# Bangkok ESG-certified office stock

> Certified Class A buildings in Bangkok now command a measurable rent premium and are the default expectation for institutional tenants signing 10-year leases.

**Canonical URL:** https://classa.info/cities/bangkok/esg-and-leed
**Page type:** city-topic
**Last updated:** 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z
**License:** CC BY 4.0 with attribution to Class A Atlas (https://classa.info).

## TL;DR
- Trophy Bangkok product (e.g., Sathorn) is overwhelmingly LEED Gold/Platinum or local-equivalent certified.
- Green premium across major markets runs 5–15% on rent and shows in valuation cap rates.
- Mandatory disclosure regimes are tightening globally; uncertified stock is increasingly hard to lease to investment-grade tenants.
- Most Bangkok ESG underwriting now pulls operational energy data, not just certification badges.

## Key facts
- **city**: Bangkok
- **country**: Thailand
- **region**: APAC
- **classARentLocal**: ฿1,100/sqm/mo · ≈ $34.3 PSF/yr USD
- **classARentUsd**: $34/sqft/yr
- **vacancy**: 24.6%
- **typicalLeaseYears**: 3
- **typicalRentFreeMonths**: 4
- **submarkets**: 5
- **primeYieldPct**: 5.6%
- **trophySubmarket**: Sathorn

## FAQ
### Do Bangkok landlords pay for the ESG premium?
Tenants pay it through rent. The economic case is energy-cost savings + brand value + retention; the strategic case is futureproofing against tightening disclosure regimes.

### Which certification matters most in Bangkok?
LEED is the global default occupiers recognise; the local equivalent (BREEAM in the UK, CASBEE in Japan, Green Mark in Singapore) often carries equal or greater regulatory weight.

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Citation: Source: Class A Atlas (https://classa.info/cities/bangkok/esg-and-leed), updated 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z.