The condo downpayment question — how much cash does a Singapore buyer actually need on day 1 — sounds simple, but it is where most first-time buyers underestimate by S$50,000 or more. The answer depends on three overlapping rules (LTV, minimum cash, and stamp duties), and it changes dramatically if this is your second or third property.
This 2026 guide walks through exactly what you need to write cheques for on the day you collect your condo keys, with worked tables for first-property Singaporean citizens, second-property buyers, and foreign buyers. For the regulator’s guidance, see MAS Notice 632 on residential LTV.
Quick Answer — Condo Downpayment on a S$1.5m Unit
First condo, Singapore Citizen: ~S$119,600 cash + S$225,000 CPF/cash = S$344,600 total day-1 outlay (including BSD).
Second condo, Singapore Citizen: ABSD alone adds S$300,000. Total day-1 outlay S$1,169,600.
Foreigner buyer, any property: 60% ABSD on top of a 45% LTV. Total day-1 outlay S$1,769,600.
Minimum cash: 5% of purchase price for 75% LTV; 10% for 45% or 35% LTV.
BSD & ABSD: payable in cash within 14 days of OTP (reimbursable from CPF OA after).
The Three Rules That Set Your Downpayment
Three layers combine to set the cash and CPF you need:
Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio. MAS caps bank lending at 75% for a first housing loan, 45% for a second, and 35% for a third and beyond. The balance is your downpayment.
Minimum cash portion. MAS requires at least 5% of the purchase price in cash for a first property, 10% for second and subsequent.
Stamp duties. BSD and, where applicable, ABSD are paid in cash within 14 days of OTP. You can reimburse from CPF afterwards.
Figure 1: Same S$1.5m condo, three buyer profiles, cash needed on day 1 varies by nearly S$1.7 million.
First Property: Singapore Citizen on a 75% LTV
The easiest case. On a S$1.5m condo, an SC buying their first home gets:
Bank loan: up to S$1,125,000 (75% LTV, subject to TDSR).
Downpayment: S$375,000 split as:
Minimum 5% cash: S$75,000 — this is a hard floor, not a guideline.
Remaining 20%: up to S$300,000 can come from CPF OA, cash, or a combination.
BSD: ~S$44,600 (progressive on S$1.5m, capped at 5% at this level).
ABSD: 0% (first residential property for a Singapore Citizen).
Total cash needed on day 1: S$75,000 (min. cash) + S$44,600 (BSD) = S$119,600. BSD can be reimbursed from CPF OA after stamping.
Second Property: Singapore Citizen on a 45% LTV
Two major shifts bite here. First, LTV drops to 45% — meaning you fund 55% of the purchase. Second, ABSD kicks in at 20%.
Bank loan: S$675,000 maximum.
Downpayment: S$825,000 split as:
Minimum 10% cash: S$150,000.
Remaining 45%: S$675,000 from CPF OA, cash, or combination.
BSD: S$44,600.
ABSD (20% SC 2nd): S$300,000.
Total cash needed day 1: S$150,000 + S$44,600 + S$300,000 = S$494,600. That is before the S$675,000 of CPF/cash needed to reach the loan ceiling.
The most expensive profile. Foreign non-residents face LTV 45% (most banks drop to 40% for non-residents without local income), plus a flat 60% ABSD.
Bank loan: S$675,000 maximum.
Downpayment: S$825,000 in cash (no CPF access for foreigners).
BSD: S$44,600.
ABSD (60%): S$900,000.
Total cash needed day 1: S$1,769,600 against a S$1.5m purchase price. Many foreign buyers end up paying 100%+ cash when accounting for legal fees and renovation.
What About CPF OA?
CPF Ordinary Account can cover most of the non-minimum-cash portion of the downpayment, plus BSD/ABSD reimbursement after stamping. Critical caveats:
For private property, CPF usage caps at the Valuation Limit (purchase price or valuation, whichever lower) and the Withdrawal Limit of 120% of VL.
Every dollar used compounds at 2.5% accrued interest — see our CPF for Property guide for the full maths.
New Launch vs Resale: Different Cash-Flow Timing
For a new launch (BUC — Building Under Construction), payments are staggered via the Progressive Payment Scheme. You typically need 25% at the Sale & Purchase Agreement (5% OTP deposit + 20% at S&PA), then 10% at foundation, 10% at reinforced concrete, etc. This reduces upfront cash strain dramatically.
For a resale, the entire downpayment hits at completion — typically 10–14 weeks after OTP. You need the full amount in cash and CPF by completion day.
TDSR Still Applies
The LTV numbers above are ceilings, not entitlements. Your actual bank loan may be smaller if your TDSR maxes out first — see our TDSR & MSR guide. A couple earning S$16,000 a month may qualify for a S$1.1m loan under TDSR even if LTV would allow S$1.125m on a S$1.5m purchase. In that case, the extra S$25,000 shortfall is yours to fund in cash or CPF.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I put down more than 5%/10% in cash?
Yes. The minimums are floors, not ceilings. Some buyers put 20%+ cash to reduce their loan quantum and future interest.
Does option fee count as part of the downpayment?
Yes. The 1% Option Money and the 4% Option Exercise Fee together form the initial 5%, which is also the minimum cash portion for a first property.
Can I borrow more than 75% LTV?
Not from a MAS-regulated bank. Some private financing vehicles lend above 75% but at materially higher rates and with punitive terms — we do not recommend this route.
Does the 75% LTV apply to under-construction properties?
Yes, but payment is progressive — you do not need the full downpayment on day 1 for a new launch.
What if I am using an HDB loan for an HDB flat, not a bank loan for a condo?
HDB concessionary loans offer up to 75% LTV with 0% minimum cash. See our HDB Loan vs Bank Loan guide for the full difference.
Disclaimer: This guide is general information, not financial advice. LTV and stamp-duty rules are subject to change. Verify current rules at mas.gov.sg and iras.gov.sg, and consult a licensed mortgage broker.
Home loan refinancing in Singapore means replacing your existing mortgage with a new one — usually at a lower rate, sometimes with a new bank, occasionally with the same bank under a new package. In a market where SORA has been swinging between 2.8% and 3.6% for the past 24 months, refinancing at the right moment can save a typical buyer S$3,000–S$6,000 per year.
Mistime it, and the legal costs, valuation fees and lock-in penalties wipe out the saving. This 2026 guide walks through when refinancing actually pays, how to do the break-even maths, and the traps that catch most Singapore homeowners.
Quick Answer — Refinancing at a Glance
Typical saving: 0.4–0.8% lower rate vs your legacy package, worth S$200–S$400 a month on a S$800k loan.
Typical cost: ~S$3,000 in legal and valuation fees (often fully subsidised by the new bank on loans above S$500k).
Break-even: 12–18 months on a typical S$800k loan.
Lock-in penalty: Usually 1.5% of outstanding if you refinance during the original package’s lock-in.
Best windows: 3 months before your existing package’s lock-in ends; when SORA 3M has moved by ≥0.5% in your favour.
What Refinancing Actually Is
When you refinance, your new bank pays off the old bank in full and a fresh loan is registered against your property. Your CPF usage, property title and outstanding principal transfer across. What changes is the interest rate structure, the lock-in period, and — if you switch bank — the lender.
Three flavours exist:
Re-pricing (same bank, new package). No conveyancing required, no legal fees, but banks typically offer worse rates than they do to outsiders.
Refinancing (new bank). Full switch with legal and valuation costs (~S$3,000), but meaningfully better rates.
Refinancing from HDB loan to bank loan. A one-way door — you cannot switch back to an HDB concessionary loan afterwards.
Break-Even: The Only Calculation That Matters
Break-even is simply: how many months of lower interest does it take to repay the switching costs?
On a S$800,000 loan, dropping from 3.2% to 2.6% saves roughly S$4,800 of interest in year one (S$400/month). If the full legal + valuation cost is S$3,000 and the new bank subsidises S$2,000, net cost is S$1,000 — break-even at ~3 months. Even with zero subsidy and S$3,000 full cost, break-even is around month 13.
Figure 1: On a S$800k, 25-year loan dropping 0.6%, the refinance pays back its S$3,000 cost by month 13 and compounds from there.
The Lock-In Trap
Every home loan package has a lock-in period — typically 2–3 years for fixed-rate packages, 1–2 years for floating. Refinancing during lock-in triggers a penalty of 1.5% of the outstanding principal. On a S$800k loan, that is S$12,000.
In almost every case, this penalty kills the business case for refinancing. The exception: if SORA has dropped so dramatically that even paying S$12,000 today is recouped within 2 years of lower rates. Rare, but it happens during rate-cut cycles.
The three-month rule
MAS banks require 3 months’ notice to refinance or to exit to a new lender. If your lock-in ends on 1 October, start engaging new banks by 1 July. Waiting until August leaves you paying the legacy rate for the full notice period.
When Refinancing Makes Sense in 2026
Three concrete triggers should make you look at your package:
Your lock-in ends within 4 months. 90% of refinancing wins come from the reset window around the end of a 2-year or 3-year fixed package. Banks actively target this window with cashback subsidies.
SORA 3M has moved ≥0.5% in your favour since you last locked. Tiny moves rarely pay for switching costs; 0.5%+ moves almost always do.
Your bank’s published rack rate is ≥0.3% above a new competitor. If your legacy package has lapsed into an expensive floating-rate default, you are overpaying regardless of macro conditions.
Fixed vs Floating at Refinance Time
The decision framework at refinance is the same as at origination: certainty vs upside. See our dedicated Fixed vs Floating Home Loan Singapore 2026 guide for a full breakdown. The only nuance at refinance time: your new package will reset your lock-in clock, so a 3-year fixed refinance locks you in for a further 3 years regardless of what happens to rates.
The Refinancing Checklist
Once you have decided refinancing makes sense, execution is largely administrative:
Request a fresh In-Principle Approval (IPA) from 2–3 competing banks. This is free and commits you to nothing.
Compare: headline rate, lock-in period, subsidy on legal & valuation, any cashback, prepayment rules.
Pick the package and accept the Letter of Offer. Instruct a conveyancing lawyer (the new bank typically has a panel).
Serve 3 months’ notice to your existing bank (email or physical letter).
Discharge of mortgage and registration of new mortgage happens on the redemption date, usually 8–10 weeks later.
Direct Debit for the old GIRO is cancelled and replaced with the new one.
The process runs itself once you sign. Your only vigilance point: verify the new monthly instalment has kicked in and the old GIRO is stopped, to avoid paying both banks briefly.
Common Mistakes
Focusing only on headline rate. A 2.35% loan with a 3-year lock-in and no subsidy is often worse than a 2.55% loan with 2-year lock-in and S$2,000 subsidy.
Refinancing too early. Switching costs are real. Sub-0.3% rate improvements rarely justify the effort.
Forgetting CPF accrued interest. Refinancing does not pause CPF accrued interest — if you want to reduce it, a voluntary housing refund is the separate tool.
Ignoring partial prepayment options. Some packages let you prepay up to 25% of outstanding without penalty. If you have a windfall, a prepayment often beats a refinance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does refinancing affect my credit score?
Minimally. A single credit inquiry when the new bank pulls your file is normal. Multiple simultaneous applications within a short window are usually scored as a single inquiry by the Credit Bureau.
Will I need to top up cash if the property has declined in value?
Possibly. New banks will value the property afresh; if the new LTV exceeds their internal limit, they may ask for a cash top-up to bring LTV back in line. This is the biggest technical obstacle to mid-cycle refinances.
Can I refinance with my existing bank?
Yes — this is “re-pricing”. No legal fees, but typically inferior rates. Always get two outside quotes first and then negotiate.
How does refinancing interact with TDSR?
For owner-occupied properties, TDSR is not applied to refinances. For investment properties, TDSR applies with a debt-reduction plan if you are above 55%.
Is the subsidy really “free”?
It is, in the sense that the bank absorbs the legal and valuation fees — but most subsidies come with a clawback clause: redeem the loan within 3 years and you repay the subsidy. Always read the clawback condition.
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information and not financial advice. Package rates and lock-in rules change frequently. Always verify current offers directly with banks or through a licensed mortgage broker.
Using CPF for property in Singapore is so routine that most buyers treat the Ordinary Account as a second bank account. That casual mental model is the source of nearly every CPF surprise at resale time — because CPF money put into a home does not behave like cash. It compounds in the background at 2.5% a year and must be repaid, with interest, the moment you sell.
This 2026 guide walks through how CPF flows into a purchase, what the withdrawal and valuation limits actually mean, how accrued interest is calculated, when the Home Protection Scheme is compulsory, and what lands in your pocket when you sell. For the authoritative rulebook, see the CPF Board’s home ownership pages.
Quick Answer — CPF for Property at a Glance
CPF Ordinary Account (OA) can be used for downpayment, stamp duties, monthly instalments, legal and valuation fees.
Interest rate: OA earns at least 2.5% per annum — and every dollar used for property continues to accrue at 2.5% in the background until repaid.
Withdrawal Limit (WL): CPF usage on private property caps at 120% of the Valuation Limit once you reach age 55 or exhaust the WL.
Home Protection Scheme (HPS): Mandatory term-life cover for HDB buyers using CPF. Not required for private property.
At sale: Principal plus accrued interest must be refunded to your OA before any cash reaches you.
What You Can Use CPF For
Your CPF Ordinary Account can be deployed at six points in the property journey:
Downpayment. For an HDB loan, CPF can fully fund the 20% minimum downpayment. For a bank loan, at least 5% must be cash and the remainder (up to 20% for a first property) can come from CPF.
Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD). Payable in cash initially but reimbursable from CPF after stamping.
Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD). Also reimbursable from CPF after stamping — cash up front, then drawn down from OA.
Monthly loan instalments. Direct GIRO from OA covers principal + interest. You can choose partial cash/CPF if you want to preserve OA for other uses.
Legal fees. Conveyancing fees capped at S$675 per transaction are reimbursable from CPF.
Property tax, renovation, utilities:Not covered by CPF. Always cash.
Figure 1: CPF OA funds flow from downpayment through monthly instalments and must be refunded with accrued interest on sale.
Valuation Limit, Withdrawal Limit & Why They Exist
CPF imposes two caps on how much OA money can be used for a private property:
Valuation Limit (VL): the purchase price or valuation of the property, whichever is lower, at the time of purchase.
Withdrawal Limit (WL): 120% of the Valuation Limit.
Up to the VL, you can use CPF freely. Between the VL and the WL, you can continue using CPF if you are below 55 or above 55 with your Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) set aside. Once the WL is hit, no further CPF can service the property loan — you must switch to cash.
For HDB flats bought with an HDB concessionary loan, the VL/WL framework does not apply in the same way — there is no cap beyond what the loan quantum supports.
Accrued Interest: The Silent Compounding
This is the single most misunderstood part of CPF for property. Every dollar of OA you use for a property is treated as if it had stayed in your OA, continuing to earn 2.5% compounded annually. When you sell, you must refund principal + accrued interest to your OA before any cash reaches your pocket.
Worked example: S$200,000 used over 10 years
Assume you use S$200,000 of CPF OA for your downpayment and contribute another S$1,500/month from OA to servicing the loan. After 10 years:
Accrued interest at 2.5% compounded: approximately S$77,500
Total refund to OA on sale: roughly S$457,500
If your sale proceeds after repaying the outstanding bank loan are only S$420,000, there is a S$37,500 negative sale — the shortfall is waived but you walk away with no cash, even though the property “made money” in headline terms.
Home Protection Scheme (HPS)
HPS is a term-life insurance scheme administered by CPF that covers the outstanding housing loan in the event of death, terminal illness, or total permanent disability. It is compulsory for HDB buyers using CPF to service the loan.
HPS is not required for private property — bank home loans are typically paired with privately purchased Mortgage Reducing Term Assurance (MRTA) instead. You can compare MRTA against HPS using the illustrative premium tables on the CPF HPS page — for most buyers below 45, privately sourced MRTA is cheaper.
Voluntary Housing Refund (VHR): Paying Down Accrued Interest Early
You can voluntarily refund cash into your OA at any time to reduce the accrued-interest trap. Every dollar you refund stops compounding — effectively giving you a 2.5% risk-free return on that cash. In a 3-4% deposit-rate environment, the maths sometimes wins for your home-loan net position; in a 0.5% environment, it is a clear winner.
VHR is especially useful in the final 3–5 years before a planned sale, when accrued interest is compounding hardest. Speak to your CPF servicing officer before making a lump sum refund.
CPF at 55: What Changes
At 55, two things shift:
The Retirement Account (RA) is created and funded with your Full Retirement Sum (FRS) — or Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) if you own property and pledge it.
OA usage for property becomes capped at the 120% Withdrawal Limit, and only if FRS/BRS is already met in the RA.
For most homeowners near 55 with significant mortgages, this means they transition to cash servicing for instalments. Plan for this 5 years ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use CPF OA to pay ABSD?
Yes, but only as a reimbursement after you have paid the ABSD in cash and the property has been stamped. You cannot draw CPF directly to IRAS.
What happens to accrued interest if I die?
Accrued interest is written off on death. The CPF member’s nominees inherit whatever is in the OA at that time; no refund from the property is required.
Can I use my CPF OA to buy a second property?
Yes, once the Full Retirement Sum has been set aside in your RA (at 55) or if you are below 55 — but CPF usage on the second property only kicks in after you reach the Basic Retirement Sum for the first.
Does accrued interest continue to compound after I pay off the loan?
Yes. As long as the property is in your name and CPF money has been used, accrued interest compounds until sale or your death.
Is there any way to avoid HPS?
Applications to opt out are considered only if you have equivalent private insurance covering the loan. CPF assesses case-by-case — the default position is compulsory participation.
What to Do Next
CPF shapes not just affordability but also upgrade strategy and retirement planning. Your next reads:
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information and not financial advice. CPF policies are updated regularly. Verify current rules on cpf.gov.sg and speak to a licensed financial adviser before making CPF-related property decisions.
TDSR and MSR are the two regulatory ratios the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) uses to decide how much home loan any Singapore buyer can take. Get these wrong in your budgeting, and the pre-approval letter from the bank will come back smaller than the deposit you have already put down on a flat. This guide breaks down what each ratio means, how they stack, and exactly how to calculate your own limit for 2026.
TDSR 55%: All your monthly debts (home loan, car loan, credit card minimums, student loans, personal loans) must stay at or below 55% of your gross monthly income.
MSR 30%: For HDB flats and new Executive Condos only — your monthly home loan alone must stay at or below 30% of gross monthly income. MSR sits on top of TDSR.
Stress rate: Both ratios are calculated using a 4.0% stress interest rate, not the actual package rate you are quoted.
Variable income: Bonuses, commission and rental income count at only 70% of their face value.
MSR is usually binding for HDB and EC buyers; TDSR is usually binding for private condo buyers.
What is TDSR and Why Does It Matter?
TDSR — Total Debt Servicing Ratio — was introduced in June 2013 as the backbone of Singapore’s sustainable-lending framework. It forces banks to look beyond your home loan and consider every monthly debt commitment you carry. If the sum of all those instalments exceeds 55% of your gross monthly income, the bank cannot extend you any further credit.
In practice, TDSR means that two borrowers on identical salaries can qualify for very different loan sizes if one of them also carries a car loan, a renovation loan, or a large outstanding credit-card balance. Because the ratio is regulatory rather than bank-specific, shopping around will not get you past it.
What counts in the 55% ceiling?
Housing loans (existing and the new one being applied for)
Car loans, motorcycle loans, and hire-purchase instalments
Renovation loans, education loans, personal loans
Minimum monthly payments on credit cards and overdraft facilities
Guarantor obligations on another party’s loan — even if you are not the primary borrower
What is MSR and When Does It Apply?
MSR — Mortgage Servicing Ratio — is a narrower, tougher cap that applies only when you are buying:
An HDB flat (BTO, Sale of Balance Flat, Open Booking, or resale), or
A new Executive Condominium (EC) directly from a developer, still within its minimum occupation period scheme.
MSR says that your monthly housing loan instalment alone must not exceed 30% of gross monthly income. Unlike TDSR, MSR does not let you compensate by showing you have no other debt — the housing instalment itself cannot breach the 30% line.
Private condos, landed property, and resale ECs after their 10-year privatisation milestone are not subject to MSR. Only TDSR applies. This is one of several reasons why private-property buyers on the same income can often borrow more than HDB buyers.
Figure 1: TDSR applies to every Singapore buyer; MSR adds a second, tighter cap for HDB flats and new ECs from developers.
How Banks Actually Calculate Your Limit
Here is the sequence every MAS-regulated bank follows when you submit a loan application:
Gross monthly income is totalled. Salary contributes 100%; variable income (bonus, commission, rent, freelance earnings) is haircut to 70%. For rental income, the bank also deducts a vacancy allowance.
Other monthly debts are added up. This includes a 3% notional minimum on your total credit-card outstandings if you do not pay in full.
Housing loan instalment is calculated at 4.0% stress rate, over your requested tenure (capped at 30 years for HDB, 35 for private). This is the rate used for ratio maths — not the 2.6% or 2.8% your package may quote.
Apply TDSR: (All debts + new housing loan at 4.0%) ÷ gross income must be ≤ 55%.
If HDB/new EC, apply MSR: New housing loan at 4.0% ÷ gross income must be ≤ 30%.
The loan is sized to the tighter of the two ceilings.
Worked example: couple earning S$16,000 a month
Consider a married couple with combined gross income of S$16,000, a car loan costing S$1,000 a month, and credit-card minimums of S$500 a month. They want to buy a 4-room resale HDB flat.
At 4.0% stress rate over 25 years, S$4,800/month supports a loan of approximately S$910,000. At the actual package rate of 2.6%, the real payment on that loan would be around S$4,127/month — giving the couple a S$673 monthly buffer once they move in.
Take away the car loan and the maths does not change — MSR still binds at S$4,800. Take away MSR (i.e. if they were buying a private condo instead), and the binding number becomes S$7,300 of TDSR headroom, translating to roughly a S$1,380,000 loan. Same couple, same income, different rule set, S$470k of extra purchasing power.
Stress Rate: The 4.0% That Quietly Decides Everything
MAS introduced the 4.0% medium-term interest rate floor (officially the “medium-term rate benchmark” or MTRB) in 2022, raising it from 3.5%. The stress rate is higher than virtually any home loan package in the market, which is the point — it builds in resilience against future rate rises.
Because the maths compounds, every 1% of stress-rate uplift cuts affordability by roughly 10%. That is why a package teaser rate of 2.5% does not actually buy you more house than a teaser of 3.0% — both are calculated at 4.0% for TDSR/MSR. What the lower package rate does buy you is cash-flow during the package term.
Variable Income: The 70% Haircut
If you earn a significant bonus, commission or rental income, the 30% haircut matters. Take a relationship manager earning S$10,000 base plus an average S$4,000 a month in commission. Gross looks like S$14,000. TDSR-countable gross is S$10,000 + (0.70 × S$4,000) = S$12,800.
To “grossed-up” income, banks typically require 24 months of commission history (12 for the more flexible ones). First-year hires with fat bonuses but short tenure often cannot count that income at all.
Three Levers to Increase Your Loan Ceiling
Extend the loan tenure (within the 30/35-year cap) — a longer tenure reduces the monthly instalment under the 4.0% stress calculation, freeing headroom under both ratios.
Retire consumer debt. Every S$1,000 of car-loan instalment taken off releases exactly S$1,000 of TDSR headroom. For HDB buyers, note this only helps if TDSR (not MSR) is the binding constraint.
Add a younger co-borrower. Tenure is capped at the weighted average age of all borrowers — bringing in a younger, income-earning co-borrower lifts the tenure ceiling and, by extension, your qualifying loan amount. Be deliberate about the legal and ownership implications before doing this.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does TDSR apply to refinancing?
For owner-occupied residential property, TDSR does not apply to refinancing of an existing loan (this is the “owner-occupier refinancing exemption”). For investment property, TDSR does apply on refinancing, with a debt-reduction plan over three years if you exceed the 55% cap.
Is rental income counted towards TDSR?
Yes. Rental income is haircut to 70% of face value, and banks further deduct a vacancy allowance. A 12-month tenancy agreement is usually required as evidence.
Does my existing home loan count if the property is rented out?
Yes, always. Every housing loan you are servicing — owner-occupied or rented — enters the TDSR calculation on the debt side, regardless of whether the rental income covers it.
Can I get a higher loan if I pay down my credit card before applying?
Yes, provided the payment clears before your bank pulls the credit bureau report. Banks calculate TDSR based on bureau-reported outstandings — pay down early enough for the next monthly report cycle.
What happens if my income drops after I take the loan?
TDSR is tested only at origination and on refinancing of investment property. A mid-loan income drop does not trigger a call on your loan — you simply need to keep paying the contracted instalment.
What to Do Next
TDSR and MSR are the first conversation with any bank, but they are not the only one. Your Loan-to-Value ratio and cash-on-hand position matter just as much. Your logical next reads on LovelyHomes:
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information and does not constitute financial advice. TDSR and MSR rules are set and periodically revised by MAS. Always verify current rules at mas.gov.sg and consult a licensed mortgage broker or bank before committing to any property purchase.
For most Singaporeans, purchasing a home represents the single largest financial commitment they will ever make. A typical S$500,000 home loan over 25 years will cost between S$180,000 and S$280,000 in interest alone—making the difference between an HDB concessionary loan (fixed at 2.6%) and a bank loan (pegged to SORA, pegged to 3M compounded SORA plus a bank spread) the difference between financial security and prolonged vulnerability to rate shocks. This 2026 guide walks you through both options, the figures that matter, and how to choose the right one for your circumstances.
Quick Answer
HDB Loan: 2.6% fixed for the loan’s life; rate stable; 75% max LTV; no surprises—but higher than current bank rates and you must be eligible (SC or PR, income ≤ S$14,000/month for families).
Bank Loan: Currently cheaper (1.5%–3.0% depending on fixed or floating); rate risk if SORA rises; 75% max LTV; fewer eligibility restrictions—but your monthly repayment could jump 20%+ if rates climb.
The HDB concessionary loan is Singapore’s most accessible home financing product. It is pegged to the CPF Ordinary Account (OA) interest rate plus 0.1%—a formula that has held since 1999. For 2026, the OA rate is 2.5%, making the HDB loan rate exactly 2.6% per annum, fixed for the life of the loan (or until you choose to refinance into a bank loan, at which point you cannot switch back).
HDB Loan: Eligibility
Citizenship: At least one owner must be a Singapore Citizen (SC). Permanent Residents (PRs) and foreigners cannot apply.
Income ceiling (monthly household): S$14,000 for families; S$7,000 for singles under the Young Single Scheme; S$21,000 for extended family schemes. These are hard ceilings—exceed them and you are ineligible, regardless of other factors.
Age: At least 21 at the time of the application.
Repayment by age 65: Loan tenure is 25 years maximum, or until you reach age 65, whichever is earlier.
HDB Loan: Key Terms
Term
HDB Loan
Interest Rate
2.6% p.a. (fixed; CPF OA + 0.1%)
Maximum LTV
75% (lowered from 80% on 20 Aug 2024)
Minimum Down Payment
25% (mix of cash & CPF OA; no mandatory cash minimum)
Maximum Tenure
25 years or age 65, whichever is earlier
MSR Cap
30% of gross monthly income
TDSR Cap
55% of gross monthly income
Rate Lock
Rate never increases; locked at 2.6% for life of loan
Early Repayment
No penalty; can pay down anytime using CPF or cash
Refinancing to Bank
Can refinance to bank loan (one-way; cannot switch back)
Example MSR Calculation: Your gross monthly household income is S$10,000. HDB MSR allows up to 30%, so your maximum monthly loan instalment is S$3,000. On a 2.6% 25-year loan, this translates to a maximum loan amount of roughly S$1,090,000 (before other debt).
Bank Loan: How It Works
Bank loans offer more flexibility than HDB loans but introduce interest-rate risk. Banks offer two primary structures: floating rates (pegged to SORA + spread) and fixed-rate packages (locked for 1–3 years, then typically floating). Check the current 3-month compounded SORA on the MAS domestic interest rates page. Banks typically add a spread of around 0.5%–1.0% on top. Fixed-rate packages range from 1.4% to 1.8% for 1–2-year locks.
Bank Loan: Eligibility
Citizenship: SCs, PRs, and even some foreigners can qualify (though foreigner terms are stricter, requiring higher down payments and lower LTV).
Income: No hard ceiling, but TDSR and MSR caps apply (see below).
Credit & Employment: Banks assess credit history, employment stability, and income verification.
Age: At least 21 at the time of application; typically loan must be repaid by age 60–75 (varies by bank).
Bank Loan: Key Terms
Term
Bank Loan (HDB)
Bank Loan (Condo)
Interest Rate (Floating)
3M SORA + 0.5–1.0% (current ~2.0%)
3M SORA + 0.5–1.0% (current ~2.0%)
Interest Rate (Fixed)
1.4%–1.8% for 1–2 yr lock
1.4%–1.8% for 1–2 yr lock
Maximum LTV (1st property)
75% (with 25-year tenure)
75% (with 30-year tenure)
LTV (2nd property outstanding)
45% max
45% max
Minimum Down Payment
25% (5% cash minimum; rest CPF or cash)
25% (5% cash minimum; rest CPF or cash)
Maximum Tenure
25 years (or to age 65)
30 years (or to age 65)
MSR Cap (HDB only)
30% of gross monthly income
N/A
TDSR Cap
55% of gross monthly income
55% of gross monthly income
Interest Rate Floor (TDSR calc)
3% (for calculation only)
4% (for calculation only)
Early Repayment Penalty
1.5% of outstanding balance (typically during lock-in; 2–3 yr lock-in standard)
1.5% of outstanding balance (typically during lock-in)
Rate Risk
After lock-in expires, rate floats; monthly payment can increase significantly
After lock-in expires, rate floats; monthly payment can increase significantly
Important TDSR Note: Banks use a minimum interest-rate floor when calculating whether you are eligible, even if the actual rate is lower. For HDB loans, the floor is 3%; for private property, it is 4%. So even if a bank offers you 2.0% floating, they assume 3%–4% when working out your TDSR, making the true affordability ceiling lower than the headline rate suggests.
Figure 1: The two main home-loan routes in Singapore — compared on rate, eligibility, LTV and flexibility.
Side-by-Side Comparison: HDB vs Bank Loan
Factor
HDB Loan
Bank Loan
Interest Rate Type
Fixed (pegged to CPF OA)
Fixed (1–3 years) or Floating (SORA+)
Current 2026 Rate
2.6%
1.5%–1.8% (floating); 1.4%–1.8% (2yr fixed)
Maximum LTV (1st property)
75%
75% (HDB); 75% (Condo)
Min Cash Down
0% (full 25% can be CPF)
5% cash; remainder CPF or cash
Max Tenure
25 yrs or age 65
25 yrs (HDB) / 30 yrs (Condo), or age 65
MSR / TDSR
MSR 30%; TDSR 55%
TDSR 55% (no MSR for condo)
Rate Stability
Locked forever; never increases
Floating rate risk after lock-in; monthly payment can jump 20%+
Early Repayment Penalty
None
1.5% during lock-in (typically 2–3 yrs)
Switching Flexibility
Can refinance to bank (one-way; no switch-back)
Can refinance to another bank; cannot switch to HDB
Eligibility Ceiling
Income ceiling: S$14,000/mth (families); SC required
No income ceiling; open to PRs & some foreigners
Figure 2: Three loan paths, same borrower — HDB S$2,268/mo; Bank floating S$2,121/mo; Bank fixed-to-floating S$2,320 → S$2,503/mo.
Worked Example: S$500,000 Loan, 25-Year Tenure
Let’s compare the true cost of an HDB loan versus two bank scenarios: a floating-rate loan and a fixed-then-floating loan.
Scenario 1: HDB Concessionary Loan at 2.6%
Loan Amount: S$500,000 Interest Rate: 2.6% p.a. (fixed for life) Tenure: 25 years (300 months) Monthly Instalment: S$2,269 Total Interest Paid: S$180,700 Total Amount Repaid: S$680,700
Scenario 2: Bank Floating Loan (SORA + 0.65%, Current ~2.0%)
Loan Amount: S$500,000 Interest Rate (Current): 2.0% p.a. (floating; SORA ~1.35% + 0.65% spread) Interest Rate (Assumption: Average over 25 yrs): 3.0% p.a. (to account for expected rate normalisation) Tenure: 25 years Monthly Instalment (at 2.0%): S$2,108 Monthly Instalment (at 3.0% average): S$2,372 Total Interest Paid (at 3.0% average): S$210,600 Total Amount Repaid: S$710,600 Life-of-Loan Difference vs HDB: +S$29,900 (approximately 3.5% higher total cost)
Note: The bank loan appears to save S$161/month initially, but that saving evaporates as rates normalise. Over the 25-year life, the HDB loan saves roughly S$30,000 despite starting at a higher rate.
Scenario 3: Bank Fixed (2.8%) for 3 Years, Then Floating (Assume 3.5%)
Years 1–3: 2.8% fixed
Monthly instalment: S$2,294
Years 4–25: 3.5% floating (after lock-in)
Recalculated instalment: S$2,506
Average Monthly Instalment: S$2,404 Total Interest Paid: S$221,200 Total Amount Repaid: S$721,200 Life-of-Loan Difference vs HDB: +S$40,500 Monthly Jump at Year 4: +S$212 (9% increase)
Key Insight: Even if you start with a bank loan at 2.0%–2.8%, the long-term cost edge of the HDB loan (at fixed 2.6%) becomes clear once you account for rate normalisation and the arithmetic of compound interest over 25 years. Moreover, the HDB loan offers psychological and budgetary peace of mind—your monthly repayment is guaranteed never to rise.
Sensitivity: What If Bank Rates Rise to 4.0%?
If 3M SORA drifts back toward 2.5% and bank spreads remain at 0.65%, a floating-rate loan would reset to approximately 3.15% base, but with TDSR floors at 4%, some borrowers would see repayments jump further. At a 4.0% effective rate:
S$500,000 loan, 25 years remaining (worst-case: rate shock in year 1): Monthly Instalment at 4.0%: S$2,639 vs HDB at 2.6%: S$2,269 Monthly Shock: +S$370 (+16.3%) Annual Impact: +S$4,440
For a household spending 30% of gross monthly income on the mortgage, a 16% rate shock could push TDSR above 55%, triggering a lender’s demand for early repayment or refinancing—a real risk during volatile rate environments.
Figure 3: Stress-tested at 2.6%, 3.5% and 4.0% — a rise to 4% adds ~S$111,000 in interest over 25 years vs the HDB baseline.
Which Should You Choose?
Choose HDB Loan If:
You are eligible (SC, income ≤ S$14,000/mth for families).
Rate stability is a priority. You plan to stay in the home for 15+ years and want zero uncertainty about future payments.
You are risk-averse or budget-conscious. Your household income is tight, and a 10%–16% payment jump would strain your finances.
You value the psychological benefit of a locked rate and a simpler loan structure.
You expect rates to rise. If SORA normalises to 2.5%+ (and spreads remain), HDB’s 2.6% becomes increasingly competitive.
Choose Bank Loan If:
You exceed HDB income ceilings (e.g. dual-income household exceeding S$14,000/mth) or are a PR/foreigner.
You are comfortable with rate risk and have sufficient financial buffers to absorb a 10%–20% payment increase.
You plan to sell or refinance within 5–10 years. Lower initial rates and longer maximum tenures (30 years for condos) offer flexibility.
You believe rates will stay low. If you expect SORA averages well below 2.6% over the life of your loan, a floating bank loan saves vs the HDB concessionary rate. If it averages above 2.6%, HDB is cheaper.
You want to refinance easily. Bank loans can be refinanced to another bank mid-term; HDB loans, once converted to a bank, cannot be converted back.
You own a condo or landed property. Bank loans offer longer tenures (30 years) and higher potential LTV; HDB loans only apply to HDB flats and ECs.
Refinancing: When and Why to Switch
The option to refinance exists at any point in your loan journey. Understanding when and why to refinance is crucial to optimising your loan cost.
HDB to Bank Refinance
If you currently hold an HDB loan at 2.6%, you can refinance to a bank loan. This is a one-way decision—once you switch to a bank, you cannot switch back. Refinancing makes sense if:
Bank rates fall significantly below 2.6% and are locked in for an extended term (5+ years).
You exceed HDB’s income ceiling due to a salary increase and want to increase your loan amount.
You are refinancing to raise cash (e.g. home equity release) against your property.
Give HDB three months’ written notice of your intention to refinance. HDB will calculate the outstanding balance and any adjustment due to CPF contributions.
Bank to Bank Refinance (or HDB → Bank)
If you hold a bank loan, you can refinance to another bank or (once) to HDB, depending on your eligibility. Refinancing makes sense if:
Your current fixed-rate lock-in is about to expire and rates have fallen; refinance before the jump.
Another bank offers 0.3%–0.5% lower rates or a longer fixed-rate tenure.
You want to consolidate multiple loans or restructure your debt.
Typical lock-in periods: 2–3 years. Early repayment within the lock-in incurs a 1.5% penalty on the outstanding balance. After lock-in, partial or full repayments are fee-free.
Lock-In Mechanics
Most bank home loans come with a lock-in clause that penalises early repayment during the initial fixed-rate period. The lock-in typically lasts 2–3 years. Here’s what you need to know:
Lock-in Period: Typically 2–3 years from the date of drawdown.
Early Repayment Penalty: 1.5% of the outstanding loan balance if you repay (or refinance) before lock-in expires.
After Lock-In: You can repay in full or in part without penalty. You can refinance to another bank.
Fixed-Rate Lock vs Lock-In: Do not confuse the fixed-rate period (e.g. 2.8% for 2 years) with the lock-in period. A 2-year fixed rate typically comes with a 2–3-year lock-in penalty clause.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can I switch from HDB to bank and back?
No. Refinancing from HDB to bank is one-way. Once you switch to a bank loan, you cannot return to HDB financing. Choose carefully before making the switch. If you are considering it, ensure bank rates are significantly lower and locked in for at least 5 years to justify the irreversibility.
2. What happens if I miss an HDB or bank loan payment?
Missing a payment triggers late fees and can damage your credit score, making future refinancing more expensive. For HDB loans, persistent defaults can lead to legal action and, in extreme cases, repossession of the flat. For bank loans, the consequences are similar. Both lenders are empowered to initiate enforcement proceedings if you default for more than three months. Contact your lender immediately if you foresee difficulties; many offer restructuring or deferment options for borrowers facing temporary hardship.
3. Can I use CPF to pay my mortgage?
Yes. You can use CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds to pay both HDB and bank home loan monthly instalments, subject to:
Your CPF OA balance must be sufficient to cover the instalment.
CPF will automatically deduct the monthly instalment from your OA if you have set up standing instructions.
If your CPF OA is insufficient, you must pay the balance in cash.
You cannot use your CPF Medisave Account (MA) or Special Account (SA) for loan repayment.
After loan maturity, CPF regulations allow you to retain a minimum sum in your Retirement Account (RA) for healthcare and longevity protection; excess funds can be withdrawn.
4. What is SORA, and why does it matter?
SORA stands for Singapore Overnight Rate Average. It is the interest rate at which banks lend to each other overnight in the Singapore money market, published daily by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). Most bank home loans in Singapore are now pegged to 3-Month Compounded SORA (reviewed quarterly) rather than the older SIBOR benchmark.
Why it matters: Your bank loan interest rate is typically SORA + a bank spread (e.g. 0.65%). As SORA fluctuates, your loan rate (and monthly payment) fluctuates. Historically 3M SORA has moved widely — from well under 1% in 2020–2021, rising above 3% through 2023–2024, and moderating thereafter. Always check the latest rate on the MAS website before committing to a package. Understanding SORA trends helps you forecast your likely repayment path.
5. How does the interest-rate floor affect my loan amount?
When calculating whether you qualify for a loan (TDSR test), banks assume a minimum interest rate, even if the offered rate is lower. For HDB loans, the floor is 3%; for private property, it is 4%. This means:
If a bank offers you 2.0% floating but applies a 4% floor for TDSR calculation, you are approved based on 4% affordability, not 2%.
If your income is S$10,000/month and TDSR is 55%, your maximum total debt repayment is S$5,500/month.
At a 4% rate (the TDSR floor), a S$500,000 loan over 25 years costs ~S$2,639/month.
Even though the actual rate might be 2.0%, the lender approves you at 4% to protect against future rate rises.
This floor is a safeguard for lenders and borrowers alike, preventing over-leverage in a low-rate environment.
6. Can I take a joint loan with a family member?
Yes. Both HDB and bank loans can be taken jointly (e.g. spouse, parent, or adult child). Joint applicants must:
Both be on the property title (either as joint tenants or tenants-in-common).
Both pass the eligibility checks (citizenship, age, credit, income).
Both be liable for the loan; if one co-borrower defaults, the lender can pursue either or both.
Agree on the split of ownership (50:50 is common; other splits are possible but more complex for tax and CPF purposes).
Joint borrowing increases the combined household income for TDSR/MSR purposes, often allowing a larger loan. However, both parties remain responsible if the other defaults.
7. Is a fixed or floating rate better?
There is no universally correct answer; it depends on your risk appetite and rate outlook.
Fixed Rate (1–3 years): Choose if you want certainty and believe rates will rise. Lock-in at the lowest rate available (currently 1.4%–1.8% for 1–2 years). After lock-in expires, you will refinance or face a floating rate, so you are not truly “locked” for 25 years.
Floating (SORA+): Choose if you believe rates will stay low and you can afford a 20%–30% payment increase. Currently, floating rates are lower than fixed (around 1.5%–2.0% all-in vs 1.4%–1.8% fixed), so you pay a rate-stability premium if you lock in.
In 2026, most experts recommend a 2-year fixed rate as a compromise: you get near-current rates locked in for two years, and then you can reassess when the lock-in expires.
Summary: Making Your Decision
Choosing between an HDB loan and a bank loan is ultimately a question of values: stability vs savings, predictability vs flexibility. The HDB loan offers peace of mind and long-term cost protection but requires eligibility. The bank loan offers potential short-term savings and flexibility but introduces rate risk. Work through the decision tree below to clarify your path:
Start here: Are you a Singapore Citizen with household income ≤ S$14,000/month (families)?
Yes: You can access the HDB loan. Proceed to the next question.
No: You must use a bank loan. Skip to bank-loan considerations below.
Next: Is rate stability your top priority, or are you comfortable with rate risk?
Rate stability: Choose HDB. You cannot beat a fixed 2.6% rate that will not rise for 25 years.
Comfortable with risk: Compare HDB (2.6%) with current bank rates (floating 1.5%–2.0%; fixed 1.4%–1.8%). If bank rates are <2.2% and locked in for 5+ years, bank may be worthwhile. If rates are expected to rise to 3%+, HDB’s 2.6% becomes increasingly attractive.
For bank-loan applicants: What is your holding timeline?
Short term (5–10 years): Floating or short fixed-rate packages (1–2 years) are fine; refinance or sell before rate shock.
Long term (15+ years): Lock in a fixed rate (2.8%–3.0%) for as long as possible (5+ years if available). The certainty is worth 0.3%–0.5% in extra rate cost.
Key Takeaways
HDB loans are fixed at 2.6% (pegged to CPF OA + 0.1%). This rate will not increase for the life of the loan—a powerful advantage in a rising-rate environment.
Bank loans are currently cheaper (1.5%–2.0% floating; 1.4%–1.8% fixed for 1–2 years) but introduce rate risk. After lock-in expires (typically 2–3 years), your payment can jump 10%–30%.
Over a 25-year life, an HDB loan typically costs S$30,000–S$40,000 less than a bank loan that averages 3.0% over the tenor, even though it starts at a higher rate.
Eligibility is the first gatekeeper. If you are a SC with income ≤ S$14,000/month, HDB is an option; otherwise, you must use a bank.
Refinancing is possible but irreversible. HDB → bank is one-way; bank → bank is flexible. Plan before you switch.
Rate floors and TDSR caps mean that your true affordability is often lower than headline rates suggest. Always ask your lender what rate floor they use in their TDSR calculation.
In 2026, the optimal strategy for most Singaporeans is: (1) if HDB-eligible, take the HDB loan unless bank rates are locked below 2.2% for 5+ years; (2) if bank-eligible only, lock in a 2-year fixed rate at 1.4%–1.8% as a bridge, then reassess when lock-in expires.
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Interest rates, LTV limits, MSR/TDSR caps, and eligibility rules change frequently. Always verify current figures with HDB (hdb.gov.sg), MAS (mas.gov.sg), and your bank before committing to a loan package. For complex situations—mixed-nationality couples, self-employed income, or refinancing decisions—consult a licensed mortgage advisor or conveyancing lawyer. CPF rules, tax treatment, and grant eligibility have edge cases; always verify your specific situation with the relevant authority.