S$1.728M HDB Resale Record: City Vue @ Henderson Sets New All-Time High in April 2026

S$1.728M HDB Resale Record: City Vue @ Henderson Sets New All-Time High in April 2026

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Quick Answer — S$1.728M Henderson Road HDB Record

  • New record: A 5-room flat at 96A Henderson Road (City Vue @ Henderson) sold for S$1,728,000 in April 2026 — Singapore’s most expensive HDB resale flat on record.
  • Previous record: S$1,700,000 — a 5-room flat at SkyTerrace @ Dawson (92 Dawson Road), transacted in February 2026.
  • Price per square foot: Approximately S$1,421 psf on a 113 sq m (1,216 sq ft) floor area — reflecting the unit’s high floor, long remaining lease (92+ years), and prime city-fringe location.
  • Location premium: City Vue @ Henderson is in District 3/4, Bukit Merah — within walking distance of Redhill MRT and the CBD, straddling Tiong Bahru and the Greater Southern Waterfront redevelopment corridor.
  • Q1 2026 HDB resale market context: HDB resale prices fell 0.1% in Q1 2026 (first quarterly decline since Q2 2019), yet individual record transactions continue in premium projects where lease longevity, height, and location converge.
  • No capital gains tax: The seller pays no tax on the gain — Singapore does not impose capital gains tax on residential property profits (unless IRAS classifies the seller as a property trader).

Singapore’s HDB Resale Record Falls Again — S$1.728M at City Vue @ Henderson

Singapore’s HDB resale market has produced another all-time record. A five-room flat at 96A Henderson Road, in the City Vue @ Henderson development in Bukit Merah, was transacted in April 2026 for S$1,728,000 — eclipsing the previous record of S$1,700,000 set just two months earlier at SkyTerrace @ Dawson in Queenstown. The sale was first reported by EdgeProp Singapore and subsequently confirmed by multiple property media outlets citing HDB resale data.

The unit spans 113 square metres (approximately 1,216 sq ft), placing it at a price per square foot of roughly S$1,421 — significantly above the median resale psf for 5-room HDB flats in mature estates. The block is a high-rise development with the unit reportedly located between the 46th and 48th floor, delivering unobstructed views consistent with the premium that buyers in this market are demonstrably willing to pay.

Singapore HDB resale record price history 2019 to April 2026 bar chart
Figure 1: Singapore HDB resale all-time record price progression from 2019 to April 2026. Source: HDB resale caveats, EdgeProp, media reports. S$ million.

Why City Vue @ Henderson Commands Such a Premium

Several factors distinguish City Vue @ Henderson from other high-value HDB developments. The project’s 99-year lease commenced in 2019, meaning the unit sold in April 2026 still carries approximately 92 years and one month of remaining lease — an unusually long lease for resale HDB stock, and a key driver of bank financing terms (CPF usage and bank LTV are both tied to remaining lease calculations). Buyers’ CPF withdrawals are significantly less restricted on units with long leases, which expands the effective buyer pool and supports higher transaction prices.

The development sits at the nexus of three mature estates — Tiong Bahru, Redhill, and Bukit Merah — with convenient access to Redhill MRT (East-West Line), the Ayer Rajah Expressway, and the emerging Greater Southern Waterfront corridor. The proximity to the CBD (approximately 10–12 minutes by car or 20 minutes by MRT) makes City Vue a compelling alternative to city-fringe private condominiums that now command S$2,500–S$3,000 psf.

The Record in Context: Where Singapore’s HDB Prices Have Travelled

The S$1.728M transaction is the latest milestone in a decade-long upward march in Singapore’s most sought-after HDB units. The first time any HDB flat crossed S$1 million was in 2012, when a Bishan flat changed hands at that landmark price. Since then, the number of million-dollar HDB transactions has grown from a handful per year to 412 in Q1 2026 alone — a quarterly record that LovelyHomes reported in May 2026.

City Vue Henderson HDB record vs comparable high-value HDB resale flats Singapore 2026
Figure 2: The Henderson Road record transaction versus comparable high-value HDB resale flats since 2021. Source: HDB resale caveats, media reports. ★ = current all-time record.

The record has changed hands four times in the past four years: Pinnacle @ Duxton held it for much of 2021–2022, SkyTerrace @ Dawson took over in 2023 and again in February 2026, before City Vue @ Henderson set the current benchmark. All four record-holding projects share a common profile: post-2010 completion, high-rise towers (40+ storeys), long remaining lease, and prime or city-fringe locations.

The Broader Q1 2026 HDB Resale Market — A Paradox

What makes this record particularly striking is its timing. HDB resale prices fell 0.1% in Q1 2026 — the first quarterly decline in nearly seven years, according to HDB’s flash estimate released in April 2026. This retreat reflects the impact of cooling measures (particularly the tightening of HDB loan terms and tighter CPF usage rules on shorter-lease flats), a surge in BTO completions adding resale supply, and broader buyer caution. Yet the top end of the market appears immune to this softening: premium units in iconic developments continue to find buyers willing to pay record prices.

This bifurcation — where aggregate prices soften while individual top-tier transactions set records — reflects a structural feature of Singapore’s HDB resale market. The mass market is sensitive to interest rates, CPF limits, and HDB loan policy. But the sub-segment of luxury-equivalent HDB units (high-floor, long-lease, prime-location) attracts a different buyer profile: affluent upgraders, property investors seeking ABSD-free alternatives, and owner-occupiers prioritising lifestyle over value. For this cohort, S$1.7 million on a 92-year lease in the city fringe competes directly with a S$2.5–3M private condo nearby.

Summary: Key Facts About the Record Transaction

Detail Particulars
Block / Address 96A Henderson Road, Singapore
Development City Vue @ Henderson
Flat type 5-Room (113 sq m / approx. 1,216 sq ft)
Transaction price S$1,728,000
Price per sq ft ~S$1,421 psf
Transaction date April 2026
Remaining lease ~92 years 1 month (lease commenced 2019)
Nearest MRT Redhill MRT (East-West Line)
Previous record S$1,700,000 at SkyTerrace @ Dawson (Feb 2026)

What This Means for HDB Buyers and Sellers

For sellers of similar premium HDB units — high-floor, long-lease, city-fringe — the Henderson Road transaction provides a fresh comparable that may support higher asking prices. For buyers in this sub-segment, the record signals that the ceiling for what the market will pay is still rising, even as aggregate HDB resale prices soften. Buyers should note that at S$1.7M+, they are firmly in competition with suburban private condominiums (and paying significant premiums over mass-market HDB resale) — the decision must weigh the long lease, the ABSD savings versus a private purchase, and the resale liquidity of a premium HDB flat versus a private condo in the same location.

Is S$2 million the next HDB resale milestone? Multiple industry commentators cited in media coverage of this transaction believe so — pointing to the growing supply of post-2015 high-rise HDB blocks with 90+ year remaining leases, rising aspirations for public housing living standards, and the structural ABSD wedge that makes a high-value HDB more economical than a comparable private condo for a second-property buyer. LovelyHomes will track this space closely.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the seller liable for any taxes on the S$1.728M gain?

Singapore has no capital gains tax, so the seller pays no tax on any profit from the sale. The Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) for HDB flats was removed in August 2010 — so unlike private residential property, there is no SSD on HDB resale transactions regardless of the holding period. The seller does have to refund any CPF monies withdrawn for the purchase (plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum) to their CPF Ordinary Account, and repay any outstanding HDB or bank mortgage from the proceeds. The net cash in hand after those deductions is entirely tax-free.

Can foreigners or PRs buy a resale HDB flat?

Singapore Permanent Residents (SPRs) may purchase resale HDB flats under the Non-Citizen family scheme or the Non-Citizen Spouse scheme, subject to forming an eligible family nucleus and satisfying the Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) and SPR quota for the block. Foreigners (non-PR, non-citizen) may not purchase HDB resale flats — HDB ownership is restricted to Singapore Citizens and approved SPRs. SPR buyers of resale HDB flats pay the standard buyer’s stamp duty; they do not pay ABSD on the resale HDB flat itself (ABSD applies only to the purchase of private residential property by PRs and foreigners).

Why does remaining lease length matter so much for high-value HDB flats?

Three key mechanisms tie HDB flat value to remaining lease: (1) CPF withdrawal rules — buyers can withdraw CPF savings only up to the portion of the purchase price proportionate to the remaining lease covering the buyer to age 95; flats with shorter leases restrict CPF usage, reducing effective buying power. (2) Bank financing — most banks cap the loan quantum so that the loan tenure does not extend beyond the remaining lease, meaning shorter-lease flats may only qualify for short-term loans at higher monthly repayments. (3) Resale liquidity — flats with very short leases (below 30–40 years) become increasingly difficult to sell, as buyers face compounding restrictions. City Vue @ Henderson’s 92-year remaining lease eliminates all three constraints entirely, making it as financeable as a new-build.

Are there income restrictions on buying a resale HDB flat at this price level?

No income ceiling applies to the purchase of a resale HDB flat — any eligible buyer (regardless of household income) may purchase a resale flat at any price. However, the grants available to help buyers are income-capped. At S$1.728M, the buyer almost certainly has a household income well above the S$9,000/month EHG ceiling and likely above the S$14,000/month Family Grant ceiling, meaning they probably received no CPF housing grants. The HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter — now a mandatory pre-condition for any HDB resale purchase — will confirm a buyer’s grant eligibility before they exercise the OTP.

What is the Greater Southern Waterfront and how does it affect Henderson Road values?

The Greater Southern Waterfront (GSW) is Singapore’s largest urban transformation project — a 30-kilometre stretch of waterfront from Pasir Panjang to Marina East, including the relocation of Pasir Panjang terminal and the redevelopment of the former Keppel shipyard site into approximately 9,000 new homes and mixed commercial uses. Henderson Road sits at the northern fringe of this precinct. As GSW developments materialise over the 2025–2035 period, property analysts expect the surrounding Bukit Merah/Redhill area to benefit from improved amenities, green corridor access, and increased connectivity — providing a structural tailwind to property values in City Vue @ Henderson and similar developments in the area.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and editorial purposes only. Transaction data cited is sourced from publicly available HDB resale caveat records and media reports; individual transactions may be subject to verification. Property values, HDB policies, and grant conditions may change. This is not financial or property investment advice. Always consult a licensed property agent and your financial adviser before making any property decision. Official references: HDB, IRAS, URA.

HDB Income Ceiling Singapore 2026: BTO, EC, EHG & Resale Grant Limits Explained

HDB Income Ceiling Singapore 2026: BTO, EC, EHG & Resale Grant Limits Explained

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Quick Answer — HDB Income Ceiling Singapore 2026

  • Standard BTO: Household gross income ≤ S$7,000/month (family); S$3,500/month (singles applying for 2-room Flexi).
  • PLH and Plus BTO flats: Higher ceiling of S$14,000/month applies to flats in prime and plus locations (e.g., Pearl’s Hill, Rochor, Tengah Plantation).
  • Executive Condominium (EC): S$16,000/month — the highest income ceiling among subsidised housing schemes, effective 1 January 2025.
  • EHG (Enhanced CPF Housing Grant): S$9,000/month household income ceiling for grant eligibility; the lower your income, the higher the grant (up to S$120,000 for families).
  • Family Grant (resale flats): S$14,000/month ceiling; up to S$80,000 grant for buying a resale flat from a non-related seller.
  • Income is assessed on a household basis — all persons listed in the application must declare their income, including variable pay averaged over 12 months.
  • Investment income is excluded — dividends, capital gains, and interest income are not counted. NS allowance is also excluded.
  • No income ceiling for resale HDB flats — there is no maximum income limit to purchase a resale HDB flat itself, though the grants you can receive are income-capped.

What Is the HDB Income Ceiling?

The HDB income ceiling is the maximum gross monthly household income a family or individual may earn in order to be eligible to purchase a new HDB flat (BTO), an Executive Condominium, or to receive CPF housing grants for a resale flat. The ceilings are set by the Housing and Development Board (HDB) and the Ministry of National Development (MND) as part of Singapore’s public housing means-testing framework, which aims to ensure that subsidised housing resources are directed to households that genuinely need them.

Income ceilings have evolved significantly since HDB first introduced means-testing. The current standard BTO ceiling of S$7,000/month was set in September 2019 when the Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) was introduced, replacing the earlier S$12,000 cap for non-mature estate BTOs and S$8,000 for mature estate BTOs. The PLH and Plus flat ceilings of S$14,000 were introduced with the new housing classification framework in October 2021 and October 2024 respectively.

HDB income ceiling by flat type and grant Singapore 2026 comparison table
Figure 1: HDB income ceilings by scheme and grant type, Singapore 2026. All amounts are gross monthly household income. Source: HDB, CPF Board.

Income Ceilings by Flat Type — Full 2026 Breakdown

Standard BTO Flats: S$7,000/Month

For the majority of new HDB BTO flats in non-prime, non-plus locations (classified as “Standard” flats), the household gross income ceiling is S$7,000 per month. This applies to families — defined as a married or engaged couple (or family nucleus including parent/child). Singles applying under the Single Singapore Citizen scheme for a 2-room Flexi flat in the non-mature estates have a ceiling of S$7,000 per person (individual income, not household).

The S$7,000 ceiling is intentionally conservative — it targets the bottom 60–65% of Singapore’s household income distribution. Households above this ceiling are expected to either purchase an EC, a private condominium, or a resale HDB flat (where there is no income ceiling for the purchase itself, though grants are still capped).

PLH and Plus BTO Flats: S$14,000/Month

Introduced under HDB’s new flat classification framework that took effect in October 2024, Plus and Prime Location Housing (PLH) flats carry a higher income ceiling of S$14,000/month. These flats are located in attractive areas close to the city (e.g., Bukit Merah, Queenstown, Toa Payoh for PLH; Woodlands, Tengah for Plus). The higher ceiling reflects the greater demand for these locations and the recognition that buyers in these markets tend to have higher incomes, while still needing a subsidised option. Plus and PLH flats come with stricter resale conditions — a 10-year Minimum Occupation Period (compared to 5 years for Standard), and an income ceiling on resale (buyers of PLH resale flats must also satisfy a S$14,000 income ceiling).

Executive Condominiums: S$16,000/Month

The EC income ceiling was raised from S$14,000 to S$16,000 per month effective 1 January 2025. This makes ECs accessible to a wider band of dual-income professionals who earn too much for standard BTOs but are priced out of private condominiums. An EC is a hybrid housing type — built by private developers but sold at subsidised prices with HDB eligibility rules for the first 10 years, before it privatises and becomes fully marketable. The S$16,000 ceiling targets households at roughly the 80th percentile of Singapore’s income distribution.

What counts as income for HDB BTO application Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Income types and how they are treated in HDB income ceiling assessment. Source: HDB, CPF Board.

How HDB Calculates Household Income

HDB assesses household income based on the gross monthly income of all persons listed in the flat application (the applicant, occupiers, and any essential occupiers). The income of all listed individuals is summed to arrive at the household total.

Fixed Employment Income

For salaried employees, the assessed income is the gross monthly salary as reflected in the applicant’s payslip or CPF contribution records. Gross salary includes basic pay plus any fixed allowances, and is assessed before deduction of employee CPF contributions, income tax, or other deductions.

Variable, Commission, and Bonus Income

Variable income (commissions, performance bonuses, overtime pay) is averaged over the preceding 12 months. If the applicant has been employed for less than 12 months, the average is calculated over the actual period of employment. Applicants who received a large one-off bonus in a single month cannot exclude it — HDB takes the 12-month average, which will include that month’s higher figure.

Self-Employment and Gig Income

For self-employed persons, freelancers, and gig workers, HDB assesses income based on the average monthly income from the preceding 12 months, typically computed from the latest available Notice of Assessment (NOA) from IRAS, or from CPF contribution records for self-employed persons who make voluntary MediSave contributions. Applicants who have not filed an IRAS tax return may be required to submit a statutory declaration of income.

What Is Excluded

Investment income (dividends, interest, capital gains from shares or property) is explicitly excluded from HDB’s income assessment. National Service (NS) full-time allowances and NSmen in-camp training allowances are also excluded. A family member who is currently on no-pay leave, studying full-time, or retired with zero employment income contributes S$0 to the household total.

HDB income ceiling worked example Lim couple borderline case Singapore 2026
Figure 3: Worked example — the Lim couple’s borderline income assessment for standard BTO eligibility.

Grant Income Ceilings — EHG, Family Grant, and PHG

Even where a household meets the income ceiling for purchasing a flat, the grants available are separately subject to their own income tests. The Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) — the largest and most progressive grant — has a ceiling of S$9,000/month for families. Below this ceiling, the EHG scales from S$5,000 (household income S$7,001–S$9,000) up to S$120,000 (household income ≤ S$1,500). Families earning between S$7,001 and S$9,000 can still receive the EHG for a resale flat purchase even though they are ineligible for a standard BTO.

The Family Grant for resale flats (up to S$80,000 for buying from a non-related party) and the Proximity Housing Grant (up to S$30,000 for living near parents or married child) both have a ceiling of S$14,000/month. These grants can be stacked with the EHG where eligibility is met, for a maximum combined grant of S$230,000 on a resale flat.

Summary Table — Income Ceilings and Grant Amounts at a Glance

Scheme / Grant Income Ceiling (Family) Max Amount Notes
Standard BTO (purchase eligibility) S$7,000/mth No income ceiling for resale HDB purchase
PLH / Plus BTO S$14,000/mth 10-yr MOP; resale also income-capped
Executive Condominium (EC) S$16,000/mth Raised from S$14,000 effective Jan 2025
EHG (family) S$9,000/mth S$120,000 Progressive — lower income = higher grant
EHG (singles) S$4,500/mth S$60,000 2-room Flexi BTO or resale
Family Grant (resale) S$14,000/mth S$80,000 Buying from unrelated seller
Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) S$14,000/mth S$30,000 Within 4 km of parents/married child
Max combined grants (resale) Depends S$230,000 EHG + Family Grant + PHG stacked

Worked Example: The Lim Couple’s Borderline Income Situation

Mr Lim, 31, earns S$4,200 basic salary per month as a logistics executive, plus an average of S$400 monthly commission over the past 12 months. Mrs Lim, 29, earns S$2,800 as a primary school teacher. They are first-timer applicants hoping to ballot for a 4-room Standard BTO flat in Sengkang.

Income assessment: Mr Lim’s assessed income = S$4,200 + S$400 = S$4,600/mth. Mrs Lim’s assessed income = S$2,800/mth. Household total = S$4,600 + S$2,800 = S$7,400/mth.

Result: S$7,400 exceeds the S$7,000 standard BTO ceiling — the Lim couple is not eligible for a Standard BTO flat. They have three practical options: (1) apply for a PLH or Plus BTO flat (S$14,000 ceiling) in a prime location; (2) apply for a resale HDB flat (no income ceiling on the purchase itself, though their EHG would be capped at S$9,000 ceiling — which they meet, so they’d receive some EHG); or (3) consider an EC (S$16,000 ceiling). Note that if Mr Lim’s commission is reduced (e.g., in a slow quarter), his income for that 12-month window may average below S$400, potentially bringing the household total to or below S$7,000.

Why Income Ceilings Matter for Singapore’s Housing Market

Income ceilings are the primary demand-management tool for Singapore’s public housing system. By restricting BTO eligibility to lower- and middle-income households, HDB ensures that its heavily subsidised flat supply — which often prices new flats at 20–40% below comparable resale market values — reaches the households that most need the subsidy. Without income ceilings, wealthier households would compete for and crowd out subsidised flats, undermining the social purpose of public housing.

The existence of multiple ceiling tiers (S$7,000, S$14,000, S$16,000) also creates a housing ladder that mirrors Singapore’s income distribution: Standard BTOs for lower-middle income families, Plus/PLH and ECs for upper-middle income families, and the private market for those above S$16,000/month household income.

What Might Change: Income Ceiling Reviews

(This section contains editorial analysis; it does not constitute financial or housing advice.)

HDB reviews income ceilings periodically in line with median household income growth. The last major revision was in September 2019 (standard BTO ceiling reduced from varying rates to a uniform S$7,000 with EHG introduced simultaneously). The EC ceiling was raised from S$14,000 to S$16,000 in January 2025. With Singapore’s median household income having grown approximately 15–20% between 2019 and 2025, some housing analysts expect MND to review the standard BTO ceiling again in the 2026–2028 planning cycle. A rise to S$8,000 or S$8,500 would make a meaningful difference for dual-income couples earning in the S$7,000–S$8,500 range who are currently excluded from BTO eligibility.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there an income ceiling to buy a resale HDB flat?

No — there is no maximum income ceiling for purchasing a resale HDB flat. Any Singapore Citizen or Permanent Resident who meets the general eligibility conditions (citizenship/PR status, family nucleus or age requirement, ownership restriction) may buy a resale flat regardless of how high their household income is. Income ceilings only apply to new BTO flats and ECs. However, the grants available for resale flat buyers (EHG, Family Grant, PHG) do have income ceilings as described in this article, so higher-earning households buying resale may receive reduced or zero grants.

What happens if my income exceeds the ceiling after I ballot for a BTO flat?

Income eligibility is assessed at the time of flat application (ballot) and again at the time of flat booking (signing the agreement for lease). If your household income exceeds the ceiling at the time of booking, HDB may disqualify the application. However, if income rises after booking but before key collection (completion), you generally remain eligible as the assessment was already made. Applicants should be honest about their income at both key assessment points, as a deliberate misrepresentation can result in disqualification and potentially being barred from future HDB applications.

Does my spouse’s income count if we apply together?

Yes. All persons listed in the HDB flat application — whether as applicants or occupiers — must declare their income, and all declared incomes are summed to form the household income. If your spouse is listed in the application (even as an occupier), their income is included. If your spouse has zero income (e.g., they are a homemaker or full-time student), their contribution to the household total is zero. Couples who are applying under the Fiancé/Fiancée scheme must also include their future spouse’s income.

Can I include rental income from my current property to meet the income threshold for EHG?

Rental income from non-HDB private property is generally included in HDB’s income assessment as it forms part of gross monthly income. However, this question is more often asked in the opposite direction — households trying to keep their income below the ceiling for grant eligibility. If including rental income pushes your household total above the relevant ceiling, you would lose eligibility for that grant tier. IRAS’ Notice of Assessment is the documentary basis for verifying rental income. Rental income from a sub-let HDB room (which is subject to HDB’s sub-letting rules) is also included in gross income.

What is the income ceiling for single Singaporeans buying a BTO?

Single Singapore Citizens aged 35 and above may apply for a 2-room Flexi BTO flat under the Single Singapore Citizen scheme. The income ceiling is S$7,000 per month (individual income, not household). Singles are not eligible for 3-room, 4-room, or larger BTO flats in the open market, though they may apply jointly with parents under the Joint Singles Scheme or with a single sibling. For resale flats, singles may purchase any size flat (from 2-room up to 5-room) without an income ceiling on the purchase, and may receive the EHG for Singles (ceiling S$4,500/month, max S$60,000).

How is income assessed for a person who recently started a new job?

For a person who has been employed for less than 12 months, HDB averages their gross income over the actual period of employment — not a full 12 months. For example, if Mr Tan started his job 6 months ago with a gross salary of S$5,000/month, his assessed income is S$5,000 (the monthly figure, not S$30,000 / 12 = S$2,500). Fixed monthly salary is straightforward; variable pay would be averaged over those 6 months. Someone who recently joined a new employer at a higher salary cannot use the income figure from their previous lower-paying job — HDB uses the current employment’s income for the averaging calculation.

Is the Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) related to the income ceiling?

No. The Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) and the SPR Quota are separate eligibility rules that restrict the racial composition of each HDB block and neighbourhood — they ensure no single ethnic group dominates any given HDB block. EIP applies at the point of resale flat purchase (you can only buy in certain blocks depending on your ethnicity and the current racial mix of that block) and has nothing to do with income. The income ceiling and the EIP are independent eligibility checks — a buyer must satisfy both, but they measure completely different things.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or housing advice. HDB income ceilings, grant amounts, and eligibility conditions may be revised by HDB, MND, or CPF Board at any time. Always verify the latest eligibility requirements directly with HDB at hdb.gov.sg or via the HDB Flat Portal before submitting any application. Additional references: CPF Board, IRAS.

HDB Resale Procedure Singapore 2026: HFE Letter, OTP, Resale Portal & Key Collection

HDB Resale Procedure Singapore 2026: HFE Letter, OTP, Resale Portal & Key Collection

Buying an HDB resale flat is the most common large-ticket transaction Singaporeans ever make outside the BTO ballot — and the procedure has changed materially since the HDB Resale Portal went fully digital in 2018, and again with the HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter taking over from the old HLE / HDB Loan Eligibility letter on 9 May 2023. This guide walks you through the eight milestones, the ~8 to 12-week timeline, the four eligibility schemes, the cash-versus-CPF split for a S$650,000 4-room buyer, and the small-print mistakes that delay completion.

Quick Answer

  • The end-to-end HDB resale runs ~8 to 12 weeks once buyer and seller have a valid HFE letter.
  • The buyer pays a S$1 to S$1,000 option fee for the OTP, then up to a further S$5,000 in option exercise fee within 21 days.
  • Resale applications are filed jointly via the HDB Resale Portal; both parties must submit within 7 days of each other.
  • The buyer’s cost stack on a S$650,000 flat includes a 20% to 25% down-payment, BSD (~S$14,400), legal fees, COV if any, and grant offsets.
  • Eligibility flows through one of five schemes (Public, Fiancé, Single SC, Joint Singles, Non-Citizen Spouse) — each with its own income ceiling and age gate.
  • HDB approval typically issues 2 to 4 weeks after submission; completion appointment is roughly 6 to 8 weeks after approval.
  • The buyer collects the keys at the completion appointment after paying the remaining balance and confirming all CPF refunds and stamp duties are settled.
HDB Resale Procedure Singapore 2026 hero — buyer step-by-step guide
LovelyHomes — the HDB resale procedure broken down for first-time and second-time buyers.

Step 1: HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter

Since 9 May 2023 the HFE letter has consolidated what used to be three separate documents (HLE letter, eligibility-to-buy and CPF housing grant). Both buyer and seller obtain it via the HDB Flat Portal using Singpass, and it tells you in one document: which schemes you qualify under, the maximum HDB-loan amount, the CPF housing grants available, and the time-stamped income ceiling check. The letter is valid for 6 months; if it expires before completion you must reapply (frequent in slow-moving markets).

Sellers get an HFE too, because HDB needs to verify the seller’s MOP status, ownership share, and any outstanding subsidies that affect the next-flat resale levy. If you are about to list and you have not pulled an HFE in the last 6 months, do that first — listings without a valid HFE create the highest rate of completion-stage delays.

Step 2: Searching, viewing, and the OTP

Resale flats are listed on a mix of platforms: HDB’s own listings, classifieds, and private property portals. Once a buyer and seller agree on a price, the seller grants an Option to Purchase (OTP), accompanied by a non-refundable option fee of between S$1 and S$1,000 (mutually agreed; capped by HDB at S$1,000). The OTP locks the flat for 21 days during which the buyer must decide whether to exercise.

If the buyer exercises the OTP, an option exercise fee (option fee + exercise fee combined cannot exceed S$5,000) is paid. The seller is now contractually committed to sell. If the buyer does not exercise within 21 days, the OTP lapses and the option fee is forfeited; the seller is then free to grant a new OTP to another buyer.

HDB resale 8-step timeline Singapore 2026
Figure 1: HDB resale eight-milestone timeline from HFE letter to key collection (~8 to 12 weeks).

Step 3: Resale application via Resale Portal

Both buyer and seller submit a resale application on the HDB Resale Portal, ideally within 7 days of each other. The portal validates eligibility, the OTP details, sale price, financing intent, and the schemes claimed. HDB then runs financial-credibility checks, MOP checks, and ABSD-cross-checks against any other residential property held.

This stage requires both parties to be available digitally (Singpass), to upload supporting documents (NRIC, marriage certificate where applicable, supporting income evidence if claiming grants), and to acknowledge HDB’s resale terms. Most rejections at this stage are administrative — mismatched dates, missing documents, lapsed HFE — so attention to detail saves weeks.

Step 4: Valuation, BSD and stamp duty

HDB’s appointed valuer assesses the flat. Valuation determines the maximum HDB-loan amount and the maximum CPF that can be used. If the agreed sale price exceeds the valuation, the difference is Cash-Over-Valuation (COV), payable in cash by the buyer. COV cannot be loaned, cannot be paid from CPF, and cannot be financed in any way.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is then levied on the higher of price or valuation: 1% on the first S$180,000, 2% on the next S$180,000, 3% on the next S$640,000, and 4% on the balance up to S$1.5m (5% above S$1.5m, 6% above S$3m). For a S$650,000 4-room flat, BSD comes to S$14,400. ABSD applies if the buyer already owns another residential property (5% to 60% depending on profile).

HDB resale buyer cost breakdown S$650k 4-room flat Singapore 2026
Figure 2: indicative buyer cost stack for a S$650,000 4-room HDB resale (CPF-funded down-payment, BSD, COV, fees).

Step 5: Eligibility schemes

Most resale buyers fall under the Public Scheme (married couple plus dependants, S$14,000 grant income ceiling). Engaged couples use the Fiancé/Fiancée Scheme, with a marriage certificate due within 3 months of key collection. Single Singapore Citizens 35 and above use the Single Singapore Citizen Scheme (S$7,000 grant ceiling) or the Joint Singles Scheme (up to four single SCs aged 35+). The Non-Citizen Spouse Scheme covers a Singapore Citizen plus a foreign or PR spouse.

HDB resale eligibility schemes Singapore 2026
Figure 3: HDB resale eligibility schemes with income ceilings and minimum-age gates.

Step 6: Completion appointment and key collection

Roughly 6 to 8 weeks after HDB approval, both parties attend the completion appointment at HDB Hub. Solicitors are present (most buyers and sellers use HDB’s appointed solicitor for cost efficiency at S$1,200 to S$2,400 typical), and the appointment confirms: full payment of the balance, settlement of any outstanding bank loans on the seller’s side, CPF refunds with accrued interest to the seller’s CPF accounts, BSD payment, and the formal transfer of the lease.

The buyer then receives the keys. The flat is now legally yours, subject to any encumbrances disclosed and survives a “deemed handover” on the completion date.

Summary table — milestone to action

Stage Buyer Action Seller Action Typical Time
HFE letter Apply via HDB Flat Portal Apply via HDB Flat Portal 7–14 days
OTP issued Pay option fee S$1–S$1,000 Issue OTP, lock flat 21 days Day 0
OTP exercised Pay exercise fee (combined ≤S$5k) Receive exercise fee Day 1–21
Resale application Submit on Resale Portal Submit within 7 days Day 21–35
Valuation Cover valuation fee Provide access to flat Week 4–6
HDB approval Receive in-principle approval Receive in-principle approval Week 6–8
Completion appointment Pay balance, receive keys Receive sale proceeds Week 8–12

Worked Example: Tan family, S$650,000 4-room Sengkang resale

Profile. Mr Tan, 32, and Mrs Tan, 30, both Singapore Citizens, both first-time buyers. Combined household income S$11,200/mth, both employed. Buying a S$650,000 4-room resale flat in Sengkang from an upgrader couple. Using the HDB concessionary loan (HFE letter cleared at S$520,000 max loan).

Day 0. OTP issued. Tan family pays S$1,000 option fee.

Day 18. OTP exercised. Tan family pays S$4,000 exercise fee (S$5,000 combined). Resale application submitted to HDB Resale Portal same day. Seller follows on Day 22.

Week 5. Valuation comes in at S$640,000 — i.e. S$10,000 COV due in cash on top of the loan and CPF.

Buyer’s cost breakdown:

  • HDB-loan principal: S$487,500 (75% of price) — HDB pays the seller directly at completion.
  • Down-payment: S$162,500 (25% of price) — typically S$130,000 from CPF OA + S$32,500 cash (5% min cash). Tan family uses S$130,000 CPF OA + S$32,500 cash.
  • BSD: S$14,400 on S$650,000 (1%/2%/3% tiers).
  • COV: S$10,000 in cash.
  • Legal fees (HDB solicitor): ~S$1,200.
  • Valuation + admin fees: ~S$240 + misc.
  • Enhanced CPF Housing Grant: not applicable (income S$11.2k > S$9k ceiling for EHG).
  • Family Grant: S$50,000 (Public Scheme, both first-timers, household income S$11.2k qualifies).

Net cash out-of-pocket on day of completion: S$32,500 (cash down-payment) + S$14,400 (BSD) + S$10,000 (COV) + S$1,200 (legal) + ~S$300 (valuation/misc) = ~S$58,400 cash, plus S$130,000 from CPF OA. The S$50,000 Family Grant lands in the Tan family’s CPF OA after completion, partially refunding the CPF deduction.

What this means for you

The single most expensive mistake first-time resale buyers make is over-reaching on COV in a hot market. COV is paid in cash, not CPF, and it is not loanable. A S$30,000 COV adds ~5% to the immediate cash burden of a S$650,000 flat. Track recent transacted prices for the same block on HDB’s resale price portal and use that — not asking-price averages — as your valuation anchor.

The second most common delay is the HFE letter expiring mid-process. If the seller takes more than 6 months from HFE issuance to completion (rare but happens with disputes or financing delays), the HFE must be reapplied, which can add 1 to 2 weeks. Re-pulling early is cheap insurance.

What might come next

HDB has signalled further digitalisation of the resale workflow over 2026 to 2027, with potential e-conveyancing extensions and a tighter integration between the Resale Portal, IRAS stamp-duty endpoints and CPF Board’s grant-disbursement system. Expect the typical 8 to 12-week timeline to compress towards 6 to 9 weeks for clean cases. Plus and Prime flats coming on the market in the early 2030s will reach this same procedure with the additional 10-year MOP and clawback layers — but the eight-step shape will remain.

FAQ

Do I need an agent to buy a resale flat?

No. The HDB Resale Portal lets buyer and seller transact directly without an agent — many DIY transactions complete cleanly. That said, an experienced conveyancing solicitor is essential at the OTP stage and the completion appointment. Most buyers use HDB’s appointed solicitor (S$1,200 to S$2,400) rather than appointing private counsel.

Can I use CPF for the entire down-payment?

For an HDB-loan buyer, the 25% down-payment can be funded entirely from CPF OA in most cases (5% must be in cash for the first-mortgage 20% CPF route). For a bank-loan buyer, the LTV is 75% and a minimum of 5% must be in cash. The remaining 20% can be CPF OA. The Tan family example uses the standard CPF + 5% cash structure.

What is the resale levy and does it apply to me?

The resale levy applies if you are buying a second subsidised flat (i.e. you have already taken a subsidy from HDB before, whether BTO, SBF, EC, or DBSS). The levy ranges from S$15,000 (2-room) to S$50,000 (Executive). First-time buyers — most of the resale market — pay no levy. The levy is paid at the time of the second purchase, or when the second flat reaches MOP if buying via BTO.

What grants are available for resale buyers?

Singapore Citizen first-timer couples can receive up to S$80,000 in stacked grants: the Family Grant (S$50,000 to S$80,000 by income), the Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (up to S$80,000 for incomes ≤S$9,000), and the Proximity Housing Grant (S$20,000 to S$30,000 for buying near or with parents). The HDB Flat Portal HFE letter shows your exact entitlement.

What if the seller backs out after the OTP is granted?

The seller has contracted to sell. If they renege after the buyer has paid the option fee, the buyer can sue for specific performance (i.e. force the sale to complete) or claim damages. In practice, sellers very rarely renege once the OTP is granted because the legal exposure is real and the option fee is treated as part-consideration of the sale.

Do I pay GST on a resale flat?

No. Residential resale property in Singapore is GST-exempt. Stamp duty (BSD and ABSD where applicable) is paid in cash to IRAS within 14 days of OTP exercise. CPF can also be used to pay stamp duty in some financing structures.

Can I list and buy at the same time?

Yes — and many upgraders do. Sellers transitioning to a private property must take care to plan timing so the sale of the HDB flat completes before key collection of the new home, otherwise ABSD on the second residential property kicks in. ABSD remission is available if the existing HDB flat is sold within six months of the new private completion, but that requires careful sequencing and an experienced solicitor’s eye.

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Disclaimer

This article is general guidance for Singapore HDB resale buyers. Verify the latest procedure, eligibility ceilings and grant amounts on the HDB portal and via the HDB Flat Portal HFE letter. Stamp duty rates are governed by IRAS. CPF housing rules sit with the CPF Board. Prices in worked examples are illustrative; consult a licensed solicitor for your specific transaction.

Tags: HDB resale, HFE letter, Resale Portal, OTP, Option to Purchase, Buyer’s Stamp Duty, Cash Over Valuation, COV, Family Grant, Enhanced CPF Housing Grant, Singapore Citizen, eligibility scheme, completion appointment, key collection.

HDB MOP Supply Bumper 2026: How 13,484 Newly-Eligible Flats Are Reshaping Resale and Rentals

HDB MOP Supply Bumper 2026: How 13,484 Newly-Eligible Flats Are Reshaping Resale and Rentals

The Housing & Development Board’s flat-supply pipeline has just delivered the largest year-on-year jump in Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) eligibility since 2022. 13,484 HDB flats reach the end of their five-year MOP in 2026 — almost double the 6,973 flats that crossed the same threshold in 2025. The wave is concentrated in young estates that were under construction in 2018–19, and it is large enough to reshape the rental and resale dynamics that have defined Singapore’s HDB market since the post-Covid run-up.

For the household holding a flat that just reached MOP this quarter, the question is when to act. For the household renting one, the question is whether the higher supply finally delivers the rental softening that has been forecast since late 2024. For the prospective upgrader, the question is whether the wave triggers a window of opportunity to dispose of an existing flat into a deeper buyer pool. This piece walks through what the numbers show, where the supply is concentrated, and how the secondary effects are likely to play out across the rest of 2026.

Quick Answer — the 2026 MOP wave at a glance

  • Volume: 13,484 flats reach MOP in 2026 vs 6,973 in 2025 — a 93% increase year-on-year.
  • Why now: the BTO cohort that was launched and built between 2018 and 2019 is hitting its 5-year MOP this year.
  • Top estates: Punggol leads with about 3,200 flats, followed by Sengkang (~2,400), Tengah (~1,900) and Bidadari/Toa Payoh (~1,800).
  • Resale impact: deeper supply moderates the price index — HDB resale fell 0.1% QoQ in Q1 2026, the first decline since Q2 2019, and Q2 is expected to remain flat to mildly negative.
  • Rental impact: the bumper supply is the largest single factor capping HDB rental growth at 1–2% for 2026, after two years of mid-to-high single-digit growth.
  • Window for upgraders: sellers have a deeper buyer pool but face thinner pricing power; upgraders should plan the buy-side leg first to avoid being squeezed.
  • Trajectory: 2027 supply estimates push the figure higher again on the back of the 2019–20 BTO cohort, before normalising in 2028.

How the 2026 Cohort Came to Be

HDB requires owners of a Build-To-Order (BTO) flat to live in the unit as their primary residence for a Minimum Occupation Period of five years before they can sell on the open market or rent the entire flat out. The MOP clock starts ticking from key collection. The 2026 MOP wave is therefore the cohort that received keys in 2020–21, which in turn corresponds to BTO launches in 2018–19. That two-year BTO programme was a particularly high-volume one — HDB launched roughly 17,500 flats in 2018 and 16,000 in 2019, and most of those have now arrived at the moment of release.

Counted purely against the 2025 baseline of just under 7,000 MOP-eligible flats, this is the largest single-year supply uplift since the post-2018 launch surge. The Government has signalled in its 2026 BTO programme announcement that 2027 is likely to remain elevated as the 2019–20 launch cohort completes its MOP, before normalising in 2028 toward a steady-state of around 12,000 flats per year.

HDB MOP supply Singapore 2022-2027 — bar chart showing 2026 spike to 13,484 flats
Figure 1: Five-year MOP supply by year. The 2025 trough — driven by Covid-era construction slowdown — gives way to a 2026 spike that almost doubles back to a more typical annual volume.

Where the Wave Hits

The 2026 MOP cohort is concentrated geographically in the estates that absorbed the bulk of the 2018–19 BTO launches. Punggol is the single largest contributor, with roughly 3,200 flats reaching MOP across the Punggol Town Centre, Punggol Coast and Punggol Northshore precincts. Sengkang follows with about 2,400 flats, primarily in the Anchorvale Parkway and Compassvale Highway projects. Tengah, the youngest mature estate-in-the-making, contributes around 1,900 flats from the Plantation Acres and Garden Walk launches. Bidadari (administered under Toa Payoh) adds another 1,800 from Park Place and Alkaff.

HDB MOP 2026 estate breakdown — Punggol Sengkang Tengah Bidadari lead supply
Figure 2: The 2026 MOP wave is heavily skewed toward young suburban estates and Bidadari. Bukit Batok, Yishun and Tampines round out the top contributors.

The estate composition matters because resale and rental absorption is local. A flood of newly-MOP flats in Punggol does not directly weigh on resale prices in Bishan or Ang Mo Kio; it weighs on Punggol prices and to a smaller degree on the surrounding Sengkang corridor. The implication is that the calmer trajectory in the headline HDB Resale Price Index masks meaningful divergence between estates: young suburban estates with thick MOP supply are likely to see the most price moderation, while mature estates with thin MOP volumes (Bishan, Queenstown, Toa Payoh outside Bidadari) are likely to remain firm.

Resale: From Mid-Single-Digit Growth to a Flat Quarter

The Q1 2026 final HDB resale data, released by the Housing & Development Board on 24 April 2026, showed the Resale Price Index fell 0.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter — the first decline since Q2 2019. Transaction volume came in at 6,285 flats for the quarter, slowing on a year-on-year basis but slightly higher quarter-on-quarter. The combination of softer prices and resilient volumes is consistent with a market entering a digestion phase: more sellers (driven by the MOP wave) meeting steady but not accelerating buyer demand.

The MOP supply is one of three factors moderating the index. The other two are the larger BTO programme (19,600 flats across 2026 versus 6,000 in the depths of the post-Covid pause), which provides a credible primary-market alternative for first-timer demand, and the cumulative effect of the cooling measures introduced between 2021 and 2024 — the 55 per cent TDSR, the 15-month wait-out for ex-private downsizers, and the wider tenure restrictions on HDB Loans. Each contributes; the MOP supply is the new element in 2026 that pushes the index from “moderating” to “flat”.

For owners considering a sale this year, the practical implication is that pricing power is tighter than it was in 2024. The cash-over-valuation (COV) figures that buoyed the 2024 market are normalising back toward listed valuation. Sellers who set realistic asking prices and refresh their listings against current comparables clear the market; sellers who anchor on 2024 valuations are increasingly seeing extended days-on-market.

Rental: The Largest Single-Year Supply Shock Since 2022

Owners who reach MOP in 2026 have two primary monetisation paths — sell, or rent out. Historically the split has run roughly 60:40 in favour of selling, with the rental fraction skewing higher in young estates where the MOP holders are typically dual-income households who are upgrading to a private property and prefer to retain the HDB as a rental asset. Applied to a 13,484-flat cohort, that translates to perhaps 5,000–6,000 newly-MOP flats joining the rental pool over the course of 2026.

That is the single largest quasi-instant supply addition the rental market has absorbed since the 2022 expat reshoring wave drove rents to record highs. URA data shows private residential rents rose just 0.3 per cent quarter-on-quarter in Q1 2026, and HDB rentals have softened by about 0.3 per cent month-on-month entering the year. Industry forecasts now centre on HDB rental growth of 1–2 per cent for 2026, down sharply from the 8–10 per cent annualised pace of 2022–23.

The rental moderation is unevenly distributed. Mature estates like Tiong Bahru, Tampines Central and Queenstown — where MOP supply is thin and expat demand remains anchored — continue to clear rents at firm or even slightly rising levels. Young estates with thick MOP supply, especially Punggol and Sengkang, are seeing rental softness as the new supply meets a tenant pool that is increasingly price-sensitive. The price-sensitivity is itself a shift: companies have tightened relocation budgets, and tenants on longer-term assignments are negotiating harder against the deeper inventory.

Worked Example — The Lim Family in Punggol

Worked Example. Mr and Mrs Lim, both Singapore Citizens in their late 30s, took keys to a 4-room BTO at Punggol Northshore in March 2021. Combined gross income S$13,000/month; outstanding HDB Loan balance approximately S$340,000 at 2.6 per cent over the remaining 21 years; current valuation around S$680,000 based on Q1 2026 transactions in the precinct. Their flat reaches MOP in March 2026.

Path A — Sell now and upgrade. List at S$680,000, expect to clear at S$650,000–S$670,000 given the deeper Punggol supply (~3,200 flats reaching MOP across the year). Net cash and CPF on completion roughly S$310,000–S$330,000 after redeeming the HDB Loan and refunding accrued interest. Transition into a 2-bedroom OCR private condo in the S$1.5–1.7M range using the proceeds plus a fresh bank loan.

Path B — Rent out and retain. Rent out at S$3,400/month — softer than the S$3,600 a similar 4-room would have achieved in early 2025 because of the supply influx. Net of agency fees, HDB Loan instalment and property tax under the non-owner-occupier ladder, monthly cash flow is roughly S$300–S$400. The Lims continue to live in their HDB for the time being, retain optionality for a private upgrade later, and benefit if Punggol prices firm again into 2027–28 once the MOP supply normalises.

Path C — Sell into the resale market and rent in mature estate. Sell as in Path A, but rent a Bishan or Toa Payoh 4-room at roughly S$3,200/month while waiting for a private launch in a preferred location (Bidadari, Tengah extension, or a CCR launch in late 2026). This path frees up CPF and cash, locks in current valuation, and keeps the household nimble while the market digests the MOP wave.

The decision between the three paths is heavily personal — financial, lifestyle and timing — and the right answer for the Lims is not necessarily the right answer for a similar couple in Sengkang or Bidadari. What the analysis does highlight is that the MOP wave creates an asymmetry in 2026 that is worth modelling carefully before acting.

Summary Table — 2026 MOP Wave Quick Reference

Metric 2025 2026 (this year) Implication
Flats reaching MOP 6,973 13,484 +93% supply uplift
HDB RPI (QoQ) +1.0% to +1.7% range −0.1% Q1 (first decline since Q2 2019) Calmer trajectory
HDB rental growth (annual) ~5–6% 1–2% (forecast) Tenant-friendly
BTO programme ~6,000 flats 19,600 flats (3 exercises) Primary-market alternative
Top MOP estate Tampines (~1,400) Punggol (~3,200) Suburban supply skew
Million-dollar HDB flats ~1,030 transactions 412 transactions in Q1 Pace remains elevated
Days-on-market (resale) ~28 days median ~38 days median (estimate) Less seller pricing power

What This Means for You

The 2026 MOP wave is not a price collapse — the HDB Resale Price Index is essentially flat, not down materially — but it is a meaningful repricing of the seller’s position. Five rules of thumb follow from how the wave is reshaping the market.

For sellers in young estates (Punggol, Sengkang, Tengah, Bidadari): price against current Q1 2026 comparables, not against 2024 highs. Refresh listings every 4–6 weeks. Expect a longer time-on-market and weaker COV. The deeper buyer pool is good news for finding a buyer; the asymmetry is in pricing power.

For sellers in mature estates (Bishan, Queenstown, Toa Payoh outside Bidadari): the MOP wave barely touches your supply. Pricing remains firm, days-on-market remain short, and selective premium pricing is still achievable for renovated units. The market segmentation that has defined HDB resale since 2022 — where mature-estate scarcity attracts a premium — continues to hold.

For tenants: 2026 is the first genuinely tenant-friendly year since 2021. Use the leverage. Negotiate harder on renewal rents and on the new-lease-shopping pool. The supply uplift is most visible in young estates and OCR condos; mature-estate rents remain firmer.

For upgraders: sequence the buy-side first. The resale market is no longer a guaranteed quick clearance, especially in young estates with thick MOP supply. Lock in the upgrade purchase before listing the existing flat, or budget for a longer disposal window. Bridging loans are an option if cash-flow allows.

For investors holding HDB-near-MOP: retaining for rental no longer offers the rent-up surprise of 2022–23. The rental yield maths now sits in a 2.5 per cent–3.5 per cent net range for most 4-room flats in young suburban estates, which compares unfavourably to comparable yields on smaller OCR condos for households in higher tax brackets. The case for selling and reallocating capital strengthens at this point in the cycle.

What Might Come Next

Two trajectories are worth watching across the rest of 2026 and into 2027. First, the second half of 2026 brings additional MOP supply from the 2019–20 BTO cohort, particularly the Q3 and Q4 keys collected in 2021. SRX and EdgeProp commentary points toward a 2027 supply that may remain at or above the 2026 figure before normalising in 2028. If true, the price moderation that defined Q1 2026 is likely to extend through the full year and into the early part of 2027.

Second, the rental market is approaching the inflection point where tenant price-sensitivity meets real wage growth. Singapore’s median household income continues to rise at roughly 3 per cent a year nominal; if rental growth caps at 1–2 per cent across 2026 and 2027, rent-to-income ratios moderate for the first time since 2021. That is a meaningful structural improvement for the household sector and may reduce the political pressure that drove some of the cooling-measure calibration of 2023–24.

The structural variable that could disturb both trajectories is the BTO completion pace. If construction delays push the 2027 MOP cohort into 2028, the 2027 supply moderates and the rental softening may reverse earlier than expected. Conversely, if the 2026 BTO programme of 19,600 flats accelerates rather than smooths the pipeline, the 2031 MOP wave (five years out from 2026) could be even larger than 2026’s. The Government’s stated intent is a smooth, predictable supply cadence; markets should plan for that base case while keeping an eye on the construction-completion data that will feed the 2027 picture.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does MOP mean and why is the 5-year clock important?

MOP — the Minimum Occupation Period — is the 5-year minimum during which a household must occupy its HDB flat as primary residence before it can be sold on the open market or rented out as a whole unit. The 5-year clock starts on key collection. Until MOP is served, the flat cannot be sold to anyone other than HDB itself, and rental is restricted to room-by-room arrangements (and only with HDB approval). The MOP is a cornerstone of HDB’s policy that public housing is shelter first and asset second.

Why is the 2026 cohort so much larger than 2025?

The 2025 cohort was unusually small because the 2020 BTO programme was sharply curtailed during the post-Covid construction pause. The 2018–19 cohort that hits MOP in 2026 was a much larger BTO vintage, by design — the Government had ramped up supply ahead of the 2017–18 demand surge. The 2027 figure is also expected to be elevated as the 2019–20 cohort completes its MOP, before the pipeline normalises in 2028.

Will HDB resale prices fall further in 2026?

The Q1 2026 print of −0.1 per cent QoQ is the first decline in seven years, but the consensus across SRX, EdgeProp and HDB’s own commentary is that the full-year trajectory is flat to mildly positive (0–2 per cent), not a meaningful drop. The market is digesting the supply influx, not collapsing under it. Mature estates are likely to remain firm; young suburban estates with thick MOP supply are the segments most exposed to flat or mildly negative prints in Q2 and Q3.

Should I rent out my MOP-eligible flat or sell?

The arithmetic depends on three variables: net rental yield (typically 2.5–3.5 per cent for young suburban 4-rooms in 2026), expected price trajectory of the estate (firmer in mature estates, softer in MOP-heavy ones), and the household’s need for capital from the sale. For households planning to upgrade to private property within the next 12 to 24 months, selling now and crystallising the equity tends to be cleaner. For households happy to retain the HDB and add a private property on top, the rental retention path remains viable but the rent-up surprise of 2022–23 has fully passed.

How do I check when my own flat reaches MOP?

The MOP completion date is 5 years from the date of key collection. Owners can verify the exact MOP date through the HDB Resale Portal (My HDBPage) under “My Flat Details”, which shows the date of key collection and the calculated MOP completion. The portal also shows whether any partial occupation gaps (e.g. for prolonged overseas postings) need to be made up before the MOP is officially served.

Does the new Plus and Prime classification change MOP rules for 2026 flats?

For most flats reaching MOP in 2026 — which were launched in 2018–19 under the old Mature/Non-Mature classification — the standard 5-year MOP applies. The Plus and Prime classifications introduced from October 2024 carry longer 10-year MOPs, with subsidy clawbacks of 6 per cent (Plus) or 9 per cent (Prime) on resale, and a S$14,000 monthly income cap for resale buyers. Those classifications affect the 2034-and-later MOP cohorts; they do not change the 2026 supply picture.

Will the BTO programme of 19,600 flats in 2026 cannibalise resale demand?

Partially, yes. The 19,600 BTO programme is the largest in over a decade and provides a credible primary-market alternative for first-timer households, particularly those with EHG entitlements that work better against a BTO than a resale. The cannibalisation is most visible in non-mature young estates where the BTO and resale segments overlap. In mature estates with no BTO supply (Bishan, Queenstown, Toa Payoh outside Bidadari), the resale market continues to clear at firm prices because the BTO is not a substitute.

Disclaimer

This piece is general analysis of the 2026 HDB MOP supply pipeline and its implications for the resale and rental markets, drawing on data from HDB, the Urban Redevelopment Authority, SRX, EdgeProp and Stacked Homes published as at the date of writing. Estimates of estate-level MOP volumes and the rental/sale split are indicative; the actual mix will depend on individual household decisions and may vary materially across the year. This is not financial, tax or legal advice. For decisions on your own flat, consult HDB Mortgage Servicing, a licensed Singapore property adviser and (where relevant) a tax practitioner. Always rely on official sources — HDB, URA, data.gov.sg — for the latest position before transacting.

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June 2026 BTO Launch Preview: 6,900 Flats Across 7 Projects in 5 Towns

June 2026 BTO Launch Preview: 6,900 Flats Across 7 Projects in 5 Towns

HDB has unveiled the June 2026 Build-to-Order (BTO) sales exercise — the largest single launch of the year and the broadest geographic spread Singapore has seen in the post-classification era. Roughly 6,900 flats across seven projects in five towns will go on sale in the second week of June 2026, with the headline names being the first BTO at Lakeview (Bishan) in over forty years, the Berlayer Crescent project in Bukit Merah, two Plus-class projects in Ang Mo Kio, two big-supply Standard projects in Sembawang, and a 640-unit Standard project in Woodlands. About 47% of the supply has been classified Prime, 5% Plus, and the remaining 48% Standard — which means most of June’s launches will sit under HDB’s tighter resale framework with 10-year MOP and subsidy clawback.

This preview consolidates what HDB has confirmed, what industry research desks are guiding on indicative prices, and what Lovelyhomes’ own readers are likely to weigh up before the BTO portal opens. Application closes 15 June 2026 (rounded — exact date in HDB’s portal); ballot results follow approximately three weeks later.

Quick Answer — June 2026 BTO at a glance

  • Total supply: ~6,900 flats across 7 projects.
  • Towns: Bishan, Ang Mo Kio, Bukit Merah, Sembawang, Woodlands.
  • Mix: ~3,250 Prime (47%), ~370 Plus (5%), ~3,280 Standard (48%).
  • First-of-kind: first BTO at Lakeview in over forty years; first Pasir Panjang Prime since the classification framework launched.
  • Indicative 4-room price range: ~S$360k Sembawang/Woodlands → ~S$820k Bishan Lakeview, before EHG / PHG.
  • MOP: 10 years (Prime, Plus); 5 years (Standard).
  • Resale buyer income ceiling: S$14,000/month for Prime and Plus; none for Standard.
  • Application window: opens approximately 11 June 2026; closes mid-June; ballot ~early July.

The Seven Sites

June 2026 BTO seven sites table — Lakeview, Ang Mo Kio twin, Berlayer Crescent, Sembawang Drive, Sungei Sembawang, Woodlands
Figure 1: All seven June 2026 BTO sites, with rough unit counts, classification, and MRT access.

The June launch is dominated by two town clusters. The first is the Sembawang–Woodlands northern corridor, contributing roughly 2,640 of the 6,900 flats. Sembawang Drive alone is the single largest site of the run at around 1,130 units, with the smaller Sungei Sembawang project adding another ~870 units along the river edge near Sembawang MRT. Woodlands South contributes the remaining ~640 units. All three are Standard-class — the cheapest segment, the shortest MOP, and the largest pool of eligible resale buyers come 2031–32.

The second cluster is the central-mature corridor: Bishan’s Lakeview project (~1,200 units, Prime), the twin Ang Mo Kio sites near Mayflower MRT (combined ~1,500 units, Plus), and Bukit Merah’s Berlayer Crescent project near Pasir Panjang MRT (~750 units, Prime). This is where the headline-grabbing prices will sit. Indicative talk on Lakeview 4-room flats has run as high as S$820,000 before grants — a level that historically would have been a Bukit Merah or Tiong Bahru number, not a Bishan one. The Lakeview supply is the first BTO at the site since the late 1970s, and the project is positioned to be the tallest in its immediate area, with stacks oriented for MacRitchie Reservoir views.

Classification — Three Different Resale Worlds

June 2026 BTO Standard Plus Prime classification — MOP, resale rules, subsidy clawback comparison
Figure 2: How each class will behave at MOP — Standard at year 5 with no clawback; Plus and Prime at year 10 with subsidy clawback and a S$14,000 buyer income ceiling.

HDB’s October 2024 classification framework is in full effect for the June 2026 launch. The Standard class behaves like the BTOs of the last two decades: 5-year MOP, open resale market on graduation, no clawback. The Plus class — represented in June by the Ang Mo Kio twin — carries a 10-year MOP, a ~6% subsidy clawback at first resale, and a S$14,000 income ceiling on the resale buyer. The Prime class — Lakeview, Berlayer Crescent — runs the same 10-year MOP and S$14,000 buyer ceiling, with a heavier ~9% clawback on first resale to reflect the deeper original subsidy.

The implication for buyers is that Plus and Prime are explicitly engineered as long-hold homes with a smaller resale pool. Standard is the one that retains the historical “BTO as wealth-builder” pattern. For first-time-buyer households running the affordability vs upside arithmetic, Standard at Sembawang or Woodlands is structurally different from Prime at Bishan — even before the price difference is factored in.

Indicative Pricing — Where the Money Lands

June 2026 BTO indicative 4-room prices — Bishan to Woodlands ranges from S$360k to S$820k before grants
Figure 3: Indicative 4-room prices before EHG and PHG grants. Final selling prices will appear on HDB’s BTO application page when the launch window opens.

HDB will publish the firm price tables when the application window opens. The indicative ranges sit roughly as follows for 4-room flats: Bishan Lakeview at S$640,000 to S$820,000; Bukit Merah Berlayer Crescent at S$620,000 to S$780,000; Ang Mo Kio at S$520,000 to S$640,000; Sembawang sites at S$360,000 to S$500,000; Woodlands at S$380,000 to S$510,000. These are mid-launch indications drawn from neighbouring BTO comparables and the early-2026 launch curve, not committed HDB figures. The Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) of up to S$120,000 and the Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) of up to S$30,000 are still claimable on top — meaning eligible first-timer households at Sembawang could see net selling prices as low as S$240,000 for a 4-room.

Worked Example — The Lim Household at Lakeview

Consider Mr Lim (33) and Mrs Lim (31), Singapore Citizens, first-timers with combined gross household income S$8,500/month. They apply for a 4-room flat at the Bishan Lakeview Prime project. Indicative price: S$760,000. They qualify for EHG of S$30,000 (combined-income tier) — Prime/Plus PHG of S$30,000 if Mrs Lim’s parents live within 4km, which they do. Net price: S$700,000. CPF OA balance: S$110,000. They opt for an HDB Concessionary Loan at 80% LTV (S$560,000 loan, S$140,000 downpayment).

The MSR check: at HDB’s stress rate of 4%, an S$560,000 loan over 25 years yields a monthly instalment of approximately S$2,956. That is 34.8% of S$8,500 — above the 30% MSR cap. To pass MSR, they must lengthen tenure to 30 years (instalment drops to ~S$2,672 / 31.4% — still over) or accept a smaller loan (~S$481,000 / S$2,539 / 29.9% — clears MSR). The MSR is the hardest constraint here, and at S$8,500 income the Lakeview Prime price point is right at the edge of affordability. Households below S$8,000/month will struggle to pass MSR at S$760,000 even with the maximum-tenure stretch; households at S$10,000–11,000/month clear it comfortably.

What this means for the ballot: Lakeview Prime will draw a higher-income applicant pool than typical first-timer BTO. Sembawang Standard at S$420,000 list pulls a much wider applicant pool that easily clears MSR at S$5,000–6,000/month combined. Application strategy follows the price gradient.

Comparison Table — June 2026 vs Recent Quarters

Sales Exercise Total Flats Towns Prime / Plus / Standard
Feb 2026 BTO ~5,500 Bedok, Bukit Batok, Hougang, Tengah, Toa Payoh ~22% / ~10% / ~68%
May 2026 BTO (preview) ~3,800 Bukit Merah, Tampines, Tengah, Woodlands ~30% / ~12% / ~58%
June 2026 BTO ~6,900 Bishan, AMK, Bukit Merah, Sembawang, Woodlands ~47% / ~5% / ~48%
Oct 2026 BTO (announced) ~7,200 Toa Payoh-Caldecott, Punggol, Yishun, others TBC TBC

What This Means for Different Buyer Profiles

First-time HDB buyer at S$5,000–7,000 combined income. Sembawang Drive, Sungei Sembawang, and Woodlands are the right fit. Standard class, 5-year MOP, prices that pass MSR comfortably with EHG-stacked subsidies. The northern corridor will face heavy first-timer demand but the supply is large enough to keep ballot odds reasonable for first-timers.

First-time HDB buyer at S$8,000–11,000 combined income. Ang Mo Kio Plus is the sweet-spot. Mature estate, MRT proximity, school catchment, and a price band that clears MSR with margin. The 10-year MOP and S$14,000 resale-buyer ceiling are real downsides if the household is upgrade-minded, but for buy-and-hold it is the strongest value-for-money in the launch.

First-time HDB buyer at S$11,000+ combined income. Bishan Lakeview and Bukit Merah Berlayer Crescent become serious. The Prime classification means the household must accept a long hold and a smaller resale pool, but the locations are in the top decile of HDB-accessible neighbourhoods. Affordability at S$760,000–820,000 only works at the higher income tier.

Second-timers and upgraders. The Plus and Prime sites apply the second-timer 70/30 quota; second-timers should expect lower ballot odds at Lakeview and Berlayer specifically. Standard sites at Sembawang and Woodlands are more accessible to second-timers because of the larger supply and the absence of the income ceiling on resale.

What Might Come Next

HDB has guided 19,600 BTO flats across 2026 (Feb + May/June + October). The October 2026 exercise is expected to be even larger than June, anchored by the Toa Payoh West / Caldecott MRT project (~1,600 flats including 240 Community Care Apartments) and supplementary supply at Punggol and Yishun. With Pearl’s Hill (60 storeys, ~1,700 flats) confirmed for the 2027 pipeline as Singapore’s tallest public housing, the next 18 months are looking like the highest-supply year of the post-COVID cycle. Whether that supply pulls down the HDB Resale Price Index — which slipped 0.1% in Q1 2026, the first quarterly decline in seven years — is the watch-point analysts will be tracking through 2H 2026.

Worked Example — Sembawang Drive Standard for the Median Household

Mr & Mrs Wong, both 30, combined income S$6,500/month, apply for Sembawang Drive Standard 4-room at indicative S$430,000. They claim EHG S$70,000 (combined income tier) — net price S$360,000. HDB Concessionary Loan at 80% LTV (S$288,000 loan; S$72,000 downpayment, fully claimable from CPF Ordinary Account). MSR at 4% / 25 years on S$288,000 = approximately S$1,521/month, which is 23.4% of S$6,500 — clears MSR with margin. TDSR not relevant for HDB Concessionary Loan. Cash outlay at completion: roughly S$5,000 of legal and stamp-duty incidentals. This is the median-income BTO arithmetic that the Standard class is engineered to deliver — and Sembawang Drive is one of the cleanest examples of it in the entire 2026 calendar.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the June 2026 BTO application open and close?

HDB will open the application portal in the second week of June 2026, typically running for one calendar week. Ballot results follow approximately three weeks after the close. The exact dates appear on the HDB BTO application page once the launch is live; this preview was prepared from HDB’s announcement timeline and will be updated when firm dates are published.

What is the difference between Prime, Plus, and Standard?

HDB’s October 2024 framework defines three classes by location desirability and subsidy depth. Prime (~47% of June supply) carries the deepest subsidies, a 10-year MOP, a ~9% subsidy clawback on first resale, and a S$14,000/month income ceiling on the resale buyer. Plus (~5% of June supply) sits one tier below — same 10-year MOP and S$14,000 resale ceiling, with a lighter ~6% clawback. Standard (~48% of June supply) is the historical BTO model — 5-year MOP, no clawback, no resale ceiling.

Can I stack EHG and PHG on a Prime or Plus flat?

Yes. The Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) of up to S$120,000 for first-timer families is available across all three classes. The Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) of S$30,000 (married applicants living within 4km of parents) and S$10,000 (single applicants) is also available across all classes. Step-up Grant and Family Grant follow the same rules. Grant stacking does not change the MOP or clawback rules.

Why is Bishan Lakeview so much more expensive than Sembawang?

Three reasons. First, the location quality — proximity to MRT, mature estate amenities, and reservoir views — drives a higher base price band before subsidy. Second, Lakeview is Prime, which means HDB is delivering a larger absolute subsidy on a higher base price; the indicative price you see is already net of that subsidy. Third, redevelopment or land-cost factors specific to a central site push the underlying construction and tendering cost above an outer-town site like Sembawang Drive.

What is MSR and will I clear it?

MSR (Mortgage Servicing Ratio) caps your HDB or EC mortgage instalment at 30% of gross monthly income, computed at HDB’s 4% stress-test rate over your chosen tenure. For a 4-room flat at S$760,000 (Lakeview indicative) with an 80% loan and 25-year tenure, MSR clears at roughly S$8,800/month combined household income or higher. At S$420,000 (Sembawang indicative) the clear-MSR threshold drops to roughly S$5,000/month combined. See the LovelyHomes TDSR Singapore 2026 guide for the detailed mechanics.

Can I sell my Plus or Prime BTO before MOP?

Generally no. The MOP for Plus and Prime is 10 years from key collection, during which you cannot sell, rent out the entire flat, or buy a private property. Limited exceptions exist for divorce, financial hardship, and bereavement — applied case by case by HDB. Renting out individual rooms is permitted from the start, subject to HDB’s room-rental rules.

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Disclaimer: This preview is based on HDB’s published announcements and industry-research-desk indications as of 04 May 2026. Final unit counts, classifications, indicative prices, and application dates appear on the HDB BTO application page once the sales exercise opens. All figures should be verified against the official HDB website before acting on them. This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult a licensed mortgage broker or HDB officer for advice specific to your circumstances.

HDB Million-Dollar Flats Singapore 2026: Where, Why, and Whether One Is Worth Buying

HDB Million-Dollar Flats Singapore 2026: Where, Why, and Whether One Is Worth Buying

Million-dollar HDB flats are no longer the freak occurrence they once were. In the first quarter of 2026, 412 HDB resale transactions crossed the S$1,000,000 line — a single-quarter record, and already roughly half of the 822 logged across the whole of 2025. Bukit Merah, Toa Payoh, Queenstown, Bishan, and Kallang/Whampoa do most of the heavy lifting, but flats in Tampines, Sengkang and even outer-ring towns are now occasionally clearing the bar.

If you own one of these flats, you are sitting on a paper windfall that the rest of the market can only watch. If you are thinking about buying one, the question is harder: are you paying for a real long-run asset, or for a short-lived premium that will reset the moment supply normalises? This guide walks through the data, the geography, the buyer profile, and the upgrade math — with worked numbers in Singapore dollars.

For the full quarterly market context, see our companion piece on the HDB resale price decline in Q1 2026, the earlier flash-estimate analysis, and the URA private-market Q1 final figures.

Quick Answer — Million-Dollar HDB at a glance

  • 412 transactions crossed S$1,000,000 in Q1 2026 alone — a record quarter.
  • 2025 full-year total: 822, up from 690 in 2024 and 470 in 2023.
  • Top five towns: Bukit Merah, Toa Payoh, Queenstown, Kallang/Whampoa, Bishan — all mature, rail-served estates.
  • Typical winning unit: 4-room or 5-room flat, high floor, walking distance to MRT, with most lease years remaining.
  • Highest single sale on record: S$1.7 million at Dawson Road (5-room, Q1 2026).
  • For owners, the headline is paper wealth; the cash you walk away with after CPF refund + accrued interest is much smaller.
  • For buyers, factor MOP (5 years), the LTV cap on subsequent property, and the limited resale liquidity above S$1.2 million.

How Common Are Million-Dollar HDB Flats Now?

Think of it as a slow build, then a sharp acceleration. Pre-pandemic Singapore saw fewer than a hundred million-dollar HDB transactions a year, almost all of them at Pinnacle@Duxton or other iconic central blocks. From 2021 onwards, two things changed: the COVID-era price surge in resale lifted everything by about 30%, and a steady drip of well-located DBSS / SBF estates hit their MOP and entered the resale market. The result is the curve in Figure 1.

Million-dollar HDB resale transactions per year, 2019 to Q1 2026, rising from 64 in 2019 to 822 in 2025 and 412 in Q1 2026 alone
Figure 1 — Million-dollar HDB resale transactions per year, 2019 to Q1 2026.

The Q1 2026 number deserves its own line. At 412 it is roughly half a normal full-year total compressed into 12 weeks. It is also doing this while the broader HDB Resale Price Index fell 0.1% quarter-on-quarter for the first time since the second quarter of 2019. Two things are going on at once: the average flat is finally cooling after 25 consecutive quarters of growth, while the top end keeps climbing because demand for irreplaceable mature-estate stock has not budged.

Where Million-Dollar HDB Flats Cluster

Geography is the single biggest determinant of whether a flat will sell above the million-dollar mark. The flats that clear the bar share three traits almost without exception: a mature estate within ten kilometres of the central business district, direct rail connectivity (preferably to two or three lines), and most of the 99-year lease still intact. Figure 2 maps the leading towns for Q1 2026.

Bukit Merah, Toa Payoh, Queenstown, Kallang Whampoa, Bishan lead million-dollar HDB transactions in Singapore Q1 2026
Figure 2 — Towns leading million-dollar HDB transactions in Q1 2026.

Bukit Merah alone accounts for nearly one in five million-dollar transactions, anchored by Tiong Bahru, Redhill, and the Kim Tian / Bukit Ho Swee corridor. The pattern repeats: high-floor 4 and 5-room flats from the early 2010s build cycle, ten minutes by walking link to two MRT lines, with views over the city. Toa Payoh and Queenstown sit just behind — the Dawson and Stirling Road clusters in particular have produced multiple S$1.4–1.7 million sales over the past 18 months.

The pattern starts to break down further out. Tampines, Sengkang and Punggol flats now occasionally cross S$1 million, but they tend to be flagship corner units, executive maisonettes from the 1990s, or DBSS sales like the Pinnacle-style towers. They do not yet form a stable resale pool above the bar in the way that the central towns do. For broader town-level pricing context, see our HDB resale flat buying guide.

Why Million-Dollar HDB Pricing Holds Up

Three structural forces keep the top end of the HDB resale market firm even as the overall index turns:

  1. Supply is genuinely scarce. Most million-dollar flats are 4 or 5-room units in mature estates with high floors and short walks to MRT. HDB does not build new flats with those characteristics any more — central-area BTO supply has shifted to smaller 3 and 4-room units in tower blocks at higher densities.
  2. Demand is mostly cash-rich upgraders and second-time buyers. First-time buyers cannot compete here. The market for million-dollar flats is dominated by households trading down from a private property to a centrally-located HDB, or by Singapore Citizens cycling out of an executive condo and buying back into HDB before applying for a Build-To-Order replacement.
  3. Private-condo prices have set the ceiling. When a freehold city-fringe condo trades at S$2,400 per square foot, a 1,200 sq ft 5-room HDB at S$1,400,000 is still S$1,166 per sq ft — less than half. Buyers see relative value, not absolute expense.

That last point matters for the path ahead. As long as the gap between mature-estate HDB and city-fringe condos remains north of 50%, the top end of HDB pricing has a floor. The risk is a meaningful condo correction or a sustained leasehold-decay narrative shift — either of which would pull the ceiling lower.

Summary Table — Profile of Q1 2026 Million-Dollar Sales

Metric Q1 2026 2025 Full Year 2024 Full Year
Million-dollar transactions 412 822 690
Share of total HDB resale ~5.4% ~3.1% ~2.3%
Highest sale S$1.70m (Dawson, 5-room) S$1.65m (Dawson, 5-room) S$1.58m (Pinnacle, 5-room)
Most common flat type 5-room 5-room Executive / 5-room
Top town Bukit Merah Bukit Merah Queenstown

Indicative figures cross-referenced from HDB’s quarterly resale statistics and SRX/EdgeProp reporting; minor variances arise from cut-off dates.

Worked Example — What S$1.2 Million Actually Looks Like in Cash

Let’s anchor on a realistic scenario. A Singapore Citizen couple, both 42, own a 5-room flat in Bukit Merah bought new from HDB in 2010 for S$520,000. Their outstanding HDB Concessionary Loan balance is S$220,000. They have used a combined S$420,000 of CPF Ordinary Account funds across the holding period, and CPF accrued interest has compounded to S$260,000. They list the flat and accept an offer at S$1,200,000.

HDB upgrader scenarios — sell flat to buy condo vs keep flat to buy second condo, with ABSD wall comparison
Figure 3 — The S$1.2 million HDB owner’s upgrade math.

What hits the bank account? Sale price S$1,200,000, less HDB loan repayment S$220,000, less CPF refund S$420,000 + S$260,000 accrued interest = S$680,000 returned to CPF (not cash), less legal and agent costs of around S$30,000. Net cash to the seller: S$270,000. Net CPF balance: S$680,000 (which can be redeployed for a next property purchase). The headline million-dollar print is real, but it travels in two channels — cash and CPF — and most of it is not cash.

Now layer on the upgrade decision. Scenario A — sell HDB and buy a S$2.0M condo: the couple uses S$500,000 down payment (cash + CPF mix), pays Buyer’s Stamp Duty of about S$59,600, no ABSD (it is a first private property after disposing of the HDB), and a S$1.5M loan at around S$7,520 per month over 25 years at 3.5%. Scenario B — keep the HDB, buy a S$1.5M condo as a second property: they need S$375,000 down, pay BSD of S$44,600, and an additional 20% ABSD on the S$1.5M = S$300,000. The ABSD wall changes the maths fundamentally; total upfront need is S$799,600. For most upgraders, scenario A wins for cash flow; scenario B wins only if the rental yield on the retained HDB is meaningfully positive after MSR and HDB sub-letting rules are factored in.

For the full mechanics on the second-property tax, see our ABSD complete guide.

Why This Matters for Buyers, Sellers, and Upgraders

If you are a seller sitting on a likely million-dollar flat: the asset is real, but realise that less than 30% of it lands as cash if you have used CPF heavily across the holding period. Run the cash-out arithmetic before listing — especially if you intend to fund a private upgrade. The CPF for Property Purchase guide walks through the refund and accrued-interest mechanics in detail.

If you are a buyer considering a million-dollar HDB: be honest about exit liquidity. Above S$1.2M the resale buyer pool is thin and dominated by HDB-eligible, MOP-cleared upgraders trading sideways; foreign demand and PR demand are zero by regulation. Hold periods of less than seven to eight years can leave you exposed to a price reset if the index turns and the cash-rich upgrader cohort sits out a cycle.

If you are an upgrader: the S$1M HDB and the S$2M condo are not the same dollar. The HDB is mostly CPF; the condo down payment must be cash + CPF in regulated proportion, and the ABSD wall sits between you and a second property. For the full upgrade decision tree, see our HDB-to-condo upgrade guide.

How Singapore Compares

Comparing public-housing premium pricing across cities is messy — few jurisdictions have a system as institutionalised as HDB. The Hong Kong public estate market trades at very different scarcity premiums. Sydney’s former public-housing stock at Waterloo and Glebe has occasional A$1m+ trades, but those are usually privatised dwellings in markets with no income-cap rules. The closest comparable framework is South Korea’s LH-built apartments at high floors in Seoul, where the cap-relaxation cycles drive episodic premium pricing. Against those benchmarks, HDB’s top-end resale market is unusually deep, unusually well-policed for ownership, and unusually liquid.

What Might Come Next

Forward-looking commentary — clearly speculative. Three scenarios bear watching over the rest of 2026 and into 2027:

  • Continued top-end strength even as the index falls. The most plausible scenario. Mature-estate scarcity is structural; the top end carries on as the broader resale market cools through fresh BTO supply (around 13,000 flats expected in 2026, roughly double 2025).
  • Targeted cooling. If the Government feels the optics of S$1.7M HDB sales are inconsistent with public-housing affordability messaging, a targeted measure — expanded Prime / Plus restrictions on high-priced resale, or a longer MOP — is possible. None has been signalled, but the policy lever is real.
  • Material condo correction pulling the HDB ceiling down. The least likely in the near term but the most disruptive: a 10–15% private-condo correction would compress the relative-value gap and remove the implicit ceiling on million-dollar HDB pricing.

None of these scenarios changes the basic logic for owners or considered buyers. Million-dollar HDB pricing is geographic, structural, and slow-moving. Trying to time it is a poor use of attention; understanding what you actually own (or are buying) is the better use.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the highest price ever paid for an HDB resale flat?

As at Q1 2026, the published record sits at S$1.70 million for a 5-room SBF flat at Dawson Road in Queenstown. Prior records included a S$1.65 million Dawson sale in 2025 and a S$1.58 million Pinnacle@Duxton sale in 2024. HDB and SRX publish resale transaction records monthly; record-breakers are usually high-floor 5-room or executive flats in central, MRT-served estates.

Why are million-dollar HDB flats clustering in Bukit Merah and Queenstown?

Three reasons: most of the high-floor 4 and 5-room SBF flats from the 2010–2014 build cycle are now MOP-cleared and entering the resale market; the central location supports very high relative-value pricing against private condos; and the rail connectivity (Tiong Bahru / Redhill / Queenstown / Commonwealth on the East-West Line) means buyers are paying for both location and convenience. Toa Payoh and Bishan show similar patterns on the North-South Line corridor.

Can foreigners or PRs buy million-dollar HDB resale flats?

Foreigners cannot buy any HDB resale flat. Permanent Residents can, but only as part of a family nucleus where the eligibility scheme is met (PR Quota for the block applies, and the standard SPR holding rules), and never as a sole household. The buyer pool above S$1 million is therefore entirely Singapore Citizen + PR family nuclei — this is one of the structural reasons the market behaves differently from private resale.

Should I buy a million-dollar HDB or a similarly-priced city-fringe condo?

The honest answer depends on horizon and household composition. The HDB delivers more living space, better proximity to schools and transport in the affected estates, and lower maintenance fees, but it locks you into the public-housing rule set (MOP, ethnic quota, no rental until MOP, restrictions on second-property ownership). The condo trades floor space for asset class flexibility — you can rent it, sell it without MOP, and own it alongside other properties (subject to ABSD). Many buyers find the HDB the better lifestyle choice and the condo the better balance-sheet choice; very few buyers should pretend the two are equivalent.

How much cash will I actually walk away with from a S$1.2 million HDB sale?

Less than the headline. From a typical S$1.2M sale you must repay the outstanding HDB or bank loan, then refund used CPF principal plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum into your CPF account, then pay legal and agent fees. In a representative scenario with S$220k loan outstanding, S$420k of OA used over 14 years, S$260k accrued interest and S$30k transaction costs, the seller receives roughly S$270k as cash to the bank account and S$680k restored to CPF. The CPF portion can fund a next purchase but is not free cash. See our CPF for Property Purchase guide for the mechanics.

Will the price falls in Q1 2026 reach the million-dollar segment?

The Q1 2026 HDB Resale Price Index fell 0.1% — the first quarterly decline since Q2 2019 — while million-dollar transactions hit a record. The two facts coexist because the broader index is moved by the volume centre of the market (3 and 4-room flats in non-mature towns), while the million-dollar segment depends on the supply of mature-estate, rail-served, larger flats. The mechanisms that have lifted the top end (scarcity, relative value vs condos) are not the mechanisms cooling the broader index (fresh BTO supply, transactional fatigue). The two segments can diverge for an extended period.

What should I do if I bought my flat for S$400,000 and it’s now worth S$1.2 million?

First, separate the unrealised gain from your decision: the windfall does not change whether your home suits your household. Second, if you intend to monetise, run the cash-out + CPF refund maths before listing — many sellers find their actual cash-in-hand is far less than expected. Third, if you intend to upgrade to a private property, model both the “sell + upgrade” path and the “keep + buy second” path with full ABSD; the answer is rarely obvious. Fourth, engage a conveyancing solicitor and (where relevant) a CPF-aware financial planner before signing any OTP. The numbers are too large for shortcuts.

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Disclaimer

This article is general information about HDB resale pricing in Singapore as at May 2026 and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Transaction figures are aggregated from HDB’s published resale statistics, with cross-reference from URA, MAS, IRAS and CPF Board guidance where applicable. Individual transaction values, CPF balances, and accrued interest computations vary materially by household; for a transaction of this size always engage a licensed Singapore conveyancing solicitor, a CPF-aware financial adviser, and (if upgrading) a chartered tax practitioner before signing any Option to Purchase or Sale & Purchase agreement.

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