Get in touch

Phuket Property Management Fees and Contract Checklist

General view of the Layan Verde project in Phuket

What this page covers

Phuket Property Management Fees and Contract Checklist

If you are reviewing Phuket property management fees and contracts from abroad, first confirm who manages the property, what the agreement includes, and how those duties are defined in writing.

Layan Verde publicly refers to cooperation with Dusit International and a signed contract in the premium hotel segment, so owners should review the exact scope, terms, and limits of any management arrangement before proceeding.

In brief

  • Confirm which party is responsible for management and whether hospitality, rental, and property management functions are clearly separated in the written agreement.
  • Read the fee language carefully, especially where service standards, owner use, and reporting depend on the management structure or contract terms.
  • Request the current official documents and written confirmations, because public materials also state that layouts, visuals, and project details may change under applicable legislation.

What to do

A practical checklist starts with the operating party and the contract structure. Layan Verde materials mention cooperation with Dusit International, a signed contract in the premium hotel segment, and broad hospitality experience. For a remote owner, that means asking which entity signs with you, which entity operates the property, and which services are actually included.

Next, review the fee and service schedule line by line. Public materials refer to hotel management, owner privileges, and a loyalty program in development, but those points do not replace a clear written schedule of charges, included services, exclusions, approval thresholds, and reporting duties. If you are comparing options, focus on what is expressly stated in the contract.

Finally, confirm how the arrangement works in day-to-day ownership. Ask how management applies across unit types, what owner-use rules may apply, how communication is handled from overseas, and which documents govern updates or changes. This matters in a large development with many layouts and a hospitality-led model, where operating terms may not be identical in every case.

What to keep in mind

Public materials have clear limits. The developer is publicly identified as Layan Best View Company Limited, and the public disclaimer states that this is not a public offer, that visualizations and property layouts are approximate, and that the developer may make project changes in accordance with applicable legislation.

That means this page is a contract review guide, not legal, tax, or financial advice. It can help you prepare questions about management scope, fees, approvals, and reporting, but your final understanding should come from current signed documents, official schedules, and direct written confirmations from the relevant parties.

It is also wise to separate operator reputation from contractual protection. References to hospitality experience, international presence, and multiple hotel management contracts may support the background story, but overseas owners should still verify the exact obligations, service levels, and fee mechanics that apply to their own purchase and ownership structure.