonably secure basis for using and controlling property for decades.
Maximum lease term: Under Cambodian law, a lease can be registered for up to 50 years and is renewable at the end of the term. Some sources cite 99-year leases being offered — these are not legally recognised under current law and should be treated with caution. The legal maximum is 50 years, with the option to renew.
✓ What a Well-Structured Lease Provides
✗ What a Lease Does NOT Give You
Registered vs Unregistered Leases — A Critical Distinction
Many foreigners in Cambodia operate on unregistered or poorly documented leases — a handshake deal or a simple letter with a Cambodian landlord. This is extremely high-risk for any significant investment. A registered, notarised long-term lease that is recorded with the cadastral authority is substantially more legally defensible. Registration provides:
📝
Public Record
The lease is recorded in the official land registry — visible to third parties and binding on future landowners
⚖️
Court Enforceability
Registered leases are far easier to enforce in Cambodian courts if the landowner breaches the agreement
🔒
Successor Binding
A registered lease binds the landowner’s heirs and any future buyer of the land — your lease survives a change of ownership
Cost of registration: Registering a long-term lease with the cadastral authority and having it notarised involves fees — typically a transfer tax equivalent plus notary and lawyer fees. This is money well spent. An unregistered lease over a property worth $200,000 saves a few hundred dollars in registration fees but leaves you with minimal legal protection worth far less than the asset at risk.
Nominee Structures — The Risks You Must Understand
MoneyKH Warning: Nominee structures for property ownership in Cambodia are illegal and carry significant financial risk. We document this structure here because it is widely practised — not to recommend it.
A nominee structure involves using a Cambodian national — a friend, partner, spouse, business associate, or professional nominee — to hold legal land title on behalf of a foreigner. The foreigner provides the funds; the Cambodian holds the title. A side agreement (power of attorney, promissory note, loan agreement, or trust document) is used to try to protect the foreigner’s interest.
This structure is widespread in Cambodia. Real estate agents, developers, and even some lawyers sometimes present it casually as a standard option. It is not a standard option — it is a legally compromised workaround that the Cambodian government has explicitly stated it does not recognise, and that carries the following serious risks:
The nominee can sell the property
As the registered title holder, the Cambodian nominee can legally sell the property. If they do, your side agreement may be unenforceable — you could lose the property entirely.
The nominee can mortgage the property
A nominee can use the property as collateral for their own loans. If they default, the bank takes the property — and you have no prior registered claim as an owner.
Death or divorce of the nominee
If the nominee dies, the title may pass to their heirs. If they divorce, the property may be treated as marital assets. Your side agreement may not protect you in either scenario.
The side agreement may be void
Cambodian courts may refuse to enforce a nominee agreement that was entered into to circumvent foreign ownership laws — treating the entire arrangement as illegal and unenforceable.
Criminal exposure
Using nominee structures to circumvent foreign ownership laws could, in theory, expose both the foreign buyer and the nominee to legal sanctions under Cambodian law.
Relationship risk
Nominee arrangements between friends, partners, or romantic partners are particularly high risk. Relationship breakdown is one of the most common triggers for nominee disputes in Cambodia.
MoneyKH position: We do not recommend nominee structures. The legal and financial risk to the foreign party is too high to justify. Use strata title for condos, use registered long-term leases for land, or use a properly structured Cambodian company with competent legal advice. These are legal. Nominees are not.
Foreign Business Ownership in Cambodia
Business ownership rules are considerably more favourable for foreigners than property ownership. Cambodia actively encourages foreign investment and allows foreigners to own 100% of most types of business registered with the Ministry of Commerce (MOC).
✓ Sectors Open to 100% Foreign Ownership
✗ Sectors Requiring Cambodian Majority / Restricted
Business registration process: Foreign-owned businesses in Cambodia are typically registered as a Private Limited Company (LLC) with the Ministry of Commerce, with a minimum share capital requirement. After MOC registration, businesses must register with the General Department of Taxation (GDT) and comply with monthly tax filing obligations. See our Cambodia Tax Guide for Expats 2026 for tax obligations.
The company-for-land-control issue: Some foreigners register a Cambodian LLC with 51% Cambodian shareholding specifically to hold land title. While this is technically a legal Cambodian company, if the arrangement is designed to circumvent the foreign ownership ban (e.g., the Cambodian shareholders are nominees), it carries similar risks to the nominee structure described above. A genuinely Cambodian-majority company with bona fide Cambodian shareholders and governance is different and generally legitimate — but requires proper legal structuring and genuine Cambodian co-investment.
Taxes on Property for Foreigners in Cambodia
Property transactions and ownership in Cambodia involve several taxes that foreigners should understand before buying, selling, or renting.
Capital gains tax note: The 20% capital gains tax on Cambodian real property introduced in 2022 catches many expats off guard, particularly those who bought property before 2022 and assumed they could sell tax-free. The tax applies to the gain (sale price minus cost basis), not the full sale value. A first-home primary residence exemption exists under certain conditions — confirm current rules with a Cambodian tax adviser before selling any property. For full Cambodia tax detail, see our Cambodia Tax Guide for Expats 2026.
Practical Checklist Before Any Cambodia Property Transaction
For Strata Title (Condo) Purchases:
For Long-Term Leases:
⚖️ Where to Get Legal Help for Cambodia Property
International Law Firms with Cambodia Offices:
For referrals:
MoneyKH Verdict
Cambodia Is Accessible for Foreign Investors — But Only Through the Right Legal Structures
Cambodia’s property market is genuinely accessible to foreigners if you use the right structures. Strata title condominiums provide clean legal ownership. Registered long-term leases provide viable control of land and houses. Foreign business ownership is among the most permissive in ASEAN for most sectors.
The risks come from taking shortcuts: unregistered leases, nominee structures, and off-plan purchases from undercapitalised developers. These shortcuts are common in Cambodia and many foreigners have lost significant sums through them. The legal protections are there — they just require using them correctly.
Before any property transaction in Cambodia — whether a condo purchase, a long-term lease, a business acquisition, or a land deal — engage a qualified Cambodian property lawyer. This is not optional advice. It is the single most important step you can take to protect your investment.
MoneyKH bottom line: Strata title for condos. Registered leases for land. A real lawyer for everything. Nominees for nothing.
Related MoneyKH Guides
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Capital gains tax, rental income tax, and more
The full overview for expats — banking, tax, insurance
Full expat budget breakdown for Cambodia’s capital
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Cambodian property and business law is complex and changes regularly. MoneyKH is not a licensed lawyer, notary, or legal adviser. Information in this article is verified as of April 2026 but may not reflect the most recent legislative or regulatory changes. Always consult a licensed Cambodian lawyer before entering into any property transaction, lease agreement, or business ownership structure in Cambodia.
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