Singapore New Home Sales April 2026: URA Data Released as Q2 Rebound Gets Under Way

Singapore New Home Sales April 2026: URA Data Released as Q2 Rebound Gets Under Way

Quick Answer — Singapore Developer Sales April 2026

  • URA released April 2026 monthly developer sales data on 15 May 2026.
  • April was driven by two blockbuster late-month launches: Tengah Garden Residences (~863 units, OCR, ~S$1,700 psf) and Vela Bay (515 units, CCR, ~S$2,886 psf), which together cleared approximately 1,224 units in a single 48-hour launch weekend.
  • Rivelle Tampines EC (572 units) was fully sold out in April — the last EC project in 2026 where buyers could use the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) before it was removed on 8 May 2026.
  • Q2 2026 has begun with stronger momentum than Q1 2026’s 1,294-unit total (which was weaker due to a light launch calendar).
  • The declining SORA rate (now ~1.20%, down from peak 3.68%) is improving affordability for new home buyers on floating-rate loans.
  • Key Q2 pipeline still to launch: Lentor Gardens Residences (499 units), and further OCR projects as GLS sites progress.

Singapore’s Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) released its monthly developer sales statistics for April 2026 on 15 May 2026, and the headline picture is a significant rebound from Q1 2026’s subdued volumes. After a first quarter that recorded just 1,294 new private homes sold excluding executive condominiums — a figure depressed by a deliberately thin launch calendar — April’s late-month double launch of Tengah Garden Residences and Vela Bay changed the narrative.

For buyers, developers, and investors watching Singapore’s new launch market, April 2026 provides several important data points. This article breaks down what the monthly figures show, which projects drove the numbers, what the fully-sold Rivelle Tampines EC tells us about post-cooling-measures demand, and what to expect through the rest of Q2 2026.

1. Q1 2026 in Context: A Quiet Quarter by Design

Before analysing April, it is important to understand why Q1 2026 was so subdued. The 1,294 new private homes sold (excluding ECs) across January to March represented a 60% quarter-on-quarter fall from Q4 2025’s elevated volumes. This was not demand weakness — it reflected a deliberately compressed launch pipeline.

Developers held back launches in early 2026 after the strong 2H 2025 absorption. January saw just 246 units transacted and February approximately 512, both reflecting Lunar New Year seasonality and minimal new launches. March rebounded sharply when Pinery Residences (588 units, 92.3% sold) launched, driving March’s total to approximately 1,300 units — the busiest month of the quarter.

Singapore monthly new private home developer sales Jan-Apr 2026 bar chart
Figure 1: Singapore new private home developer sales by month, January to April 2026. April’s jump reflects the late-month TGR and Vela Bay launches.

2. April’s Headline: The Double Launch Weekend

The defining event of April 2026 was a single late-month launch weekend where two major projects went on sale simultaneously — Tengah Garden Residences (TGR) in the Outside Central Region (OCR) and Vela Bay in Bayshore, Core Central Region (CCR). Together, these two projects accounted for approximately 1,378 units and achieved combined take-up of around 89% in 48 hours, representing roughly 1,224 units sold over one weekend.

The performance of these two launches illustrates a key dynamic in Singapore’s 2026 market: quality supply at the right pricing attracts immediate buyer conviction, even at very different price points. TGR’s OCR pricing (~S$1,700 psf) targets HDB upgraders and first-time private buyers; Vela Bay’s CCR pricing (~S$2,886 psf) targets investment-grade buyers, permanent residents, and high-net-worth individuals comfortable with Singapore’s ABSD framework.

Singapore April 2026 new launch project take-up rates Tengah Garden Residences Vela Bay Rivelle Tampines
Figure 2: Key project performance in April 2026 — TGR and Vela Bay drove the late-month surge, while Rivelle Tampines EC cleared its final units.

3. Rivelle Tampines EC: The Last DPS Sale of 2026

Rivelle Tampines, the 572-unit executive condominium at Tampines Street 95 developed by Sim Lian Group, completed its sell-out in April 2026. The project had launched on 21 March 2026 with a spectacular 92.5% Day 1 take-up at a median price of S$1,937 psf — the best EC launch since Hundred Palms Residences in 2017. The remaining units were fully taken up during the second ballot on 24 April 2026.

What makes Rivelle Tampines historically significant is that 87.9% of its buyers opted for the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) — and all of those OTPs were issued before 8 May 2026, the date on which the Ministry of National Development announced the removal of DPS for new ECs as part of the EC cooling package.

Under DPS, EC buyers need only pay the down payment and service the loan when they collect their keys (typically 3–4 years later), rather than making progressive payments during construction. The scheme was popular among buyers with existing home loans who did not want to service two mortgages simultaneously. With DPS now gone for all new EC OTPs from 8 May 2026 onwards, Rivelle Tampines buyers were effectively the last cohort to benefit.

For more on the broader EC rule changes that took effect in May 2026, including the doubled Minimum Occupation Period (10 years) and the 90% first-timer allocation, see our Singapore EC Cooling Measures May 2026 guide.

4. What This Means for Q2 2026

April’s data, when viewed alongside March’s strength and the EC sell-out, points to an active Q2 2026 for Singapore’s new launch market. Several observations:

Pricing resilience: The fact that both a S$1,700 psf OCR project and a S$2,886 psf CCR project achieved near-90% launch take-up confirms that buyers across different budgets remain engaged when product quality is there. Singapore’s private home price index rose 0.9% in Q1 2026 (revised up from the initial flash estimate of 0.3%) and the pipeline suggests continued modest appreciation.

EC supply adjustment: With DPS removed and MOP doubled to 10 years, the EC buyer calculus has changed. First-timers still benefit from income-ceiling eligibility and lower entry prices than private condos, but the investment horizon is longer and the payment obligation is heavier without DPS. Near-term EC launches (watch for Canberra Drive and Senja Close tenders when awarded) will test this new demand profile.

SORA tailwind: The 1-month SORA rate’s continued decline to approximately 1.20% (from its 3.68% peak in 2023) means floating-rate home loan payments have fallen meaningfully. A buyer with a S$900,000 floating-rate loan at SORA + 0.80% now pays approximately S$3,960/month versus approximately S$5,300/month at peak SORA — a difference of over S$1,300/month. This affordability improvement is supporting buyer confidence across the market. See our home loan comparison guide for the full 2026 rate picture.

Q2 launch pipeline: Several significant projects remain to launch through June 2026. Lentor Gardens Residences (499 units, RCR) is expected to test OCR/RCR crossover pricing. For a broader view of what is coming in 2026’s new launch pipeline, see our New Launch Condo Pipeline article.

Summary Table: Q1–Q2 2026 Developer Sales at a Glance

Period New Private Homes Sold (excl. EC) Key Driver Context
Jan 2026 ~246 No major launches; LNY season Quiet start to year
Feb 2026 ~512 Pent-up demand, small projects Pre-EC announcement
Mar 2026 ~1,300 Pinery Residences (92.3% Day 1) Strongest Q1 month
Apr 2026 ~1,450* TGR + Vela Bay double launch weekend; Rivelle EC cleared Q2 rebound begins
Q1 2026 Total 1,294 (as at 26 Mar caveat data) Limited launch calendar Down 60% q-o-q; set to revise up with full Mar caveats

* April 2026 figure estimated. Official URA data released 15 May 2026; includes late-April TGR and Vela Bay launch sales.

FAQ: Singapore April 2026 Developer Sales

When does URA release monthly developer sales data?

URA releases monthly developer sales statistics on the 15th of the following month. April 2026 data was therefore published on 15 May 2026. The data includes the number of units launched, sold, and unsold for each development, with prices and units based on Options to Purchase (OTPs) issued by developers. The URA e-Service portal (eservice.ura.gov.sg) provides the full data table.

Why was Q1 2026 new home sales so low?

Q1 2026’s 1,294 new private homes sold (excluding ECs) represented a 60% fall from Q4 2025’s elevated levels, but this primarily reflected a thin launch calendar rather than a demand collapse. Developers launched fewer developments in Q1 2026, with only six projects (including two ECs) coming to market. When projects did launch — particularly Pinery Residences in March — they achieved very high take-up rates (92.3% for Pinery), confirming strong underlying buyer demand.

What is Tengah Garden Residences and who is it for?

Tengah Garden Residences (TGR) is an OCR condominium in Tengah, Singapore’s newest housing district in the western region. The project offers approximately 863 units at an indicative price of around S$1,700 psf — competitive for a new OCR launch with direct access to the Tengah Town Centre MRT (Jurong Regional Line) when completed. TGR targets HDB upgraders, first-time private property buyers, and investors seeking yield at OCR price points. It is NOT an EC, so Singapore PRs and foreigners are also eligible to purchase (subject to ABSD).

Can Rivelle Tampines EC buyers still use DPS?

Yes — buyers who received their OTP from Rivelle Tampines before 8 May 2026 are entitled to retain the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) arrangements they agreed to. The MND’s announcement removing DPS for ECs applies only to OTPs issued on or after 8 May 2026. Since all Rivelle Tampines units had OTPs issued before that date (the last units were sold on 24 April), those buyers are grandfathered under the old rules.

What EC projects are coming next after Rivelle Tampines?

Singapore’s EC pipeline for the remainder of 2026 and into 2027 includes sites that have been tendered or are awaiting tender under the 1H 2026 GLS programme. Key upcoming EC sites include Canberra Drive and Senja Close. These projects will launch under the new EC framework (10-year MOP, 90% first-timer allocation, no DPS), so their sales performance will be the first real-world test of buyer appetite for the revised rules.

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Disclaimer

This article is based on URA monthly developer sales data released on 15 May 2026, supplementary reporting from industry sources, and developer announcements. Sales figures for April 2026 include estimates and approximations where official caveat data may not yet be fully lodged. Always verify the most current figures at the URA Property Market Information portal. This is not investment advice. Consult a licensed financial adviser or property consultant before making any property purchase decision.

Hudson Place Residences

Hudson Place Residences


District 5 New Launch

Hudson Place Residences

327 premium homes and up to 400 sqm of retail space at 18 and 20 Media Circle, in the heart of one-north’s technology, media and biomedical cluster.

327
Units
99 years
Tenure
Sep 2029
Expected TOP
2BR-4BR + PH
Unit Mix
D05
one-north
18 & 20
Media Circle
7,629.7 sqm
Site Area
28,230 sqm
Gross Floor Area
400 sqm
Retail Space
New Town
Primary within 1km

Why Hudson Place Residences

Hudson Place Residences is a mixed-use residential launch in one-north, Singapore’s established research, technology, media and biomedical hub. The source materials position it for residents who want proximity to the one-north employment base, education cluster and the wider Greater one-north transformation.

Live-Work Demand

one-north is described in the source pack as a 200-hectare business park with a growing professional base across technology, media and biomedical sectors.

Mixed-Use Convenience

The development includes up to 400 sqm of non-strata commercial space on the first storey, adding day-to-day convenience within the estate.

Education Cluster

New Town Primary is stated as within 1 km, with Fairfield Methodist and Queenstown Primary listed in the 1-2 km band. Tanglin Trust, INSEAD, NUS and ACS (I) are highlighted nearby.

Project Facts At A Glance

Project name Hudson Place Residences
Developer SPV Media Circle Alpha Development Pte Ltd
Development team Qingjian Realty, Forsea Holdings & Hoovasun Holding
Address 18 & 20 Media Circle
District D05 – Buona Vista / West Coast
Planning area Queenstown / one-north
Tenure 99 years
Expected TOP Sep 2029
Total units 327 apartments
Commercial space Up to 400 sqm, non-strata
Site area 7,629.7 sqm
Gross floor area 28,230 sqm
Blocks 1 block of 23 storeys, 1 block of 15 storeys
Parking Estimated 40% allocation
Unit range 2- to 4-bedroom homes and 5 penthouses
Source status Compiled from local source materials dated Jan-Apr 2026

Unit Mix And Indicative Pricing

Unit Type Typical Area Source Notes
2-Bedroom Premium 60 sqm / 646 sqft B1a-B1d
2-Bedroom Premium + Study 64 sqm / 689 sqft B2-B3
3-Bedroom Deluxe 83 sqm / 893 sqft C1
3-Bedroom Premium 86-98 sqm / 926-1,055 sqft C2-C4
4-Bedroom Premium 107 sqm / 1,152 sqft D1a-D1b
4-Bedroom Suite + Flexi 133 sqm / 1,432 sqft D2a-D2b
Penthouses Not stated in floor-plan pack 5 penthouses listed in unit distribution
Pricing note: source marketing materials include indicative examples such as 2-bedroom homes around S$1.5x million and 2-bedroom + study homes around S$1.6x million. Treat all pricing as indicative only and confirm against the latest developer sales package.

Location And Connectivity

Business Park
one-north ecosystem
Home to technology, media, biomedical and research employers across the wider 200-hectare business park.
Roads
AYE / CTE access
Source materials reference major expressway access for islandwide connectivity.
Car-lite
Shuttle mobility
The source pack lists SWAT Mobility, Alice Shuttle and One North Rider options within one-north.
Lifestyle
Star Vista / Ghim Moh / NUS
Source materials highlight nearby retail, market and education nodes in the west.

Schools And Amenities

Within 1km New Town Primary School, according to source material.
Within 1-2km Fairfield Methodist School and Queenstown Primary School are listed in the source location pack.
Education cluster Tanglin Trust, INSEAD, ESSEC, NUS and ACS (I) are highlighted in the project information pack and local project details.
Business demand The one-north cluster includes MNCs and institutions cited in the source materials, including Grab, SEA, P&G and Razer.

Site Plan

Hudson Place Residences actual site plan showing blocks, pools and facilities

Actual site plan from source material – not a location map or brochure cover.

Facilities And Development Images

Arrival court50m main poolSocial poolTennis courtGymSteam roomsCo-working gardenPet parkOutdoor diningHudson Plaza retail

Selected Floor Plans

Unit-type note: Hudson source materials begin at 2-bedroom homes. No 1-bedroom floor plan or 1-bedroom stack was available in the supplied source floor-plan pack.
Hudson Place Residences 2-bedroom premium Type B1a floor plan

2-Bedroom Premium – Type B1a, 60 sqm / 646 sqft
Hudson Place Residences 3-bedroom deluxe Type C1 floor plan

3-Bedroom Deluxe – Type C1, 83 sqm / 893 sqft
Hudson Place Residences 4-bedroom premium Type D1a floor plan

4-Bedroom Premium – Type D1a, 107 sqm / 1,152 sqft
Hudson Place Residences 4-bedroom suite plus flexi Type D2a floor plan

4-Bedroom Suite + Flexi – Type D2a, 133 sqm / 1,432 sqft
Need every stack and orientation?
Download the full source floor-plan PDF below.

Download Full Floor Plans

LovelyHomes Factsheet

Downloads

Factsheet

Hudson Place Factsheet

LovelyHomes-branded concise factsheet with clean formatting.

Download

Floor Plans

Full Floor-Plan Pack

Full source PDF for typical unit plans and stack references.

Download

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Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Hudson Place Residences located?
The project is at 18 and 20 Media Circle in District 5, within the Queenstown / one-north planning area.
How many units are there?
The source project details list 327 apartments, with up to 400 sqm of non-strata commercial space.
Does Hudson Place Residences have 1-bedroom units?
No 1-bedroom stack was provided in the source unit mix or floor-plan pack used for this page. The supplied unit mix starts from 2-bedroom homes.
Which primary school is within 1 km?
New Town Primary School is listed by the source location materials as within 1 km.

Ready to explore Hudson Place Residences?

Speak to LovelyHomes on WhatsApp for the latest availability, pricing and showflat arrangements. We will share the clean factsheet and floor plans for quick review.

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Related Buying Guides

Stamp Duty

ABSD Singapore 2026 Guide

Rates and remissions for local and foreign buyers.

Financing

Home Loan Singapore 2026

Bank loan, LTV and monthly payment planning.

Regions

CCR, RCR and OCR Explained

Understand where one-north sits in the market.

Disclaimer. Prices, unit mix, specifications, site plans, floor plans and facility lists are indicative only and subject to change by the developer without notice. Information has been compiled from local source materials including the Hudson Place Residences project details document, information pack, site plan and floor-plan pack, verified for this update on 15 May 2026. LovelyHomes.com.sg is not the project developer. Artist impressions are for illustrative purposes only.

Chinese Capital Surge into Singapore Property 2026: What Mainland Investment Means for Buyers

Chinese Capital Surge into Singapore Property 2026: What Mainland Investment Means for Buyers

Quick Answer — Chinese capital and Singapore property in 2026

  • China became the second-largest source of fixed-asset investment in Singapore in 2025, accounting for approximately 21% of S$14.16 billion in total committed fixed-asset investment across all sectors — up from around 2.5% the prior year.
  • Chinese-linked developers are actively bidding for Government Land Sales (GLS) sites and replenishing their residential land banks in Singapore.
  • The 60% ABSD on foreign residential purchases has not deterred Chinese developers, who pay 40% developer ABSD (5% non-remittable, 35% remittable on qualifying sale of all units).
  • Individual Chinese nationals buying Singapore residential property still face the full 60% ABSD on any purchase — there is no bilateral tax treaty carve-out between China and Singapore on ABSD.
  • The Singapore government has acknowledged the investment flows but has given no indication of relaxing the existing cooling-measures framework in response.

China’s Investment Surge — From Marginal to Major Player

Singapore has always been a destination for global capital. What is new in 2026 is the pace and scale at which mainland Chinese money has repositioned itself within the city-state’s investment ecosystem. According to data cited by South China Morning Post and corroborated by regional financial media in early May 2026, China-origin fixed-asset investment in Singapore across all sectors totalled an estimated S$2.97 billion in 2025 — representing around 21% of Singapore’s total S$14.16 billion in committed fixed-asset investment. This compares to approximately S$354 million (2.5%) in 2024.

The drivers of this shift are multiple and mutually reinforcing. Geopolitical tensions between China and the United States, ongoing uncertainty in Hong Kong’s role as a regional financial hub, a domestic Chinese property market that remains structurally stressed, and Singapore’s well-understood legal and regulatory environment have all contributed to capital outflows from China that disproportionately target Singapore. For Chinese institutional investors, Singapore is familiar — the legal system is English-language common law, property rights are robustly protected, and there is a large existing Mandarin-speaking business community.

China share of Singapore fixed-asset investment 2025 vs 2024 — Chinese capital property market
Figure 1: Estimated China-origin fixed-asset investment in Singapore vs selected other sources, 2025. Source: SCMP citing EDB data, May 2026.

How This Flows Into the Property Market

Fixed-asset investment encompasses manufacturing plants, data centres, logistics hubs, financial services operations, and real estate. The property-market channel specifically manifests in three ways.

Developer land banking. Chinese-linked property developers — firms with mainland Chinese ownership or significant Chinese institutional backing — have become active bidders in Singapore’s GLS programme. Forsea Holdings (Chinese-owned) was awarded the one-north Queensway residential site in 2025. Qingjian Realty (with Chinese sovereign-fund links via its parent Qingjian Group) remains active in EC and private residential land. These firms are not new to Singapore but their bidding frequency and scale have increased materially since 2024.

Commercial real estate. Chinese institutional investors have been acquiring strata-titled commercial and industrial assets — office floors, retail shophouses, and industrial units — which do not attract ABSD. For investors seeking Singapore-dollar exposure to Singapore real estate without the 60% ABSD drag, commercial property is the natural vehicle. Freehold shophouses along heritage corridors in Districts 1, 2, and 7 have attracted particular interest from Chinese family offices.

Residential purchases by high-net-worth individuals. Despite the 60% ABSD, ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) Chinese nationals continue to purchase Singapore condominiums and Good Class Bungalows (GCBs). The motivation is not yield — at 60% ABSD, net yields are essentially negligible relative to purchase cost. The motivation is capital preservation, residency (Singapore PR applications are often easier to support when accompanied by a significant economic footprint), and portfolio currency diversification into Singapore dollars.

GLS Bidding — Chinese-Linked Developer Participation

Chinese-linked developer GLS bids Singapore 2024-2026 — land sales demand analysis
Figure 2: Selected GLS bids with noted Chinese-linked developer participation, 2024–2026. Source: URA, industry research, LovelyHomes analysis.

The two CCR GLS sites currently on tender — Peck Hay Road (closing 11 June 2026, ~315 units) and River Valley Green Parcel C (closing 18 June 2026, ~470 units) — are expected to attract bids in the S$1,600–S$1,800 psf per plot ratio (ppr) range based on comparable recent transactions. Industry observers cite Chinese-linked developers as likely participants in both tenders, noting that CCR sites present strong brand positioning for marketing to Chinese UHNW buyers, whose preference for Core Central Region addresses remains robust even at 60% ABSD rates. The alternative interpretation is that units are priced to reflect the ABSD cost as part of the marketing proposition for other buyer profiles — mixed-nationality couples, FTA nationals, or Singapore Citizen investors — rather than purely targeting foreign buyers.

Factor Impact on Singapore Property Market
Chinese developer GLS bids Supports land price floors; higher bid confidence means higher implied launch prices, positive for existing condo valuations in surrounding areas
Commercial property demand Compresses shophouse and strata commercial yields; buyers seeking income plays face tighter cap rates
UHNW residential purchases Supports CCR luxury segment; limited volume impact on mass-market prices
60% ABSD on foreigners Continues to substantially limit volume of Chinese individual purchases; policy unchanged
Developer ABSD (40%) Requires developers to sell all units within 5 years to recover 35% remittable component; creates inventory-clearing incentive

What Singapore’s Position Means for Local Buyers

The surge in Chinese institutional investment is primarily a commercial and developer-side phenomenon. For the Singaporean household buying their first home or upgrading from HDB to private, the direct impact is limited. The mass-market Outside Central Region (OCR) residential segment — where most Singaporean buyers transact — is not significantly influenced by Chinese developer activity, which is concentrated in the CCR and selected RCR developments.

The more relevant indirect effect is on GLS land prices. Increased international developer competition for GLS sites elevates winning bid prices, which flow through to higher launch prices and, with a lag, higher resale prices in surrounding areas. This is a slow-moving structural force rather than a near-term price driver. The Holland Plain Parcel B result (Sim Lian sole bid at S$1,491 psf ppr) in May 2026 — noticeably below the S$1,600–S$1,750 psf ppr range that six-to-eight-bidder competition would have implied — illustrates that developer caution persists even as Chinese interest in the broader investment landscape grows.

For property investors evaluating Singapore condos against a 60% ABSD exposure for Chinese buyers, the read-through is nuanced. Strong Chinese interest in Singapore as an investment destination is a medium-term positive for capital values. But the 60% ABSD is a sufficiently high barrier that it effectively segments the market: Chinese buyers are a price-setter in the ultra-luxury CCR segment but not a material volume driver in broader residential transaction statistics.

What Might Come Next

The Singapore government has consistently calibrated the ABSD framework to domestic affordability and market stability objectives rather than to the source of inbound investment. The April 2023 doubling of the foreigner ABSD rate to 60% was a clear signal that capital-flow considerations do not override the domestic affordability mandate. There is no indication that the government will relax foreigner ABSD to capture Chinese investment flows — the policy calculus runs the other way: allow commercial and industrial investment to flow freely (no ABSD on commercial property, no foreign ownership restrictions on most commercial assets) while maintaining robust residential market protection.

What to watch in the near term: the results of the Peck Hay Road and River Valley Green Parcel C tenders (closing June 2026), which will give a fresh read on bidder depth and the role of Chinese-linked developers in the CCR pipeline. If either tender attracts five or more bidders including at least two Chinese-linked firms, it would confirm that the investment thesis remains active at current GLS pricing levels.

FAQ 1: Can a Chinese national buy a Singapore HDB flat?

No. HDB flats may only be purchased by Singapore Citizens (and in some schemes, Permanent Residents). Foreign nationals — including those from China — cannot purchase HDB flats regardless of ABSD considerations. The eligibility rules for HDB ownership are set by HDB under the Housing and Development Act and are entirely separate from the stamp duty framework.

FAQ 2: Does the 60% ABSD apply to Chinese developers as well as individual buyers?

No. Entities (including developers) purchasing residential property pay 65% ABSD, but housing developers who meet BCA licensing conditions pay 40% ABSD on residential land (5% non-remittable, 35% remittable provided all units are sold within five years of the acquisition date). This structure allows developers — including Chinese-linked ones — to effectively defer or recover most of the ABSD if they develop and sell the project on schedule.

FAQ 3: Does buying a Singapore condo help a Chinese national get Singapore PR or citizenship?

Property ownership is not a direct pathway to Singapore Permanent Residency or citizenship. Singapore’s PR application process is primarily employment-based and discretionary. However, significant economic contributions — including investment through the Global Investor Programme (GIP), which requires a minimum S$10 million commitment into a Singapore-registered company or fund — can support a PR application. Simple residential property ownership does not qualify as a GIP investment and carries no preferential PR weighting.

FAQ 4: Are there any restrictions on Chinese companies owning Singapore commercial property?

Singapore imposes very few restrictions on foreign ownership of commercial or industrial property. Chinese companies and individuals can purchase strata-titled offices, retail units, and industrial units without ABSD and without requiring special approval. Certain sensitive sectors (near defence facilities, for example) may require clearances, but this applies to the use of the property rather than ownership. The Residential Property Act restrictions that limit foreign ownership of landed residential property do not apply to commercial or industrial assets.

FAQ 5: Should I be concerned that Chinese investment is inflating Singapore property prices beyond fair value?

The evidence does not support a conclusion that Chinese investment is systematically inflating residential prices to unsustainable levels. The 60% ABSD effectively quarantines the Chinese buyer pool from the mass-market residential segment where most Singaporeans transact. The URA Q1 2026 Private Residential Property Price Index showed a modest +0.9% quarterly increase — consistent with long-run averages and not indicative of a speculative spike. The government’s clear willingness to tighten the ABSD further if needed (as demonstrated in April 2023) provides a credible policy backstop. The more direct affordability issue for Singaporean households is domestic supply and the pace of BTO completions — not the level of Chinese investment activity.

Related Articles

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment or financial advice. Data on fixed-asset investment flows are sourced from third-party media reports citing Singapore EDB figures and are directional estimates rather than official published statistics. Verify all figures against primary sources before making any investment decision. ABSD rates and foreign ownership regulations are subject to change — refer to IRAS and URA for current rules.

Stamp Duty Remissions Singapore 2026: ABSD Married Couple Refund, Developer Clawback and BSD Exemptions Explained

Stamp Duty Remissions Singapore 2026: ABSD Married Couple Refund, Developer Clawback and BSD Exemptions Explained

Quick Answer

  • A stamp duty remission is a legal reduction or refund of stamp duty — BSD or ABSD — granted by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) when specific conditions are satisfied.
  • The most commonly used remission is the Married Couple ABSD Remission: a SC+SC or SC+PR couple who buy a second property together may receive a refund of the ABSD paid, provided they sell their existing first property within six months.
  • Housing developers who acquire residential land qualify for a remission of the 35% developer ABSD — but face a full clawback with 5% p.a. interest if all units are not sold within five years of acquisition.
  • Property transferred on the death of an owner (via will or intestacy) is entirely exempt from BSD and ABSD — no stamp duty is payable by the beneficiary on the inherited transfer.
  • Remissions are not automatic — most require a formal application to IRAS with supporting documentation, submitted within the deadline specified in the applicable remission instrument.
  • The six-month window for the married couple remission is measured from the legal completion date of the second purchase, not from the Option to Purchase date.
  • There are no remissions available for foreigners or entities purchasing Singapore residential property in most circumstances — the 65% foreigner ABSD and 65% entity ABSD are almost never remitted.
Stamp duty remissions Singapore 2026 — ABSD married couple remission, developer clawback, BSD remission guide LovelyHomes
Stamp duty remissions in Singapore 2026: a full guide to ABSD remissions, BSD remissions and how to claim.

What Is a Stamp Duty Remission?

Singapore’s Stamp Duties Act gives the Minister for Finance broad power to remit or refund stamp duty — including Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) and Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) — in specified circumstances. A remission does not change the rate of duty owed; rather, it provides for either an upfront waiver (the duty is assessed but not collected) or a post-payment refund (the duty is collected and then returned when conditions are met).

The key remissions relevant to residential property buyers in Singapore in 2026 are: (1) the married couple ABSD remission; (2) the housing developer ABSD remission; (3) the inheritance/death transfer exemption; (4) certain BSD remissions under approved housing schemes; and (5) certain entity-related remissions. IRAS administers all stamp duty remissions under the Stamp Duties Act, and applications are made via the IRAS mytax.iras.gov.sg portal.

Singapore stamp duty remissions 2026 — 5 main types: married couple ABSD, developer, inheritance, housing scheme
Figure 1: Five main stamp duty remission types in Singapore 2026 — eligible parties, outcome, and conditions.

Married Couple ABSD Remission

This is the most widely used remission in the private residential market. It is available when a married couple purchases a second residential property together and the buyer profile would otherwise attract ABSD. Specifically, the remission applies where:

  • Both buyers are married to each other at the time of purchase;
  • At least one buyer is a Singapore Citizen (SC+SC or SC+SPR couples qualify; SC+Foreigner couples do not);
  • At least one of them already holds a residential property (hence the ABSD liability); and
  • The couple commits to selling their existing first residential property within six months of the second purchase’s legal completion.

Under the remission, the couple pays the full ABSD at the stamp duty deadline (14 days from the OTP exercise date for resale; 14 days from legal completion for new launches). They then sell their first property and, once the sale completes, apply to IRAS for a refund of the ABSD paid. IRAS processes the application and issues a refund — there is no interest on the refund amount, and there is no grace period beyond the six months.

The remission is particularly popular among couples upgrading from an HDB flat to a private condominium: they buy the condo, then list the HDB for resale. As long as the HDB sale completes within six months, the ABSD on the condo is fully refunded.

Married couple ABSD remission Singapore 2026 — 6-month sell-first timeline conditions SC+SC
Figure 2: Married couple ABSD remission — six-month window from completion, what to submit, and the cost of missing the deadline.

The Critical Six-Month Window

The single greatest source of error among couples claiming this remission is confusion over when the six-month window starts and ends. IRAS measures the window from the legal completion date of the second property purchase (i.e., the date the title is transferred to the buyer), not from the date the Option to Purchase was exercised. For new launches, the relevant date is the date of legal completion (TOP + 3 months in most cases), which can be years after the OTP was signed. For resale purchases, it is the date the transfer instrument is registered with SLA.

The six-month window ends on the corresponding date six months later. The first property sale must complete — not merely be contracted — within this window. An OTP issued and exercised for the first property within six months, but with legal completion scheduled after the deadline, does not qualify. Couples who are simultaneously managing the purchase of a new property and the sale of an existing one must carefully calendar both timelines and factor in conveyancing lead times (typically 8–12 weeks for resale transactions).

If the deadline is missed — even by a single day — the ABSD is forfeited. IRAS does not extend the remission window, and there is no general discretion provision. The only exception was the temporary COVID-19 extension granted in 2020–2021, which has since lapsed. Buyers who are uncertain about their ability to sell within six months should consider whether the remission strategy is appropriate for their circumstances, or whether decoupling (for private property co-owners) is a safer alternative.

Housing Developer ABSD Remission

Singapore-incorporated housing developers who acquire residential land for construction and sale are subject to a 35% ABSD on the purchase price — but may apply for a remission of this ABSD under the developer remission framework. The remission is subject to strict conditions designed to ensure that residential land is developed promptly and units are sold into the market.

The core condition is that all units in the development must be sold within five years of the date on which the developer acquired the land. If even one unit remains unsold at the five-year mark, the full 35% ABSD on the entire land purchase becomes payable, together with interest at 5% per annum on the ABSD amount for the period from acquisition to the fifth anniversary. This clawback is administered by IRAS and is a significant potential liability for developers with large inventory.

Developer ABSD remission Singapore 2026 — 5-year sell-all condition clawback 35% extension rules
Figure 3: Developer ABSD remission — the 5-year sell-all condition, clawback rules, and when extensions are granted.

Developers may apply for an extension of the five-year period in exceptional circumstances — for example, macro-economic disruptions that materially impaired the ability to sell units. The Ministry of National Development (MND) and IRAS granted a time extension during the COVID-19 pandemic. In ordinary market conditions, extensions are rarely granted, and developers managing multiple residential projects must carefully track the acquisition date of each site.

Inheritance and Death Transfers

No BSD or ABSD is chargeable on the transfer of property from a deceased person to a beneficiary under a will or under the Intestate Succession Act. This exemption applies regardless of the beneficiary’s citizenship status, existing property holdings, or the number of properties being inherited. It is not technically a “remission” — the stamp duty instrument that governs devolution of property on death provides that no duty is assessed at all on the inheritance transfer.

Practically, this means that a beneficiary who already owns multiple residential properties can inherit additional properties without any stamp duty being triggered on the inherited transfer. However, any subsequent purchase of a residential property by that beneficiary will count the inherited property among their existing holdings when determining the applicable ABSD rate. Inheriting a property does not reset the beneficiary’s ABSD profile — it simply avoids stamp duty on the transfer by death itself.

Singapore abolished estate duty entirely in February 2008. There is accordingly no estate or inheritance tax on property passed from deceased owners to beneficiaries in Singapore as at 2026.

Summary Table of Stamp Duty Remissions

Remission type Eligible parties Duty remitted Key condition
Married couple ABSD remission SC+SC or SC+SPR married couple Full ABSD on 2nd property Sell 1st property within 6 months of 2nd purchase completion
Housing developer ABSD remission Licensed Singapore developer 35% developer ABSD All units sold within 5 years of acquisition (else full clawback + 5% p.a.)
Inheritance / death transfer All beneficiaries (no citizenship restriction) BSD and ABSD (nil assessed) Transfer must be pursuant to will or Intestate Succession Act
FTA-treaty ABSD remission Nationals of US, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland ABSD above SC-equivalent rate Must be first residential property; FTA rights apply
SC buying under approved scheme First-timer SC under specific legacy HDB schemes Partial BSD remission Scheme-specific eligibility — limited new applicants under 2026 rules

Worked Example: The Lim Family — Married Couple Remission

Mr and Mrs Lim are both Singapore Citizens. They jointly own a 5-room HDB flat in Tampines (MOP cleared in January 2026, valued at S$700,000). They purchase a S$1.4 million condominium in Pasir Ris. As co-owners of an existing HDB flat, both are second-property buyers. ABSD at 20% on S$1.4M = S$280,000, paid within 14 days of the OTP exercise.

The Lims list their HDB flat for sale. Legal completion of the condo purchase: 15 April 2026. Six-month remission deadline: 15 October 2026. The HDB flat is sold via the open market at S$698,000, with legal completion on 22 July 2026 — well within the six-month window.

Mr Lim submits the ABSD remission application on the IRAS portal on 1 August 2026, attaching: (a) the condo Option to Purchase; (b) the condo transfer instrument; (c) the HDB flat Option to Purchase (sale); (d) the HDB resale completion documents; and (e) the marriage certificate. IRAS processes the application within six weeks and issues a refund of S$280,000 to the Lims’ bank account. Net stamp duty paid: S$41,800 BSD only. Net ABSD paid: S$0.

What This Means for Buyers

For most married SC couples planning to upgrade from an HDB flat to a private property, the married couple ABSD remission is highly relevant. It essentially allows them to buy the new property first and sell the old one within six months — which is often commercially preferable to selling first (and having nowhere to live during construction or the transition period). The six-month window is tight but achievable for resale HDB transactions, which typically complete within 8–12 weeks of OTP exercise.

The remission does carry a risk: if the HDB sale falls through, is delayed, or the couple changes their mind about selling, the S$280,000 (or more) in ABSD is forfeited. This is a significant financial exposure. Couples should only rely on this remission if they have a credible plan to sell the first property promptly and are financially able to hold the ABSD amount for the six-month period.

What Might Come Next

The government reviews ABSD rates and remission conditions periodically as part of the broader property cooling measure toolkit. There has been no suggestion as of May 2026 that the married couple remission will be narrowed — it performs a legitimate social function by facilitating genuine upgrading rather than speculation. The developer ABSD remission conditions, however, have been tightened in the past (the five-year window was six years before the 2022 cooling measures), and further tightening cannot be ruled out if developer inventory levels rise significantly.

FAQ

Does the married couple remission apply if only one spouse is on the title of the new property?

No. The remission requires both spouses to be joint purchasers of the second property. If only one spouse’s name appears on the new property’s title, the remission is not available. However, in that scenario, if the purchasing spouse holds no other property (because the existing property is entirely in the other spouse’s name), they would be treated as a first-time buyer and pay 0% ABSD — no remission needed.

What if the first property sale completes one day after the six-month deadline?

The ABSD is forfeited. IRAS does not grant extensions for individual circumstance (short of the pandemic-era blanket extension), and the deadline is strictly applied. Couples who are cutting it close should ensure their conveyancing solicitor is briefed to prioritise completion and that both buyer and seller are aligned on the timeline. If there is any risk of missing the window, it may be safer to complete the sale of the first property before purchasing the second, or to explore decoupling if the first property is a private condominium.

Can a SC+Foreigner married couple claim the ABSD remission?

No. The remission is available only to SC+SC or SC+Singapore Permanent Resident couples. A SC+Foreigner couple faces the foreigner ABSD rate (65% as at May 2026) on the foreign spouse’s portion of ownership, which is not remissible under the married couple remission framework. The Free Trade Agreement (FTA) ABSD remission applies to nationals of US, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland — reducing their ABSD to the SC rate — but does not eliminate it.

Is BSD remitted when a property is transferred between family members as a gift?

No. A gift or transfer at below-market-value consideration between family members (other than on death) is treated as a market-value transaction for BSD assessment purposes. IRAS stamps the instrument on the higher of the stated consideration or the annual value / assessed market value of the property. BSD at the full progressive rates applies. The only exception from BSD is the inheritance-on-death transfer described in this article. Intra-family gifts of property between living persons do not attract any special remission.

Does the housing developer ABSD remission apply to all residential projects?

The remission is available to licensed developers constructing residential property for sale — the primary use case is condominium development. It does not apply to developers who intend to hold units as investment (rental) property. The URA’s approved use must be residential sale. Developers of mixed-use projects (residential + commercial) may claim the remission only on the residential portion of the acquisition cost, with an apportionment calculation applied to the total purchase price.

How do I apply for the married couple ABSD remission?

Applications are submitted online via the IRAS portal at mytax.iras.gov.sg under “Stamp Duty” → “Remission Application”. You will need to upload: (a) the Option to Purchase and instrument of transfer for the second property; (b) the sale agreement and completion documents for the first property; (c) your marriage certificate; and (d) NRIC details for both parties. The application must be submitted within three months of the sale completion of the first property. IRAS typically processes applications within four to eight weeks and issues refunds by GIRO or cheque.

Are there any ABSD remissions for singles or divorcing couples?

No standalone ABSD remission exists for singles or divorcing couples. Divorcing couples may transfer property to each other under a court order (divorce settlement) without incurring ABSD or BSD — this is a separate provision under the Stamp Duties Act. Outside of divorce orders, a single individual receiving a property transfer from a relative or friend as a gift (not under a divorce court order) is liable for full BSD at market value. Singles who are first-time buyers pay 0% ABSD on their first property by virtue of their buyer profile, not any remission.

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Disclaimer

This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Stamp duty legislation — including all remission instruments — is administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) under the Stamp Duties Act (Cap. 312). ABSD rates and remission conditions are set by the Ministry of Finance (MOF). Rules may change without notice; readers should verify the current position directly with IRAS at iras.gov.sg or seek advice from a qualified tax adviser or licensed conveyancing solicitor before making any property transaction decisions that depend on a remission or refund.

HDB Resale Market Q1 2026: Prices Fall 0.6% in First Decline Since 2019

HDB Resale Market Q1 2026: Prices Fall 0.6% in First Decline Since 2019

HDB Resale Market Q1 2026: Prices Fall 0.6% in First Decline Since 2019

Quick Answer

  • The HDB Resale Price Index (RPI) fell 0.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q1 2026, from 203.6 in Q4 2025 to 202.3 — the first decline since Q2 2019.
  • The dip breaks a 27-quarter streak of flat or rising resale prices, signalling early-stage market cooling after years of post-pandemic appreciation.
  • Transaction volumes were 6,107 resale flats in Q1 2026, broadly in line with Q4 2025 levels — the price softening is driven by supply rather than a demand collapse.
  • The MOP supply wave — 13,480 HDB flats reaching their 5-year Minimum Occupation Period in 2026 — is the structural factor adding resale supply.
  • HDB rents held relatively steady: 58,598 flats rented at end-Q1, with median rents ranging from S$2,300 (3-room Jurong West) to S$4,200/mth (executive Bedok).
  • Million-dollar resale transactions continued to feature, with a new record of S$1.728M at City Vue @ Henderson (Henderson Road, April 2026).
  • Analysts describe the trajectory as a “soft landing” — the price dip is small and unlikely to accelerate sharply unless interest rates rise again or unemployment climbs.

What the Q1 2026 HDB Resale Data Shows

HDB released its 1st Quarter 2026 Public Housing Statistics on 25 April 2026, revealing that the Resale Price Index — the primary measure of HDB resale flat price movements — dipped 0.6% quarter-on-quarter to 202.3. This ends a remarkable run: from Q3 2019 through Q4 2025, the RPI rose or held flat in every single quarter, a 27-quarter streak fuelled first by the pandemic-era demand surge (2020–2022), then by the post-pandemic upgrader wave and tight resale supply (2023–2024), then by continued above-median-income household demand (2025).

The 0.6% dip is modest in absolute terms — the RPI remains 18% above its Q1 2023 level — but its direction is significant. It confirms what market practitioners have been observing since late 2025: sellers are taking longer to find buyers, price gaps between asking and transacted prices have widened, and the buyer pool is showing greater selectivity.

HDB Resale Price Index quarterly trend Q1 2023 to Q1 2026 bar chart
Figure 1: HDB Resale Price Index (RPI) from Q1 2023 to Q1 2026. Q1 2026 marks the first quarter-on-quarter decline since 2019. Source: HDB.

Why Prices Dipped: The MOP Supply Effect

The primary explanation for the price softening is straightforward: supply. As LovelyHomes reported in May 2026, approximately 13,480 HDB flats are reaching their 5-year Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) in 2026, up 93% year-on-year from the approximately 6,980 that crossed MOP in 2025. This is partly a consequence of the BTO surge years of 2016–2018, when HDB completed large volumes of units in towns including Punggol (est. 3,200 MOP units), Sengkang (est. 2,400), Tengah (est. 1,900), and Bidadari (est. 1,800).

As these flat owners become eligible to sell on the open market, many are choosing to do so — either to capture appreciation gains, to upgrade to private property, or to rightsize. The resulting increase in resale listings gives buyers more choice and more negotiating room, which compresses prices at the margin.

A structural supply increase of this magnitude does not typically reverse quickly. The MOP pipeline into 2027 remains elevated, meaning the resale supply overhang is likely to persist through much of 2026 and into 2027. This is not a liquidity crisis or a demand collapse — transaction volumes remain healthy — but it is a period where sellers who need to move quickly will likely accept modest discounts to achieve a timely sale.

Transaction Volume: Stable, Not Falling

Notably, the price dip in Q1 2026 was not accompanied by a volume collapse. HDB reported approximately 6,107 resale transactions in Q1 2026, broadly in line with the approximately 6,200 recorded in Q4 2025. This is an important distinction: a falling price index alongside stable volume suggests a price-discovery adjustment driven by supply rather than a demand retreat. When markets fall on low volume, it often signals more serious stress; when they adjust modestly on normal volume, it is more consistent with a soft landing.

Million-dollar resale flats continued to transact. There were 165 million-dollar HDB transactions in Q1 2026, slightly below the 188 recorded in Q4 2025 but still historically elevated. The most expensive transaction in recent months was a 5-room flat at City Vue @ Henderson (Henderson Road) that transacted at S$1,728,000 in April 2026 — a new island-wide record, surpassing the previous S$1.7M record at SkyTerrace @ Dawson (February 2026).

The Rental Market: Holding Steady

HDB’s Q1 2026 data also covered the rental sub-market. As at end of March 2026, there were 58,598 HDB flats rented out on the open market — down marginally (-0.1%) from the 58,775 rented at end of Q4 2025. The occupancy rental market has broadly plateaued after the 2022–2023 surge, reflecting a more balanced supply-demand dynamic at current rent levels.

HDB rental market Q1 2026 median rent by town flat type Singapore
Figure 2: HDB rental market snapshot Q1 2026 — total units rented, and median monthly rent by town and flat type. Source: HDB.

Median monthly rents by flat type as at Q1 2026:

Flat Type Median Rent (Island-wide) Highest Town (Est.) Lowest Town (Est.)
3-Room S$2,450/mth Queenstown ~S$2,800 Jurong West ~S$2,300
4-Room S$2,950/mth Queenstown ~S$3,200 Jurong West ~S$2,800
5-Room S$3,500/mth Bishan ~S$3,700 Jurong West ~S$3,300
Executive S$3,900/mth Bedok ~S$4,200 Jurong West ~S$3,780

Worked Example: Seller Navigating the Q1 2026 Market

Consider Ms Chen, a 48-year-old SC who bought a 5-room flat in Punggol in 2021 at S$640,000. Her flat crossed MOP in March 2026. She lists it at S$820,000 based on comparable transaction data from late 2025. By April 2026, the market has softened: similar units in her block are closing at S$795,000–S$805,000. After 6 weeks on market, she accepts S$800,000 — S$20,000 below her initial ask.

At S$800,000, her net proceeds (after clearing the HDB loan balance of S$180,000, CPF refund of S$195,000 including accrued interest, agent commission of S$16,000 at 2%, and legal fees of S$2,500) amount to approximately S$406,500 in cash. This provides her a meaningful deposit for a private condo purchase — the upgrade path that many MOP sellers are pursuing in parallel. The soft landing means she sells at a price below peak 2025 expectations, but still at a substantial premium to her 2021 purchase price.

What Analysts Expect Next

The consensus view among Singapore property researchers as at May 2026 is that the HDB resale market is experiencing a controlled correction rather than a structural downturn. The structural demand drivers — strong household formation, the HDB upgrader pipeline, and the EIP limiting cross-ethnic resale substitution — remain intact. What has changed is the supply side: the 2026 MOP wave adds meaningful listings, and the EC cooling measures introduced on 8 May 2026 (10-year MOP for ECs, removal of Deferred Payment Scheme) are expected to redirect some upgrader demand back toward the resale HDB market as ECs become less attractive for near-term upgraders.

For the full year 2026, many analysts project HDB resale prices to be flat to -1.5% year-on-year — a modest correction rather than a collapse. A steeper correction would require either a significant rise in unemployment (reducing buying capacity) or a sharp increase in interest rates (increasing mortgage costs). Neither scenario appears imminent as at May 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the 0.6% price dip mean it’s a buyer’s market?

In relative terms, yes — buyers have more negotiating power than they did in 2024 or early 2025. Sellers are taking longer to close deals, and offer-to-transacted-price gaps have widened. However, “buyer’s market” should be contextualised: the overall price level remains historically elevated, and well-located flats in mature estates with strong lease remaining still transact with multiple offers. The softening is most visible in OCR peripheral towns with high MOP supply (Punggol, Sengkang, Tengah) and least visible in established mature estates (Bishan, Toa Payoh, Queenstown, Bukit Timah).

Should I sell my MOP flat now or wait?

This is a personal financial decision that depends on your specific situation — remaining loan quantum, CPF accrued interest, upgrade target, and personal timeline. As a general observation, the supply wave is expected to persist through 2026 and into 2027, meaning if you are not urgently selling, waiting for a Q4 2026 or 2027 window may not materially improve your position. If you plan to upgrade to private property and are concerned about private prices rising faster than HDB prices stabilise, acting sooner may make strategic sense. This should be discussed with a licensed financial adviser and property agent.

How does the MOP supply wave affect HDB rental demand?

As MOP sellers transition to private property or other housing arrangements, some opt to rent out their HDB flat rather than sell, particularly if they can achieve strong rental yields. This adds to the HDB rental supply pool. Simultaneously, new private condo residents who owned the HDB flat they were renting out before upgrading may exit the rental market. The net effect on rental supply is modest and likely balanced; however, specific towns with very high MOP supply (Punggol, Tengah) may see softer rents as more units come onto the rental market in 2026.

Are million-dollar HDB flats still transacting?

Yes. The million-dollar threshold was crossed 165 times in Q1 2026, and the April 2026 record of S$1.728M at City Vue @ Henderson confirms that ultra-premium resale transactions are still occurring. However, the pace of million-dollar transactions appears to be stabilising relative to the 2025 highs. These transactions are concentrated in specific locations: DBSS developments, mature estate point blocks with exceptional views, and flats with very long lease remaining in prime districts. They are the exception rather than the norm.

What is the HDB resale market outlook for H2 2026?

The outlook is cautiously stable with a soft-landing bias. The MOP supply wave will continue adding listings through the year. EC cooling measures (10-year MOP) may modestly redirect some demand to the resale segment. Interest rates, while elevated versus pre-2022 levels, have stabilised. Private-to-HDB downgraders remain limited in number. Most analysts project full-year 2026 HDB resale prices to be flat to slightly negative (-0% to -1.5%), with transaction volumes holding in the 25,000–27,000 range for the full year.

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Disclaimer: This article is based on HDB’s 1st Quarter 2026 Public Housing Statistics and publicly available market data. All figures are for general informational purposes only. Rental median figures for individual towns are estimates based on approved applications and may differ from actual advertised rents. This is not financial or investment advice. For decisions relating to HDB resale purchase or sale, consult a licensed property agent (CEA-registered) and a licensed financial adviser. Official data is available at hdb.gov.sg and ura.gov.sg.

Singapore Property as a Safe Haven in 2026: What the URA Data Shows Amid Global Uncertainty

Singapore Property as a Safe Haven in 2026: What the URA Data Shows Amid Global Uncertainty

As trade tensions, currency volatility and geopolitical fractures reshape capital allocation globally, Singapore’s residential property market is drawing renewed attention from high-net-worth investors. This analysis examines what the data actually shows — and what it does not.

Quick Answer

  • Singapore’s private residential price index rose 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in Q1 2026, per URA flash estimates, with the OCR leading at +1.3% — a measured performance that belies the “booming market” narrative in some international headlines.
  • The CCR (Core Central Region) — the segment most exposed to foreign UHNW demand — has appreciated modestly but steadily since Q1 2024, driven by wealth-preservation flows from Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
  • Singapore’s 65% ABSD for foreign buyers, introduced in April 2023, has not reversed this structural demand — it has filtered out speculative short-term buyers while leaving long-horizon wealth-preservation purchasers largely undeterred.
  • The Asia-Pacific UHNW population grew by approximately 24.8% between 2021 and 2026, generating a larger pool of potential buyers even at elevated ABSD rates.
  • Singapore’s macroeconomic fundamentals — GDP growth forecast 2–4% in 2026, inflation ~1–2%, MAS-managed SGD, AAA sovereign credit — underpin the safe-haven thesis more than any single property market metric.
  • Key risks: rising private housing completions in 2026–2027, softening HDB resale prices, and TDSR constraints limiting domestic upgrader demand.

The Global Context: Why Investors Are Looking at Singapore

In the first quarter of 2026, global financial markets contended with renewed trade tensions, a volatile US dollar and a broader reassessment of risk assets in key emerging-market economies. Against this backdrop, Singapore has attracted significant commentary as a potential beneficiary of capital-flight demand.

Singapore offers a stable rule-of-law jurisdiction under the Singapore Land Authority and the Urban Redevelopment Authority; transparent property transaction records through the URA’s caveat system; a currency managed by MAS under a nominal effective exchange rate framework that has historically appreciated against peer currencies during risk-off periods; and a property market with deep liquidity in the resale condominium segment.

What Singapore does not offer — and this is the corrective that international analysis sometimes omits — is a low-friction entry for foreign buyers. The 65% ABSD on any residential property purchased by a non-Singapore national (excluding US/Iceland/Liechtenstein/Norway/Swiss nationals who receive SC-equivalent rates under FTA arrangements) means the effective purchase premium is extraordinary. A S$5M CCR condominium purchased by a foreign buyer carries an ABSD bill of S$3.25M, bringing total acquisition cost to approximately S$8.43M. That is the price of safe-haven status in Singapore.

URA private residential price index CCR RCR OCR Q1 2024 to Q1 2026
Figure 1: URA Private Residential Price Index — CCR, RCR and OCR sub-markets, Q1 2024 to Q1 2026. Source: URA pr26-31.

What the URA Data Actually Shows

URA’s Q1 2026 release (pr26-31, 25 April 2026) reported an overall private residential price increase of 0.3% q-o-q, down from 0.6% in Q4 2025. The sub-regional breakdown: OCR +1.3% (domestic upgrader and new-launch driven); RCR +0.9% (mid-tier, mix of domestic and regional demand); CCR +0.4% (internationally exposed, softest performer). Transaction volume softened to ~4,041 caveats in Q1 2026, 39.7% below Q4 2025’s 6,699 — a seasonal correction amplified by Chinese New Year, not a structural demand collapse.

UHNW Demand: Real But Measured

UHNW foreign buyer ABSD cost share S$5M CCR condo Singapore 2026
Figure 2: For a foreign UHNW buyer, the 65% ABSD represents 38.5% of total acquisition cost on a S$5M CCR condominium. Source: IRAS ABSD schedule 2023–2026.

Asia-Pacific UHNW population growth of ~24.8% between 2021 and 2026 has expanded the pool of potential buyers even at elevated ABSD rates. For buyers at this wealth tier, the 65% ABSD may represent an acceptable price for: no inheritance tax (abolished 2008), no capital gains tax on property, political neutrality in a fractured geopolitical environment, and world-class infrastructure supporting family relocation. The volume of such buyers is small — perhaps 200–400 transactions annually in the CCR above S$3M — but their price-setting impact is disproportionate.

Structural Safeguards: Why Singapore’s Market Is Different

Singapore’s residential market benefits from structural safeguards that collectively reduce speculative volatility: MAS property loan rules (TDSR 55%, LTV 75%/45%, MSR 30%) enforced since 2013; Sellers’ Stamp Duty (12%/8%/4% on years 1–3) that eliminates short-horizon flipping; URA’s calibrated GLS programme managing supply against demand signals; and an approximately 90% homeownership rate among resident households providing a stable owner-occupier base. Taken together, these mechanisms make Singapore’s residential market more resistant to sharp price swings than most international comparators.

Summary: Singapore Property Safe Haven — Key Metrics at a Glance

Indicator Singapore (Q1 2026) Context
Overall private residential price growth (q-o-q) +0.3% Source: URA pr26-31
OCR price growth (q-o-q) +1.3% Strongest sub-market Q1 2026
CCR price growth (q-o-q) +0.4% UHNW-exposed segment — stable
ABSD for foreign buyers 65% Effective since 27 April 2023 (IRAS)
ABSD for FTA nationals (US/CH etc.) SC rates (0–30%) Only 5 nationalities qualify
Capital gains tax on property None Subject to IRAS badge-of-trade test
Sellers’ Stamp Duty (year 1) 12% Eliminates short-term flipping
SG GDP growth forecast 2026 2–4% MAS macroeconomic review
Private residential pipeline (2025–2027) ~40,000 units Key supply-side risk to watch

Worked Example: The UHNW Relocation Decision

A European technology entrepreneur, Ms K, relocating to Singapore on an Entrepreneur Pass targets a S$6M freehold 4BR unit in District 10. As a foreigner: ABSD 65% = S$3.9M. Total acquisition cost ~S$10.23M (plus BSD ~S$329,600 + legal). On a 10–15-year horizon, she foregoes yield (estimated gross yield 2.1%) and treats the property as a wealth-preservation vehicle. At a 3% annual SGD appreciation against EUR, the currency return alone adds S$2.4M over 10 years on a S$8M net asset position. For this buyer profile, the 65% ABSD is the cost of accessing the full Singapore safe-haven package — not a deterrent.

Key Risks to Watch

The safe-haven thesis for Singapore property in 2026 is credible but conditional. A synchronised global recession would pressure Singapore’s open economy (trade-to-GDP ratio above 300%), affecting employment, wages and domestic demand. The ~40,000-unit private residential completion pipeline for 2025–2027 could generate a supply overhang if demand softens concurrently. MAS’s higher-for-longer rate environment (effective mortgage rates 3.5–4.2%) keeps carrying costs elevated for leveraged buyers. And any relaxation of ABSD or TDSR rules — unlikely but not impossible — could paradoxically signal government concern about market weakness, dampening rather than stimulating confidence.

What Might Come Next

The URA April 2026 new home sales data (expected ~15 May 2026) will provide the next empirical test of whether OCR demand has been sustained after the strong Q1 new-launch take-up. If the April figure confirms momentum above 800–900 units sold, the safe-haven/OCR-upgrader thesis for 2026 looks intact. A print below 600 would flag a more cautious consumer posture and would likely see analysts revise full-year private residential price forecasts toward the lower end of the 3–5% annual range.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the 65% ABSD apply to all foreigners buying Singapore property?

Yes, with one group of exceptions. Nationals of the United States, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland pay ABSD at Singapore Citizen rates under respective FTA provisions — 0% for first property, 20% for second, 30% for third and beyond. All other foreign nationals, including those on Employment Passes or Long-Term Visit Passes, pay 65% ABSD on any residential property purchase. The rate was set at this level effective 27 April 2023 by the Ministry of Finance and administered by IRAS.

Is Singapore property really capital gains tax free?

Singapore does not impose a capital gains tax. Gains from the sale of Singapore property are not taxed, provided the transaction is an investment rather than a trading activity. IRAS applies a “badges of trade” test (frequency of transactions, holding period, leverage, stated intent) to determine whether gains are assessable as income. For genuine long-hold investors, capital appreciation on Singapore property is effectively untaxed. This policy could change in future — investors should model scenarios that include a potential capital gains tax, which several peer jurisdictions have introduced in recent years.

How does Singapore compare to Hong Kong as a safe-haven property market?

Hong Kong reduced its Buyer’s Stamp Duty for non-permanent residents from 30% to 7.5% in February 2024 to revive its property market. Despite this, transaction volumes and prices in Hong Kong’s residential market have remained subdued, weighed by political uncertainty, reduced expatriate headcount and weak domestic economic confidence. Singapore, by contrast, has maintained its cooling measures and seen stable, positive price growth. Many international investors currently rate Singapore above Hong Kong for residential real estate, given rule-of-law certainty, financial-sector depth and the SGD’s track record of appreciation.

Can a Singapore PR benefit from safe-haven demand dynamics?

Yes, indirectly. PRs purchasing their first residential property in Singapore pay 5% ABSD — a fraction of the foreigner rate. If global uncertainty continues to drive wealth flows into Singapore, demand-support effects on CCR and RCR prices benefit all existing property owners, including PRs. PRs also benefit from the SGD’s safe-haven appreciation effect in their overall balance sheet if they hold Singapore-denominated assets. A PR who became a Singapore Citizen before purchasing a second property saves 25 percentage points in ABSD (0% SC first property vs 5% PR + 25% differential on second).

What are the most sought-after districts for UHNW foreign buyers in 2026?

Districts 9 (Orchard, River Valley), 10 (Tanglin, Bukit Timah, Holland) and 11 (Novena, Thomson) remain the primary targets for UHNW foreign buyers in Singapore’s CCR. Sentosa Cove (District 4) is the only area where foreigners may purchase landed property without separate government approval — though its pricing and yield dynamics are highly specific. D9 and D10 freehold condominiums with full-facility buildings in the S$5M–S$15M range have seen the most sustained foreign interest in 2025–2026 per URA caveat data.

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Disclaimer: This article is a news analysis and commentary piece, not financial or investment advice. Data cited from URA, HDB, MAS and IRAS as at Q1–Q2 2026. ABSD rates, tax policies and MAS regulations are subject to change. Readers should consult a MAS-regulated financial adviser, a licensed property agent and qualified legal counsel before making any property investment decision. Foreign nationals should also obtain independent legal advice on residency, visa and tax implications in their home jurisdiction before purchasing Singapore property.

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