Bangkok’s evolution into a car-dependent metropolis began six decades ago when American-influenced urban planning principles took hold with the implementation of the famous 1960 “Litchfield Plan”. Today, parking provision is often excessive in urban centres and municipal areas across Bangkok. It has become a critical determinant of project viability, with regulatory requirements often dictating financial outcomes for real estate developments. Our analysis shows parking spaces typically account for at least 15% of total construction costs, rising to 25% in commercially driven mixed-use developments and MICE-anchored precincts—costs that get passed to buyers and tenants. This is the norm for development economics in Bangkok.
The current regulatory framework presents a notable inefficiency. Bangkok’s mandatory parking ratios exceed those of Singapore and Seoul by fivefold and nearly threefold, respectively, for comparable commercial developments. More significantly, empirical research indicates that nearly 90% of condominiums in the Bangkok Metropolitan Region exceed minimum legal requirements. This suggests that market-driven demand fundamentally shapes parking provision rather than regulatory mandates alone. This tension creates conflict with Bangkok’s Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) aspirations and highlights a long-overdue policy misalignment that warrants systematic reform.
Table 1: Car parking required in commercial buildings (per 100 sqm GFA)

Source: ADB
The 2027 comprehensive plan: Regulatory recalibration
After years of postponements, first pandemic-related, then bureaucratic, Bangkok’s comprehensive fourth revision plan is finally advancing with substantive policy shifts. Set for implementation in 2027, the framework prioritises TOD principles. It permits increased density in urban cores and incentivises green and sustainable building practices through FAR bonuses.
The most consequential provision allows developers to reduce parking requirements by up to 25%. This applies to projects within walkable proximity to twenty designated major rail stations across the Central Business Area and core commercial districts. Such regulatory flexibility enables developers to reallocate gross floor area from parking infrastructure to revenue-generating spaces. On paper, the economics seem obvious. Less parking means more revenue-generating space. However, reality may prove more complicated.
Developers face a troubling question: will buyers accept less parking in a city where car ownership remains deeply embedded in local consumers’ expectations? The market has consistently voted with its wallets for abundant parking, regardless of what regulations require. The evidence is clear in luxury condominiums (on average providing 110% of parking required) and large department stores; the number could nearly double. In these developments, parking provision often far exceeds legal minimums. This is not just regulatory compliance, but rather a deliberate strategy to ensure the best customer experience.
Additionally, the policy requires developers who reduce parking to provide public amenities instead. These include plazas, green spaces, community area, at a ratio of 6 sqm per parking space reduced. For developments in high-value urban cores, the land opportunity cost of dedicating space to public areas may offset or even exceed the financial benefits gained from parking reduction.
The reform faces real challenges, but the policy represents a genuinely proactive legal instrument. It is one that could, over time, begin reshaping both supply-side development patterns and demand-side consumer expectations. Whether it succeeds depends on factors beyond regulation alone. However, the direction, at least, points towards a more sustainable urban future.
More on 'Office' in 'Thailand'
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- Building communities revive underutilised spaces in BangkokMay 21, 2024
- Shaping Bangkok’s skyline: The mixed-use revolutionApril 11, 2024







