Singapore Condo Buying Guide for HDB Upgraders 2026: Complete Roadmap from HDB to Private Property

Singapore Condo Buying Guide for HDB Upgraders 2026: Complete Roadmap from HDB to Private Property

Quick Answer: HDB Upgrader Buying a Condo in 2026

  • ABSD of 20% applies to Singapore Citizens buying a second property whilst still holding their HDB flat — but a full remission is available if you sell the HDB within 6 months of the condo completion date.
  • Sequence matters most: sell HDB first and you pay 0% ABSD on the condo; buy condo first and you pay 20% upfront (then claim remission), but you must fund the ABSD amount out of pocket or cash proceeds initially.
  • CPF OA can pay for the condo once your HDB flat’s CPF accrued interest is refunded on sale — but timing the liquidity is critical.
  • No income ceiling for private condo — unlike EC, there is no household income cap on purchasing a private condominium.
  • TDSR 55% applies — your total monthly debt obligations (all loans) cannot exceed 55% of gross monthly income; your mortgage alone typically maxes out at 30–40% of income in practice.
  • MAS 30-month wait does not apply to upgraders who previously received a CPF Housing Grant — that restriction applies only to subsequent HDB flat purchases, not private property.
  • Typical all-in cash needed for a $1.3M–$1.5M condo: $80K–$130K cash at OTP and exercise, before CPF usage.

Upgrading from an HDB flat to a private condominium is one of the most financially significant moves a Singapore household can make. For many middle-income families, the HDB flat accumulated over a decade of mortgage repayments and CPF contributions represents their largest asset — and the upgrade decision involves a careful choreography of timing, tax planning, CPF allocation, and loan qualification.

In 2026, the roadmap for HDB upgraders has become more nuanced than ever. The Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) framework, the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR), and the 6-month HDB sale window for ABSD remission create a set of interdependent constraints that require advance planning — ideally 12–18 months before the intended purchase date. This guide walks through every step of the process, with practical numbers drawn from Singapore’s current property market.

Understanding Your ABSD Position as an HDB Upgrader

The first and most consequential decision for any HDB upgrader is whether to sell the HDB flat before or after buying the private condo. This choice determines your ABSD liability and cash-flow requirements at the point of condo purchase.

ABSD rates for HDB upgraders buying private condo Singapore 2026 remission table by buyer profile
Figure 1: ABSD Rates and Remission Eligibility for HDB Upgraders by Buyer Profile — Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS (iras.gov.sg), Ministry of Finance

Strategy A: Sell HDB First, Then Buy Condo

If you sell your HDB flat and receive the proceeds before completing the purchase of a private condominium, the condo counts as your first private property purchase. A Singapore Citizen pays 0% ABSD in this scenario. The trade-off is that you must secure interim accommodation — typically renting a private condo or staying with family — during the gap between HDB sale completion and new condo key collection. The rental expense during this bridging period can range from $2,500 to $5,000 per month depending on location and unit size.

This strategy is particularly attractive when the upgrader is buying a new launch condo where key collection is 3–4 years away. The HDB can be sold when the TOP (Temporary Occupation Permit) is imminent, capturing appreciation on the HDB flat whilst avoiding ABSD entirely.

Strategy B: Buy Condo First, Sell HDB Within 6 Months of TOP

Singapore Citizens buying a second property pay 20% ABSD upfront (effective from 27 April 2023, under the 2023 cooling measures). However, a married SC couple where at least one spouse is buying their first private property is eligible for an ABSD remission — the full 20% is refunded if the HDB flat is sold within 6 months of the condo’s TOP (for new launches) or within 6 months of the condo’s date of purchase (for resale condos).

The critical point: you must pay the ABSD first and apply for refund afterwards. On a $1.4M condo, this means funding $280,000 out of pocket (or from bridging finance) that you will recover only after selling the HDB. Ensure your combined CPF OA balances and cash savings can support this exposure.

Strategy C: SPR Upgraders

Singapore Permanent Residents face a more restrictive ABSD environment. SPR buyers pay 5% ABSD on their first private property — even if they already own an HDB flat (which, for ABSD purposes, counts as a residential property). SPRs who hold an HDB flat and buy a condo are treated as purchasing a second property (30% ABSD) with no remission available. SPR households considering an upgrade to private property should consult a qualified tax adviser about the cost implications, or consider applying for Singapore Citizenship before upgrading.

Financial Qualification: Can You Afford the Upgrade?

Once your ABSD strategy is clear, the next question is loan eligibility. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) property cooling measures set binding financial limits:

Rule Limit What It Means for Upgraders
TDSR 55% max All monthly debt obligations ÷ gross income ≤ 55%
LTV (bank loan) 75% max 25% down payment required (5% must be cash)
MSR N/A for private condo 30% MSR rule applies only to HDB loans and EC loans
Stress test rate MAS medium-term rate +0.5% Banks typically use 4.0–4.5% notional rate for TDSR calculations
Loan tenure Max 30 years (to age 65) Older borrowers face shorter tenures; affects monthly instalment

Maximum condo price by household income for HDB upgraders Singapore 2026 TDSR 55 percent affordability chart
Figure 3: Recommended Condo Price Bands by Household Monthly Income — HDB Upgraders 2026. Assumes 75% LTV, 30-year tenure, 3.2% rate. For illustration only.

The 10-Step Upgrader Roadmap

HDB upgrader condo buying roadmap 10 steps decision to keys Singapore 2026
Figure 2: HDB Upgrader’s 10-Step Roadmap from Decision to Condo Keys — Singapore 2026

The roadmap above captures the sequential decisions an HDB upgrader must navigate. The two most critical junctures — ABSD strategy (Step 2) and OTP exercise (Step 6) — have time-limited consequences that are difficult to reverse. Build a minimum 6-month planning runway before committing to an OTP.

Understanding the CPF Component of Your Upgrade

Most HDB upgraders have been servicing their HDB mortgage using CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds. When you sell the HDB flat, the CPF amount withdrawn (principal) plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum must be returned to your CPF OA before you receive any net cash proceeds. After this refund, your CPF OA balance is typically replenished significantly — and these funds can immediately be applied to the new condo purchase.

Example: a couple who bought their Tampines 5-room HDB flat in 2015 for $450,000 and have withdrawn $280,000 from their combined CPF OA (including accrued interest at 2.5%) over 11 years will have an accrued interest component of approximately $55,000 — meaning the CPF refund on sale is $280,000 principal + $55,000 interest = $335,000, which goes back into their OA. This OA balance can then be used as part of the 25% down payment on the new condo. See our detailed CPF Accrued Interest Guide 2026 for the full calculation framework.

Worked Example: The Lim Family’s HDB-to-Condo Upgrade

Singapore Citizens Mr and Mrs Lim, aged 38 and 36. Combined monthly income: $13,000. Selling Sengkang 5-room HDB (valued $600K). Target: 3-bedroom resale condo in D19 (Punggol/Sengkang corridor), asking $1,450,000.

Item Amount
Condo purchase price $1,450,000
Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) $44,600
ABSD (SC 2nd property, 20%) $290,000 (paid upfront, refunded after HDB sale)
Legal fees (conveyancing) ~$3,200
Cash at OTP (1% option fee) $14,500
Cash at exercise (4% + BSD + ABSD) $396,400
Bank loan (75% LTV) $1,087,500
Monthly instalment (3.2%, 30yr) $4,685/mth
TDSR check: $4,685 / $13,000 36.0% ✔ PASS
HDB sale proceeds
HDB sale price $600,000
Less: Outstanding HDB loan balance ($82,000)
Less: CPF OA refund (principal + accrued interest) ($310,000)
Net cash from HDB sale $208,000
Net cash position after ABSD remission ($290K refunded) $498,000 cash + $310,000 CPF OA

In this scenario, the Lims need approximately $410K of liquid funds at the point of condo exercise (before HDB sale proceeds arrive). If their combined cash savings and existing CPF OA balances are insufficient to bridge this gap, they may consider a bridging loan from a bank — typically at 5–6% per annum, used for a short period of 3–6 months until the HDB sale is completed and ABSD is refunded.

Key Timing Rules You Cannot Miss

Singapore’s ABSD remission framework contains two non-negotiable deadlines that upgraders frequently misjudge:

  • 6-month sale window for resale condo: if you purchase a resale condo whilst owning the HDB, you must complete the sale of your HDB within 6 months from the condo’s option exercise date. Missing this deadline forfeits the 20% ABSD remission permanently — IRAS does not grant extensions.
  • 6-month window from TOP for new launch: for a new launch condo, the 6-month HDB sale window runs from the date of the condo’s TOP or from the date of issue of the Certificate of Statutory Completion (CSC), whichever is earlier. Most buyers align HDB sale completion with the month of TOP collection to optimise cash flow.
  • HDB Minimum Occupation Period (MOP): your HDB flat must have fulfilled its MOP (typically 5 years from key collection date or TOP, whichever is earlier) before you are permitted to sell it on the open market. Verify your HDB MOP completion date before committing to a condo timeline that depends on HDB sale proceeds.

Why Upgrading Still Makes Sense in 2026

Despite higher ABSD rates and a TDSR framework that has tightened debt capacity compared with pre-2021, the HDB-to-condo upgrade remains one of the most financially rational moves in the Singapore property journey. Four factors support this view as at mid-2026:

  • HDB resale prices near peak: the HDB Resale Price Index reached 183.1 in Q1 2026, up from 131.5 in Q1 2020 — a 39% nominal gain. An upgrader selling a 5-room Tampines or Bishan flat today captures near-peak pricing on an asset that carries significant maintenance risk as it ages. See our HDB Resale Flat Prices Guide 2026 for current market data by town.
  • Private condo supply cycle: with 42,561 private units in the pipeline as at Q1 2026 (of which 17,032 remain unsold), supply is elevated relative to the historical average. This supports price stability in the near term and reduces the risk of a sharp price spike catching upgraders off-guard.
  • Condo rental yield as hedge: an upgrader who buys a condo and rents it out (Strategy A — living in HDB until MOP, then renting out the condo) benefits from rental income that helps service the mortgage. Current condo rental yields in the OCR are approximately 3.0–3.8% gross, which can cover most or all of the monthly bank instalment at 75% LTV.
  • Intergenerational wealth transfer: private property is transferable to heirs without the MOP-related restrictions that apply to HDB flats. For families building intergenerational wealth in Singapore’s constrained land environment, private property ownership remains a cornerstone asset.

What Might Come Next: Upgrader Market Outlook

The following is speculative commentary for planning purposes only.

The key policy risk for HDB upgraders is a further increase in ABSD rates for second-property purchases. The 2023 cooling measures raised the SC second-property ABSD from 12% to 20% — a significant step that dampened upgrader volumes in the resale condo market through late 2023. As at mid-2026, transaction volumes have stabilised but the government has signalled no plans to relax ABSD. An upgrader who is within 12 months of MOP completion should note that any further rate increase would significantly raise the cost of Strategy B (buy condo first, claim remission later).

The Bank of Singapore’s interest rate outlook for 2026–2027 suggests SORA-linked floating rates may ease modestly from current levels of approximately 3.0–3.4%. Even a 50 basis point reduction in effective mortgage rates from a $1.4M loan improves monthly cash flow by approximately $460/mth — a meaningful difference in household affordability.

Frequently Asked Questions: HDB Upgrader Buying a Condo

Can I use my CPF OA to pay for the condo down payment while still holding the HDB?

Yes. CPF OA funds can be used for the new condo purchase whilst you still own your HDB flat, subject to the CPF Board’s Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) or Full Retirement Sum (FRS) rules depending on your age. If you are below 55, you may use CPF OA funds freely for the condo up to the Valuation Limit. If you are 55 or older, CPF rules require you to retain a minimum amount in your Retirement Account. Consult the CPF Board’s online calculator or a financial adviser before committing.

What happens if I cannot sell my HDB within 6 months and miss the ABSD remission deadline?

You forfeit the ABSD remission permanently. IRAS does not grant extensions or case-by-case waivers under the current policy framework. Missing the 6-month deadline means you have permanently paid 20% ABSD (for SC 2nd property) with no refund. This is precisely why careful planning of the HDB sale timeline — engaging a listing agent immediately after the condo OTP is issued — is essential. Do not rely on the full 6 months as buffer; aim to complete the HDB sale within 4–5 months to allow for unexpected delays.

If only one spouse is on the HDB, and the other spouse has never owned property, can they buy a condo as a first purchase (0% ABSD)?

No. The ABSD rules are assessed at the household level for married couples in Singapore. If either spouse owns a residential property (including the HDB flat), both spouses are treated as second-property purchasers for ABSD purposes on any joint purchase. Even if only one spouse is listed on the HDB and the other is not, a joint condo purchase by both attracts 20% ABSD. If the non-HDB-owning spouse purchases the condo as a sole owner, the ABSD treatment depends on whether they personally own any residential property — but the couple’s intent to use the property as a family home may be considered by IRAS.

Should I choose a new launch condo or a resale condo for my upgrade?

Both have merits. A new launch condo gives you 3–5 years before TOP, during which you can continue living in the HDB flat (if MOP is satisfied) and saving towards the down payment and ABSD buffer. You also benefit from the progressive payment scheme — disbursing the purchase price in stages as construction milestones are reached, reducing upfront capital outlay. A resale condo gives immediate possession, which suits upgraders who want to rent it out right away for yield, or who have already sold the HDB flat and need accommodation. The stamp duty and legal timeline for a resale condo is typically 8–12 weeks from OTP issue to completion. See our Private Property Resale Process Guide 2026 for a detailed walkthrough.

Can I still qualify for an HDB housing grant after buying a private condo?

No. Once you have purchased a private residential property in Singapore, you are permanently debarred from purchasing a new HDB flat (BTO or DBSS) or receiving HDB housing grants. You may still purchase an HDB resale flat under certain conditions (as an SC, after the relevant waiting period following private property disposal), but you will not be eligible for the Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) or Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) if you have previously owned private property. This is an important one-way door in the Singapore housing journey — understand that the upgrade to private property is largely irreversible from the HDB subsidy perspective.

Is there a minimum income to buy a condo in Singapore?

There is no statutory minimum income requirement to purchase a private condominium in Singapore. However, the TDSR of 55% effectively sets a practical floor — at a 3.2% mortgage rate over 30 years, the minimum household income needed to service a $1M bank loan is approximately $3,900/mth (using 55% TDSR). Most upgraders targeting a $1.2M–$1.5M condo with a 75% LTV loan require combined household income of $9,000–$12,000/mth to comfortably satisfy TDSR with some headroom. The affordability chart in Figure 3 provides a range of price-to-income scenarios.

Can I use a bridging loan to fund the ABSD gap between condo exercise and HDB sale?

Yes. Most Singapore banks offer bridging loans specifically for this scenario — to bridge the period between condo OTP exercise (when ABSD is due) and HDB sale completion (when proceeds arrive). A bridging loan is typically capped at 25% of the property value, charged at around 5–6% per annum, and must be fully repaid within 6 months. The interest cost for a $290,000 ABSD bridging loan at 5.5% for 4 months is approximately $5,350 — a relatively modest cost compared with the $290,000 ABSD amount being refunded. Some upgraders instead use a combination of personal savings and unsecured credit lines; discuss your specific cash-flow needs with your bank’s mortgage specialist before committing.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Singapore property regulations, ABSD rates, and CPF rules are subject to change. All figures are illustrative and based on conditions as at June 2026. Consult a licensed property agent, mortgage specialist, or legal adviser for advice specific to your circumstances. Official resources: hdb.gov.sg, iras.gov.sg, mas.gov.sg, cpf.gov.sg.
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HDB Resale Levy Singapore 2026: Complete Guide for Second-Timer Buyers and Upgraders

HDB Resale Levy Singapore 2026: Complete Guide for Second-Timer Buyers and Upgraders

The HDB Resale Levy is one of Singapore’s least understood property costs — and one of the most consequential for households planning to upgrade from a first subsidised flat to a second. Administered by the Housing and Development Board (HDB), the resale levy exists to ensure that the substantial housing subsidy granted to first-time buyers is partially recovered when those buyers choose to purchase a second subsidised flat from HDB. Understanding exactly who pays it, how much it is, and when it is collected can save upgrading households tens of thousands of dollars in planning errors.

✅ Quick Answer — HDB Resale Levy at a Glance

  • What it is: A levy payable to HDB by second-timer applicants who received a housing subsidy on their first flat and are now buying a new subsidised flat.
  • Who pays: Second-timers buying a new Build-To-Order (BTO), Sale of Balance Flat (SBF), or new Executive Condominium (EC before privatisation).
  • Who does NOT pay: First-timers; buyers of resale HDB flats (the levy applies only to new-flat purchases); buyers who have not previously received a housing subsidy.
  • Amounts (2026): S$15,000 (2-room) | S$30,000 (3-room) | S$40,000 (4-room) | S$45,000 (5-room) | S$50,000 (Executive) | S$55,000 (EC).
  • When paid: Deducted from the sale proceeds of the first flat, or paid in cash if proceeds are insufficient.
  • Official source: HDB’s Resale Levy Policy (www.hdb.gov.sg).

What Is the HDB Resale Levy and Why Does It Exist?

Singapore’s public housing system is built on the principle of one major housing subsidy per household in a lifetime. When a household buys its first BTO flat, it benefits from a significant subsidy — typically 20–40% below the market value of equivalent resale flats — funded by the Government through HDB’s development programme. This subsidy is the bedrock of Singapore’s high home-ownership rate (approximately 89% as at 2026).

When a subsidised household later sells its flat and applies to buy a second new subsidised flat (another BTO or a new EC), it would effectively be receiving a second government subsidy. The resale levy is designed to partially recoup the first subsidy, ensuring fair allocation of public resources across generations of Singaporeans. It applies regardless of the sale price achieved for the first flat — the levy is fixed by flat type, not by capital gain.

The levy was first introduced in 1995 and has been revised several times. The current levy schedule (below) has been in place since 2006 with minor adjustments, and no changes were announced in 2025 or early 2026.

Resale Levy Amounts — 2026 Schedule

HDB resale levy amounts by flat type Singapore 2026
Figure 1: HDB Resale Levy Amounts by First-Flat Type — 2026. Levy is fixed regardless of sale price achieved. Source: Housing and Development Board.
Type of First Subsidised Flat Resale Levy (S$) Payable To
2-Room Flexi BTO 15,000 HDB
3-Room BTO / DBSS / SBF 30,000 HDB
4-Room BTO / DBSS / SBF 40,000 HDB
5-Room BTO / DBSS / SBF 45,000 HDB
Executive Flat / Maisonette BTO 50,000 HDB
Executive Condominium (new, pre-privatisation) 55,000 HDB

The levy is determined by the type of the first subsidised flat, not the second. If a household sold a 4-room BTO and is now buying a 5-room BTO, it pays the 4-room levy of S$40,000 — not the 5-room levy of S$45,000. This distinction often surprises upgraders who assume the levy scales with their new purchase.

Who Pays — and Who Is Exempt

Who pays HDB resale levy Singapore 2026 eligibility guide
Figure 2: HDB Resale Levy — Who Pays vs Who Does Not Pay (2026). Green column: exempt. Pink column: liable. Source: HDB.

The two conditions that must simultaneously be met for the levy to apply are: (1) you or your co-applicant previously received a housing subsidy on a flat you own or have owned, and (2) you are now applying for a new subsidised flat (BTO, SBF, or new EC). If either condition is absent, no levy applies.

Common situations where the levy does NOT apply: buying a resale HDB flat on the open market (regardless of whether you owned a BTO before); buying a private condominium or landed property; buying an HDB flat from HDB as a first-timer with no prior subsidy; and any purchase after the levy has already been paid once (HDB does not charge it twice for the same household).

When Is the Resale Levy Collected?

HDB upgrading journey resale levy timeline Singapore 2026
Figure 3: The HDB Upgrading Journey — where the Resale Levy is collected in the transaction sequence. Source: HDB.

The levy is collected at the point of completion of the sale of the first flat, not at the point of booking the new flat. In practice, HDB deducts the levy directly from the sale proceeds — meaning it never passes through the seller’s hands. If the net sale proceeds (after repaying the outstanding HDB loan and refunding CPF with accrued interest) are insufficient to cover the levy, the shortfall must be paid in cash.

This sequencing has an important implication for households planning their upgrade: you must complete the sale of your first flat before or concurrently with the booking of the new flat. HDB will not proceed with the new flat application until it can confirm the levy payment from the sale proceeds. In practice, HDB typically requires a signed Option to Purchase (OTP) on the sale of the first flat before confirming the new flat booking.

Can the Resale Levy Be Paid in CPF?

No. The HDB Resale Levy must be paid in cash or deducted from the net cash proceeds of the first flat’s sale. It cannot be paid using CPF Ordinary Account (OA) savings. This is a common misconception and a frequent source of financial surprise for upgraders who assumed their CPF could cover all transaction costs.

The practical consequence: if you are selling a 4-room BTO and your net cash proceeds after HDB loan repayment and CPF refund (with accrued interest) are less than S$40,000, you will need to top up the shortfall in cash from your personal savings. This situation is more common than buyers realise, particularly for flats sold in the early years after MOP, when capital appreciation has been modest and CPF accrued interest has significantly eroded the net cash component.

Resale Levy vs ABSD: Key Differences

Feature Resale Levy ABSD
Administered by HDB Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS)
Applies to New subsidised HDB/EC purchases by second-timers All residential property purchases (rates vary by profile)
SC first property No levy (unless second-time buyer) 0% ABSD
SC second property No levy (resale market); levy if new HDB 20% ABSD
Payable via CPF? No — cash only No — cash only
Fixed or variable? Fixed by flat type, not price Percentage of purchase price
Can be remitted? No Yes, under specific conditions (e.g., SC couples who sell first property within timeline)

The ABSD remission scheme (where a SC married couple buying their second property simultaneously can sell their first within 6 months after completion and apply for ABSD remission) does not affect the resale levy — the two are entirely separate instruments with separate rules and separate authorities.

What This Means for Upgraders: Planning the Upgrade Correctly

The practical implications of the resale levy are most acute for households with a low outstanding HDB loan balance and moderate CPF accrued interest — a situation common among households who purchased their first BTO 8–12 years ago at subsidised prices and have mostly paid down their loan. Such households may find that their net cash proceeds after selling are barely above or even below the levy amount, making the cash flow management of the upgrade critical.

The recommended approach is to work backwards from the levy amount before booking a second flat. Calculate your estimated net cash proceeds: (1) estimated sale price of current flat, minus (2) outstanding HDB or bank loan balance, minus (3) CPF refund with accrued interest (mandatory), equals (4) net cash. If (4) is less than the applicable levy, plan for the shortfall before the upgrade timeline begins.

Does the Resale Levy Apply to Divorcees or Single Applicants?

Yes, with nuance. A divorced Singapore Citizen who previously owned a subsidised flat with an ex-spouse may be subject to the resale levy if they are applying for a new BTO as a second-timer. However, HDB applies a concession for divorcees applying under certain schemes (such as the Joint Singles Scheme or the Single Person Scheme under specific conditions) — eligibility for this concession depends on income, flat type applied for, and the specific circumstances of the divorce. Divorcees are strongly advised to consult HDB directly before making any booking.

📊 Worked Example: Family Selling 4-Room BTO and Buying a New EC

Profile: Lim family — SC/SC couple, age 38 and 36; bought a 4-room BTO in Punggol in 2015 for S$320,000 (HDB loan S$256,000, fully repaid by 2023); MOP completed 2020; now selling at S$620,000 and booking a new EC.

Step 1 — Gross sale proceeds: S$620,000

Step 2 — CPF refund with accrued interest:
Total CPF OA used (down payment + monthly instalments over 8 years): ~S$220,000
Accrued interest at 2.5% p.a. for average holding period (~6 years): ~S$34,000
Total CPF refund required: S$220,000 + S$34,000 = S$254,000

Step 3 — Outstanding loan balance: S$0 (fully repaid in 2023)

Step 4 — Net cash proceeds: S$620,000 – S$254,000 – S$0 = S$366,000 cash

Step 5 — Resale Levy (4-room BTO seller buying new EC): S$40,000 (levy is based on first flat type = 4-room, regardless of what they are buying)

Step 6 — Net after levy: S$366,000 – S$40,000 = S$326,000 net cash available for EC downpayment

New EC purchase: S$1,350,000; minimum 5% cash downpayment = S$67,500; next 15% via CPF OA = S$202,500; balance via bank loan S$1,080,000 @ 3.2% p.a. 25yr ≈ S$5,230/mth. TDSR = S$5,230 / combined income S$16,000 = 32.7% — PASS (TDSR cap 55%).

Key insight: The S$40,000 levy significantly reduces the Lim family’s available cash — from S$366k to S$326k — but is comfortably manageable given their sale price and income. Families with smaller sale proceeds or higher CPF accrual would face tighter cash positions.

Frequently Asked Questions — HDB Resale Levy

Do I pay the resale levy if I am buying a resale HDB flat (not BTO)?

No. The resale levy applies only when you are purchasing a new subsidised flat directly from HDB — that is, a BTO, Sale of Balance Flat (SBF), or a new Executive Condominium (EC, before it achieves privatisation at the 5-year mark). If you are buying a resale HDB flat on the open market from a private seller, no resale levy is charged, regardless of whether you previously owned a BTO or received a housing grant. This is a critical distinction — many upgraders choose the resale market specifically to avoid the levy, sacrificing subsidised pricing in exchange for levy-free transacting.

Can I avoid the resale levy by adding a new flat co-applicant who is a first-timer?

No. If any co-applicant on the new flat application is a second-timer (previously received a housing subsidy), the resale levy applies to the entire application. You cannot dilute the levy obligation by adding a first-timer co-applicant. HDB treats the household as a whole — if any member has received a prior subsidy, the levy is charged.

What if I am selling my first flat at a loss — do I still pay the levy?

Yes. The resale levy is a fixed amount determined by your first flat’s type, not by whether you made a profit or loss on its sale. Even if you sell your 4-room BTO below your purchase price (or break even after CPF and loan repayment), the S$40,000 levy still applies. In such cases — where net cash proceeds are insufficient — you must pay the levy shortfall in cash. This is one of the primary reasons that HDB advises households to plan their upgrade timeline carefully, ideally waiting until the flat’s market value has appreciated sufficiently to generate meaningful net cash proceeds.

Does the resale levy apply if I sold my first flat more than 10 years ago?

Yes, there is no time limitation on the resale levy obligation. Once you have received a housing subsidy on a flat, your status as a second-timer is permanent for HDB eligibility purposes. Even if you sold your first BTO 15 or 20 years ago, applying for a new BTO today would trigger the applicable levy. This surprises some buyers who assumed the passage of time or a change in marital status would reset their subsidy status — it does not, unless specific HDB concession conditions apply.

Do Singapore Permanent Residents (SPRs) pay the resale levy?

SPRs are generally not eligible to purchase new BTO flats, so the resale levy rarely applies to them directly. However, if an SPR purchased a resale flat as a first-timer (which SPRs are permitted to do) and later achieves Singapore Citizenship, they may apply for a BTO as a couple where one is SC and one was a former SPR — in which case HDB would assess whether any prior housing subsidy was received and apply the levy accordingly. The specific eligibility rules for mixed-status (SC/SPR become SC/SC) applicants are complex; consult HDB directly.

Can the resale levy be waived or reduced in hardship situations?

HDB does not have a published framework for waiving or reducing the resale levy on hardship grounds. The levy is a fixed statutory amount with no discretionary exemption for financial difficulty. Households who are unable to pay the levy from sale proceeds must arrange cash payment before HDB will proceed with the new flat transaction. If cash reserves are insufficient, households may need to consider alternative options such as purchasing a resale flat (no levy applies), deferring the upgrade, or liquidating other assets to meet the levy obligation. This is a situation where independent financial advice is strongly recommended before committing to a booking.

What happens to the resale levy if my new BTO booking is cancelled?

If you cancel your new BTO or SBF booking before completion, HDB will typically refund the resale levy — but the exact refund treatment depends on the stage of cancellation and whether the first flat has already been sold. If the first flat has been sold and proceeds used to pay the levy, the refund would be processed back to you in cash. If the cancellation is post-completion of the new flat, no refund applies. HDB’s cancellation and refund terms for BTO bookings are detailed on the HDB website and in your sales letter — review these carefully before booking.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or property advice. The HDB Resale Levy amounts, eligibility criteria, and collection procedures described are based on HDB’s published policy as of June 2026 and are subject to change at any time. Readers must verify all information directly with the Housing and Development Board (www.hdb.gov.sg) before making any property transaction decision. CPF accrued interest calculations, loan amounts, and cash flow estimates in worked examples are illustrative only. Consult a licensed financial adviser and HDB directly before proceeding with any flat sale or purchase.

Singapore HDB Upgrading Guide 2026: Costs, ABSD, CPF and Step-by-Step Process

Singapore HDB Upgrading Guide 2026: Costs, ABSD, CPF and Step-by-Step Process

Quick Answer: HDB Upgrading Guide 2026

  • Who can upgrade? SC and PR households who have fulfilled the HDB Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) — 5 years for standard flats, 10 years for Plus/Prime flats classified from October 2024.
  • Typical upgrade path: Sell HDB first (avoid ABSD), then buy a private condo. Alternatively, buy first and claim ABSD remission within 6 months of selling.
  • ABSD on 2nd property: SC pays 20%, PR pays 30%, foreigners 65%. Selling HDB first means the condo is your 1st private purchase — 0% ABSD for SC couples.
  • Upgrader costs at S$1.35M condo: BSD ~S$37,200 + agent ~S$27,000 (selling + buying). No ABSD if HDB is sold first.
  • CPF: All CPF used for HDB (principal + 2.5% p.a. accrued interest) must be refunded to your CPF OA on sale. Net cash proceeds fund the condo down payment.
  • TDSR cap: 55% of gross monthly income. For a S$1.35M condo at 30-year tenor, monthly repayment at 3.0% is ~S$5,690 — household income of at least S$10,345/mth needed.
  • Sell-first vs buy-first: Sell-first saves 20% ABSD but carries gap-period risk. Buy-first triggers ABSD upfront, claimable back within 6 months of HDB sale completion.

For many Singaporean families, the journey from an HDB flat to a private property is the single largest financial milestone of their lives. The HDB upgrading guide process — commonly called “upgrading” — involves selling your public housing flat and buying a condominium, landed property, or Executive Condominium (EC) once your Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) is met. In 2026, upgrading remains very much alive: URA Q1 2026 data shows Outside Central Region (OCR) condo prices up 2.2% quarter-on-quarter, and HDB resale volumes continue to provide upgraders with strong equity to deploy.

Upgrading is simultaneously a financial decision, a tax-planning exercise, and a lifestyle transition. This guide, updated for Singapore HDB upgrading 2026, covers everything from MOP eligibility and ABSD implications to working through the exact stamp duties, CPF obligations, and loan calculations that determine whether the numbers stack up for your household.

Upgrader cost comparison chart showing BSD, ABSD and fees for 4 buyer profiles at S$1.35M condo Singapore 2026
Figure 1: Upgrader cost comparison — buying a S$1,350,000 condo under four common profiles. SC couples who sell their HDB first face only BSD + agent fees, with zero ABSD. (Source: IRAS BSD schedule; author calculations.)

Who Is Eligible to Upgrade from HDB?

The primary eligibility gate is the Minimum Occupation Period administered by the Housing & Development Board (HDB) under the Housing & Development Act. For most HDB flats bought on the open market or through BTO exercises before October 2024, the MOP is 5 years from the date the keys are collected. For Plus and Prime flats classified under the new framework introduced in October 2024, the MOP is 10 years. If you purchased a Prime Location Public Housing (PLH) flat before October 2024, the MOP for that flat is also 10 years.

During the MOP, you cannot sell the flat, rent out the entire flat, or acquire any private residential property in Singapore or overseas. Once the MOP is fulfilled, these restrictions are lifted — you are free to sell your HDB and buy private property simultaneously or in sequence. Singapore Citizens (SC) have the most favourable ABSD profile for this transition; Permanent Residents (PR) and foreigners face significantly higher stamp duties on private property acquisition.

The Core Upgrade Decision: Sell-First or Buy-First?

The most consequential choice in the upgrading journey is sell-first versus buy-first. Both strategies are legal and used regularly; the right answer depends on your household’s liquidity, risk appetite, and the current market cycle.

Under sell-first, you obtain an Option to Purchase (OTP) for your HDB buyer, complete the HDB sale, then use the proceeds to exercise an OTP on your chosen condo. Because your HDB is sold before you acquire private property, the condo is treated as your first private residential purchase — 0% ABSD for SC couples, 5% for PRs. The downside is a gap period between vacating your HDB and taking possession of the condo (typically 3–6 months if buying resale, or 3–5 years if buying a new launch off-plan).

Under buy-first, you exercise the condo OTP before completing the HDB sale. Because you momentarily own both properties, IRAS treats the condo as a second property and levies ABSD upfront — 20% for SC couples at the time of writing. The Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), however, provides a ABSD remission window of 6 months from the date the condo is purchased (or the date the condo is completed, for new launches). If you sell and complete the HDB transfer within that window, 20% ABSD is refunded in full. If you miss the 6-month window, the ABSD is forfeited.

HDB upgrader 5-step process timeline from MOP completion to condo purchase Singapore 2026
Figure 2: HDB upgrader process — 5 steps from MOP fulfilment to condo purchase (sell-first strategy). Completing the HDB sale before exercising the private property OTP eliminates ABSD exposure entirely for SC couples. (Source: HDB, IRAS.)

Stamp Duties: BSD, ABSD and Seller’s Stamp Duty

Stamp duties administered by IRAS are the biggest variable cost in any upgrading exercise. Three taxes are relevant.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is payable by the condo purchaser on a slab-rate schedule: 1% on the first S$180,000, 2% on the next S$180,000, 3% on the next S$640,000, 4% on the next S$500,000, 5% on the next S$1,500,000, and 6% on amounts above S$3,000,000. For a S$1,350,000 purchase, BSD works out to S$37,200.

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) is levied on the acquisition of private residential property. The 2026 ABSD rates, effective since 27 April 2023, are: SC buying 1st property — 0%; SC buying 2nd property — 20%; SC buying 3rd or subsequent — 30%. For PR buying 1st — 5%; 2nd — 30%. Foreigners — 65% (with limited exemptions for nationals of countries with FTA provisions). If you sell your HDB first, your condo purchase is your 1st private property and you pay 0% ABSD.

Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) does not apply to HDB flats (HDB imposes its own MOP rules instead). SSD applies to private residential properties sold within 3 years of acquisition: 12% in year 1, 8% in year 2, 4% in year 3. If you are buying a new launch condo off-plan, SSD starts running from the date you exercise the OTP, not the date of key collection.

Upgrader Stamp Duty Summary

Scenario BSD (S$1.35M condo) ABSD SSD Total Duties
SC couple, sell HDB first (condo = 1st private) S$37,200 0% Nil (hold >3 yrs) S$37,200
SC couple, buy-first + remission (sell HDB within 6 mths) S$37,200 20% → refunded Nil S$37,200 net
SC couple, buy-first — miss 6-mth window S$37,200 S$270,000 (20%) Nil S$307,200
SC single, keep HDB + buy condo (2nd property) S$37,200 S$270,000 (20%) Nil S$307,200
PR couple, sell HDB first (condo = 1st private) S$37,200 S$67,500 (5%) Nil S$104,700
PR couple, buy-first (2nd property, 30%) S$37,200 S$405,000 Nil S$442,200

Worked Example: The Tan Family Upgrade

Mr and Mrs Tan are Singapore Citizens, joint owners of a 5-room HDB flat in Tampines purchased in January 2019 at S$620,000. Their combined gross monthly income is S$14,000. The flat is MOP-cleared in January 2024. In Q1 2026, they list the flat at S$820,000 and receive an offer.

Step 1 — Net proceeds from HDB sale. Outstanding HDB loan at point of sale: S$280,000. CPF drawn (principal + 2.5% p.a. accrued interest over 7 years): S$180,000 (principal) + S$33,600 (accrued interest) = S$213,600. Agent commission at 2%: S$16,400. Legal fees (seller): S$2,800. Net calculation: S$820,000 − S$280,000 (loan) − S$213,600 (CPF refund) − S$16,400 (agent) − S$2,800 (legal) = net cash S$307,200. The S$213,600 is returned to the Tans’ CPF OA and is available for reuse on the condo purchase.

Step 2 — Condo purchase. The Tans target a 3-bedroom OCR condo at S$1,450,000. BSD: S$40,600. Agent (buyer): S$14,500 (1%). Legal (purchaser): S$3,500. Total acquisition costs: S$58,600. CPF OA balance after HDB refund: S$213,600 + regular contributions ≈ S$230,000 available. Minimum cash down at LTV 75%: 5% = S$72,500 cash + 20% CPF/cash = S$290,000 combined. Total down payment: S$362,500. Of this, S$230,000 from CPF, S$132,500 from cash. Bank loan: S$1,087,500 at 3.0% for 30 years → monthly repayment S$4,584. TDSR: S$4,584 ÷ S$14,000 = 32.7% — well within the 55% cap.

Cash position check: Net cash from HDB sale S$307,200 less cash down S$132,500 less acquisition costs S$58,600 = surplus cash S$116,100. The Tans proceed comfortably.

Singapore property price comparison HDB resale versus new launch condo by region Q1 2026
Figure 3: Typical unit prices by property type and region — HDB resale versus condominium new launches, Singapore Q1 2026. OCR condos remain the most accessible rung for HDB upgraders. (Source: URA REALIS, HDB.)

CPF in the Upgrading Equation

CPF is both your biggest asset and the most misunderstood element of the upgrading calculation. When you sell your HDB, the Central Provident Fund Board (CPF Board) requires you to return to your CPF OA the full amount withdrawn — principal plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum, compounded annually. This refund is mandatory regardless of whether you have an outstanding mortgage.

The good news: the money does not disappear. It goes back into your CPF OA, where it can immediately be reused for the private property purchase (BSD, initial down payment, or progressive payments on a new launch). The CPF Withdrawal Limits on private property are governed by the Valuation Limit (VL) and the Withdrawal Limit (WL): you can use CPF OA up to the VL (property market value or purchase price, whichever is lower) freely, and up to 120% of VL if the property’s remaining lease covers the youngest buyer to age 95.

Why Upgrading Still Makes Financial Sense in 2026

Three structural factors continue to make the HDB-to-private upgrade compelling. First, HDB resale prices have risen 41% since Q1 2019 (RPI 153.2 → 216.3 as of Q1 2026), materially increasing the equity pool available to upgraders. A household that bought a 4-room HDB in an OCR town for S$450,000 in 2018 may now realise S$620,000–S$680,000 on sale — generating S$150,000–S$200,000 in net equity above the original purchase price.

Second, OCR condo prices have appreciated 73% since Q1 2019, but entry-level 2-bedroom units in OCR developments remain accessible at S$1.0M–S$1.3M for resale or S$1.15M–S$1.4M for new launches. For a dual-income SC household earning S$12,000–S$16,000/mth, these price points sit comfortably within TDSR thresholds at current bank loan rates of approximately 3.0–3.5%.

Third, the absence of capital gains tax in Singapore means any appreciation in your private property value — whether you eventually sell, rent, or pass it on — accrues entirely to you. This structural advantage makes Singapore property one of the most tax-efficient long-term wealth vehicles available to residents.

What Might Come Next for Upgraders

This section reflects editorial analysis and is speculative in nature. The government has signalled a sustained commitment to housing supply: 19,600 BTO flats are scheduled for 2026, and the 2H 2026 GLS Confirmed List adds approximately 4,010 private residential units to pipeline supply. Greater supply should moderate new launch price growth, potentially improving affordability for upgraders who are not yet MOP-cleared. Conversely, a prolonged high-interest-rate environment (3M SORA at approximately 2.4% in mid-2026) raises mortgage servicing costs, and any reversal of ABSD policy is not anticipated — the 20% rate for a second residential property has been stable since April 2023 and serves a deliberate demand-management function.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I buy a condo while still living in my HDB during the MOP?

No. During the MOP you cannot acquire any interest in a private residential property in Singapore or overseas. Doing so constitutes a breach of the HDB ownership conditions and may result in compulsory acquisition of the flat by HDB at below-market rates. You must wait until the MOP is fulfilled before exercising an OTP on any private property. For Plus and Prime flats (classified from October 2024 onwards), the MOP is 10 years.

What happens to my CPF when I sell my HDB?

All CPF monies withdrawn from your CPF Ordinary Account for the HDB purchase — including the down payment, progressive mortgage payments, and BSD — must be refunded to your CPF OA upon sale, together with accrued interest at 2.5% per annum compounded annually. This refund is deducted from the sale proceeds before you receive any cash. The refunded amount is then available in your OA for use on your next property purchase, subject to CPF Withdrawal Limits. It is not lost — it simply moves from property equity back into your CPF account.

Is the ABSD remission for buy-first upgraders automatic?

No. It must be applied for. After completing the HDB sale within the 6-month window, you must submit an ABSD remission application to IRAS within 6 months of the later of: (a) the date of purchase of the private property, or (b) the date of completion of the HDB disposal. IRAS will process the refund of the 20% ABSD (SC couple on 2nd property) back to you. If you miss the window or fail to apply, the ABSD is permanently forfeited. It is strongly advisable to appoint a conveyancing lawyer who tracks these timelines for you.

How does the TDSR affect how much I can borrow?

The Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR), introduced by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in June 2013, caps all debt obligations (mortgage + car loan + personal loans + credit card minimum payments) at 55% of verified gross monthly income. For a S$1.35M condo at 3.0% over 30 years, the monthly repayment is approximately S$5,690. To pass TDSR on this loan alone, a household needs gross income of at least S$10,345/mth (S$5,690 ÷ 55%). If you carry a car loan of S$1,200/mth, your required income rises to S$12,527/mth. Clear outstanding personal loans and credit card balances before applying for a bank loan to maximise your borrowing capacity.

Can I keep my HDB and buy a condo at the same time?

Yes, SC households may own one HDB and one private residential property simultaneously, provided the HDB MOP has been met. However, the condo purchase would be treated as a second property and attract 20% ABSD (SC rate) — approximately S$270,000 on a S$1.35M condo. Many owners with sufficient financial capacity choose this route to retain rental income from the HDB or for personal family use. Note that you cannot rent out the entire HDB flat during MOP; once MOP is cleared, HDB resale flat owners may apply to rent out the whole flat subject to HDB approval.

What is the difference between upgrading to a resale condo versus a new launch?

A resale condo can be occupied within 8–12 weeks of completion, eliminating the gap period. You pay the full purchase price in one tranche. A new launch (off-plan) typically takes 3–5 years to complete, during which you make progressive payments tied to construction milestones. This gives cash-flow breathing room — you do not need to fund the full purchase at once — but you carry developer and construction risk. New launches also attract a 12%/8%/4% SSD if sold within the first 3 years. Buyers purchasing at launch must ensure their financial position can sustain both any interim rental during the construction period and mortgage servicing once the loan disburses progressively.

Do ECs count as private property for ABSD purposes after privatisation?

Yes. Executive Condominiums (ECs) are considered HDB flats for the first 5 years (during MOP) and private property thereafter. After 10 years from the date of purchase, ECs are fully privatised and become indistinguishable from private condominiums for all regulatory purposes, including ABSD. If you are an EC owner past the 5-year MOP, you may buy a private property — but the EC’s privatisation status at 10 years means your EC becomes “private property held” from ABSD counting at that point. Seek legal advice on timing if you hold an EC and are planning to acquire additional private property.

Related Articles

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. ABSD rates, CPF rules, HDB policies, and bank lending criteria are subject to change. Always verify current rates with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) at iras.gov.sg, the Housing & Development Board (HDB) at hdb.gov.sg, the Central Provident Fund Board (CPF Board) at cpf.gov.sg, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) at mas.gov.sg. Consult a licensed conveyancing lawyer and, where appropriate, a MAS-licensed financial adviser before making any property transaction.

Singapore Bridging Loan Guide 2026: How to Bridge the Gap Between Selling and Buying Property

Singapore Bridging Loan Guide 2026: How to Bridge the Gap Between Selling and Buying Property

Quick Answer: Singapore Bridging Loan 2026 at a Glance

  • What it is: A short-term loan that bridges the timing gap between buying a new property and receiving sale proceeds from your existing one. It covers the shortfall when both transactions overlap.
  • Who needs it: Typically upgraders who sign an Option to Purchase (OTP) on a new property before completing the sale of their current HDB flat, condo, or landed home.
  • Loan quantum: Usually up to 120% of the sale price of the property being sold, capped by the bank’s assessment. The amount typically covers the gap between the new purchase price and your available cash and CPF savings.
  • Interest rate: Singapore banks typically price bridging loans at 5.0–6.5% per annum (as at Q1 2026), charged on the drawn-down amount on a daily rest basis. This is significantly higher than standard mortgage rates of 2.8–3.5%.
  • Maximum term: Most banks limit bridging loans to 6 months, with some allowing up to 12 months by exception. They are designed to be short-term instruments, not medium-term financing.
  • Repayment: The bridging loan is repaid in full from the sale proceeds of your existing property at completion. Interest may be capitalised (added to the loan balance) or paid monthly, depending on the bank’s product structure.
  • TDSR applies: The bridging loan amount and interest must be included in the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) calculation alongside your new home loan, which can affect the amount you are eligible to borrow for the new property.
  • Alternative: Selling your current property first before buying the new one eliminates the need for a bridging loan entirely — but requires temporary accommodation and precise transaction timing.

What Is a Bridging Loan in Singapore Property?

A bridging loan (sometimes called a bridging facility) is a short-term credit instrument provided by Singapore banks to property buyers who need to complete the purchase of a new property before the sale of their existing one has been finalised. The loan “bridges” the financing gap — giving you access to the equity locked in your current property so that you can meet the payment obligations on your new home without waiting for completion of the sale.

In Singapore’s property market, bridging loans arise most commonly in the upgrader scenario: an owner-occupier who is selling their HDB flat or private condo and simultaneously buying a larger or more expensive replacement home. Because Singapore’s property transactions involve a sequence of deposits, Option exercises, and completion dates that cannot always be synchronised precisely, it is common for buyers to need short-term funds to plug the gap between “paying for the new place” and “receiving money from selling the old one”.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) does not publish specific rules governing bridging loans as a product category, but banks are required to apply the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework to all property-related credit facilities. This means the bridging loan reduces the amount you can borrow on your new home mortgage, and the combined debt burden must not exceed 55% of your gross monthly income.

Singapore bridging loan interest cost comparison 2026 duration rate
Figure 1: Total interest cost on a S$500,000 bridging loan at typical Singapore bank rates and durations (2026). Sources: Major Singapore banks, MAS. Actual rates vary by borrower profile and bank.

When Do You Need a Bridging Loan?

The need for a bridging loan arises whenever you are committed to buying before you have received the proceeds from your sale. In practice, the scenarios that most commonly trigger a bridging loan in Singapore are:

Scenario 1 — HDB upgrader buying before HDB flat is sold. You find a private condo you want to buy. You grant the OTP, which starts the 21-day clock. Your HDB flat has not yet been sold. The CPF and proceeds you plan to use for the new downpayment are still tied up in your HDB flat. A bridging loan covers the downpayment shortfall until your HDB sale completes (typically 8–16 weeks after OTP exercise).

Scenario 2 — Private upgrader with overlapping completion dates. You are selling your existing condo (completion in Month 6) and buying a new condo (completion in Month 4). The two-month timing mismatch means you need bridging to cover the new home’s completion before your old one is sold.

Scenario 3 — New launch purchase with progressive payment. For some uncompleted private condominiums, the S&P stage payments fall due before the buyer’s existing property sale completes. Bridging covers the interim stage payments.

In each case, the bridging loan is a temporary instrument. It is never designed to be a permanent part of your capital structure — it should be repaid in full from sale proceeds as soon as they arrive.

How Does a Bridging Loan Work in Singapore?

Here is the typical process a buyer goes through when arranging a bridging loan alongside a new home purchase:

  1. Apply to your bank — usually the same bank providing your new home loan. Most banks will only offer a bridging loan if they are also lending you the mortgage on the new property. You will need to provide the signed OTP (or S&P Agreement) for both the property you are buying and the property you are selling.
  2. Bank assesses quantum and TDSR — the bank will confirm (a) the maximum bridging quantum (typically up to the lower of the expected sale proceeds or 120% of the existing property’s market value), and (b) whether the combined TDSR — new mortgage + bridging loan — passes the 55% cap. If the combined TDSR fails, the bank will reduce either the bridging quantum or the new home loan accordingly.
  3. Bridging loan is drawn down at the point when the funds are needed — usually at completion of the new purchase or at the OTP exercise stage requiring a cash deposit.
  4. Interest accrues daily on the outstanding bridging balance, typically at 5.0–6.5% per annum. Some banks allow interest to be capitalised (added to the loan balance and settled at repayment); others require monthly interest servicing.
  5. Bridging loan is repaid when the sale of the existing property completes and the proceeds are disbursed. The law firm acting in the sale will typically direct the net sale proceeds to discharge the bridging loan before releasing any balance to the seller.
Singapore property sell first vs buy first bridging loan timeline comparison 2026
Figure 2: Transaction timeline comparison — selling first (no bridging needed) vs buying first (bridging loan required to cover the overlap period). Indicative months only; actual timelines vary.

Bridging Loan vs Selling First: Which Is Better?

The most important decision an upgrader makes is not “which bank to use for the bridging loan” — it is whether to use a bridging loan at all. The sell-first strategy eliminates the bridging cost entirely, but introduces its own set of trade-offs.

Factor Sell First, Then Buy Buy First (Bridging Loan)
Bridging interest cost Nil S$13,750–S$30,000 on S$500k for 6–12 mths
ABSD risk None — only one property at OTP date 20% ABSD if OTP on new home before HDB/condo sold
Negotiating position Strong — you are a cash buyer with no chain Weaker — subject to bridging approval and old sale completing
Temporary accommodation Required (rent or stay with family during transition) None needed — move from old to new directly
Market risk New property price may rise while you wait to buy New property secured; old property sold in current market
Stress and timing Can negotiate purchase at leisure Time pressure from both transaction deadlines simultaneously
Suitable for Buyers with flexible accommodation options; rising market Buyers wanting seamless move; found specific property they want

The ABSD trap is the most important consideration in the buy-first scenario. If you are a Singapore Citizen and you sign an OTP on a new property while still owning your HDB flat or condo, you technically hold two properties at the OTP date. This triggers 20% ABSD on the new purchase for SCs (30% for SPRs on a second property). You can claim back the ABSD under the Married Couple Remission — but only if you complete the sale of the existing property within six months of the new purchase completion (or TOP/CSC date for uncompleted units). Miss the six-month window, and the ABSD is forfeited. Our full ABSD Singapore 2026 guide covers the remission conditions in detail.

Worked Example: The Tans — HDB Upgraders Using a Bridging Loan

Profile: Mr & Mrs Tan, Singapore Citizens, joint gross income S$14,500/month. They own a fully paid-up Tampines 5-room HDB flat (est. market value S$920,000, no outstanding HDB loan, CPF accrued interest to refund approx. S$180,000). They wish to buy a 3-bedroom 99-year leasehold condo in Bedok for S$1,650,000.

Transaction plan: They sign an OTP for the new Bedok condo first (grants on 1 June 2026). They intend to sell the HDB flat, estimated completion 15 August 2026. The bridging period is approximately 2.5 months.

ABSD: The Tans hold two residential properties at the OTP date for the Bedok condo. ABSD of 20% on S$1,650,000 = S$330,000 is payable within 14 days. They apply for the SC Married Couple Remission, planning to complete the HDB sale within 6 months of Bedok condo completion (expected December 2026). If remission is granted, S$330,000 is returned; if the HDB sale slips past the 6-month window, the S$330,000 is forfeited.

BSD on new condo: 1%×S$180k + 2%×S$180k + 3%×S$640k + 4%×S$500k + 5%×S$150k = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$20,000 + S$7,500 = S$52,100.

New condo bank loan (LTV 75%): Maximum S$1,237,500. Minimum 5% cash = S$82,500; remaining 20% (S$330,000) via CPF OA.

CPF available: After CPF accrued interest refund of S$180,000, the Tans expect approximately S$310,000 in CPF OA from the HDB sale — but this only arrives at HDB completion in August. For the June new purchase, their current CPF OA balance is S$95,000. Shortfall for 20% cash-or-CPF at June completion = S$330,000 – S$95,000 = S$235,000 bridging required.

Bridging loan: S$235,000 at 5.5% per annum for approximately 2.5 months = S$235,000 × 5.5% × (2.5/12) ≈ S$2,698 interest. This is the cost of the bridging loan — relatively modest at this quantum and short duration.

New home loan monthly repayment: S$1,237,500 at 3.0% over 25 years ≈ S$5,868/month. TDSR = S$5,868 ÷ S$14,500 = 40.5% — well within the 55% cap. The bridging loan itself adds minimal TDSR impact given its short remaining term at the time of the new home loan drawdown.

HDB sale net proceeds: S$920,000 – CPF accrued interest refund S$180,000 = est. S$740,000 (before conveyancing costs, agent commission and any CPF OA refund offset). The net cash/CPF from the HDB sale repays the bridging loan and tops up the Tans’ CPF OA for the new condo.

This example is illustrative. CPF calculations depend on actual contribution history; ABSD remission requires strict compliance with timelines; engage a conveyancing lawyer before signing any OTP.

Singapore bridging loan vs sell first 6-month carrying cost comparison 2026
Figure 3: Six-month carrying cost comparison — buy first (with bridging loan) vs sell first (no bridging), on a S$500,000 bridging amount and S$1.2M new home loan at 3.0% over 25 years. Sources: Major Singapore banks, indicative rates 2026.

Interest Rates and Fees: What Singapore Banks Charge in 2026

Bridging loan interest rates are not regulated individually — each bank sets its own pricing, typically benchmarked against the prime lending rate or a fixed spread. As at Q1 2026, the indicative rates from major Singapore banks are:

  • DBS / POSB: Approximately 5.5% per annum, daily rest, on the drawn-down outstanding balance.
  • OCBC: Approximately 5.75–6.0% per annum, depending on loan quantum and customer relationship tier.
  • UOB: Approximately 5.5–6.0% per annum.
  • Standard Chartered, HSBC, Maybank: Typically 5.5–6.5% per annum for bridging, priced on a case-by-case basis.

In addition to the interest, some banks charge a processing or commitment fee of 0.5–1.0% of the bridging quantum, though this is waived by some banks as part of a combined new home loan package. There is no early repayment penalty on bridging loans — redeeming early as soon as sale proceeds arrive is standard practice and incurs no penalty.

Always compare the all-in cost (interest + fees) rather than the headline rate, and clarify whether interest is capitalised or must be serviced monthly. Monthly interest servicing on a S$500,000 bridging loan at 5.5% per annum = S$500,000 × 5.5% ÷ 12 ≈ S$2,292 per month — a significant additional monthly cash outflow on top of the new mortgage.

TDSR Implications: How Bridging Loans Affect Your Borrowing Capacity

This is the most frequently misunderstood aspect of bridging loans. Under the MAS TDSR framework, all outstanding debt obligations must be counted when calculating your maximum new home loan. This includes the bridging loan.

In practice, most banks assess TDSR at the point of new home loan approval by considering the bridging loan as a temporary debt that will be retired at the old property’s sale completion. Banks typically apply a “stressed” annualised interest rate (usually at or slightly above the actual bridging rate) to the bridging outstanding balance to calculate a monthly debt equivalent. This monthly equivalent is added to your projected new home mortgage payment, and the combined total must be below 55% of gross income.

The practical impact: if you are borrowing close to the TDSR limit on your new mortgage, a bridging loan may push you over the threshold. In such cases, the bank will either reduce the new home loan quantum or decline the bridging facility. This is a key reason why property lawyers and mortgage brokers recommend getting in-principle approval for the combined new home loan and bridging loan before signing any OTP on the new property.

What Might Change: Bridging Loan Policy Outlook 2026

This section represents forward-looking analysis only and should not be taken as advice.

The MAS has not signalled any specific changes to bridging loan regulation in 2026. However, the broader property cooling measure landscape — particularly the 20% ABSD for SC second-property purchases and the six-month remission window — creates ongoing policy interaction with bridging loans. Any extension of the ABSD remission window (currently six months) would reduce the timing risk for upgraders using bridging loans and might marginally increase demand for such facilities.

Conversely, if MAS tightens the TDSR methodology to apply higher stress rates to bridging loan obligations, the maximum new home loan quantum for borrowers using bridging would fall further. This is speculative at this stage but worth monitoring if you are planning a mid-2026 transaction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use CPF to repay a bridging loan?

No. CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds can only be used for specific approved purposes: purchasing a residential property, servicing the monthly mortgage instalment on that property, or paying stamp duties. Repaying a bridging loan directly from CPF is not an approved use. However, when your existing property (the one being sold) completes its sale, your solicitors will refund any CPF OA amounts you previously drew from that property back to your CPF OA, with accrued interest at 2.5% per annum. Those refunded CPF funds can then be applied toward the new property’s mortgage or downpayment, which indirectly allows you to reduce the amount of cash needed from your bank loan or bridging facility. For the detailed CPF rules on property purchases, see the CPF Board’s official guidelines.

What happens if my existing property sale falls through while I have an outstanding bridging loan?

This is the primary risk of the buy-first strategy. If your sale falls through after the new purchase has completed, you are left holding two properties with no sale proceeds to repay the bridging loan. In that scenario, the bridging loan continues to accrue interest at 5.0–6.5% per annum until a new buyer is found and the sale completes. Additionally, you may be holding two properties simultaneously — triggering 20% ABSD on the newer purchase (for SCs) unless you already paid it and are waiting for remission. You would need to refinance the bridging loan as a longer-term mortgage, which requires bank approval and may not be granted at favourable rates. This scenario underlines why most financial advisers recommend the sell-first sequence for buyers who do not have strong cash reserves to cover an extended bridging period if plans go awry.

How long does it take to get a bridging loan approved in Singapore?

Most major Singapore banks can approve a bridging loan in principle within 2–5 business days, provided you submit complete documentation: income documents (latest 3 months’ payslips or 2 years’ NOA for self-employed), the signed OTP or S&P Agreement for both the purchase and sale properties, and the latest CPF Statement showing your OA balance. Some banks require the new home loan approval to be finalised in parallel with the bridging approval. In practice, most upgraders apply for the combined facility (new home loan + bridging) at the same time, which can take 1–2 weeks for formal approval. Always apply at least 3 weeks before the payment obligation falls due.

Do HDB sellers qualify for a bridging loan?

Yes, if they are simultaneously buying a private property. HDB sellers who are selling their flat and purchasing a private residential property can apply for a bridging loan from a bank, provided the bank also approves the new private property mortgage. Note that HDB resale transactions involving the Central Provident Fund Board typically have a completion timeline of around 8–16 weeks after exercising the OTP, which determines how long the bridging facility needs to remain outstanding. HDB sellers cannot use an HDB Concessionary Loan for a private property purchase — only bank loans apply to private residential transactions.

Is a bridging loan the same as a renovation loan or a personal loan?

No. A bridging loan is a property-secured short-term credit facility specifically designed to cover the timing gap in a simultaneous sale-and-purchase transaction. A renovation loan is an unsecured or property-secured loan used to fund home improvements, typically capped at S$30,000–S$200,000 and repaid over 1–5 years. A personal loan is unsecured, typically carries a higher effective interest rate (6–12% per annum), and is not tied to a specific property transaction. Of the three, only the bridging loan and the renovation loan (if secured) fall within the MAS TDSR framework as property-related credit; a personal loan is counted separately under the broader all-debt-obligation test. Never use a personal loan as a substitute for a bridging loan on a property transaction — the higher cost and the TDSR double-counting will almost always make your financial position worse.

Can I use a bridging loan to buy an investment property I do not intend to sell my current home for?

A bridging loan is specifically designed for the scenario where an existing property is being sold and the proceeds are needed to fund a replacement purchase. Banks will not issue a bridging loan simply because a buyer wants short-term leverage on a second investment property without an underlying sale. For buyers seeking to fund an investment property purchase while retaining their existing home, the standard instruments are a standard bank mortgage (subject to LTV and TDSR) or, for short-term portfolio financing, specialist property investor loans. The 20% ABSD (for SCs) and 30% ABSD (for SPRs) on second properties make leveraged second-property investment a high-bar exercise in Singapore regardless of the loan type.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or banking advice. Bridging loan terms, interest rates, and eligibility criteria vary by bank and individual borrower profile and are subject to change. Always obtain a formal Letter of Offer from your bank and take independent legal and financial advice before entering into any property transaction that relies on a bridging loan. Verify all ABSD, TDSR, and CPF rules with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), and the CPF Board respectively before transacting.
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HDB Upgrader Guide Singapore 2026: How to Move from HDB to Private Property

HDB Upgrader Guide Singapore 2026: How to Move from HDB to Private Property

The HDB upgrader guide Singapore 2026 is your complete, step-by-step resource for navigating the most financially significant move many Singaporeans will ever make: selling your Housing Development Board flat and purchasing a private condominium. Whether you are a Singapore Citizen approaching Minimum Occupation Period, or a permanent resident re-evaluating your property portfolio, understanding the full financial, regulatory, and timing picture is essential before you commit to either transaction.

Quick Answer — HDB Upgrade at a Glance

  • You must meet a Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) of 5 years before selling your HDB flat (resale) or renting it out entirely
  • Singapore Citizens buying a private condo while retaining their HDB pay 20% ABSD on the private property purchase
  • The sell-first strategy eliminates ABSD and is used by the majority of upgraders; the buy-first strategy preserves housing continuity but incurs ABSD upfront
  • Minimum cash component for a private condo: 5% of purchase price (beyond what CPF can cover)
  • Your Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) must not exceed 55% of gross monthly income on all loans combined
  • CPF Ordinary Account savings used for the HDB must be refunded with accrued interest of 2.5% per annum upon sale
  • Full upgrade process (sell HDB + buy private): 7–9 months on a sell-first strategy; legal completion to collect keys adds 3–5 months for new launches
  • A Singapore Citizen household with S$800K HDB equity upgrading to a S$1.5M condo typically needs S$350K–$420K in additional cash/CPF

What Is the HDB-to-Private Upgrade Path?

Singapore’s dual-tier housing market — public HDB flats and private residential properties — creates a well-trodden upgrade path that the Housing Development Board and Urban Redevelopment Authority have both shaped through policy. An HDB flat is built on land sold to the HDB by the State under a 99-year lease; the HDB flat grant system, CPF usage rules, and MOP together form a structured subsidy framework designed to support first-time homeownership. The private condominium market, regulated separately by the URA, operates without the same direct subsidies, but also without income ceilings, nationality restrictions (for citizens and PRs), or MOP constraints once purchased.

The “HDB upgrade” is the act of monetising the subsidised first-home equity — essentially converting the benefit of below-market pricing and CPF grants into cash proceeds — and reinvesting those proceeds into the private market. The CPF Housing Grant for resale HDB flats, administered by the Housing Development Board, can total up to S$80,000 for eligible first-time buyer households; this grant accrues interest at 2.5% per annum and must be returned to CPF upon sale. Upgraders therefore need to account for this accrued interest deduction before calculating usable equity.

MOP: When Can You Sell?

The Minimum Occupation Period is the single most important gating rule. Under HDB regulations, resale HDB flat owners must physically occupy the flat for five years from the date of possession (for resale) or five years from the date of key collection (for new BTO flats purchased directly from the HDB). During the MOP you cannot sell your flat on the open market, rent out the entire flat, or own any private residential property in Singapore.

The five-year MOP was first introduced in 2010 and has remained stable since. For Prime Location Public Housing (PLH) flats announced from October 2021, the MOP is 10 years — a significant constraint for buyers in mature estates like Bishan, Queenstown, or the Pearl’s Hill development announced by MND in March 2026. Always verify the applicable MOP from your HDB letter of offer.

ABSD and the Simultaneous-Ownership Question

The single most expensive decision in the upgrade process is whether to sell your HDB flat before or after buying the private property. The difference is the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty, which is administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS).

Upfront stamp duties and cash needed when upgrading from HDB to private condo Singapore 2026
Figure 1: Upfront stamp duties + minimum cash for a S$1.5M private condo purchase by buyer profile. ABSD is administered by IRAS and is based on the purchase price or market value, whichever is higher.

At the current rates (effective 27 April 2023), a Singapore Citizen buying a second residential property pays 20% ABSD on the purchase price. On a S$1.5M condominium that is S$300,000 payable within 14 days of exercising the Option to Purchase. Permanent Residents buying their first private residential property pay 5% ABSD; their second attracts 30%.

The sell-first strategy means completing the HDB sale (and receiving the full proceeds) before exercising the OTP for the private property. As long as no private residential property is in your name at the point of exercising the OTP, the ABSD charge is 0% for a Singapore Citizen’s first private purchase. This is the financially dominant path for the majority of HDB upgraders and accounts for the bulk of upgrade transactions recorded in URA caveats each year. The downside is an interim period — typically 1–4 months — between HDB completion and private condo collection, during which the family must rent or stay with relatives.

The buy-first strategy preserves residential continuity and is preferred by households with school-age children needing school proximity, or families who cannot face temporary displacement. However, ABSD is payable in full at OTP exercise. IRAS does offer a Remission Scheme for Married Couples: if at least one buyer is a Singapore Citizen and the couple sells the first property within six months of the private purchase date (resale) or key collection date (new launch), IRAS will refund the ABSD on the second property. The refund is not automatic — the couple must apply via the IRAS MyTax Portal within the six-month window.

CPF Usage, Accrued Interest, and Usable Equity

Understanding your actual usable equity from the HDB sale requires two deductions many sellers underestimate. First, the outstanding HDB loan balance (typically financed at the CPF Ordinary Account interest rate of 2.6% per annum) or bank loan must be fully repaid upon completion. Second, all CPF Ordinary Account monies used for the purchase — including the principal plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum compounded annually — must be refunded to your CPF OA before you receive any cash proceeds. The CPF Board, as custodian of the national retirement savings scheme, enforces this return to ensure retirement adequacy is not eroded by property liquidation.

Practical example: a flat purchased in 2016 for S$500,000 where S$150,000 was used from CPF over nine years will have accrued approximately S$38,000 in interest, meaning S$188,000 must be refunded to CPF. This refunded amount is not lost — it returns to your CPF OA for future use, including towards the new private property — but it does reduce the cash-in-hand proceeds from the HDB sale.

TDSR, MSR, and How Much You Can Borrow

Private property mortgage lending in Singapore is governed by the Total Debt Servicing Ratio framework, administered by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). Under TDSR rules, the monthly repayment on all outstanding credit facilities — including the new mortgage — must not exceed 55% of the borrower’s gross monthly income. MAS also applies a stress-test rate: variable-rate loans are assessed at the prevailing rate plus a floor, and fixed-rate loans are assessed at the actual fixed rate or 3.5% (whichever is higher, as of the most recent MAS guidance). This means that even if actual SORA-pegged mortgage rates are below 3.5% today, the bank will calculate affordability as if they were 3.5%.

The Mortgage Servicing Ratio — which caps HDB loan repayments at 30% of income — does not apply to private property. However, banks typically retain their own internal MSR-equivalent underwriting floors. For a household with S$12,000 monthly gross income, the maximum monthly debt service across all credit lines is S$6,600 (55%), and after deducting any car loan or personal loan obligations, the remaining capacity determines the maximum mortgage quantum.

HDB upgrade timeline sell-first strategy 7 to 9 months Singapore 2026
Figure 2: The typical sell-first upgrade timeline. Steps 1–4 cover the HDB sale; Steps 5–7 cover the private condo purchase. Total elapsed time is approximately 7–9 months for a resale private condo; add 2–5 years for a new launch.

The Loan-to-Value Framework for Private Property

Under MAS Notice 632, the maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio for a first housing loan from a financial institution is 75% of the lower of purchase price or market value, provided the loan tenure does not exceed 30 years and the borrower does not exceed 65 years of age at loan maturity. If either condition fails, the LTV drops to 55% or 45%. For upgraders who have fully repaid their HDB loan, the higher 75% LTV applies on the private condo purchase. For those with an outstanding HDB bank loan at the time of application (buy-first strategy), the LTV for the new loan may be reduced to 45%, further increasing the cash component required.

Summary Table: Key Upgrade Figures at a Glance

Parameter Sell-First (No ABSD) Buy-First (ABSD Remission)
ABSD (SC, 2nd property) 0% (sold HDB first) 20% upfront; refundable if HDB sold within 6 months
BSD (on S$1.5M) ~S$44,600 (both strategies) ~S$44,600
Min Cash Required 5% of purchase price 5% + 20% ABSD (cash or financing)
Max LTV 75% (no outstanding loan) 45% (outstanding HDB bank loan retained)
TDSR Limit 55% of gross income 55% of gross income
Typical Timeline 7–9 months (resale condo) 6 months from OTP exercise to sell HDB
CPF OA Accrued Interest 2.5% p.a., must refund to CPF upon HDB sale Same

Worked Example: The Tans Upgrade from Tampines to Condo

Mr and Mrs Tan are a Singapore Citizen couple in their late thirties. They purchased a Tampines HDB 5-room resale flat in 2019 for S$620,000, using S$180,000 from CPF OA and taking an HDB bank loan for S$440,000 at 2.6% per annum. As of April 2026 — seven years into the loan — their outstanding loan balance is approximately S$360,000, and their CPF refund obligation (principal S$180,000 + accrued interest ~S$33,000) totals S$213,000. The flat is valued at S$750,000 on the open market.

Proceeds calculation (sell-first):

  • Sale price: S$750,000
  • Less: outstanding HDB loan repayment: −S$360,000
  • Less: CPF refund obligation: −S$213,000
  • Net cash-in-hand: S$177,000
  • CPF OA balance after refund: S$213,000 (available for new purchase)

New condo purchase at S$1.5M (sell-first, no ABSD):

  • BSD payable to IRAS: ~S$44,600
  • ABSD: S$0 (HDB sold first)
  • 5% minimum cash: S$75,000
  • Loan quantum (75% LTV): S$1,125,000
  • CPF usable (OA): S$213,000 (can cover remaining 20% − 5% cash = S$225,000; short by ~S$12,000 in CPF — top up from cash or savings)
  • Total upfront cash outlay: ~S$132,000 (BSD S$44.6K + cash S$75K + CPF shortfall S$12K)
  • Usable HDB cash proceeds (S$177K) exceed cash outlay (S$132K): surplus ~S$45,000

Combined gross household income for TDSR: S$14,000/month. Monthly mortgage on S$1,125,000 at 3.5% stress rate over 25 years ≈ S$5,630. TDSR = 40.2% — within the 55% cap. The upgrade is financially feasible.

Additional cash needed when HDB upgrading to private condo Singapore citizen second property ABSD 2026
Figure 3: Additional cash or loan funding needed above HDB equity proceeds, by condo price point and usable equity level. All figures assume 20% ABSD (SC 2nd property) and 3% BSD; sell-first scenario removes the ABSD bar entirely.

Why the Upgrade Matters for Singapore Wealth Building

The HDB-to-private upgrade has historically been Singapore’s most reliable individual wealth-building step. URA transaction data consistently shows that private residential prices in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) and Core Central Region (CCR) have outpaced HDB resale price appreciation over 10-year rolling periods, particularly in proximity to MRT interchanges and integrated developments. The 2016–2026 decade saw HDB resale values rise approximately 40–55% in prime estates, while comparable private freehold or 99-year leasehold condos in the same districts appreciated 60–90%.

That said, the upgrade decision is not purely about capital appreciation. Private condo ownership typically involves higher monthly outgoings — management fees, sinking fund contributions, higher property tax under the non-owner-occupier progressive rate (administered by IRAS), and higher mortgage quantum — which compress monthly cash flow for the first 5–10 years. Households should model the cash-flow impact carefully using the actual mortgage rate (SORA + spread, typically 3.4–3.8% as of April 2026 for new floating-rate packages) rather than the stress-test rate.

What Might Come Next: Policy Watch for Upgraders

The current ABSD framework (20% for SC second property) has been in place since April 2023 and shows no sign of immediate revision. MAS and MND have both signalled that macroprudential tools will remain elevated as long as private property prices continue to rise. The URA reported a 0.9% quarter-on-quarter increase in private residential prices in Q1 2026 (full statistics released 25 April 2026), on top of a 0.6% gain in Q4 2025, suggesting sustained upward pressure that gives authorities little reason to ease ABSD. Upgraders planning their move in 2026–2027 should assume the 20% SC ABSD rate persists for the foreseeable future, and should build the sell-first timeline around that assumption.

One area to watch is the Lease Buyback Scheme and CPF use rules for older HDB upgraders (aged 55+), where CPF Retirement Account obligations create a different equity-release calculus. MND’s Committee of Supply 2026 speech hinted at ongoing reviews of CPF Retirement Sum drawdown rules for older owner-occupiers — any loosening could marginally improve equity available for the upgrade among this cohort.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I buy a private condo before selling my HDB flat?

Yes, but as a Singapore Citizen you will be liable for 20% ABSD on the private condo purchase price, payable within 14 days of exercising the OTP. IRAS provides a Remission Scheme for married couples where at least one is a Singapore Citizen: if you sell your HDB within six months of the private condo’s key collection date (new launch) or OTP exercise date (resale), you may apply to IRAS for a refund of the ABSD paid. The refund is not automatic and requires a formal application within the stipulated window. Note that the 5% cash down payment for the private condo is still required upfront and is not refunded.

What happens to the CPF money I used for my HDB flat?

Upon selling your HDB flat, all CPF Ordinary Account monies used for the purchase — including the initial down payment, subsequent monthly instalments drawn from CPF, and any CPF Housing Grants received — must be refunded to your CPF OA with accrued interest at 2.5% per annum compounded annually. This refunded amount re-enters your CPF OA and can be used immediately for the down payment on your private condo purchase (subject to the CPF Withdrawal Limit and Valuation Limit rules). You do not lose this money — it simply remains within the CPF system rather than being paid out as cash. The CPF Board’s property portal at cpf.gov.sg provides a withdrawal calculator to estimate your exact refund obligation.

How much cash do I actually need to upgrade?

The minimum cash component for any private property purchase in Singapore is 5% of the purchase price. This must be paid in cash — CPF OA funds or bank loans cannot cover this component. For a S$1.5M condominium that is S$75,000. On top of this, you will need cash or CPF for the Buyer’s Stamp Duty (approximately S$44,600 on S$1.5M), legal fees (~S$3,000–$5,000), and a valuation fee (~S$300–$600). If you are using the sell-first strategy and have no ABSD to pay, total cash and CPF outlay to exercise the OTP is approximately S$120,000–$130,000 for a S$1.5M property, with the remainder funded by your mortgage and CPF OA balance.

Can I retain my HDB flat and buy a private condo?

Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents are not prohibited from simultaneously owning an HDB flat and a private property, but the financial cost is high: as an SC you will pay 20% ABSD on the private property purchase, and as a PR you will pay 30% ABSD on your second property. Additionally, while you own both, the HDB flat remains subject to HDB rules including the restriction on fully subletting the flat until MOP is met (unless you are above 35, divorced, a single with the right to sublet under HDB’s rules, or have specific HDB approval). If you proceed with this dual-ownership approach, you must ensure your TDSR covers both your HDB loan instalments and the new private mortgage simultaneously.

What is the Temporary Housing Solution during the gap between HDB completion and condo collection?

Most sell-first upgraders experience a 1–6 month gap between HDB legal completion and moving into the new private property. The most common approach is a deferred completion arrangement negotiated with the HDB buyer at the point of signing the OTP — you agree to stay in the flat for a fixed rental period (typically 2–3 months at a market rate) after legal completion while your new home is prepared. Alternatively, families rent a unit in the open market at prevailing rates, or stay with extended family. Factoring rental costs of S$2,000–$4,500 per month (depending on unit size and district) into your upgrade budget is essential, particularly for the east and central regions where new launch condo waiting periods can extend to 3–5 years.

Are there specific private condos I cannot buy with my HDB equity?

There are no restrictions on which private condominium an HDB upgrader may purchase. However, two practical constraints often apply. First, Restricted Residential Properties under the Residential Property Act — Good Class Bungalows and most landed housing in Singapore — require Ministerial approval for Singapore Permanent Residents and are unavailable to foreigners entirely; Singapore Citizens may purchase without restriction. Second, if your usable CPF OA balance is below the Valuation Limit (the lower of purchase price and market value), your CPF usage will be capped; you must fund the shortfall from cash. Always check the CPF Board’s updated Valuation Limit rules at cpf.gov.sg before committing to a price point.

What happens if I cannot sell my HDB within the 6-month ABSD remission window?

If you purchased a private condo while retaining your HDB flat (buy-first strategy) and are unable to sell the HDB within six months of the private condo’s key collection date or OTP exercise date, the ABSD remission is forfeited — the 20% ABSD you paid upfront is not refunded. In practice, HDB resale transactions in Singapore typically complete within 8–16 weeks of listing, so the six-month window is generally achievable if you list the HDB promptly after exercising the condo OTP. The risk is greatest when buying a resale condo (shorter completion timeline) while your HDB is slow to sell. If you are uncertain, the sell-first strategy eliminates this risk entirely.

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Disclaimer

This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Stamp duty rates, CPF rules, HDB regulations, and MAS lending guidelines are subject to change; always verify current figures directly with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), the CPF Board, the Housing Development Board, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore. Consult a licensed property agent, bank mortgage specialist, and solicitor before making any property transaction decision. Nothing in this article should be treated as a solicitation to buy or sell any property.


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