Thailand property can be located, such as in the form of real estate, in this Southeast Asian nation. Thailand property, if found somewhere on the borders of the country, may by close by Burma, to the north, Laos, again to the north or to the east, Malaysia, to the south, the Gulf of Thailand, also to the south, or the Andaman Sea, to the west. Thailand property laws are noted for being somewhat restrictive, aiming at allowing overseas buyers to purchase real estate in Thailand only accordingly to certain permissible routes. Thailand property laws can allow for overseas ownership of land in the country through the effective “owner” of the lot owning the most stock in a corporation, based out of Thailand, which actually holds the lease to the property. Thailand property laws also allow foreigners the so-called “2x30” route of agreeing to leases, lasting for up to a 30-year period, with a Thai citizen or Thai-owned business group. Foreign-born purchasers of Thailand land and other forms of property have sometimes gotten around Thailand property laws by having their Thai-born spouses purchase the property in their own names, but this strategy has been noted as often ending with the would-be purchasers losing their financial investment completely in view of their lack of formal ownership of the land. One popular subject addressed through Thailand property laws may be the option of Phuket real estate. Phuket real estate, in the country’s south, is located on the island of this name, Thailand’s richest area.