Singapore Property Mortgage Guide 2026: SORA, Fixed vs Floating, LTV and Refinancing

Singapore Property Mortgage Guide 2026: SORA, Fixed vs Floating, LTV and Refinancing

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Quick Answer: Singapore Property Mortgage Guide 2026

  • Benchmark rate: 3-Month Compounded SORA has fallen from a ~3.5% peak in mid-2024 to ~1.07% in June 2026, the sharpest rate drop since the 2020 pandemic era.
  • Best rates now: Bank fixed rates start at 1.35–1.40% p.a. for private property; SORA-pegged floating rates begin at ~1.27% p.a. (3M SORA + 0.20%). HDB Concessionary Loan remains at 2.60%.
  • LTV limits: 75% for a first private property bank loan; 80% for an HDB Concessionary Loan. MAS stress-tests TDSR at 4% p.a. regardless of actual rate.
  • Fixed vs floating: Fixed rates offer certainty for 1–3 years; floating (SORA) packages could cost less now but carry rate-reset risk. Most analysts forecast SORA at 0.7%–1.2% through 2026.
  • Repricing vs refinancing: Repricing (same bank) is cheaper but offers fewer options; refinancing (new bank) takes longer but can yield better rates and cashback offers.
  • TDSR and MSR: Total Debt Servicing Ratio capped at 55% of gross income. Mortgage Servicing Ratio capped at 30% for HDB flat purchases. Both are regulated by MAS.

How Singapore Property Mortgages Work

A property mortgage in Singapore is a secured loan where the property itself serves as collateral. When you take a bank mortgage, the bank registers a legal charge over the property via the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). If you default, the bank has the right to repossess and sell the property to recover the outstanding loan.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) regulates mortgage lending through Notices MAS 632 (banks) and MAS 1115 (finance companies). Key parameters include the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio, Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR), and Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR). These rules apply to all financial institutions licensed to offer mortgage products in Singapore, ensuring borrowers are not over-leveraged.

The HDB Concessionary Loan is a separate product offered by the Housing & Development Board at a fixed rate of 2.60% per annum (0.1 percentage points above the CPF OA rate, currently 2.5%). It is available only for HDB flat purchases by eligible applicants and carries a higher LTV ceiling of 80% but is limited to HDB resale and BTO flats.

Singapore Mortgage Rates in June 2026

Singapore mortgage rates June 2026 comparison HDB fixed SORA floating monthly repayments
Figure 1: Singapore Mortgage Rates (June 2026) and Monthly Repayments by Loan Size — HDB Loan vs Fixed Rate vs SORA Floating
Loan Type Rate (June 2026) Lock-In Monthly on S$800K / 30yr Best For
HDB Concessionary Loan 2.60% p.a. (fixed) None S$3,218 / mth HDB flat buyers who want certainty
Bank Fixed (2-year) 1.35–1.40% p.a. 2 years S$2,666 / mth Buyers wanting rate certainty for 2 years
Bank Fixed (3-year) 1.50–1.60% p.a. 3 years S$2,757 / mth Buyers wanting longer-term certainty
SORA Floating (3M+0.20%) ~1.27% p.a. now None or 1–2yr ~S$2,617 / mth Buyers comfortable with rate movement
Board Rate (legacy) ~2.10% p.a. Varies S$2,996 / mth Avoid — opaque and usually uncompetitive

Rates sourced from published bank rate sheets and PropertyNet.sg (week of 15 June 2026). Monthly repayments calculated at 30-year tenure for illustration. Actual rates vary by loan quantum, LTV, and bank assessment. HDB Concessionary Loan calculated at 25 years as it is unavailable beyond that tenure.

SORA: Singapore’s Mortgage Benchmark Explained

SORA — the Singapore Overnight Rate Average — replaced the Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (SIBOR) and Swap Offer Rate (SOR) as the primary interest rate benchmark for Singapore-dollar financial products. The transition was completed in 2021 under MAS guidance. SORA is a backward-looking rate: it is calculated daily as the volume-weighted average rate of unsecured overnight transactions in the Singapore wholesale interbank market, published each business day by MAS.

For mortgages, banks typically use either the 1-Month Compounded SORA (1M SORA, currently ~1.16%) or the 3-Month Compounded SORA (3M SORA, currently ~1.07%) as the reference rate, to which they add a fixed bank spread (typically 0.20%–0.80%). Your effective rate resets monthly or quarterly depending on the package. Unlike SOR, SORA has no embedded credit or liquidity risk premium, making it more stable.

Singapore SORA 3-month compounded rate history 2022 to 2026
Figure 2: 3-Month Compounded SORA — Rise and Fall from 2022 to Q2 2026 (Source: MAS)

The 3M Compounded SORA peaked at approximately 3.52% in Q1–Q2 2024 as the US Federal Reserve held rates at 40-year highs. From mid-2024 through 2025, the US Fed began cutting rates, Singapore rates followed, and by June 2026 the 3M SORA has settled at ~1.07% — a 68% reduction from its peak. Industry analysts forecast 3M SORA to remain in the 0.7%–1.2% band through end-2026, barring unforeseen macroeconomic shocks.

Fixed vs Floating: How to Decide

The right choice depends on your risk tolerance, your mortgage tenure, and your view on rates. Consider these factors:

Choose a fixed rate if: you are on a tight budget and need payment certainty; you are buying with a co-borrower and want to avoid any surprises; your TDSR is near the 55% cap; or you are buying a new launch with a long construction period and want to lock in today’s rates now.

Choose a SORA floating rate if: SORA is at a cyclical low and you believe rates will not rise significantly; you have a financial buffer to absorb higher instalments; your loan tenure is short (under 15 years); or you plan to refinance or sell within the lock-in period and want the flexibility of a nil or short lock-in.

In June 2026, with 3M SORA at ~1.07% and fixed rates starting at 1.35%, floating packages are marginally cheaper now. However, the fixed-floating spread is only about 0.10%–0.30%. On an S$800,000 loan, that difference is approximately S$400–S$800 per year — modest relative to the certainty fixed provides. Most financial advisers recommend fixing for at least two years to ride out any near-term uncertainty.

LTV Limits and Downpayment Requirements

Scenario Maximum LTV Minimum Downpayment Cash Portion
First bank loan, no outstanding loans 75% 25% (5% cash + 20% cash/CPF) 5% minimum
Second bank loan (1 existing loan) 45% 55% (25% cash + 30% cash/CPF) 25% minimum
Third+ bank loan (2+ existing loans) 35% 65% (25% cash + 40% cash/CPF) 25% minimum
HDB Concessionary Loan (HDB flat) 80% 20% (cash or CPF) No minimum cash

These LTV limits assume the loan tenure does not extend beyond the borrower’s 65th birthday, and that no property loan remains outstanding on the HDB flat being sold (in the case of upgraders). Buyers who have not yet sold their existing property before taking a new mortgage fall under the higher LTV tier temporarily.

Repricing vs Refinancing: Choosing at Lock-In Expiry

Repricing versus refinancing Singapore home loan comparison 2026
Figure 3: Repricing vs Refinancing — Key Differences and When to Choose Each

When your mortgage lock-in period expires — typically after one to three years — you face two choices: reprice with your current bank (switch to a new package, fee ~S$300–S$800, no legal process) or refinance to a new bank (full legal process, fees S$2,000–S$3,500, but potentially better rates and cashback incentives). The break-even analysis is straightforward: if the annual saving from switching rates exceeds the legal and admin costs, refinancing makes financial sense. On an S$800,000 loan, a 0.30% rate improvement saves approximately S$2,400 per year — enough to cover legal fees in 1–2 years.

Banks competing for refinancing customers often offer cashback of S$1,000–S$3,000 or fee absorption on legal and valuation costs. These incentives effectively lower the refinancing break-even to under six months in many cases. Re-assess your mortgage every time your lock-in expires, or at least every two to three years.

Worked Example: Ng Family Refinancing in 2026

Mr and Mrs Ng bought their Bishan condo in 2022 for S$1,450,000 with a bank mortgage of S$1,087,500 at a fixed rate of 1.80% for two years, which rolled onto SORA + 0.50% in early 2024 (peak SORA ~3.52%, effective rate ~4.02%). Their monthly instalment jumped from S$3,930 to S$5,191. Their lock-in expired in March 2026.

Scenario Rate Monthly Instalment Annual Cost
Current (SORA+0.50%, board revert) ~1.57% now (was 4.02%) S$3,523/mth S$42,276
Reprice with same bank (new 2-yr fixed) 1.40% S$3,418/mth S$41,016
Refinance to new bank (2-yr fixed + S$2K cashback) 1.35% S$3,386/mth S$40,632 (–legal+cashback)

Outstanding loan (March 2026): approximately S$958,000 (after ~4 years of repayments). By refinancing to the best market rate of 1.35% with a S$2,000 cashback, the Ngs save approximately S$1,640 per year versus repricing, and approximately S$1,644 per year versus staying on the current revert rate. Legal fees of S$2,800 are covered in approximately 1.5 years of savings. The Ngs choose to refinance. Total saving over the 2-year fixed period: approximately S$3,300 net of costs.

Why This Matters in Singapore’s 2026 Rate Environment

The SORA rate cycle of 2022–2026 was a defining event for Singapore property owners. Mortgage costs more than doubled between mid-2022 and mid-2024, squeezing affordability and prompting a wave of careful cash-flow planning. The subsequent easing — SORA back to 2022-era lows — has provided significant relief. For buyers entering the market in mid-2026, current rates represent one of the most favourable financing windows since the post-COVID era.

MAS continues to use macroprudential tools (LTV limits, TDSR, ABSD) rather than interest rate policy to manage property market risks. This means Singapore mortgage rates are largely driven by global rates — primarily the US Federal Reserve’s policy — rather than local inflation alone. With the Fed expected to hold or cut modestly through 2026, analysts broadly expect 3M SORA to stay below 1.5% for the remainder of the year.

What Might Come Next for Singapore Mortgage Rates

The consensus among local bank economists is that SORA will remain in the 0.7%–1.2% band through end-2026, with the next potential increase contingent on any unexpected re-acceleration of US inflation or a significant weakening of the Singapore dollar. If the Fed were to hike rates again in response to a fresh inflationary episode, SORA could rise back toward 2%–2.5% within six to twelve months. Buyers on floating SORA packages should maintain a financial buffer equal to at least three to six months of mortgage instalments to absorb any rate shock. For those on fixed packages, the certainty is already baked in — focus on planning for the re-pricing at lock-in expiry.

Frequently Asked Questions: Singapore Property Mortgages 2026

Can I switch from an HDB loan to a bank loan?

Yes, but the switch is a one-way door. Once you refinance an HDB Concessionary Loan to a bank mortgage, you cannot switch back to the HDB loan. Before making this move, compare the total interest cost over your remaining tenure carefully. The HDB loan at 2.60% is currently above the best bank rates of 1.35–1.40%, but it comes with no lock-in period, allows you to use CPF OA freely, and does not require a legal process or valuation. For smaller loan balances in later stages of the mortgage, the cost saving from switching may not justify the hassle and loss of flexibility.

What is the TDSR and how is it calculated?

The Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) is a MAS regulatory framework that caps all monthly debt obligations — including mortgage, car loan, personal loan, and credit card minimums — at 55% of gross monthly income. For a joint purchase, the combined income is used. Banks must stress-test the TDSR at a floor rate of 4% per annum (or the actual contracted rate, whichever is higher) when calculating the maximum loan quantum. This means even if you can access a 1.27% SORA mortgage today, the bank models your repayment capacity at 4%, ensuring you remain serviceable if rates rise.

Can I use CPF to pay my monthly mortgage?

Yes. CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds can be used to service monthly mortgage instalments on private property and HDB flats, subject to the Valuation Limit (VL) and Withdrawal Limit (WL) rules. Once your cumulative CPF withdrawals reach the Valuation Limit (100% of the lower of purchase price or bank valuation), you must set aside the Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) before withdrawing further. Beyond the Withdrawal Limit (120% of the VL), CPF withdrawals are stopped entirely. Accrued interest at 2.5% p.a. on all CPF drawn must be refunded on eventual sale.

What is a lock-in period and what happens if I break it early?

A lock-in period is a contractual commitment to keep your mortgage with the same bank for a specified duration — typically one to three years. If you refinance, fully repay, or make significant partial prepayments (usually above 10–20% of the outstanding balance) within the lock-in, the bank charges a prepayment penalty of approximately 1.0%–1.5% of the amount repaid. Always read the mortgage letter carefully. For a S$1,000,000 loan, a 1.5% penalty represents S$15,000 — a significant cost that can erode any rate savings from early refinancing.

Should I take a longer or shorter loan tenure?

A longer tenure (e.g., 30 years) lowers your monthly instalment and improves TDSR headroom, but results in substantially more interest paid over the life of the loan. A shorter tenure means higher monthly payments but lower total interest cost and faster equity build-up. The optimal tenure depends on your cash flow needs, retirement timeline, and opportunity cost of capital. If you have surplus savings earning more than 1.35% (e.g., in Singapore Savings Bonds or T-bills), there may be limited benefit to over-paying the mortgage. Conversely, if you are paying high-interest credit card debt, that should be retired first.

How often can I refinance my mortgage?

There is no regulatory limit on how often you can refinance, but practically, you should refinance at each lock-in expiry to avoid penalties and maximise savings. Most borrowers refinance every two to three years. Frequent refinancing to exploit small rate differences is rarely economical once legal fees and admin costs are accounted for — the minimum rate saving worth refinancing for is typically 0.25%–0.30% per annum on a loan of S$500,000 or above. Always calculate the break-even period before committing to a new lender.

What is the MSR and when does it apply?

The Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) is a tighter constraint that applies specifically to HDB flat purchases and Executive Condominium (EC) purchases (during the initial launch phase). MSR caps the monthly mortgage instalment at 30% of gross monthly income — stricter than the 55% TDSR cap. MSR applies to the mortgage for the HDB flat or EC only; other debt obligations are captured under TDSR. For a household with S$10,000 gross income, MSR limits the HDB mortgage instalment to S$3,000/month, which at 2.60% over 25 years equates to a maximum loan of approximately S$667,000.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or mortgage advice. Interest rates are indicative only and change daily. Always obtain formal mortgage advice from a licensed mortgage broker or banker, and verify current rates and MAS regulatory requirements at mas.gov.sg. CPF usage rules are governed by the CPF Board at cpf.gov.sg. Stamp duty obligations should be confirmed with IRAS at iras.gov.sg before committing to any property purchase.

Singapore New Launch Condo Buying Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Sign

Singapore New Launch Condo Buying Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Sign

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Quick Answer: New Launch Condo Buying Guide 2026

  • What it is: A new launch condo is sold directly by the developer, typically before or during construction. You pay in stages as the building progresses.
  • Key costs: Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) of up to 6% plus Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) ranging from 0% (Singapore Citizens buying their first property) to 60% (foreigners) — due within 14 days of exercising the OTP.
  • No valuation: Unlike resale, new launches do not require a bank valuation. You finance up to 75% of the purchase price via a bank loan.
  • Wait time: Expect two to five years for the keys if buying under construction. Completed units (TOP) are available for immediate occupation.
  • ABSD remission for upgraders: Singapore Citizen couples selling their HDB flat within six months of the new purchase can claim back the 20% ABSD paid on their second property.
  • 2026 landscape: CCR new launch prices have trended upward, with recent GLS awards (River Valley Green Parcel C at S$1,730 psf ppr) signalling higher future launch prices in prime locations.

What Is a New Launch Condo?

A new launch condominium is a private residential development sold directly by a licensed developer — not by a previous owner. In Singapore, new launches are typically marketed during two windows: pre-launch (exclusive VIP previews before the official sales gallery opens) and the official launch (when all units are released to the public).

Unlike a resale transaction where you buy from an individual who has already lived in or rented out the unit, a new launch is a developer-to-buyer sale. The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) regulates the developer and the sale under the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act (Cap. 130). Developers must obtain a Sale Licence before selling any units.

New launches come in two forms. Under-construction projects are the most common: the development has received planning approval but has not obtained TOP (Temporary Occupation Permit). You pay progressively as construction milestones are met — a legally governed payment schedule under the Sale and Purchase Agreement (S&PA). Completed new launches (projects that have just obtained TOP) require full payment upfront, similar to a resale transaction, but you are buying directly from the developer with no prior owner.

Who Can Buy a New Launch Condo in Singapore?

Private residential property (including condominiums and apartments) is largely open to all buyers, subject to Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) and certain landed property restrictions. The Residential Property Act (Cap. 274) restricts foreigners from buying landed residential property without prior SLA approval, but condominiums are freely purchasable by foreigners — albeit at a steep ABSD rate of 60% as at 2026.

The table below summarises eligibility and ABSD rates for a new launch condo purchase:

New launch condo BSD and ABSD stamp duty costs by buyer profile Singapore 2026
Figure 1: BSD + ABSD Stamp Duty Costs by Buyer Profile at S$1.5M New Launch Condo (June 2026 Rates)
Buyer Profile ABSD Rate (2026) BSD on S$1.5M ABSD on S$1.5M Total Stamp Duty
Singapore Citizen — 1st property 0% S$44,600 S$0 S$44,600
Singapore Citizen — 2nd property 20% S$44,600 S$300,000 S$344,600
Singapore Citizen — 3rd+ property 30% S$44,600 S$450,000 S$494,600
Singapore Permanent Resident — 1st 5% S$44,600 S$75,000 S$119,600
Singapore Permanent Resident — 2nd+ 30% S$44,600 S$450,000 S$494,600
Foreigner (any property) 60% S$44,600 S$900,000 S$944,600

BSD rates: 1% on first S$180,000; 2% on next S$180,000; 3% on next S$640,000; 4% on next S$500,000; 5% on next S$1.5M; 6% on remainder. ABSD rates effective from 27 April 2023. Source: IRAS.

The New Launch Buying Process: Step by Step

Buying a new launch condo follows a structured legal process governed by the Controller of Housing and the Sale and Purchase Agreement. Here are the key stages:

  1. Engage a property solicitor: Appoint a law firm to advise on the S&PA before you commit. Legal fees for a new launch are typically S$2,500–S$4,500.
  2. Obtain an AIP (Approval-in-Principle) from your bank: Most developers require this before you can book a unit. Your bank assesses your TDSR (Total Debt Servicing Ratio, capped at 55%) and MSR (Mortgage Servicing Ratio, 30% for HDB flats) to determine the maximum loan.
  3. Pay the Booking Fee: Upon selecting your unit, you pay 5% of the purchase price in cash as a booking fee. The developer issues you an Option to Purchase (OTP).
  4. Exercise the OTP (within 3 weeks): Within 21 days, you must exercise the OTP by signing the S&PA and paying the remaining 15% downpayment (cash or CPF Ordinary Account). Total upfront: 20% (5% cash + 15% cash/CPF).
  5. Pay BSD and ABSD: Due within 14 days of exercising the OTP. These must be paid before the S&PA can be stamped by IRAS. Failure to pay on time incurs a penalty of up to four times the stamp duty.
  6. Drawdown mortgage: Once the S&PA is stamped, your bank releases the loan. For under-construction units, the loan is drawn down progressively.
  7. Progress payments: As the developer completes each construction stage, the corresponding payment instalment is due. See Figure 2 below.
  8. TOP and key collection: When the building receives its Temporary Occupation Permit, you collect your keys and do a defects inspection. The final 5% is typically withheld as a defects retention sum, released at the Certificate of Statutory Completion (CSC) stage.
New launch condo progress payment schedule Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Progress Payment Schedule for a New Launch Condo Under Construction (Typical Private Residential Project)

For a completed new launch (unit at TOP or CSC), the entire purchase price is due at completion — typically 20% downpayment upfront and 80% financed by the bank. This is similar to a resale transaction in timing, but the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS), if offered, allows you to defer the balance of the downpayment to TOP, paying only the booking fee upfront.

Financing a New Launch: LTV, TDSR and CPF

Banks can lend up to 75% of the purchase price for a new launch condo (the first loan, assuming no existing property loans). This is the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

Your loan quantum is also constrained by the TDSR: total monthly debt obligations — including the new mortgage, car loans, personal loans, and credit card minimums — must not exceed 55% of gross monthly income. MAS requires banks to stress-test the TDSR at 4% per annum, regardless of the actual rate offered, to ensure you can service the loan even if rates rise.

CPF Ordinary Account (CPF OA) funds can be used for:

  • The 15% balance of the downpayment (after paying 5% cash)
  • Monthly mortgage instalments (reduces the cash you need each month)
  • Legal fees and stamp duty (BSD only — ABSD cannot be paid with CPF)

Note that CPF withdrawals accrue interest at 2.5% per annum (the CPF OA rate). When you eventually sell the property, all CPF principal drawn plus accrued interest must be refunded to your CPF account before you can pocket any cash proceeds.

New Launch vs Resale Condo: Key Differences

New launch condo versus resale condo comparison Singapore 2026
Figure 3: New Launch vs Resale Condo — Key Differences at a Glance (Singapore 2026)

Choosing between a new launch and a resale condo involves trade-offs across price, wait time, financing, and negotiation power. New launches are priced by the developer — there is limited room for negotiation, though unit selection, floor level, and stack choice are typically available. Resale condos are priced by individual sellers and are often open to negotiation, including Cash Over Valuation (COV) in sellers’ markets or discounts in buyers’ markets.

On financing, new launches do not require a bank valuation — you borrow against the purchase price. For resale units, the bank will commission an independent valuation; if the bank’s valuation is lower than the agreed price, you must fund the shortfall in cash (COV cannot be financed).

Worked Example: SC Couple Buying a S$1.8M New Launch in the OCR

Mr and Mrs Tan are a Singapore Citizen couple. They currently own an HDB flat in Tampines (with three years left before MOP). They wish to purchase a 3-bedroom new launch condo in the Outside Central Region priced at S$1,800,000 as their second property. Here is the full cost breakdown:

Item Amount Notes
Booking fee (5% cash) S$90,000 Paid on unit selection
Balance downpayment (15%) S$270,000 Cash or CPF OA, due on OTP exercise
Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) S$54,600 Due within 14 days of OTP exercise
ABSD (20% — SC 2nd property) S$360,000 Due within 14 days; refundable on remission
Legal fees (solicitor) S$3,200 Approximate
Bank loan (75% LTV) S$1,350,000 @2.8% 30yr = S$5,578/mth
Monthly TDSR (S$12,000 gross income) S$5,578 (46.5%) Below 55% cap — PASS

ABSD Remission Plan: As a Singapore Citizen couple, the Tans are entitled to a full ABSD remission if they sell their HDB flat within six months of the new launch’s Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) date. They must apply to IRAS for the remission within six months of TOP. If successful, IRAS refunds S$360,000 — reducing the net stamp duty outlay to just S$54,600 (BSD only). The six-month window begins at TOP, not at the purchase date, giving upgraders time to plan their HDB sale around the completion of their new unit.

Total cash needed before remission: S$90,000 + S$54,600 + S$360,000 + S$3,200 = S$507,800 (of which S$270,000 can be CPF).

Total cash needed after remission: S$507,800 − S$360,000 = S$147,800 (net of CPF drawdown).

Why New Launches Matter in Singapore’s 2026 Property Market

New launches remain a cornerstone of Singapore’s private property market. URA data shows 17,032 private residential units were unsold at end Q1 2026 — a substantial pipeline, yet concentrated in certain segments and locations. Developers have been selective about launches, absorbing units from completed projects before launching new ones, which has kept absorption rates healthy.

Land acquisition costs directly influence new launch prices. The recent Government Land Sales (GLS) results are instructive: the River Valley Green Parcel C site closed on 18 June 2026 with a top bid of S$1,730 psf ppr — a new benchmark for the River Valley and Zion precinct. Translated to end-buyer prices, analysts project launches on this site could command S$3,200–S$3,800 psf, making it among the priciest new launches in 2027–2028.

For first-time SC buyers, new launches in the OCR and RCR remain the most accessible entry point into private property. ABSD at 0% on a first purchase, coupled with current bank fixed rates at 1.35–1.40% and SORA-pegged rates at ~1.27%, make 2026 a financially favourable environment compared to the 3%+ rate environment of 2024.

What Might Come Next for New Launches

The GLS pipeline for 2H2026 is set to add further supply in growth corridors including Jurong Lake District and Tengah. As completed CCR projects are absorbed, developers are likely to accelerate new launches in 2027, particularly in the RCR where demand from HDB upgraders remains strong. Watch for the formal award of River Valley Green Parcel C — when the project eventually launches (est. 2027–2028), it will set a new price ceiling for District 9 condominiums. URA Q2 2026 flash estimates, due in early July, will provide the next major data point on whether price momentum is moderating.

Frequently Asked Questions: New Launch Condo Singapore 2026

Can I use my HDB flat as collateral for a new launch condo loan?

No. HDB flats cannot be used as collateral for private property loans. Your bank will assess your eligibility purely on income, existing liabilities, and the Loan-to-Value limits set by MAS. Your HDB flat is considered a separate asset. If you still have an outstanding HDB loan, it will be factored into your TDSR calculation, reducing the maximum loan amount for your new launch purchase.

Is there a minimum cash requirement when buying a new launch?

Yes. At least 5% of the purchase price must be paid in cash as the booking fee. If your LTV is limited to 75%, the remaining 20% downpayment (after the 5% booking) can be paid using CPF OA funds. Additionally, ABSD cannot be paid with CPF — it must be funded in cash. For SC second-property buyers at the S$1.5M–S$2M price range, the ABSD alone can represent S$300,000–S$400,000 in cash outlay (refundable on remission).

What happens if I miss the 14-day deadline to pay BSD and ABSD?

Under the Stamp Duties Act, stamp duty must be paid within 14 days of the date of execution of the Sale and Purchase Agreement (in Singapore) or within 30 days if the agreement is executed overseas. Late payment incurs a penalty of up to four times the outstanding stamp duty. IRAS does consider applications for remission of late payment penalties on a case-by-case basis, but this is not guaranteed. Engage your solicitor well in advance to ensure stamp duty is paid on time.

Can foreigners buy a new launch condo in Singapore?

Yes, with restrictions. Foreigners can freely buy non-landed private residential properties such as condominiums and apartments, subject to paying ABSD at 60% of the purchase price as at 2026. Foreigners cannot purchase landed residential property (terrace houses, semi-detached, bungalows) without prior approval from the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) under the Residential Property Act. The 60% ABSD rate, introduced in April 2023, has significantly reduced foreign buyer activity — accounting for under 5% of new launch transactions in 2025–2026.

What is the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) and how does it work?

The Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) applies to completed new launch units (those that have already obtained TOP). Under DPS, you pay only a small initial amount (typically 5–10% of the purchase price) at booking, and defer the remaining balance until you exercise the OTP and arrange financing. This gives buyers a window of 3–6 months to sell an existing property and arrange their finances before committing fully. DPS is offered at the developer’s discretion and typically carries a slight price premium over the normal payment scheme. It is not available for under-construction projects.

How are new launch condo prices set? Can I negotiate?

New launch prices are set by the developer, guided by recent comparable sales, land cost, construction cost, and projected profit margins. Developers typically release units at carefully calibrated prices by stack, floor, and facing, often with a price ladder (higher floors cost more). There is limited room to negotiate the base price, though you may negotiate on inclusions, car park allocation, or fit-out upgrades. Buyers do, however, benefit from developer incentives such as early-bird discounts, stamp duty absorption (increasingly rare post-2023 ABSD hikes), and legal fee rebates during soft launches.

What should I check before signing the Option to Purchase?

Before signing the OTP for any new launch, verify the following: (1) the developer’s Sale Licence number (from the Controller of Housing at the Ministry of National Development); (2) that the development charge and differential premium, if any, have been paid and the Grant of Written Permission is in order; (3) your AIP is confirmed and the loan quantum covers 75% of the purchase price; (4) your solicitor has reviewed the S&PA, particularly the defects liability period, the completion milestone schedule, and the developer’s liability for delays; and (5) you have a clear plan for BSD, ABSD, and downpayment financing, with cash reserves confirmed. Do not sign under pressure — the standard OTP gives you 21 days to exercise, and legitimate developers do not pressure you to sign immediately.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Stamp duty rates, LTV limits, and ABSD rules are subject to change by the Singapore government. Always verify current rates with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) at iras.gov.sg, the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) at ura.gov.sg, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) at mas.gov.sg. Consult a licensed property solicitor, mortgage broker, and financial adviser before committing to any property purchase.

Singapore Developer Sales May 2026: 447 Units Sold as Launch Drought Hits Market

Singapore Developer Sales May 2026: 447 Units Sold as Launch Drought Hits Market

⚡ Quick Answer: Singapore Developer Sales May 2026

  • 447 new private homes sold in May 2026, excluding Executive Condominiums — the lowest monthly figure since January 2026.
  • Down 71.1% month-on-month from April’s 1,548 units — a sharp contraction driven primarily by a lack of new project launches, not weak demand.
  • May marks the 4th consecutive month where sales exceeded launches — demonstrating persistent absorption of available inventory.
  • The Rest of Central Region (RCR) dominated, accounting for 74.7% of all sales (334 units), driven almost entirely by Hudson Place Residences at Media Circle.
  • Only one major project launched in May: Hudson Place Residences (327 units, 61.5% sold on launch weekend at S$2,458 psf average).
  • Data released by URA on 15 June 2026. Year-to-date sales through May 2026: approximately 4,206 units.
  • No structural market weakness — analysts attribute the drop to the BTO ballot period in June, which historically suppresses developer sales as upgraders pause to watch BTO results.

What the May 2026 Numbers Tell Us

Singapore developers sold 447 new private homes (excluding Executive Condominiums) in May 2026, according to data released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) on 15 June 2026. That represents a 71.1% fall from April’s 1,548 units — a dramatic month-on-month contraction that sounds alarming but is largely explained by a near-complete absence of new launches during the period.

Context is essential. April 2026 was a strong launch month, with multiple projects hitting the market simultaneously. May, by contrast, saw only one major launch — the 327-unit Hudson Place Residences at Media Circle in the Rest of Central Region. With limited new supply on offer, buyers had fewer projects to commit to, and the monthly total naturally dropped. The underlying demand signal remains intact: May was the fourth consecutive month in which developer sales outpaced developer launches, a ratio that indicates buyers are consistently absorbing available inventory faster than it is replenished.

Singapore developer sales January to May 2026 — 447 units sold in May, down 71.1% month-on-month
Figure 1: Monthly developer sales (new private homes excluding ECs) from January to May 2026. The April spike reflects a multi-project launch month; the May trough reflects a near-absence of new launches. Source: URA data released 15 June 2026; chart by LovelyHomes.

Regional Breakdown: RCR Takes 74.7% on a Single Project

The concentration in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) in May 2026 was unusually high — 334 of the 447 units sold (74.7%) were in the RCR. This was almost entirely attributable to Hudson Place Residences, the 327-unit mixed-use development at Media Circle in the One-North precinct. On its launch weekend, Hudson Place sold 201 units (61.5%) at an average price of approximately S$2,458 per square foot (psf) — a solid performance for a city-fringe project at that price point.

The Outside Central Region (OCR) contributed 91 units (20.4%), reflecting steady take-up in existing launches in suburban areas. The Core Central Region (CCR) accounted for just 22 units (4.9%) — consistent with the slower pace of luxury transactions that has characterised the CCR since the February 2023 ABSD tightening, which raised foreigner ABSD to 60% and significantly reduced the international buyer pool.

Singapore developer sales May 2026 by region — RCR 74.7%, OCR 20.4%, CCR 4.9%
Figure 2: Regional sales split for May 2026. RCR dominance at 74.7% reflects Hudson Place Residences as the sole major May launch. CCR remains subdued at 4.9%. Source: URA; chart by LovelyHomes.

May 2026 Developer Sales at a Glance

Metric May 2026 April 2026 Change MoM
New homes sold (excl. EC) 447 1,548 -71.1%
New homes launched 357 ~1,420 est. -75% approx.
Sales > Launches? Yes (4th consecutive month) Yes Demand intact
CCR units sold 22 (4.9%) ~93 Subdued
RCR units sold 334 (74.7%) ~620 Launch-driven
OCR units sold 91 (20.4%) ~835 Steady
Top project Hudson Place (327 units launched, 201 sold) Multiple projects
Average psf (top project) S$2,458 (Hudson Place) Varied

What This Means for Singapore Property Buyers

The 71.1% month-on-month decline in May 2026 is a statistical artefact of the launch calendar, not a signal of deteriorating buyer sentiment. Singapore’s new private home market operates in pulses: when developers launch, buyers respond; when there are no launches, there are no sales. The sustained pattern of sales exceeding launches over four consecutive months tells a more informative story — each new unit released into the market is being absorbed with relative ease.

For buyers considering a purchase in the second half of 2026, several practical points emerge from the May data:

Competition may intensify in June and July. The June 2026 BTO exercise (which closed for applications around 11 June 2026) diverts a segment of potential buyers toward the public housing market temporarily. Once BTO results are announced in early July, those who are unsuccessful are likely to accelerate their private market search, potentially increasing competition for well-priced OCR and RCR launches in the third quarter.

CCR remains a buyer’s market. The Core Central Region’s 22 units in May 2026 reflects the structural impact of the 60% foreigner ABSD. With international demand suppressed, CCR developers have been patient on pricing, and Singapore Citizen buyers seeking prestige addresses have more negotiating room than at any point in the past five years.

OCR and RCR launches remain the primary volume driver. Suburban projects priced at S$1,800–S$2,400 psf continue to attract the largest buyer pools — upgraders from HDB, young families accessing their first private property. This segment is well-supported by the TDSR framework and the relatively low SORA environment in 2026.

What to Watch in June and July 2026

June and July 2026 are expected to be more active launch months. At least four to six projects are understood to be in advanced pre-launch preparation, including developments in the Thomson-East Coast corridor and at Tengah. The River Valley Green (Parcel C) GLS site — tender closed at noon on 18 June 2026 — is expected to see an award announcement in late June or early July, adding another data point for CCR land pricing following the S$1,865 psf ppr benchmark set by the Peck Hay Road award in June 2026. The URA Q2 2026 flash estimates for the Property Price Index will be released in early July, which will confirm whether the 0.9% quarterly growth seen in Q1 has been sustained or moderated.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did developer sales drop so sharply in May 2026?

The primary reason is that only one major project — Hudson Place Residences — launched in May. Developer sales are almost entirely determined by what launches during the month; without new supply entering the market, there are simply fewer units for buyers to purchase. The drop from April’s 1,548 units to May’s 447 is not a demand collapse; it reflects a quiet launch month in the developer pipeline. This pattern repeats regularly in Singapore’s new launch market.

What does “sales exceeding launches” for four months mean?

When monthly sales are greater than monthly launches, it means buyers are absorbing inventory faster than developers are replenishing it. Over time this reduces the unsold inventory of launched units. For buyers, a sustained period of sales exceeding launches suggests competitive conditions when new projects hit the market. For sellers of resale units, it signals a healthy primary market that keeps overall transaction activity elevated.

Is the CCR market weak?

Relative to the OCR and RCR, yes — but it is structurally weak rather than cyclically weak. The February 2023 ABSD increase to 60% for foreign buyers removed a significant demand segment from the CCR. Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents are still buying in the CCR, but at a pace that leaves unsold inventory elevated compared to pre-2023 levels. For well-capitalised Singapore Citizen buyers, the CCR in 2026 offers the most negotiating leverage of any segment.

When will the next URA developer sales data be released?

URA typically releases monthly developer sales data around the 15th of the following month. June 2026 data would therefore be expected around 15 July 2026. The Q2 2026 Property Price Index flash estimate is expected in early July 2026, followed by full Q2 statistics in late July.

What is the River Valley Green Parcel C GLS site and why does it matter?

River Valley Green (Parcel C) is a 99-year leasehold Government Land Sale site adjacent to Great World MRT Station on the Thomson-East Coast Line, expected to yield approximately 470 homes. Its tender closed at noon on 18 June 2026. The site is significant because it is one of the last remaining large residential parcels in the CCR’s River Valley / Great World precinct. The award price — expected in late June or early July 2026 — will establish a fresh land-cost benchmark for the area and provide an indication of developer confidence in CCR pricing.

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Disclaimer: This article is based on publicly released URA data and industry reporting. All figures are as at 15 June 2026. Past transaction volumes are not indicative of future market conditions. Buyers and sellers should consult a licensed property agent and conduct independent research before making any property decision. For official data, refer to the Urban Redevelopment Authority at ura.gov.sg.

Singapore TDSR Guide 2026: Total Debt Servicing Ratio Explained

Singapore TDSR Guide 2026: Total Debt Servicing Ratio Explained

⚡ Quick Answer: TDSR Singapore 2026

  • TDSR stands for Total Debt Servicing Ratio — a MAS rule capping all monthly debt repayments at 55% of gross monthly income.
  • All debts count: mortgage, car loan, personal loan, student loan, credit line, renovation loan — every obligation.
  • HDB and EC buyers face two limits: TDSR 55% (all debts) and MSR 30% (the HDB/EC mortgage alone).
  • Gross income is used, including CPF. Variable income (commission, bonuses) is typically haircut by 30%.
  • TDSR was reduced from 60% to 55% on 30 September 2022 — the tightening that cooled the 2022 market.
  • Banks stress-test at a slightly higher rate than your actual rate to ensure you can cope with rate rises.
  • Exceeding 55% = loan declined — no exceptions under MAS Notice 645 for residential property loans.

What Is TDSR and Why Did MAS Introduce It?

The Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) is a financial prudential measure introduced by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) on 29 June 2013 under MAS Notice 645. It requires every MAS-regulated financial institution in Singapore to verify that a borrower’s aggregate monthly debt obligations — across all loans, not just the new mortgage — do not exceed 55% of gross monthly income before extending a property loan.

The policy was created in response to a prolonged low-interest-rate environment that was encouraging households to borrow heavily for property. Without TDSR, a borrower could theoretically obtain a mortgage even if their total monthly repayments consumed 80% or more of their income. TDSR closed that gap by introducing a single universal ceiling enforced across all lenders simultaneously.

On 30 September 2022, MAS tightened the TDSR from 60% to its current 55%, as part of a package of property cooling measures. This 5-percentage-point reduction effectively cut maximum loan sizes by approximately 8-10% and is credited with contributing to the slower price growth seen in 2023 through 2025.

TDSR breakdown: example monthly debt obligations versus MAS 55% cap, Singapore 2026
Figure 1: Illustrative household with S$10,000 gross monthly income. The bars show how individual debts each consume a share of income, and how the 55% TDSR ceiling constrains the total. Source: MAS Notice 645; illustration by LovelyHomes.

How TDSR Is Calculated

The TDSR formula is:

TDSR = Total Monthly Debt Obligations ÷ Gross Monthly Income × 100
Must be ≤ 55% for a residential property loan to be approved under MAS Notice 645.

Gross monthly income includes fixed salary (before CPF deduction), allowances, and discounted variable pay. Variable components — commissions, overtime, bonuses, rental income — are typically reduced by 30% (i.e., the bank counts only 70% of such income). Self-employed borrowers must provide at least two years of IRAS Notices of Assessment; the bank uses the lower of the two-year average or the latest year’s net trade income, often with a further haircut.

Total monthly debt obligations covers: the proposed new property mortgage (at the bank’s applicable stress-test rate, which may be 0.5%–1% above your actual rate), all existing property loans, car hire purchase instalments, personal loan repayments, student loan repayments, credit card minimum payments (typically 5% of outstanding balance per month), and renovation loans.

If you own another property with an outstanding mortgage, that entire monthly repayment is included in your TDSR calculation for any new loan application. This is the key reason why owning multiple properties progressively reduces your borrowable amount on each subsequent purchase.

TDSR affordability chart: maximum property price by gross monthly income, Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Maximum property price at TDSR 55% with no other debts, 30-year bank loan at 3.2% p.a., 75% LTV. The chart shows the affordability ceiling for clean-balance-sheet borrowers. Source: LovelyHomes calculation.

TDSR for Different Property Types

The TDSR framework applies to all property loans extended by MAS-regulated financial institutions, but the practical constraints differ by property type:

Private residential (condominiums, apartments, landed homes): TDSR 55% applies. There is no separate MSR restriction. LTV starts at 75% for a first property, falling to 45% and 35% for second and subsequent properties respectively.

HDB resale flats (bank loan): Both TDSR 55% and MSR 30% apply simultaneously. MSR requires that the monthly HDB mortgage payment alone must not exceed 30% of gross income. MSR is usually the binding constraint for most HDB buyers since 30% is typically hit before the 55% TDSR ceiling.

HDB resale flats (HDB loan): The HDB Concessionary Loan is administered by HDB, not subject to MAS Notice 645 in the same way, but HDB applies its own 30% MSR equivalent. The HDB loan rate is pegged at 0.1% above the CPF OA rate, currently 2.6% per annum (effective 1 January 2026).

Executive Condominiums: Both TDSR 55% and MSR 30% apply at point of purchase. After the five-year mark, once an EC is privatised, resale buyers are only subject to TDSR (no MSR restriction).

Commercial and industrial property: TDSR applies but MAS sets the cap for non-residential property loans at 60% — a more lenient threshold than the 55% residential cap.

TDSR vs MSR comparison table — Total Debt Servicing Ratio vs Mortgage Servicing Ratio Singapore 2026
Figure 3: TDSR vs MSR side-by-side across eight dimensions. For HDB and EC buyers, both ratios apply simultaneously — the more restrictive constraint governs. Source: MAS Notice 645, MAS Notice 632; LovelyHomes.

TDSR and MSR — Summary Table

Loan / Property Type TDSR Cap MSR Cap LTV (1st Prop.) Notes
Private condo / landed (1st property) 55% None 75% 5% cash + CPF for balance of DP
Private condo / landed (2nd property) 55% None 45% 25% cash mandatory downpayment
Private condo / landed (3rd+ property) 55% None 35% 25% cash mandatory downpayment
HDB resale flat (bank loan) 55% 30% 75% Both caps apply; MSR typically binds first
HDB resale flat (HDB loan) N/A 30% 80% No cash DP required; CPF OA used
Executive Condominium (at launch) 55% 30% 75% 5% cash booking fee; MSR applies
Commercial / industrial property 60% None Up to 70% Higher TDSR cap for non-residential loans

Worked Example: Mr and Mrs Ong Buy Their First Private Condo

Mr and Mrs Ong are a Singapore Citizen couple. Combined gross monthly income: S$12,000 (Mr Ong S$7,500 fixed; Mrs Ong S$4,500, of which S$2,000 is commission).

Existing debts: car hire purchase S$850 per month; personal loan S$300 per month.

Target property: OCR 3-bedroom condo at S$1,500,000. Bank loan 75% LTV = S$1,125,000 over 30 years at 3.2% p.a. Monthly repayment: approximately S$4,862.

Income adjustment: Mrs Ong’s S$2,000 commission is haircut by 30% (bank counts S$1,400). Qualifying income = S$7,500 + S$2,500 fixed + S$1,400 variable = S$11,400 per month.

TDSR calculation: Total obligations = S$4,862 (new mortgage) + S$850 (car) + S$300 (personal) = S$6,012 per month. TDSR = S$6,012 ÷ S$11,400 = 52.7% — below the 55% cap. Loan approved (subject to credit assessment and valuation).

Sensitivity: If the Ongs wished to buy at S$1,700,000 instead (loan S$1,275,000, repayment ~S$5,517), total obligations would rise to S$6,667, giving TDSR = 58.5% — which exceeds 55%. The S$1,700,000 purchase would be declined unless they clear the car loan (saving S$850/mth) or increase their qualifying income.

Lesson: A single car loan can cost you S$200,000+ in purchasing power. Clearing non-housing debts before applying for a mortgage is one of the most effective ways to maximise your TDSR headroom.

Why TDSR Matters: Singapore in Global Context

Singapore’s TDSR framework is widely regarded as one of the most comprehensive income-based mortgage controls in the Asia-Pacific region. Countries like Australia and the UK use similar debt-to-income concepts in their macroprudential toolkits, but Singapore’s version is legally binding on all lenders — there is no discretion to override it for high-net-worth clients or particularly creditworthy borrowers.

The practical effect is a structurally cautious mortgage market. Singapore mortgage arrears remain among the lowest in Asia, and the 2022 cooling measures (which included the TDSR tightening) contributed to a soft-landing scenario rather than a sharp price correction. For buyers, this means the market is protected from speculative excess, but also that stretching to buy at the top of your affordability range carries real interest-rate risk if rates rise post-purchase.

What Might Change in TDSR Policy

MAS reviews the TDSR threshold as part of its broader macroprudential toolkit, typically alongside reviews of LTV limits and stamp duty rates. With the 3-month compounded SORA having eased to approximately 1.0% in early 2026, some market observers have speculated whether MAS might loosen the TDSR to 60% if sustained rate normalisation persists. However, as at June 2026, no public consultation or announcement has been made. Prospective buyers should plan all financing decisions on the current 55% threshold and not rely on any anticipated easing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does CPF count as income in the TDSR formula?

The gross monthly income used in TDSR is your gross salary before CPF deduction. CPF contributions are not separately added — they are already implicit in the gross figure. However, CPF OA contributions do help service the mortgage (reducing your cash outlay), which gives HDB buyers and those using CPF for loan repayment meaningful payment relief even though the income figure itself is unchanged in the TDSR calculation.

Can I exclude a loan that will be fully paid in six months?

Some banks will exclude short-term residual debt (typically fewer than 6 to 12 months remaining) from the TDSR calculation at their discretion, since such obligations will not affect long-term serviceability. Policies differ by bank. If your car loan has only a few months left, it is worth asking your mortgage banker whether it will be included. Alternatively, fully clearing the loan before applying can improve your TDSR ratio — and often has an outsized positive impact on your maximum loan quantum.

What if my TDSR exceeds 55%?

A bank is required under MAS Notice 645 to decline your application if TDSR exceeds 55%. There is no exception or waiver for residential property loans. Your options are to: (a) make a larger downpayment to reduce the loan amount and therefore the monthly mortgage obligation; (b) clear existing debts before applying; (c) choose a lower-priced property; or (d) add a co-borrower whose income improves the combined TDSR, provided that person’s debts do not make things worse.

How is TDSR calculated for the self-employed?

Banks require at least two years of IRAS Notices of Assessment and, for incorporated businesses, audited or signed financial statements. Qualifying income is typically the lower of the two-year average or the most recent year’s net trade income. Many banks apply an additional haircut of 20–30% on top of this. Self-employed borrowers should expect their qualifying income to be assessed conservatively, which reduces their maximum mortgage relative to a salaried employee with the same stated earnings.

Does TDSR apply when I refinance?

Yes. Refinancing is a new loan application and must satisfy TDSR at the time of application. If your financial circumstances have changed since your original purchase — new debts, a drop in income — you may find you fail the current TDSR test even if you passed it years ago. This is an important practical risk for borrowers on fixed-rate packages coming up for repricing who intend to switch lenders.

Is TDSR the same as DSCR?

No. TDSR is a consumer-lending rule for individuals applying for property loans in Singapore. DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) is a commercial-lending metric used for corporate or commercial real estate loans; it measures whether a property’s net operating income covers its debt service. A residential buy-to-let investor is subject to TDSR on the individual borrower side; a developer or company owning commercial property typically uses the DSCR framework instead.

Joint purchase — is TDSR calculated on combined income?

Yes. Joint borrowers’ incomes are pooled and their debts are also pooled. This generally allows a couple to qualify for a much larger loan than either could secure individually. However, if one co-borrower carries significant debts (a large car loan, for instance), those debts also enter the combined TDSR calculation and reduce the joint loan quantum. Both parties will need to provide full income and liability documentation.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. TDSR rules and MAS policies are subject to change without notice. All borrowers should seek independent advice from a licensed financial adviser or mortgage broker, and verify current rules directly with the Monetary Authority of Singapore at mas.gov.sg and the Housing & Development Board at hdb.gov.sg.

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

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

Quick Answer: HDB Upgrader Buying a Condo in 2026

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

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

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

Understanding Your ABSD Position as an HDB Upgrader

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

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

Strategy A: Sell HDB First, Then Buy Condo

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

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

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

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

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

Strategy C: SPR Upgraders

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

Financial Qualification: Can You Afford the Upgrade?

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

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

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

The 10-Step Upgrader Roadmap

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

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

Understanding the CPF Component of Your Upgrade

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

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

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

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

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

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

Key Timing Rules You Cannot Miss

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

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

Why Upgrading Still Makes Sense in 2026

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

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

What Might Come Next: Upgrader Market Outlook

The following is speculative commentary for planning purposes only.

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

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

Frequently Asked Questions: HDB Upgrader Buying a Condo

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Disclaimer: This guide is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Singapore property regulations, ABSD rates, and CPF rules are subject to change. All figures are illustrative and based on conditions as at June 2026. Consult a licensed property agent, mortgage specialist, or legal adviser for advice specific to your circumstances. Official resources: hdb.gov.sg, iras.gov.sg, mas.gov.sg, cpf.gov.sg.
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Singapore Property Rental Income Tax Guide 2026: IRAS Deductions, Rates and How to File

Singapore Property Rental Income Tax Guide 2026: IRAS Deductions, Rates and How to File

Quick Answer: Singapore Rental Income Tax 2026

  • All rental income from Singapore property is taxable under the Income Tax Act (Cap 134), administered by IRAS.
  • You may deduct allowable expenses — mortgage interest, property tax, fire insurance, routine repairs, agent fees — to arrive at net taxable rental income.
  • Capital costs cannot be deducted — no claims for renovations, major upgrades, furniture depreciation, or loan principal repayments.
  • Tax is levied at personal income tax rates — Singapore tax-resident rates (0–24%) apply; non-residents pay a flat 22% on net rental income.
  • Filing deadline: 18 April annually — declare via myTax Portal; IRAS auto-includes known data where available.
  • Late filing or non-declaration attracts penalties — up to 200% of tax undercharged plus potential prosecution under s.96 Income Tax Act.
  • HDB flat rental has slightly different rules — HDB room rental income is also taxable but sub-let approval and NCQ limits still apply (see our HDB Room Rental Guide 2026).

Owning an investment property in Singapore comes with one certainty beyond market cycles: your rental income is taxable. Whether you own a one-bedroom condominium in Tiong Bahru, a shophouse unit in Tanjong Pagar, or a landed property in Upper Bukit Timah that you lease out whilst residing abroad, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) expects you to declare that rental income each year.

Yet many Singapore landlords — especially first-time investors who upgraded from an HDB flat — under-declare or over-pay because they misunderstand which deductions IRAS allows. This guide sets out the complete picture: what qualifies as rental income, which expenses are deductible, how the tax is calculated, and how to file correctly by 18 April each year.

What Counts as Rental Income in Singapore?

Under section 10(1)(f) of the Income Tax Act, rental income includes all amounts received or receivable by a person in respect of the letting of any property located in Singapore. This covers:

  • Gross rent — the monthly or annual sum paid by your tenant under the tenancy agreement.
  • Lease premiums — any upfront lump-sum payment to secure the tenancy is spread over the lease term and taxed proportionately.
  • Furniture and fittings rent — if your tenancy agreement splits the total into “base rent” and a “furniture allowance”, both components are taxable rental income.
  • Reimbursed expenses — if your tenant pays your utility bills or property tax and these are included in the rent, the gross amount is your rental income (before the deduction).
  • Compensation for early termination — amounts received from tenants for breaking a tenancy early are treated as rental income for the period the tenancy was broken.

Rental income from overseas property is generally not taxable in Singapore (as Singapore uses a territorial tax system), provided the funds are not remitted into Singapore. From 1 January 2024, certain foreign-sourced income remitted to Singapore by individuals is taxable; consult a licensed tax adviser if you hold overseas investment property.

IRAS allowable rental deductions Singapore 2026 table showing mortgage interest property tax maintenance fees as deductible and renovation loan principal as non-deductible
Figure 1: IRAS Allowable vs Non-Allowable Rental Deductions — Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS (iras.gov.sg)

Allowable Deductions: What You Can Claim Against Rental Income

IRAS allows landlords to deduct expenses that are wholly and exclusively incurred in the production of rental income and are revenue in nature (not capital). The following are the main allowable deductions in 2026:

1. Mortgage Interest

The interest portion of your monthly bank or HDB loan repayment is fully deductible. Only the interest element qualifies — loan principal repayments are capital and cannot be deducted. If you have a floating-rate loan, use the actual interest charged each year. Most banks issue an annual statement splitting principal and interest for your records.

2. Property Tax

Annual property tax paid to IRAS on the investment property is deductible. Note: you are claiming the tax as an expense against rental income — this is separate from your residential property tax obligation on your own home. The deduction is for the property tax assessed on the rented property for the year.

3. Fire Insurance Premium

Fire insurance premiums covering the property during the rental period are allowable. If your policy covers a period spanning two tax years (e.g., July 2025 to July 2026), apportion the premium to the relevant year.

4. Routine Maintenance and Repairs

Costs of maintaining the property in its existing condition — plumbing repairs, repainting, replacing faulty fixtures — are deductible. Improvements that enhance the property’s value or extend its life (a new built-in wardrobe, a replacement air-conditioning system that upgrades the previous one) are capital expenditure and not deductible.

5. Agent Commission and Advertising

Letting fees paid to a licensed property agent, including a one-time commission upon signing the tenancy agreement, are deductible. Advertising costs (online listings, print advertisements) for finding tenants are similarly allowable. These are expenses incurred in earning the rental income.

6. Legal Fees for Tenancy

Solicitor’s fees for drafting or reviewing a tenancy agreement are deductible. Legal costs for acquiring or disposing of the property are capital and not deductible.

What You Cannot Deduct

IRAS explicitly disallows: renovation costs, capital improvements, furniture and fittings depreciation (Singapore has no wear-and-tear allowance for residential property), loan principal repayments, mortgage protection insurance premiums, costs incurred during vacancy periods when no rent is being earned, and any expense that is not wholly connected to earning the rental income.

How Singapore Income Tax Applies to Rental Income

Rental income does not attract a separate tax — it is added to your other assessable income (employment income, trade income, director’s fees) and taxed at your marginal personal income tax rate under the resident progressive rate schedule, effective Year of Assessment (YA) 2024 onwards:

Chargeable Income (SGD) Rate on Band Cumulative Tax
First $20,000 0% $0
Next $10,000 ($20K–$30K) 2% $200
Next $10,000 ($30K–$40K) 3.5% $550
Next $40,000 ($40K–$80K) 7% $3,350
Next $40,000 ($80K–$120K) 11.5% $7,950
Next $40,000 ($120K–$160K) 15% $13,950
Next $40,000 ($160K–$200K) 18% $21,150
Next $40,000 ($200K–$240K) 19% $28,750
Next $40,000 ($240K–$280K) 19.5% $36,550
Next $40,000 ($280K–$320K) 20% $44,550
Above $320,000 22% – 24% progressive

Non-resident landlords pay a flat 22% on net rental income with no personal reliefs available. This applies to individuals not ordinarily resident in Singapore for 183 days or more in the relevant year. Non-residents must also file a Singapore tax return and may be required to appoint a local tax agent.

Rental income estimated annual tax at five monthly rent levels Singapore 2026 IRAS income tax
Figure 2: Gross vs Net Rental Income and Estimated Annual Income Tax at Five Monthly Rent Levels — Singapore 2026. Illustrative only; actual tax depends on your total chargeable income profile.

Worked Example: Renting Out a Private Condo in 2026

The Wong family — Singapore Citizens, joint owners of a 2-bedroom condominium in Kallang. Gross monthly rent: $3,200. Mr Wong earns $9,500/mth in employment income.

Item Amount
Gross annual rent (Jan–Dec 2025) $38,400
Less: Mortgage interest (POSB Home Loan statement) ($9,600)
Less: Annual property tax (non-owner-occupied) ($3,200)
Less: Fire insurance premium ($520)
Less: Routine maintenance / A/C servicing / plumbing ($1,100)
Less: Agent commission (1 month’s rent) ($3,200)
Net taxable rental income (YA 2026) $20,780
Mr Wong’s employment income (declared separately) $114,000
Total chargeable income (after personal reliefs ~$37,000) ~$97,780
Incremental tax on rental income at ~11.5% marginal rate ~$2,389/yr
Net rental income after tax (monthly) ~$1,516/mth

Key takeaway: after deductions and tax, Mr Wong nets approximately $1,516 per month from the $3,200 gross rent. This is not a criticism of property investment — the capital appreciation on the condo adds significantly to total returns — but it illustrates why landlords who model only gross rent make poor investment decisions.

How to File: IRAS myTax Portal Step by Step

How to declare rental income to IRAS Singapore 2026 step by step myTax Portal filing process
Figure 3: Rental Income Tax Filing Process — Seven Steps from Documents to Tax Payment, Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS

IRAS auto-populates most employment income figures via the Auto-Inclusion Scheme (AIS), but rental income is not auto-included — landlords must declare it manually. The process in practice:

  1. Gather your documents by January of the filing year: tenancy agreement, bank loan annual statement (splitting principal and interest), IRAS property tax assessment, insurance policy, receipts for maintenance and agent fees.
  2. Log in to myTax Portal at mytax.iras.gov.sg using Singpass MFA.
  3. Navigate to “File Individual Income Tax (Form B1)” (for employees with rental income) or Form B (for self-employed) — complete the rental income section under “Other Income”.
  4. Enter gross rental income and each allowable deduction separately. IRAS will compute net rental income automatically.
  5. Submit by 18 April (e-filing; paper returns are due 15 April).
  6. Receive your Notice of Assessment (NOA) by post or via myTax Portal. Review for accuracy — you have 30 days from the NOA date to object if there is an error.
  7. Pay by the due date on the NOA — via GIRO, PayNow, internet banking, or at AXS/SingPost counters.

Tip: IRAS’s Rental Relief Framework introduced during the COVID-19 period (2020–2021) has fully expired. No rental income relief is available in YA 2026 under COVID measures.

Why Rental Income Tax Matters for Singapore Property Investors

Singapore has relatively low income tax rates compared with most developed markets — the top marginal rate of 24% (above $1M) is far below the UK’s 45%, Australia’s 47%, or Hong Kong’s 17% salaries tax. Even at the 15–18% band that most mid-income investors land in, the after-tax rental yield for a well-located condo is typically positive. However, failing to account for IRAS obligations when underwriting a property purchase leads to three common errors:

  • Overestimating net yield — a $3,200/mth gross rent may look like a 3.2% yield on a $1.2M property, but after allowable deductions and tax, the true cash yield is closer to 1.8–2.2%.
  • Missing deductions — many landlords forget to claim mortgage interest (the largest deductible item) because they use CPF OA funds for repayment and assume no cash changes hands. IRAS allows the interest deduction regardless of whether the repayment comes from CPF or cash.
  • Commingling ABSD strategy with tax strategy — if you held your HDB flat and purchased a condo (20% ABSD, with remission on HDB sale within 6 months), you must still declare rental income on the condo during the period you hold both properties. The ABSD framework and the rental income tax regime are entirely separate systems administered by different IRAS divisions.

For investors holding multiple properties, maintaining a separate rental income tracker for each property and reconciling it quarterly against bank statements is strongly recommended. This significantly simplifies April filing.

What Might Come Next: Rental Income Tax Outlook

The following is forward-looking speculation based on publicly available commentary and budget signals — it does not constitute tax advice.

IRAS has signalled no changes to the rental income tax framework for YA 2026 or YA 2027. However, two areas bear watching:

  • Foreign-sourced income changes: Following the 2022 changes that brought certain foreign passive income (dividends, interest) into the Singapore tax net when remitted, there is ongoing policy debate about whether foreign rental income should similarly be taxable upon remittance. As at June 2026, rental income from overseas properties remains outside Singapore’s tax net if not remitted, but high-net-worth landlords with overseas portfolios should monitor any Budget 2027 announcements.
  • Non-owner-occupied property tax alignment: The graduated non-owner-occupied property tax rates (10–20%, increased in 2023) may be reviewed in future budgets to further discourage speculative holding. Higher property tax would paradoxically increase allowable deductions for landlords, but would also compress investment yields.
  • Platform reporting: IRAS has been expanding its data-matching capabilities via MAS and regulatory partnerships. Rental income declared through platforms like 99.co, PropertyGuru, and Airbnb may eventually be subject to third-party reporting obligations similar to the GST framework for digital services.

Rental Income Tax in Context: Singapore vs Regional Peers

Singapore’s approach to taxing rental income is broadly aligned with other developed economies, but its relatively modest rates and clear deduction framework make it more landlord-friendly than most. In Malaysia, rental income above RM70,000 is taxed at 24%; in Australia, negative gearing laws allow interest losses to offset other income but the effective capital gains tax erodes returns on sale; in Hong Kong, property tax is levied as a flat 15% on net rental income (gross rent less 20% statutory allowance) regardless of actual expenses. Singapore’s expense-based deduction regime — whilst requiring more documentation — is generally more accurate and beneficial for highly leveraged investors with large mortgage interest deductions.

Frequently Asked Questions: Rental Income Tax Singapore 2026

Can I claim mortgage interest if I use CPF OA to pay my loan?

Yes. IRAS allows the deduction of mortgage interest regardless of whether you use CPF Ordinary Account funds or cash to service your loan repayments. You can obtain the annual mortgage interest figure from your bank’s annual statement or CPF Board’s online portal. Only the interest portion is deductible — not the principal reduction.

What if my property is vacant for part of the year? Can I still claim expenses?

Only expenses incurred during periods when the property is genuinely available for rent can be claimed. If the property is vacant between tenancies whilst you are actively seeking a new tenant, IRAS generally accepts a proportionate deduction. However, if the property is vacant because you are using it personally, renovating it, or simply leaving it idle, expenses during that period are not deductible. Keep records of advertising and agent correspondence to demonstrate active letting intent during vacancy.

Is rental income taxed if I rent out a room in my HDB flat?

Yes — all rental income from HDB flats and private property is taxable. For HDB flat room rentals, you must obtain HDB’s approval to sub-let, comply with the Non-Citizen Quota (NCQ), and declare the rental income to IRAS annually. You may deduct a proportionate share of allowable expenses (interest, property tax) corresponding to the rented portion. See our Singapore HDB Room Rental Guide 2026 for the full framework including NCQ limits and approval conditions.

Can I deduct renovation costs from rental income?

No. Renovation and improvement costs are capital expenditure and are not deductible against rental income under Singapore tax law. This applies even if the renovation was undertaken specifically to attract higher-paying tenants. IRAS distinguishes between revenue expenditure (maintaining the property in its existing state) and capital expenditure (enhancing or extending the property). Routine maintenance such as repainting, replacing like-for-like fixtures, and servicing appliances qualifies as revenue expenditure and is deductible; a full kitchen overhaul or bathroom extension does not.

What penalties apply if I under-declare rental income?

Under section 94 of the Income Tax Act, omitting income from a tax return without reasonable excuse attracts a penalty of twice the tax undercharged (200% penalty). Fraudulent under-declaration under section 96 can result in up to treble the tax undercharged plus a fine of up to $10,000 and imprisonment. IRAS has access to HDB records, URA caveats, and banking data — undeclared rental income identified through these channels is aggressively pursued. The most cost-effective approach is voluntary compliance and accurate declaration.

How does IRAS treat short-term rentals (e.g., Airbnb / serviced apartments)?

Short-term accommodation of private residential property — rentals shorter than three consecutive months per tenant — is generally not permitted under the Planning Act without URA approval, and HDB flats may not be sub-let on a short-term basis at all. Where such rentals are authorised (typically in government-approved short-stay projects), the income is taxable as rental income under the Income Tax Act. Platforms that facilitate short-stay bookings may be subject to IRAS data-matching. Unauthorised short-term rentals carry planning enforcement risk in addition to tax exposure.

Do joint owners each declare their share of rental income separately?

Yes. If a property is jointly owned, rental income and deductible expenses are allocated to each owner in proportion to their beneficial interest (ordinarily 50:50 for joint tenants, or as specified in a tenancy-in-common arrangement). Each owner declares their respective share independently in their personal income tax return. There is no joint filing option for property rental in Singapore. In practice, joint owner couples often find this beneficial if one spouse is in a lower tax bracket — the aggregate tax burden may be lower than if only the higher-earner declared the full rental income.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, financial, or legal advice. Singapore tax law is subject to change; rates and rules above reflect the position as at June 2026. For specific advice on your rental income tax obligations, consult a qualified tax adviser or accredited tax practitioner (ATP) registered with IRAS. Official resources: iras.gov.sg, IRAS Rental Income and Expenses page.
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