First-Time Home Buyer Singapore 2026: The Complete Walkthrough

First-Time Home Buyer Singapore 2026: The Complete Walkthrough

Buying your first home in Singapore is the single largest financial decision most people ever make. It has regulatory gates (HFE, TDSR, MSR), financial gates (downpayment, stamp duty, renovation), and procedural gates (OTP, resale application, completion). This 2026 walkthrough moves through all eight gates in the order you will actually encounter them.

If you are still deciding between flat types, read our comparison of BTO, resale and EC first. This article assumes you know roughly what you want to buy, and are ready to work out how.

Quick Answer — The 8 Gates

  1. Budget and debt audit — work out TDSR and MSR.
  2. HFE letter or bank IPA — locks your loan ceiling.
  3. Shortlist and compare — narrow to 3–5 options.
  4. Viewings and offer — expect 3–8 viewings before firming.
  5. OTP and option fee — commits both parties.
  6. Stamp duty and loan drawdown — the money phase.
  7. Completion — legal transfer and final balance.
  8. Keys and renovation — you own a home.
First-time home buyer 8-step journey Singapore 2026
Every Singapore first-time buyer moves through the same eight gates — in order.

Gate 1: Budget and Debt Audit

Before you look at a single listing, sit down with your household income and debt obligations. Two ratios govern what banks will lend you:

  • TDSR 55%: All monthly debts (existing loans, minimum credit-card payments, new home loan) must be at or below 55% of gross income.
  • MSR 30%: For HDB and EC buyers only — home loan alone is capped at 30% of gross income.

See our detailed TDSR and MSR guide for a worked example.

Work out your upfront cash

Your upfront cash comprises:

  • Option fee and exercise fee (HDB: up to S$5,000 total; private: typically 5% of purchase price)
  • Downpayment beyond CPF (minimum 5% cash for all property types with a bank loan)
  • Buyer Stamp Duty (BSD) — see our BSD guide
  • ABSD if applicable — see our ABSD guide
  • Legal fees, valuation fees, agent commission
  • Renovation buffer — typical 3–5 room HDB renovation runs S$50k–S$100k

Gate 2: HFE Letter or Bank IPA

With the maths squared away, you need a financing lock:

  • HDB route: Apply for an HFE letter via the HDB Flat Portal. Takes ~2 weeks. Valid 6 months.
  • Private condo route: Apply for Bank IPA (in-principle approval). Typically 3–5 working days. Valid 30 days.

An HFE or IPA is the document a seller or developer will ask to see before engaging seriously. It also tells you how much you can actually borrow, which constrains your flat search.

Gate 3: Shortlist and Compare

Use the HDB Resale Portal (for HDB), 99.co, PropertyGuru, and our own LovelyHomes listings (for private) to narrow a shortlist. Criteria that matter:

  • Transport: Walking distance to MRT, commute to work, future Cross Island Line / Jurong Region Line stations.
  • Schools: 1km and 2km catchment for primary schools if you have young children.
  • Layout: North-South orientation, natural ventilation, bomb shelter location.
  • Remaining lease (HDB): Affects loan tenure and CPF usage.
  • Maintenance fees (private): Check the strata table for the monthly MCST fee.

Gate 4: Viewings and Offer

Expect 3–8 viewings before you firm on a unit. At each viewing, check:

  • Water pressure and drainage (run taps, flush toilets)
  • Ceiling for water staining (upstairs leaks)
  • Door frames for termite damage
  • Window seals for water ingress
  • Electrical outlet locations and DB box condition
  • Noise during the day and evening

When you are ready to offer, recognise that asking prices are typically 3–8% above the agreed-on transaction price for HDB resale, and 5–10% for private condos. Start below asking.

Gate 5: OTP and Option Fee

Once price is agreed, the seller issues the Option to Purchase:

  • HDB resale: S$1,000 option fee (fixed by HDB). 21 days to exercise.
  • Private resale: 1% of purchase price. 14 days to exercise.
  • New launch condo: 5% on booking, then S&P Agreement within 8 weeks.

This is the commitment point. Engage a conveyancing lawyer during this window, and if buying private with a bank loan, lock the loan offer now.

Gate 6: Stamp Duty and Loan Drawdown

Within 14 days of OTP exercise, you must pay Buyer Stamp Duty via IRAS. If ABSD applies (second or subsequent property, PR, or foreigner), it is due at the same time. Your lawyer will handle the filing and remittance.

Your bank will now process the loan in earnest. They will send a valuer to the property, finalise the loan offer, and coordinate with your lawyer for completion.

Gate 7: Completion

For HDB, completion happens at the HDB Hub, typically 8–12 weeks after the resale application. For private, it happens at your lawyer’s office, typically 8–12 weeks after OTP exercise. At completion:

  • You pay the final cash balance
  • Your CPF is debited for the CPF portion
  • Your bank disburses the loan
  • The seller receives the proceeds
  • Legal title transfers to you
  • You receive the keys

Gate 8: Keys and Renovation

Congratulations — you own a home. From this point:

  • Apply for HDB renovation permit if structural changes (hacking, plumbing relocation).
  • Pay renovation deposit (HDB: S$200 refundable; MCST: varies).
  • Attend fire-safety briefing (HDB only) before renovation begins.
  • Budget realistically: 4-room HDB renovation runs S$50,000–S$80,000 on average in 2026.
  • MOP clock starts (HDB and EC) from the completion date.

Worked Example: S$780,000 BTO Flat, First-Timer Couple

A married couple, both SCs, combined monthly income S$9,500, buying a 4-room BTO in Tengah at S$380,000 (Standard flat):

Component Amount
Purchase price S$380,000
CPF Housing Grant (EHG) S$55,000
Effective price S$325,000
HDB loan @ 75% S$244,000
Downpayment (cash + CPF) S$81,000
Of which minimum cash S$16,300 (5%)
Buyer Stamp Duty S$5,700
Legal fees ~S$500
Minimum cash upfront ~S$23,000
Monthly HDB loan (25 yr, 2.6%) ~S$1,108

Against a household income of S$9,500, this represents an MSR of 11.7% — well inside the 30% limit. TDSR is also comfortable if there are no other debts.

Common Mistakes First-Timers Make

  • Viewing first, financing second. Without an HFE or IPA, you cannot make a binding offer.
  • Forgetting renovation cost. Budget S$50k–S$100k. It is often the second-largest cost after the downpayment.
  • Ignoring CPF accrued interest. The CPF you use will need to be returned with ~2.5% annual compounding when you sell. See our CPF guide.
  • Choosing HDB Legal for complex cases. HDB Legal is great for straightforward cases but offers no flexibility if your situation has quirks (trust ownership, divorce partial transfer, etc).
  • Maxing the loan tenure. The longest tenure minimises instalments but means vastly more interest over time.

FAQ — First-Time Buyer 2026

How long does the whole process take from first viewing to keys?

For HDB resale: 4–6 months. For private condo: 3–5 months. For BTO: add the 3–5 year build wait after selection.

Can I use my parents’ CPF to buy?

Yes, if they are named as co-applicants or under the Essential Occupier scheme. Their contribution becomes a charge on the flat like any other CPF usage.

Should I choose HDB loan or bank loan?

HDB loan: fixed 2.6% rate, forgiving on TDSR stress test, flexible on prepayment. Bank loan: potentially lower floating rates but exposed to SORA volatility. See our fixed vs floating guide.

Do I need a lawyer for my first home purchase?

Yes. For HDB, the HDB Legal service is low-cost. For private, you will need an external conveyancing firm. Expect to pay S$2,000–S$3,500 including disbursements.

What grants am I eligible for as a first-timer?

CPF Housing Grant (up to S$80k for families depending on income), Enhanced CPF Housing Grant, and Proximity Housing Grant if living near or with parents. Your HFE letter will compute your exact entitlement.

Disclaimer: Regulations, rates and grants change over time. Verify current rules with HDB, your bank, and IRAS before committing. Consider engaging a qualified financial advisor for tax and CPF planning on large purchases.

Executive Condominium (EC) Eligibility & Buying Guide Singapore 2026

Executive Condominium (EC) Eligibility & Buying Guide Singapore 2026

An Executive Condominium (EC) is Singapore’s middle-ground property — built by private developers like a condo, but sold initially with HDB-style eligibility rules and subsidies. Ten years after launch, it becomes indistinguishable from a private condo. This 2026 guide walks through the EC framework, eligibility rules, income ceiling, grants, and the full arc from application to full privatisation.

For the latest EC launches and rules, see the HDB EC page.

Quick Answer — EC Essentials

  • Hybrid flat: HDB-administered for the first 10 years, private after.
  • Income ceiling: S$16,000 gross monthly household income at application.
  • MOP: 5 years from TOP — during which you cannot sell or rent out the whole unit.
  • At year 5: sell to Singapore Citizens and PRs only.
  • At year 10: fully privatised — sell or rent to anyone, including foreigners.
  • CPF grants: up to S$30,000 for first-timer families.
  • ABSD: treated like private property — SCs 0% on first home, PRs 5%.
Executive Condominium 15-year journey Singapore 2026
From launch to full privatisation — the EC follows a distinctive 15-year arc.

What Is an EC?

An Executive Condominium sits between public housing and private property. The Housing Development Board administers the launch and enforces early-stage rules, but the project itself is designed and built by a private developer, is freehold of its strata units, and has all the finishes and facilities of a regular condo — pool, gym, security, the full package.

The tradeoff is the resale restriction: for the first five years, you cannot sell the unit at all. Between year 5 and year 10, you can only sell to Singapore Citizens or PRs. Only from year 10 onwards is the EC fully privatised — at which point it is just like any other condo.

Eligibility Rules

EC eligibility sits in between BTO and private condo:

Applicant profile

  • Public Scheme (married couples): At least one SC, the other SC or PR.
  • Fiancé/Fiancée Scheme: Both parties intend to marry within 3 months of key collection.
  • Joint Singles Scheme: 2 singles aged 35+, both SCs.
  • No Single-Buyer Scheme — unlike BTO, ECs cannot be bought by a lone single applicant.

Income ceiling

The gross monthly household income must not exceed S$16,000 at application. This is tested at the time of booking, not at TOP. Once you have signed the sale and purchase agreement, subsequent income growth does not disqualify you.

Existing property ownership

Applicants cannot own any other property, local or overseas, within 30 months of the EC application. This is a stricter rule than private condos (where overseas property is fine) but less strict than BTO (which has complete no-tolerance for non-subsidised private property).

Financing and Grants

ECs are financed by bank loans only — HDB Concessionary Loans do not apply. That means:

  • LTV is bank-determined (max 75% for first property, falling to 45% for second).
  • Minimum 5% cash downpayment plus up-to-20% via CPF or cash.
  • TDSR and MSR both apply — whichever is tighter is binding. MSR caps the EC loan at 30% of gross monthly income.

CPF Housing Grants for ECs

First-timer families buying an EC can receive the CPF Housing Grant:

Household income Family grant
Up to S$10,000 S$30,000
S$10,001–S$11,000 S$20,000
S$11,001–S$12,000 S$10,000
Above S$12,000 Nil

Second-timer + first-timer households receive progressively less; second-timer + second-timer couples receive no CPF grant for ECs.

Payment Schedule: Progressive Payments

ECs use a Progressive Payment Scheme because the unit is still under construction when you sign. You pay in stages as the project hits construction milestones:

Stage % of price When
Booking fee 5% At booking
S&P Agreement 15% ~8 weeks after booking
Foundation 10% Typically 6–12 months
Concrete structure 10% Mid-construction
Further milestones 35% Structure, walls, ceilings, M&E
TOP 25% Key collection
CSC 15% 12 months after TOP

The 5-10-15 Journey

An EC’s economic and legal profile changes at three fixed points:

Year 0–5 (MOP period)

You cannot sell the unit at all. You can only sublet a single room, not the whole unit. The EC is, legally, treated as HDB for most purposes.

Year 5 (MOP achieved)

You can now sell, but only to Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents. You can also now rent the whole unit out. Most EC owners who plan to upgrade do so at this point.

Year 10 (full privatisation)

The EC is now legally indistinguishable from a private condo. Foreign buyers are allowed. Resale prices typically see a step-up at this milestone, as the buyer pool widens significantly.

EC vs BTO vs Private Condo

Attribute BTO EC Private condo
Income ceiling S$14k S$16k None
Grants Up to S$80k Up to S$30k None
HDB loan Yes (2.6%) No No
MOP 5 / 10 yr 5 yr None
Foreigner buyer (resale) Never After year 10 Anytime
Facilities HDB estate Full condo Full condo

For a fuller head-to-head, see our BTO vs Resale vs EC guide.

Common Pitfalls

  • Income growth after booking is fine — but MOP stays at 5 years even if your income later exceeds the EC ceiling. You are not forced to sell.
  • Do not rent out the whole unit before MOP — this is the most common accidental breach, and HDB can compulsorily acquire the flat at the original price.
  • Don’t underestimate the progressive payment schedule — you need to service the loan as disbursements happen, not just at TOP.
  • Check the EC framework for your specific launch — rules on income ceiling, grants and MOP have been revised multiple times over the past decade.

FAQ — Executive Condominium 2026

Can I buy an EC if I already own a BTO?

You must dispose of the BTO before or within 6 months of the EC TOP date, and the MOP on the BTO must already have been fulfilled. Otherwise, you are not eligible.

What if my income goes above S$16k after booking?

No impact. The income ceiling is tested at booking only. Your future income is not relevant to your EC eligibility.

Can PRs buy an EC?

Only jointly with a Singapore Citizen, under the Public Scheme. A standalone PR applicant is not eligible.

Can I sublet individual rooms before MOP?

Yes, up to 3 rooms, provided you continue to occupy the unit. The whole unit cannot be sublet before MOP.

How is EC resale valued at year 5?

The open market determines the price, but the buyer pool is restricted to SCs and PRs only. Prices typically reflect this — liquidity step-ups further at year 10 when foreigners can also buy.

Disclaimer: EC rules have been revised multiple times; eligibility and grant amounts for your launch may differ. Always verify with the specific e-brochure for the project and consult a licensed property agent or HDB directly.

BTO Application Guide Singapore 2026: Eligibility, Balloting & Timeline

BTO Application Guide Singapore 2026: Eligibility, Balloting & Timeline

Applying for a BTO flat in Singapore is an exercise in managing eligibility rules, luck (the ballot), and patience (the 3–5 year wait). This 2026 guide walks you through everything: the six eligibility gates that every applicant clears, how balloting actually works, flat selection strategy, and the full launch-to-keys timeline.

For the latest launches, see the HDB BTO/SBF exercises page. This article explains how to actually navigate them.

Quick Answer — BTO Application in 60 Seconds

  • Four launches a year — February, June, October (plus an SBF).
  • Six eligibility gates: citizenship, age, income ceiling, family nucleus, property ownership, EIP quota.
  • Income ceiling: S$14,000 standard, S$21,000 for Prime & Plus flats.
  • Application fee: S$10 per ballot attempt.
  • Ballot system: fully computerised; queue number determines flat-selection order.
  • Wait to keys: typically 3–5 years from ballot date.
BTO eligibility gates Singapore 2026
The six gates every BTO applicant must clear before a queue number is assigned.

What Is a BTO Flat?

A Build-To-Order (BTO) flat is a brand-new HDB flat built specifically for your balloting cycle. HDB announces the supply for each town, you apply, and — if successful — you wait for construction to complete. You collect the keys 3–5 years later.

Because BTO flats are subsidised by HDB and sold directly from the government, the price is substantially lower than a comparable resale in the same estate — often 20–30% lower. The trade-off is the wait, the balloting uncertainty, and the new Prime/Plus/Standard framework that ties tighter resale restrictions to the most subsidised flats.

The Six Eligibility Gates

Every BTO applicant clears the same six tests. Failing any one of them disqualifies the application entirely. Know these cold before you start filling anything in.

Gate 1: Citizenship

At least one of the applicants must be a Singapore Citizen. A second SC applicant (or an SC/PR spouse) unlocks full grant access; an SC + foreigner household is limited to the Non-Citizen Spouse scheme with tighter eligibility.

Gate 2: Age

21 or above under the Public Scheme (most married couples) and the Fiancé/Fiancée Scheme. 35 or above under the Single Singapore Citizen Scheme. 55 or above under the Joint Singles Scheme.

Gate 3: Income Ceiling

From the latest HDB framework:

  • S$14,000 monthly gross household income — standard flats (most BTO supply).
  • S$21,000 — Prime and Plus flats in choice locations.
  • S$7,000 individual income — Single Scheme applicants (2-room Flexi only in non-mature estates).

Gate 4: Family Nucleus

Your application must fit one of HDB’s recognised schemes: Public, Fiancé/Fiancée, Orphan, Single, Joint-Singles, Non-Citizen Spouse, Non-Citizen Family.

Gate 5: Property Ownership

If you or anyone in your family nucleus has disposed of a private property within the last 30 months, you are in the wait-out period and cannot apply. Existing owners of non-subsidised private property are disqualified outright.

Gate 6: Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP)

The block you choose must not be full for your ethnic group under the EIP. You cannot apply to a block that is at its quota, even if all other conditions are met.

Understanding the Ballot

Each launch exercise, HDB opens applications for a 7-day window. Everyone who applies goes into a ballot. The ballot produces a queue number — your position in the flat-selection order.

How the ballot weightings work

HDB does not run a pure random lottery. Applicant profiles are weighted:

  • First-timer families get approximately twice the chances of a second-timer.
  • Applications with children get a boost under the Married Child Priority Scheme.
  • Third-Child Priority Scheme families get additional weighting.
  • Parenthood Priority Scheme (PPS) reserves up to 40% of supply for families with children under 16.

The weightings mean a queue number in the low hundreds is far more likely for first-timer parents with kids than for single applicants or second-timers. Single applicants typically face the longest queues of any group.

Queue number and your actual chances

If the project has 600 flats and you have queue number 450, your probability of selecting the unit you want is entirely dependent on what the 449 people ahead of you choose. In popular estates, low queue numbers often select quickly and leave stock for high numbers too; in over-subscribed projects (Tanjong Pagar, Bukit Merah, Queenstown), your queue number has to be in the top couple of hundred to realistically select anything.

The Full Timeline

Milestone What happens Timing
Launch opens 7-day application window Day 0–7
Ballot & queue number HDB emails your number ~3–4 weeks after close
Flat selection In-person or online appointment ~3 months post-ballot
Sign Lease Agreement Pay downpayment, stamp duty ~4 months post-ballot
Construction HDB builds the project ~3–4 years
Key collection TOP & handover 3–5 years from ballot

Prime, Plus, Standard — The 2026 Framework

HDB restructured BTO classifications in 2024 into three categories, each with different resale restrictions and subsidy recovery rules:

  • Standard: No additional resale restrictions. 5-year MOP, then free to sell on the open market. Forms the bulk of BTO supply.
  • Plus: 10-year MOP, subsidy recovery on resale, income ceiling applied to future buyers. Located in choice mature-estate areas.
  • Prime: Strictest restrictions — same as Plus, plus a subsidy clawback on resale and tighter future-buyer eligibility. Highest subsidy at purchase.

Tips to Improve Your Odds

  • Apply as first-timers together — the biggest possible ballot weighting.
  • Use the Priority Schemes: PPS (children under 16), Married Child Priority Scheme (near parents), Third-Child Priority.
  • Target non-mature estates if you are flexible — over-subscription is lower, your queue number goes further.
  • Don’t apply for Prime flats casually — the 10-year MOP and subsidy recovery change the economics significantly.
  • Keep your HFE letter ready — required before flat selection.

FAQ — BTO 2026

How much does it cost to apply for a BTO?

S$10 per ballot attempt, paid when you submit the application.

Can I apply for BTO while living overseas?

Yes, as long as at least one applicant is a Singapore Citizen. You will need to return for flat selection and key collection.

What if I don’t get a flat after multiple attempts?

Each unsuccessful application counts toward your priority weighting. HDB explicitly tracks first-timer attempts, so persistence does eventually matter. Alternatively, consider a resale flat or EC.

Can I cancel after I get a queue number?

Yes, up until you sign the Lease Agreement. Cancelling after selection incurs a penalty and counts against your first-timer status for 12 months.

What happens to my HFE letter if I don’t get selected?

It remains valid for six months from issue. You can re-apply in the next BTO launch using the same HFE letter (if still valid), or refresh it before applying.

Disclaimer: HDB policies, income ceilings and classifications can change between launches. Always refer to the specific launch e-brochure on the HDB website for authoritative rules on that exercise.

How to Buy an HDB Resale Flat in Singapore (2026 Step-by-Step)

How to Buy an HDB Resale Flat in Singapore (2026 Step-by-Step)

Buying an HDB resale flat in Singapore in 2026 is a process with clear, legally-defined stages. Miss one, and the deal either stalls or collapses entirely. This guide walks you through every step in the exact order you will actually encounter it — from securing your HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter to collecting the keys.

For the official rules, refer to the HDB Resale Buying page. This article explains what those rules mean in practice and how the numbers add up for a typical 2026 buyer.

Quick Answer — The HDB Resale Buying Process

  1. Apply for HFE letter on the HDB Flat Portal (~2 weeks processing).
  2. Shortlist and view flats (typically 2–6 weeks).
  3. Negotiate, then receive the OTP from the seller (S$1,000 option fee).
  4. Exercise the OTP within 21 days with the exercise fee (up to S$4,000 more).
  5. Submit the resale application on the HDB Resale Portal.
  6. HDB processes the application (~8 weeks) — appraisal, Resale Checklist, legal, CPF.
  7. Complete the purchase at the HDB Hub appointment and collect keys.

Total elapsed time: typically 12–16 weeks from OTP to keys.

HDB resale buying timeline 5 stages Singapore 2026
The five stages of buying an HDB resale flat, from HFE letter to keys.

Step 1: Apply for Your HFE Letter

The HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter is the gating document for any HDB purchase. It confirms three things in a single statement: whether you are eligible to buy, how much CPF housing grant you qualify for, and the maximum HDB loan you can take.

You apply through the HDB Flat Portal using Singpass. The portal will check your household income, ages, citizenship, and existing property holdings. Processing usually takes around two weeks — but longer if HDB needs clarification on income or existing flat ownership.

The HFE letter is valid for six months, and you cannot exercise any OTP without one. Budget for your HFE to be ready before you start serious viewings — you will see sellers, and agents expect you to have it lined up.

What the HFE letter tells you

  • Whether your household meets the eligibility conditions (at least one SC, under the S$14,000 monthly household income ceiling, no overlapping private-property ownership).
  • The exact CPF Housing Grants you qualify for (CPF Housing Grant, Enhanced CPF Housing Grant, Proximity Housing Grant).
  • The maximum HDB Concessionary Loan you can take, based on TDSR and MSR.
  • The minimum cash required at OTP and exercise stages.

Step 2: Shortlist Flats and Conduct Viewings

Once you have your HFE letter in hand, you can begin serious viewings. The HDB Resale Portal and third-party sites (PropertyGuru, 99.co, ourselves at LovelyHomes) let you filter by town, flat type, remaining lease and recent transacted price.

What to actually evaluate at a viewing

  • Remaining lease: Directly affects your maximum loan tenure and CPF usage. Anything under 60 years of remaining lease starts restricting grants and CPF usage significantly.
  • Condition of the flat: Look past the paint. Check ceilings for water marks (upstairs leaks), windows for water ingress, and door frames for termite damage.
  • Ethnic quota status: Your ethnic group must be under the block-level EIP cap. Ask the agent if the block is “open” for your group.
  • Noise and dust: Traffic, MRT, and construction noise. Visit twice — once at peak hour, once in the evening.
  • Ownership history: The agent should be able to confirm the number of previous owners and whether any structural alterations were made without HDB approval.

Step 3: Negotiate the Price and Receive the OTP

Once you and the seller agree on a price, the seller grants you the Option to Purchase (OTP). The option fee is fixed by HDB at S$1,000, paid on the spot. This buys you the exclusive right to purchase that flat at the agreed price for 21 calendar days.

The OTP is a legally binding document for the seller during those 21 days — they cannot sell to anyone else. But you, the buyer, can walk away by simply not exercising the option. You forfeit the S$1,000 but have no further obligation.

Cash-Over-Valuation (COV) in 2026

If the agreed price exceeds HDB’s official valuation, the gap must be paid in cash — never from CPF or loan. This is Cash-Over-Valuation, and it is firmly back on the table in 2026’s tight resale market. Budget for it if you are bidding on a popular estate or a high-floor unit. See our full COV guide for negotiation tactics.

Step 4: Exercise the OTP

Within the 21-day window, you exercise the OTP by paying the exercise fee. The option fee plus exercise fee cannot exceed S$5,000 combined — typically structured as S$1,000 option + S$4,000 exercise. At this point the sale becomes unconditional.

In the same 21 days, you should:

  • Engage a conveyancing lawyer (HDB’s in-house Legal & Claims Registry is a low-cost option for straightforward cases).
  • If taking a bank loan, finalise your loan offer and submit it for valuation.
  • Prepare the Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) — due within 14 days of OTP exercise.

Step 5: Submit the Resale Application

Once the OTP is exercised, both parties log into the HDB Resale Portal and submit the resale application jointly. The portal walks you through the Resale Checklist, financial plan, and any declarations.

You will pay stamp duty, agree on the completion timeline, and nominate your solicitor. Your CPF refund to the seller, the loan disbursement and the final cash shortfall are all calculated at this point. HDB aims to process the resale application within eight weeks.

Typical fees at application stage

  • Resale application fee: S$80 (1-room / 2-room flats) or S$120 (3-room and above).
  • Buyer Stamp Duty (BSD): Graduated — 1% on first S$180k, 2% on next S$180k, 3% on next S$640k, 4% thereafter. On a S$600k resale, BSD comes to S$12,600. See our BSD guide for the full maths.
  • Legal fees: S$350–S$600 via HDB Legal, S$1,800–S$3,000 via a private conveyancing firm.

Step 6: Completion and Key Collection

About twelve to sixteen weeks after you first exercised the OTP, you will attend the completion appointment at HDB Hub. Both parties sign the legal transfer documents, CPF disbursements are triggered, your bank or HDB loan is drawn down, and you receive the keys.

From this moment, the flat is legally yours. Your MOP clock starts ticking from this date — see our MOP guide for what that means going forward.

Worked Example: Buying a S$620,000 4-Room Resale Flat

Let’s walk through a realistic 2026 purchase. A young couple, both Singapore Citizens and first-time buyers, buy a 4-room resale flat in Sengkang at S$620,000 — S$30,000 above HDB’s valuation of S$590,000.

Component Amount
Purchase price S$620,000
HDB valuation S$590,000
COV (cash) S$30,000
HDB loan @ 75% of valuation S$442,500
Cash + CPF downpayment (25% of valuation) S$147,500
Buyer Stamp Duty S$13,200
Legal fees (HDB route) ~S$500
Minimum cash needed upfront ~S$60,000

The couple might qualify for an Enhanced CPF Housing Grant of up to S$80,000 depending on their combined income, which offsets a large chunk of the downpayment. See our CPF for property guide for how the grants flow into the purchase.

Common Mistakes That Delay or Kill the Deal

  • No HFE letter in hand: You cannot exercise an OTP without one. Plan at least three weeks of buffer before you start offering.
  • Underestimating COV: It has to come from cash savings, not CPF. Many deals collapse at OTP because buyers find their cash short.
  • Ignoring the ethnic quota: Your offer can be accepted, only to have HDB reject the resale application because the block is full for your group.
  • Not checking structural alterations: Unauthorised renovations (load-bearing wall removal, unpermitted window grilles) are the buyer’s problem after completion.
  • Valuation shock: If the valuation comes in below the purchase price, the cash shortfall must be covered by you — not CPF.

FAQ — HDB Resale Buying 2026

How long does the entire HDB resale process take?

Typically 12–16 weeks from OTP exercise to keys. Add another 2–6 weeks for your flat search, and 2 weeks for the HFE letter.

Can I use CPF to pay the option fee?

No. The S$1,000 option fee and the up-to-S$4,000 exercise fee both come from cash. CPF Ordinary Account funds only flow in at the resale-application stage.

What happens if I cannot exercise the OTP in time?

You forfeit the S$1,000 option fee. The seller is then free to grant the OTP to someone else.

Do I need a property agent to buy HDB resale?

No. HDB’s Resale Portal is designed to let buyers and sellers complete the process without an agent, though you are welcome to use one. Total agent commission on the buyer side is typically 1% of the purchase price.

Can I back out after I exercise the OTP?

Only with the seller’s agreement, and you would likely forfeit both the option and exercise fees (up to S$5,000). HDB does not have a “cooling-off” period for resale buyers once OTP is exercised.

Disclaimer: This is general guidance, not legal advice. Rules, fees and grant amounts change periodically — always verify with HDB directly before committing. Consult a qualified conveyancing lawyer for your specific purchase.

Cash-Over-Valuation (COV) in Singapore HDB Resale: 2026 Guide

Cash-Over-Valuation (COV) in Singapore HDB Resale: 2026 Guide

Cash-Over-Valuation — COV — is the gap between the price a Singapore HDB resale buyer agrees to pay and the official valuation HDB assigns to the flat. That gap is paid entirely in cash, on top of the 5% deposit and any loan shortfall. For the first time since 2014, COV is measurably back in Singapore’s hotter resale estates — and most buyers have no mental model for it.

This 2026 guide explains exactly how COV arises, why HDB redesigned the valuation process to kill it in 2014, why it came back, and how to negotiate it down when you are sitting across the table from a seller’s agent. For the official valuation process, see the HDB resale valuation page.

Quick Answer — COV at a glance

  • COV = offer price − HDB valuation. If positive, the difference is payable in cash only.
  • No CPF allowed. You cannot draw CPF OA to pay COV.
  • No loan allowed. Banks and HDB cap their loans at LTV applied to valuation, not to price.
  • On top of: 5% cash deposit, any BSD and ABSD, and any shortfall between loan quantum and valuation.
  • Typical 2026 COV in hot estates: S$20,000–S$80,000 in Queenstown, Bukit Merah, Tiong Bahru.

How COV Arises

HDB resale purchases follow a fixed sequence: buyer and seller agree on a price; buyer pays a S$1,000 Option Fee; HDB conducts its valuation; buyer exercises the OTP within 21 days with a further 4% cash Option Exercise Fee. The valuation comes after the price agreement.

If the agreed price is higher than HDB’s valuation, the buyer has a choice: abandon the option (losing S$1,000) or proceed and pay the gap in cash. That gap is COV.

Cash-Over-Valuation formula explained with worked example of S$780k offer minus S$720k valuation equals S$60k COV in cash
Figure 1: The COV formula. S$60k in cash, stacked on top of the S$39k cash deposit, is what a buyer really needs before signing.

A Worked Example

A couple agrees to buy a 4-room flat in Queenstown for S$780,000. HDB valuation comes back at S$720,000.

  • COV: S$780,000 − S$720,000 = S$60,000 cash.
  • 5% cash deposit (1% Option Fee + 4% Exercise Fee on purchase price): 5% × S$780,000 = S$39,000.
  • Loan ceiling: HDB loan at 75% LTV on valuation = 75% × S$720,000 = S$540,000.
  • Downpayment (25%) on valuation: 25% × S$720,000 = S$180,000 from CPF or cash.
  • Loan shortfall: loan only covers S$540,000; purchase price is S$780,000 — shortfall of S$240,000 covered by downpayment (S$180,000) + COV (S$60,000).

Total cash required (excluding stamp duty): 5% deposit + COV = S$39,000 + S$60,000 = S$99,000. BSD of about S$17,400 must also be paid (reimbursable from CPF OA).

Why COV Was “Killed” in 2014

From 1994 to 2014, HDB valuations were issued before buyers made offers. Agents advertised a flat with both the valuation and the asking COV — e.g. “valued at S$500k, asking S$550k (S$50k COV).” This framing normalised COV as a negotiated headline number and fed a runaway COV culture.

In March 2014, HDB reversed the sequence: buyers agree a price first, then HDB values the flat. With buyers no longer able to advertise or openly negotiate COV, the market default moved to “price at valuation” and COV collapsed to zero on most transactions for nearly a decade.

Why COV Is Back in 2026

Resale prices rose 27% between 2020 and 2025 on the HDB Resale Price Index. HDB’s own valuations are based on a 6-month trailing transaction window — which means when prices rise fast, valuations lag the market. In a hot estate, an agent can credibly point to last-week comparables at S$800k while HDB’s valuation, anchored to six-month-old evidence, comes in at S$740k.

The structural ingredients for COV are back:

  • Supply constraint: MOP release volumes below long-term averages.
  • Premium locations: mature estates near MRT and international schools see thinner supply and bigger price-to-valuation gaps.
  • Cash-heavy buyer pools: multi-generational households and HDB upgraders returning to buy smaller units have cash on hand to pay COV.

In Q4 2025, HDB data showed roughly 1 in 8 resale transactions with measurable COV, concentrated in Queenstown, Bukit Merah, Tiong Bahru, Toa Payoh, and Kallang/Whampoa. Two years earlier the number was closer to 1 in 30.

How to Negotiate COV Down

Sellers asking for COV have real competition. Use these levers:

  1. Pull recent transaction comparables. HDB Resale Portal publishes all resale transactions with price, flat type, floor range and storey. If the asking price is above the 90th percentile for comparable flats in the same block, push back with evidence.
  2. Request HDB valuation before exercise. The valuation is issued to you after the OTP is granted. If the gap is unacceptable, you have 21 days to walk away and lose only the S$1,000 Option Fee.
  3. Time your viewing. Sellers under pressure (downgrading, emigrating, selling to fund a BTO completion) drop COV asks fastest. Ask the agent what the seller’s next move is.
  4. Offer a smooth completion. Sellers often trade COV against completion certainty — pre-approved loan, short exercise window, willingness to extend for them to buy their next place.
  5. Walk away. On 2 of every 3 COV asks in 2026, the next buyer in the pipeline pays less or at valuation. Patience is priced.

When COV Is Actually Worth Paying

COV is not always irrational. Sometimes it reflects real scarcity that will not reverse:

  • Rare floor plate. A high-floor corner unit with panoramic view and cross-ventilation in a mature estate.
  • Zero-renovation condition. Move-in-ready flats save S$40k–S$80k in renovation and 3–6 months of rent elsewhere.
  • Family proximity. Living near parents for childcare or caregiving has a legitimate non-market value.

The rule of thumb: if the COV is less than 2% of the purchase price and the trade-offs are non-replicable, paying is defensible. Above 5% COV is rarely justified.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is COV allowed for BTO or EC purchases?

No. COV only appears in HDB resale transactions where a valuation is issued separately from the price. BTO flats are priced directly by HDB; ECs are priced by developers. Both settle on price and never encounter a valuation gap.

Can the seller accept my offer at or below valuation?

Yes. Many transactions settle at valuation with zero COV. The seller’s agent may push back, but the buyer ultimately chooses whether to pay COV.

What happens if HDB undervalues the flat and I walk away?

You forfeit the S$1,000 Option Fee and the 21-day exercise window lapses. No other penalty.

Can I request a second valuation?

HDB valuations are final for the purpose of that transaction. You cannot appeal or request a second opinion — you must walk away and try a different flat.

Does the seller benefit from a higher COV?

Yes, directly. Every dollar of COV goes to the seller in cash at completion. This is why agents representing sellers push for higher COV asks in a tight market.

What to Do Next

  1. HDB Buying Guide — the full resale process end to end.
  2. TDSR & MSR 2026 — because MSR, not LTV, is usually the binding loan limit for HDB buyers.
  3. BSD Singapore 2026 — stamp duty on the purchase price, including any COV component.

Disclaimer: This guide is general information, not financial advice. HDB rules and valuation practice are subject to change. Verify current rules at hdb.gov.sg.

Condo Downpayment Singapore 2026: LTV, Cash & CPF Breakdown

Condo Downpayment Singapore 2026: LTV, Cash & CPF Breakdown

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:

  1. 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.
  2. Minimum cash portion. MAS requires at least 5% of the purchase price in cash for a first property, 10% for second and subsequent.
  3. Stamp duties. BSD and, where applicable, ABSD are paid in cash within 14 days of OTP. You can reimburse from CPF afterwards.
Condo downpayment comparison for S$1.5m Singapore property showing first, second and foreigner cash requirements
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.

This is why many Singaporean upgraders follow the sell-first-buy-second route — or take a bridging loan — to avoid holding two properties simultaneously.

Foreigner: 45% LTV + 60% ABSD

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:

  • CPF cannot cover the mandatory minimum cash portion (5% first, 10% subsequent).
  • 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.

What to Do Next

  1. ABSD Singapore 2026 Complete Guide — the biggest line in any upgrader’s cash-flow.
  2. BSD Singapore 2026 — full progressive rate ladder.
  3. TDSR & MSR 2026 — what your loan can actually be.

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.

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