Why foreigners need a trust to own landed property.
Cambodia's constitution prohibits foreigners from directly owning land. This restriction is fundamental and total: no visa status, no length of residency, no business structure changes the underlying rule. A foreigner cannot hold a land title in their own name.
For condominiums, the 2010 co-ownership law offers a clean workaround — strata title lets foreigners own condo units directly, up to 70% of any given building. But for landed property — boreys, shophouses, standalone villas, land plots — that option doesn't exist. Until 2019, the realistic options were: don't buy, use a Cambodian spouse or nominee, set up a land-holding company, or sign a long-term lease. All carry risk. None are as clean as direct ownership.
The 2019 Law on Trusts changed this. For the first time, a legal, regulated mechanism allows foreigners to hold beneficial ownership of landed property in Cambodia — with a licensed trustee holding the legal title on their behalf, bound by law to act in the beneficiary's interest. By early 2025, more than $1.7 billion had been invested through Cambodia's trust structure, with around 90% going into real estate.
$1.7 billion invested through Cambodia trusts in 5 years — 90% into real estate.
From 2019 to early 2025, trust-structured investment into Cambodia reached $1.7 billion. The vast majority is property investment by foreign buyers who would otherwise be unable to hold landed title directly.
How a Cambodian property trust actually works.
A trust is a legal arrangement with three parties: a settlor who transfers the asset, a trustee who holds it, and a beneficiary who receives its benefits. In the context of Cambodian property, this maps cleanly to a foreign buyer who wants to own landed property:
You are the settlor. You identify the property you want to buy. You transfer the purchase funds — or the property itself if you already own it — into the trust structure. You draft a trust deed specifying exactly what rights you retain.
The licensed trustee holds the legal title. The hard title to the land is registered in the trustee company's name. The trustee is legally bound by the trust deed and Cambodian law to hold and manage the asset solely for your benefit. They cannot sell, mortgage, or deal with the property without your instruction.
You are the beneficiary. You retain all economic rights: you receive rental income, you instruct the trustee on any sale or transfer, you can designate who inherits the trust on your death. The beneficial interest — the real economic ownership — is yours. The trustee's name on the title is a legal formality, not a meaningful transfer of control.
This distinction between legal title (held by the trustee) and beneficial ownership (held by the foreign investor) is the engine of the whole structure. It is specifically designed to be compliant with Cambodian land law while providing the foreign investor with enforceable, documented, and regulated rights over the property.
Critical difference
A trust is not a nominee arrangement. The difference is legal protection.
In a traditional nominee arrangement, a Cambodian citizen holds title in their name on an informal basis. There's no regulatory oversight, no enforceable legal framework protecting the foreign investor, and no recourse if the nominee acts fraudulently. A licensed trust is the opposite: the trustee is regulated, licensed, and legally bound by the trust deed and Cambodian law. The trustee acting against your interest is a criminal offense, not just a civil dispute.
What property types can be held in a trust
Cambodia's trust law allows for various immovable assets to be placed in trust, including:
- Land plots (with hard title)
- Borey houses — link houses, twin villas, queen villas, king villas
- Shophouses and commercial villas
- Standalone villas and landed homes
- Land held under development for future construction
The property must carry a hard title. Soft-title properties are generally not suitable for trust holding — the title ambiguity that makes soft title risky for any buyer is amplified in a trust structure where the title is the legal foundation.
NBFSA / Trust Regulator supervises all licensed trustees. Trust deed is legally enforceable under Cambodian law.
Beneficial ownershipCreates the trust, transfers funds or property. Retains all economic rights — income, sale proceeds, succession.
Legal title onlyHard title is in the trustee's name. Cannot deal with the property without your written instruction. Regulated by NBFSA.
Legally ring-fencedTrust assets are held separately from the trustee's corporate assets. Protected against insolvency. Up to 100-year term.
Understanding property title types in Cambodia
A trust requires hard title to work. If you're unsure about the difference between hard title, soft title, and strata title — and why it matters for a trust — our title guide covers everything.
The legal framework: three instruments you need to know.
Cambodia's trust industry is built on three progressively detailed legal instruments. Understanding which law covers what helps you ask the right questions when reviewing a trust deed.
| Instrument | Issued | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Law on Commercial Trusts | January 2019 | Establishes the concept of trusts in Cambodia. Defines the three parties, trust types, and the general framework for trust creation and enforcement. |
| Sub-Decree on Commercial Trusts | July 2021 | Implementing regulation. Establishes the Trust Regulator, operational rules for trustees, and registration requirements for trusts. |
| Prakas No. 003 (NBFSA) | January 2022 | Detailed licensing rules for trustee companies and individuals. Qualifications, obligations, capital requirements, and supervisory framework. |
The regulator overseeing Cambodia's trust industry is the Non-Banking Financial Services Authority (NBFSA), operating through the Trust Regulator (TR) division. Any entity holding itself out as a trustee in Cambodia must be licensed by the TR. In January 2026, the NBFSA issued Prakas No. 012 further regulating branch operations of licensed trustees — signaling the regulator's intent to tighten oversight as the industry matures.
Regulatory oversight
Only NBFSA-licensed trustees can legally hold property in trust.
The trust law explicitly requires that all trustee entities hold a valid license from the Trust Regulator. This is the minimum threshold. Before engaging any trustee, verify their current license directly with the Trust Regulator's public registry or at the TR's office in Phnom Penh.
The Cambodia Trustees Association (CTA), formally recognized by the Trust Regulator on October 28, 2025, serves as the industry body — setting professional standards, providing training, and acting as the bridge between licensed trust service providers and the regulator. CTA membership is an additional signal of a trustee's commitment to professional standards, though it does not replace a valid TR license.
The five key benefits of buying through a trust.
Access to landed property
The primary benefit. A trust is currently the only regulated, legally sound pathway for a foreigner to hold beneficial ownership over landed property — boreys, villas, shophouses, land plots — in Cambodia.
Asset protection
Assets inside a trust are legally separate from your personal estate. They are protected against personal liabilities, judgments, or creditors in both Cambodia and your home country — depending on the trust deed structure.
Estate planning & succession
The trust deed can designate beneficiaries who inherit the trust on your death — without going through the Cambodian probate process. This is particularly valuable for family property planning across generations.
Privacy
The land title is held in the trustee's company name. The foreign beneficiary's name does not appear on the public title record. This provides a layer of privacy that direct ownership does not.
Legal enforceability
Unlike nominee arrangements, trust rights are enforceable under Cambodian law. The trust deed is a legal document. A trustee who acts against the beneficiary's interests is in breach of both the deed and the Trust Law — with regulatory and criminal consequences.
Corporate structuring
Foreign companies and holding entities can be beneficiaries of a trust, enabling structured cross-border investment into Cambodian property. Consult a tax specialist on implications across your home jurisdiction.
Trust vs. other foreign ownership structures.
The trust isn't the only structure foreigners use in Cambodia — it's the most legally sound one for landed property. Here's how it compares to the alternatives you'll encounter.
| Trust | Nominee | Long-term Lease | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | 2019 Trust Law | No specific law | Civil Code |
| Regulated | Yes — NBFSA/TR | No | Partially |
| Fraud protection | High | Very low | Moderate |
| Estate planning | Yes — built in | Complicated | Difficult |
| Ownership type | Beneficial | None (informal) | Leasehold only |
| Max term | Up to 100 years | Indefinite (but fragile) | 50 years (renewable) |
| Cost | Setup + annual fee | Low setup, hidden risk | Lease premium + registration |
| Recommended for | Foreign buyers of landed property | Not recommended | Hospitality / commercial projects |
The nominee risk in plain language
A nominee can claim the property is theirs. Your trust cannot.
In a nominee arrangement, there is no legal document binding the Cambodian nominee to act in your interest. If they decide to sell, mortgage, or refuse to return the property, your legal position is extremely weak — you essentially lent your money to someone who bought property in their own name. Trustee misconduct under the 2019 law, by contrast, is a criminal matter with regulatory consequences.
Licensed trustee directory.
Only entities licensed by Cambodia's Trust Regulator (TR / NBFSA) may legally act as trustees and hold property on behalf of beneficiaries. The TR issued its first batch of licenses in 2023 to six companies. The table below lists the known licensed trustees ranked by track record, market presence, and property-specific experience, based on publicly available information.
Ratings reflect editorial assessment of market reputation and property trust experience. Always verify current licensing status directly with the Trust Regulator before engaging any trustee.
What a property trust costs.
Trust costs have two components: a one-time setup fee to establish the trust structure, and ongoing annual management fees. Pricing is not standardized across trustees and is typically negotiated based on property value and service scope. These figures represent typical market ranges as of 2026.
Covers trust deed drafting, Trust Regulator registration, title transfer to trustee name, and initial compliance documentation. Higher for complex structures or high-value properties.
Ongoing trustee administration, regulatory compliance, annual reporting, and maintenance of the trust record. Some trustees charge a percentage of property value instead.
Cost of engaging an independent property lawyer to review the trust deed and advise on your rights. Separate from and in addition to trustee fees. Strongly recommended.
The standard 4% transfer tax applies when the property title is moved into the trust. This is a government fee paid to the Ministry of Land Management — the same as any title transfer.
Total cost framing
Budget roughly 2–4% of property value for total setup cost.
On a $150,000 property, expect $3,000–6,000 in setup costs (stamp duty + trustee setup + legal fees), plus $500–2,000/year in ongoing management. Over a 10-year hold, total trust costs typically amount to 4–6% of property value — significantly less than the risk exposure of an unregulated nominee structure or forfeited investment.
The step-by-step process: from decision to registered trust.
Choose a licensed trustee
Research the six TR-licensed trustee companies. Meet at least two in person. Compare their property trust track record, fee structures, team experience, and insurance coverage. Verify their current license at the Trust Regulator's registry.
Identify and verify the property
The property must carry a hard title. Conduct the standard property due diligence: verify the title at the Ministry of Land Management, confirm boundaries, check for encumbrances. The trustee will also conduct their own due diligence — but don't rely solely on theirs.
Engage an independent lawyer
Hire a Cambodian property lawyer independent of both the trustee and the seller. Their job is to review the trust deed clause-by-clause, advise on your rights as beneficiary, and flag any terms that reduce your protections. The trust deed is the most important document in the entire transaction — it governs your relationship with the trustee for the entire life of the trust.
Draft and sign the trust deed
The trust deed specifies: property details, your rights as beneficiary (instruction rights, income rights, termination rights), the trustee's obligations and limitations, succession provisions, and what happens in case of trustee default. This must be notarized. Insist that the deed specifies the trustee cannot deal with the property without written instruction from you.
Register the trust with the Trust Regulator
The trustee registers the trust with the NBFSA's Trust Regulator. This is the step that gives the trust its legal standing. Registration creates the official record of the trust's existence, parties, and asset — providing a layer of public verifiability.
Transfer the property title to the trustee
The land title is formally transferred to the trustee company's name at the Ministry of Land Management. Stamp duty (4% of assessed value) is payable at this point. Once the title is in the trustee's name and the trust deed is registered, the structure is complete.
Red flags and due diligence checklist.
The "trustee" cannot show a current Trust Regulator license.
This is the single non-negotiable. An unlicensed entity cannot legally hold property in trust in Cambodia. Ask for the license number and verify it directly with the TR. Do not proceed without this confirmation.
The trust deed doesn't require your consent for property dealings.
A trust deed should explicitly state that the trustee cannot sell, mortgage, lease, or otherwise deal with the property without your written consent as beneficiary. If this clause is missing or weakly worded, you're exposed.
The trustee wants to also serve as your lawyer.
A trustee should not draft the trust deed and also advise you on it. These are conflicting interests. Insist on independent legal advice from a lawyer who represents only you.
The property doesn't have a clean hard title.
A trust structure cannot fix a title problem. If the property has soft title, disputed ownership, or any encumbrances, those problems go into the trust with the property. Resolve title issues before establishing the trust.
You're told "this is just like a nominee — simpler."
Anyone selling a trust structure as essentially the same as a nominee arrangement doesn't understand the law — or is misrepresenting it. The legal distinction is the entire point. A trust should be sold on its legal protections, not its simplicity.
There are no succession provisions in the deed.
One of the key benefits of a trust is defined succession. A trust deed without named beneficiaries or clear succession instructions undermines the estate planning value and creates uncertainty on your death.
The trustee has no professional indemnity insurance.
Licensed trustees should carry professional indemnity insurance. If they make an error or are found liable for breach, you need a means of recovery beyond a lawsuit against a potentially insolvent company.
Frequently asked questions.
Ready to explore trust-held properties?
Browse properties listed as trust-eligible on PropertyHub, or speak to an advisor who can connect you with a licensed trustee and walk you through the structure for your specific situation.