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

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

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

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

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

Quick Answer — Million-Dollar HDB at a glance

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

How Common Are Million-Dollar HDB Flats Now?

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

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

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

Where Million-Dollar HDB Flats Cluster

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

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

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

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

Why Million-Dollar HDB Pricing Holds Up

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

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

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

Summary Table — Profile of Q1 2026 Million-Dollar Sales

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Why This Matters for Buyers, Sellers, and Upgraders

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

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

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

How Singapore Compares

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

What Might Come Next

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

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

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

Frequently Asked Questions

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Disclaimer

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

LTV Limits Singapore 2026: How Much You Can Borrow for Your Home or Investment Property

LTV Limits Singapore 2026: How Much You Can Borrow for Your Home or Investment Property

Loan-to-Value (LTV) is the single most important number in a Singapore home-purchase budget. It tells you, before anything else, the maximum slice of the property price the bank is willing to lend — and therefore the cash and CPF you need to bring yourself. Misread it by even five percentage points and you may find yourself short by tens of thousands of dollars on completion day.

This guide walks you through the LTV framework as it stands in 2026 — the rate ladder by housing-loan count, how tenure and age cut into the cap, how LTV interacts with TDSR and MSR, and the practical decisions buyers face. The framework is set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) Notice 645 and reinforced by HDB’s own concessionary loan rules.

Quick Answer — LTV at a glance

  • Bank loan, first housing loan: up to 75% LTV, tenure up to 30 years for private (25 years for HDB).
  • Second housing loan: up to 45% LTV; third or more: up to 35%.
  • If tenure exceeds 30 years OR runs past borrower age 65: caps drop to 55% / 25% / 15%.
  • HDB Concessionary loan: up to 75% LTV, 25-year max tenure.
  • The cash component of the down-payment is at least 5% (private) or 10% (HDB Concessionary).
  • LTV is one of three gates — you must also pass TDSR (55%) and, for HDB/EC, MSR (30%).

What Is Loan-to-Value — and Why Does It Exist?

LTV is the ratio of the housing loan amount to the property’s purchase price or market value, whichever is lower. Banks use it as a first-pass risk control: a higher LTV means thinner equity from the borrower, which means less cushion if property prices fall.

MAS sets the LTV ceiling industry-wide. The ceiling has been progressively tightened since the cooling-measure era began in 2013, as the regulator’s priority shifted from supporting first-time owner-occupiers to discouraging investment-driven leverage. The most recent recalibration was December 2021, which lowered LTV on second housing loans from 50% to 45% and on third loans from 40% to 35%. That framework remains in force in 2026.

LTV Limits Singapore 2026 — guide cover
LTV limits Singapore 2026 — the cap that sets the size of your loan.

The 2026 LTV Ladder — Bank Housing Loans

The headline number you have heard — “75% LTV” — only applies to first-time housing-loan borrowers under standard tenure. Once you have an existing housing loan or stretch the tenure beyond the conservative limit, the cap falls sharply.

LTV ladder Singapore 2026 — 75% first loan, 45% second loan, 35% third loan; tenure-cut to 55%/25%/15%
Figure 1: LTV ladder for bank housing loans, by housing-loan count and tenure.
Borrower scenario Standard LTV If tenure > 30 yrs OR runs past age 65
No outstanding housing loan 75% 55%
One outstanding housing loan 45% 25%
Two or more outstanding loans 35% 15%

Two practical points are worth flagging. First, the 30-year tenure rule does not mean a 30-year loan is always available — banks themselves often cap tenure earlier for older borrowers. Second, the “outstanding housing loan” count includes loans for properties you co-own as a guarantor or as a second name on the title; the regulator does not look only at your primary mortgage.

Cash Component — The Mandatory Minimum

LTV defines the maximum the bank will lend; the rest must come from the buyer. But of that “rest”, a minimum portion must be in cash and cannot be funded from CPF Ordinary Account.

Loan type Minimum cash Balance from CPF or cash
Bank loan, 75% LTV 5% of price 20% of price
Bank loan, 55% LTV (long tenure) 10% of price 35% of price
Bank loan, 45% LTV (2nd loan) 25% of price 30% of price
HDB Concessionary loan 10% of price 15% of price (CPF or cash)

The cash floor is the practical constraint that catches most upgraders by surprise. A buyer with a S$1.5M target and 75% LTV needs S$75,000 cash on the table at exercise day — on top of BSD, ABSD, and legal fees. CPF Ordinary Account balances cannot substitute for this minimum.

The Three Gates — LTV, TDSR, and MSR

LTV is only one of three caps. Banks must also satisfy:

LTV TDSR MSR three-gate framework Singapore 2026
Figure 2: The three gates — your loan is the smallest of the three answers.
  • LTV — absolute % of property value, set by MAS as above.
  • TDSR (Total Debt Servicing Ratio) — total monthly debt repayments capped at 55% of gross monthly income, stress-tested against a 4.0% medium-term interest rate even though current bank rates are well below that. All debts count: home loans, car loans, education loans, personal loans, credit-card minimum repayments.
  • MSR (Mortgage Servicing Ratio) — only for HDB flats and Executive Condos within MOP, capped at 30% of gross monthly income.

The bank computes the maximum loan under each rule and lends you the smaller of the three. A buyer at 75% LTV but with a heavy car loan can find their actual loan capped by TDSR rather than LTV; an HDB buyer with no other debts often finds MSR — not LTV — is the binding constraint.

Worked Example — Three Buyer Profiles, Three Loan Sizes

Consider three buyers all looking at the same S$1.5M private condo, taking a 30-year loan at 2.85% fixed:

Three buyer profiles, three loan sizes on a S$1.5M private condo
Figure 3: Three buyer profiles compared on identical S$1.5M condo.

The first-time buyer at age 35, salary S$10k/month, no other loans, gets the textbook 75% LTV: S$1,125,000 loan, S$375,000 down (5% cash + 20% CPF/cash). Monthly payment S$4,663 — comfortably inside 55% of S$10k.

The second-property buyer at age 48 with one outstanding home loan is capped at 45% LTV: S$675,000 loan only, S$825,000 down. This buyer also pays 20% ABSD on the new property — an additional S$300,000.

The upgrader to a tenure that runs past age 65 at age 50 is capped at 55% LTV (because the 30-year tenure runs to age 80, well past 65): S$825,000 loan only. Same income as the second buyer, but bigger loan because no existing housing loan; still smaller than the first-time buyer because of the tenure rule.

HDB Concessionary Loan — A Different Beast

The HDB Concessionary loan, available to buyers of new and resale HDB flats meeting income and ownership criteria, runs on its own framework:

  • LTV: up to 75% of valuation, identical to first-time bank loan.
  • Tenure cap: 25 years for new flats, 25 or 30 years for resale depending on age.
  • Interest rate: pegged to CPF Ordinary Account rate plus 0.1% — currently 2.60% (CPF OA at 2.5% + 0.1% spread, rate-locked).
  • MSR-only gate: 30% of gross income, no separate TDSR overlay.
  • Rule of two: Singapore households are limited to two HDB Concessionary loans across a lifetime, with a five-year wait between the first and second.

For comparable risk profiles, the Concessionary loan typically beats bank loans on cost; the trade-off is the more rigid tenure cap and the requirement to deplete CPF OA balances above S$20,000 first.

What This Means for You as a Buyer in 2026

The 2026 environment is the tightest LTV regime Singapore has had in two decades. Combined with stress-tested TDSR at 4.0% and ABSD at 20% on second properties for citizens, the effective leverage available to a typical buyer is materially below where it sat pre-2018.

Three practical conclusions:

  1. Plan around the binding gate, not around LTV alone. Run all three checks before committing — ask your banker to model TDSR with all your debts, and MSR if you are buying HDB or EC.
  2. Tenure is now a real lever for older buyers. Choosing a 25-year tenure that ends before 65 can keep you on the 75% LTV track even at age 40. Stretching to 30 years past 65 cuts to 55%.
  3. Reserve capital, not just cash. The 5% mandatory-cash floor is the headline; in practice you also need BSD, ABSD, legal fees, and a six-month reserve buffer. A S$1.5M purchase typically requires S$120,000 in cash on the table at exercise.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is LTV calculated on the purchase price or the valuation?

The lower of the two. If a property is bought at S$1.5M but the valuation is S$1.45M, the bank applies LTV to S$1.45M. The remaining S$50,000 must be covered in cash — this is the dreaded “valuation gap” that catches buyers in rising markets.

Does selling my existing property before buying a new one reset my LTV count?

Yes — provided the existing housing loan is fully discharged before the OTP date on the new purchase. Banks check the credit bureau records on the day of credit assessment, and a discharged loan no longer counts as outstanding. This is why “sell-then-buy” buyers can access the 75% LTV track that “buy-then-sell” buyers cannot.

Can I take a 35-year loan if I am only 30 years old?

The MAS framework permits it, but bank policies vary. Most banks prefer to cap tenure at 30 years even for young borrowers. Even where 35 years is permitted, the over-30 tenure rule kicks in and reduces the LTV cap to 55% on the first loan — usually a poor trade-off.

Does my spouse’s housing loan affect my LTV count?

If you co-borrow on a single property, you are counted as one applicant for LTV purposes. If your spouse has a separate property in their sole name with an outstanding loan, that does not count against you when you buy in your sole name — this is the basis of decoupling strategies that release ABSD allowance.

What happens if my loan application is approved but my income drops before completion?

Banks reserve the right to re-underwrite at completion. A material income drop (typically more than 20%) between approval and completion can lead to a loan reduction or, in extreme cases, withdrawal. Buyers facing this should engage their banker proactively rather than wait for completion day.

Are there any loans that bypass LTV?

Not for residential property. Some private banks offer “lombard” or asset-backed lending against shares, bonds, or insurance policies, which sit outside the housing-loan framework, but these are not housing loans and the security is the financial portfolio, not the property. They are an option mainly for high-net-worth borrowers with substantial liquid investments.

Does SORA-pegged versus fixed-rate make a difference to LTV?

No. LTV is set by the housing-loan count and tenure, regardless of the rate type. Fixed and floating loans face the same LTV cap. Choice between fixed and SORA is a separate decision driven by rate outlook and personal risk preference.

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Disclaimer

This article provides general information about LTV and related housing-loan rules in Singapore as at May 2026. It is not financial, tax, or legal advice. LTV ceilings, cash-component rules, TDSR and MSR are set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore, and the Housing & Development Board, and may be amended at any time. For authoritative figures, consult MAS, HDB, CPF Board, the Urban Redevelopment Authority, and SingStat. Before signing an Option to Purchase, engage a licensed Singapore mortgage banker, conveyancing solicitor, and where relevant a financial planner to model your situation specifically.

Mortgage Refinancing in Singapore 2026: When to Switch, How Much You Save & What It Costs

Mortgage Refinancing in Singapore 2026: When to Switch, How Much You Save & What It Costs

Mortgage refinancing Singapore 2026 sunset hero
Mortgage Refinancing Singapore 2026 — when, why and how to switch.

Quick Answer

  • Refinancing means moving your home loan from one bank to another for a better rate or package — repricing means renegotiating with your existing bank.
  • The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s compounded 3-month SORA sits around 2.95% in April 2026; effective floating-rate packages run 3.60–3.80%, while bank fixed packages re-quote at 2.78–2.85%.
  • Most home loans carry a 2-year lock-in. Refinancing inside lock-in usually triggers a 1.5% penalty on the outstanding balance — wait until expiry.
  • Plan to start the conversation 3 months before lock-in expires: that is the standard required notice period for both repricing and refinancing.
  • Total switching cost is typically S$1,800–S$2,500 in legal and valuation fees, and most banks subsidise legal fees if your loan is at least S$300,000.
  • If your current rate is above 3.40% and you have at least three years left, the new package usually breaks even within 9–14 months.
  • Your TDSR is reassessed each time you refinance. If income has dropped or new debt has appeared, you may not qualify for the lowest rate.

What Refinancing Actually Means

Refinancing a Singapore home loan means closing your existing mortgage with one bank and opening a new mortgage with another bank, secured against the same property. The new lender pays off the old one and you start fresh on a different rate, structure and lock-in. This is not the same thing as repricing, which is staying with your current bank and signing a new internal package — a much lighter administrative move that usually saves you the legal fees of a full refinance.

Both options are common because Singapore mortgage packages are short-dated by design. Almost every fixed-rate package locks in for one to three years, after which the rate floats up to a much higher “thereafter” board rate. Floating SORA packages also reset to less attractive spreads at the same anniversary. The market expects you to switch — and the banks compete fiercely for that switch business twice in the life of a typical 25-year loan.

Singapore mortgage rate benchmarks April 2026
Figure 1: Where Singapore mortgage rates sit in April 2026.

The April 2026 Rate Picture

Pricing in 2026 has been shaped by the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s tighter monetary policy stance and by elevated US Treasury yields. The 3-month compounded SORA — the official MAS-published reference rate that has replaced SIBOR — averages around 2.95%. That feeds into floating packages quoted as SORA + a spread: 0.65–0.85% for private property and 0.65–0.75% for HDB, giving effective floating rates of roughly 3.60–3.80%.

Bank fixed packages are pricing inside floating because lenders read the curve as flat to lower over the next 24 months. That is why a private fixed at 2.78% is achievable today even though SORA is at 2.95%. The HDB Concessionary Loan, which is administered by HDB rather than a bank, remains the cheapest mortgage anywhere on the island at 2.60% — fixed at CPF Ordinary Account rate plus 0.10% — and is unaffected by the bank rate cycle.

When Should You Refinance?

The textbook trigger is a rate gap of 0.5% or more between your current effective rate and a fresh fixed package. Below that, the legal-fee drag and the time investment usually do not pay off, especially if your remaining loan is small. Above that, the maths almost always favours the switch, particularly if you can lock in fixed rates while SORA is still elevated.

The other strong trigger is your lock-in expiry. If you signed a 2-year fixed package in mid-2024, that lock-in lifted in mid-2026 and you are now on a much higher reset rate. The bank knows this — its repricing offer will be roughly the market rate plus a small loyalty discount, while a competitor’s refinance offer will be the full headline rate. Compare both in the same fortnight, three months before the anniversary. The notice period is what gives the new bank time to draw fresh facility documents and complete the legal handover without you paying a clawback.

What It Costs to Switch

The all-in cost of a private refinance is normally S$1,800 to S$2,500. That covers the conveyancing legal fees (S$1,500–S$2,000 depending on the firm and complexity), a valuation report (S$300–S$500) and minor disbursements. Banks routinely subsidise legal fees if the new loan is at least S$300,000 and you commit to a clawback period — typically three years. If you refinance again before that clawback ends, you will repay the legal subsidy.

For HDB loans the legal cost is lower because conveyancing is simpler. Expect S$1,200–S$1,800. Repricing is cheaper still, often S$500 or less, because you are simply signing a new package letter with the same lender — no lawyer is needed to discharge and re-mortgage the property.

Worked example refinancing S$800,000 loan break-even
Figure 2: A S$800,000 floating-rate mortgage broken down against the same loan refinanced to a 2.78% fixed package.

Worked Example: A S$800,000 Loan, 25 Years to Run

Imagine a private condominium owner sitting on a S$800,000 loan balance with 25 years left. Her current package, a SORA + 1.25% legacy float taken in 2022, has reset to an effective 4.20%. Her monthly instalment is roughly S$4,319, of which around S$33,000 will be interest in year one alone.

If she refinances into a 2.78% one-year fixed package, the same S$800,000 over 25 years drops her instalment to about S$3,705 — a monthly saving of S$614 and a year-one interest bill closer to S$21,800. After legal subsidy from the new bank, her net switching cost is roughly S$2,000.

That puts the break-even point at about 3.3 months. Over the first five years, she pockets roughly S$34,800 of cash-flow savings before any further repricing. Even if she chooses to lock in only one year and then floats again, the pull-forward of those savings is large enough to justify the move.

Repricing vs Refinancing — Which One Should You Choose?

Repricing is the right move if (a) your remaining loan is below S$300,000, (b) you have less than three years to run, or (c) the new offer from your existing bank is within roughly 0.20% of the cheapest competing refinance. The legal-fee saving and the speed of the process — usually two weeks rather than eight — make up for the slightly higher headline rate.

Refinancing is the right move if your loan is large, the rate gap is meaningful, you want to consolidate debt or you want to change the loan structure (for example, switching from a fixed to a SORA-pegged float, or vice versa). It is also the right move if your current bank’s customer service is poor, because once a refinance closes you have no further dealings with the old lender.

Singapore mortgage refinancing decision matrix 2026
Figure 3: Six common borrower situations and the recommended next move.

The Six Things That Can Sink a Refinance

Even when the rate maths looks compelling, the application can fail at the new bank for any of the following reasons. Each one is worth checking before you start the paperwork.

1. TDSR breach. The Total Debt Servicing Ratio is recalculated at every refinance, even on owner-occupied properties bought before TDSR existed. The standard 55% TDSR cap is stress-tested at a medium-term interest rate of 4.0% for residential property. If your monthly debt obligations have crept up — through a renovation loan, a car loan, or a second property — you may now fail.

2. Income haircut. A bank requires three months of payslips and a Notice of Assessment. If your income has dropped because of a job change or a move to self-employment, the new lender will discount your variable income by 30%, sometimes more. The number that goes into TDSR is lower than your gross.

3. Lock-in penalty. A 1.5% penalty on the outstanding balance is the most common clawback. On a S$800,000 loan that is S$12,000 — usually enough to cancel two years of savings. Always check your facility letter before quoting refinancing offers.

4. Legal subsidy clawback. If you refinanced in the last three years, the prior bank’s legal subsidy may still be repayable on exit. This is rarely waived. Diary-mark the clawback expiry rather than chasing every promotion.

5. Insurance complications. Mortgage Reducing Term Assurance (MRTA) policies are often assigned to the original lender. Reassigning them to the new bank takes time and, in some cases, a small administrative fee. If the policy is portable, no problem; if it is not, you may need a new policy at a new premium.

6. Decoupling and joint-name complications. If a couple has decoupled since the original loan, or if a parent’s name was added or removed for ABSD reasons, the new bank will require fresh underwriting on whoever remains on the title. Plan an extra month for the credit checks.

Documents You Will Need

The refinance pack is largely the same across banks. Have these ready before you ask for in-principle approval:

Category Documents
Identity NRIC for SC/PR; passport + employment pass for foreigners
Property Title deed, sale & purchase agreement, latest property tax notice, CSC or TOP letter
Existing loan Latest loan statement, facility letter, lock-in expiry date, current outstanding balance
Income — employed Latest 3 months’ payslips, latest 1-year Notice of Assessment, CPF contribution history
Income — self-employed Latest 2 years’ Notice of Assessment, 6 months’ bank statements, ACRA business profile
Other liabilities Credit card statements, car loan, renovation loan — anything that goes into TDSR
For HDB HDB resale completion letter or VP letter, HDB loan eligibility letter if any

The Refinancing Timeline

From in-principle approval to legal completion the process runs roughly eight weeks. Plan backwards from your lock-in expiry so the new loan disburses on the day the old loan exits.

Week Action
Week 0 Compile rate sheets from at least three banks and your existing lender’s repricing offer.
Week 1 Submit application + documents to the chosen bank. Receive Letter of Offer.
Week 2 Bank-appointed valuer inspects property; valuation report issued.
Week 3-4 Sign Letter of Offer and engage law firm (often nominated by the bank for subsidy purposes).
Week 5-6 Lawyer prepares discharge of existing mortgage, redemption statement, fresh mortgage instrument.
Week 7 Notice of redemption served on existing bank (the 3-month notice period).
Week 8 New loan disburses; old loan redeemed; new mortgage registered with SLA.

Why It Matters Now

Singapore’s rate cycle is sitting in an unusual window. SORA is high enough that floating-rate borrowers feel the pinch every month, but bank fixed packages are pricing inside SORA because the curve has inverted. That means the gap between an old floating package and a fresh fixed one is unusually wide — often 90 to 130 basis points for borrowers who took loans in 2022–2024. Whether you act on that gap now or wait six months can mean tens of thousands of dollars over the life of a S$1 million loan.

The complement matters too. If MAS pivots back to easing later in the year, the floating rate will fall but bank fixed packages will fall faster — banks reprice off their forward expectations, not spot SORA. A fixed package taken in April 2026 may look high in early 2027. The remedy is to sign one-year fixed rather than three-year fixed unless you genuinely need the cash-flow certainty.

What Might Come Next

Two scenarios are worth thinking through. The first is that MAS holds policy unchanged through October 2026 and the curve flattens further. In that world, fixed rates fall toward 2.50% by mid-year, floating rates compress slightly, and the refinancing window stays open but shrinks. Borrowers who reprice will probably do as well as those who refinance in net terms.

The second scenario is that the US Federal Reserve cuts rates more aggressively because of slower-than-expected growth. Singapore’s domestic rate complex would follow on the floating side but more slowly on fixed. In that world, floating becomes the cheaper bet and refinancing into a SORA-pegged float — rather than fixed — becomes the better trade. Either way, the basic discipline does not change: review the package three months before lock-in expiry and make a decision based on the gap, not on a guess about where rates are headed.

Frequently Asked Questions

How early should I start the refinancing conversation?

Three months before your lock-in expires is the standard cadence. That is the notice period most existing lenders require, and it gives the new bank time to issue the Letter of Offer, complete the valuation, and have your lawyer prepare the discharge — all without overlapping with your current package’s reset date. Starting earlier than three months is fine for shopping around, but the formal application sits at the three-month mark.

Will refinancing reset my loan tenure?

Only if you ask it to. The new loan can match the remaining tenure of your old loan (most common) or it can be re-amortised to a longer tenure (subject to the borrower’s age cap of 65 for residential and the LTV cap, which tightens with longer tenures). Lengthening tenure lowers the monthly instalment but raises the lifetime interest paid and may push you into a lower LTV ceiling, requiring extra cash or CPF.

Can I refinance to take cash out?

Yes, this is called a cash-out refinance or term loan top-up. It is allowed on private property under MAS rules but the loan-to-value cap on the cash-out portion is 75% (or 55% if you have an existing housing loan or your tenure breaches the standard caps). HDB flats cannot be cash-out refinanced — you can only refinance the existing loan balance. The cash-out interest rate is also typically higher than a vanilla refinance.

Does refinancing affect my credit score?

The credit bureau records the new mortgage application as a credit enquiry and the new account as a fresh trade line. There is a minor short-term dip while the old loan is closed and the new one is opened. Within three to six months the score normalises. The bigger credit-score risk is having multiple unsuccessful applications in a short window, so do your homework before you formally apply.

What happens to my CPF Accrued Interest if I refinance?

Refinancing has no effect on your CPF Accrued Interest balance. CPF Accrued Interest is a notional amount tracking what your CPF Ordinary Account would have earned if you had not used it for the property. It accumulates regardless of which bank holds the mortgage and is only crystallised when you sell. Refinancing also does not affect your CPF withdrawal limit or your Valuation Limit.

Should I switch from floating to fixed in 2026?

For most borrowers in 2026 the answer is yes, because bank fixed rates are pricing below spot SORA. The exception is borrowers who believe MAS will ease aggressively in the next six months, or borrowers whose remaining loan is small enough that the lifetime interest difference is modest. If certainty of monthly cash flow matters more than chasing the last 20 basis points, fixed is the right answer in 2026.

What if I am refinancing while between jobs?

Banks treat unemployed applicants as having zero employment income, regardless of savings or assets. If you are between jobs, complete the refinancing while you are still in your current role, or wait until you have at least three months of payslips at the new employer. Self-employed borrowers must show two full years of Notice of Assessment, so a recent move from employment to self-employment is the same problem in slow motion.

Disclaimer. This article is general information about mortgage refinancing in Singapore as at 29 April 2026 and does not constitute financial advice. Rates and bank packages change frequently. Always verify current rates with the lender, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (SORA reference), HDB (HDB Concessionary Loan), and your own licensed financial adviser, mortgage broker or solicitor before making any decision.

Tenancy Agreement Singapore 2026: A Landlord and Tenant’s Complete Guide to the Rental Contract

Tenancy Agreement Singapore 2026: A Landlord and Tenant’s Complete Guide to the Rental Contract

Last updated 28 April 2026. Reflects IRAS lease stamp duty rules current as at FY2026 and standard market norms reported by URA’s quarterly rental statistics.

Quick Answer — 30-second takeaways

  • A Singapore tenancy agreement is the binding contract between a landlord and tenant. It is governed by Singapore contract law and the principles of the Civil Law Act and the Conveyancing and Law of Property Act.
  • Standard residential terms are 12 or 24 months. Anything shorter than 3 months risks being treated as serviced accommodation, which is regulated separately.
  • Security deposit: typically 1 month’s rent per year of lease, capped at 2 months. Refundable within 14 days of handover, less reasonable deductions.
  • Diplomatic clause: standard on 24-month leases, lets the tenant terminate after 12 months on 2 months’ notice if posted out of Singapore.
  • Lease stamp duty (LSD): 0.40% of total rent across the lease term, payable by the tenant within 14 days of execution, e-stamped at iras.gov.sg.
  • Minor repairs cap: tenant pays first S$150–S$250 of any repair; landlord pays the excess. Aircon servicing 3-monthly is the tenant’s cost.
  • Disputes ≤ S$30,000 can be heard at the Small Claims Tribunals (SCT) with both parties’ consent. Larger disputes go to the State Courts.

What a tenancy agreement is — and what it isn’t

A tenancy agreement (often abbreviated TA) is the written contract that creates a legal lease between a property owner (the landlord) and an occupant (the tenant). It records the parties, the property, the term, the rent, the deposit, and the rules for living in and looking after the home.

Singapore does not have a dedicated Residential Tenancy Act. Tenancy agreements are governed by general contract law, supplemented by the Civil Law Act 1909, the Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1886, and — for HDB rentals — by the rules of the Housing and Development Board. This means that what is “standard” in a Singapore tenancy is largely set by market practice and by widely-used template clauses, not by statute. Landlords and tenants who do not read every clause carefully can find themselves bound by terms the other side considers normal but they did not expect.

A tenancy agreement is not a Letter of Intent (LOI). The LOI is the pre-contract document the prospective tenant submits with a good-faith deposit. The TA is the binding lease that follows once the LOI is accepted. Stamp duty is payable on the TA, not the LOI.

Singapore tenancy agreement 2026 — 10 key clauses every landlord and tenant should read line by line
Figure 1: The 10 clauses that do most of the work in a Singapore tenancy agreement.

Who can be a landlord, and who can be a tenant

For private property, any property owner can lease their unit, subject to building by-laws and the conditions of any mortgage. The Urban Redevelopment Authority requires a minimum lease of 3 months for private residential property; below that threshold the lease is treated as short-stay accommodation and is generally not allowed unless the unit is licensed serviced apartment stock.

For HDB flats, the rental rules are stricter:

  • The flat must have met its Minimum Occupation Period (MOP), which is typically 5 years for new flats and 5 years for resale flats with grant.
  • The owner must apply for HDB approval to rent out the whole flat or individual rooms.
  • Rentals to non-citizen households must respect the Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) and Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) quota.
  • Maximum 6 unrelated occupants per flat (4 for 1- and 2-room flats).
  • The minimum rental period is 6 months for whole-flat HDB rentals.

Tenants can be Singapore Citizens, Permanent Residents, work-pass holders, students or any other lawfully present individual. For non-resident tenants, landlords must verify that the tenant holds a valid pass throughout the lease — leasing to an individual without a valid pass is an offence under the Immigration Act.

The 10 clauses that do all the work

A typical Singapore residential TA runs to 8–14 pages. Most of the legal heavy-lifting happens in ten clauses, summarised in Figure 1 above and explored below.

Term and renewal

The lease term is fixed: it has a defined start date and end date. Holding-over (continuing to occupy after expiry without a new TA) creates a tenancy at will, which is terminable on short notice and offers neither party much protection. Most landlords negotiate renewal 2–3 months before expiry; the LSD on the renewal lease must be re-stamped at the new rent.

Rent and security deposit

Rent is payable monthly in advance. The market norm for the security deposit is 1 month’s rent per year of lease, capped at 2 months. The deposit secures the landlord against damage beyond fair wear and tear, unpaid rent, and unpaid utility bills. It is refunded within 14 days of handover, less itemised deductions. Disputes over deposit deductions are the single most common Singapore tenancy dispute, and the Small Claims Tribunals see hundreds each year.

Diplomatic clause and reimbursement clause

The diplomatic clause allows a tenant to terminate after 12 months on 2 months’ written notice if they are required to leave Singapore (typically because of a job posting or visa cancellation). It is market-standard on 24-month leases and rare on 12-month leases. The mirror is the reimbursement clause: if the tenant terminates early, they must reimburse the landlord on a pro-rated basis for the agent’s commission and legal fees of the original lease.

Minor repairs cap

Tenants are responsible for minor repairs up to a contractual cap, typically S$150–S$250 per item. Landlords pay the excess. The clause prevents petty disputes about light bulbs and tap washers, while keeping major repairs (aircon compressor failure, roof leaks, structural defects) on the landlord’s account. Air-conditioner servicing every 3 months is the tenant’s cost; receipts must be produced at handover.

Inventory and handover

An inventory list — usually a schedule attached to the TA — records every item of furniture, every appliance, and every fixture provided. At move-in, both parties walk through and sign off. At move-out, deductions for missing or damaged items are calculated against this list. Photo evidence at both ends saves arguments.

Stamp duty clause

The TA will state which party is responsible for paying lease stamp duty. By Singapore market practice and IRAS guidance, the tenant pays. Failure to e-stamp within 14 days exposes the lease to a penalty of 4 times the duty or S$10, whichever is higher, and the unstamped lease is inadmissible as evidence in a Singapore court (the duty must be paid before the lease can be relied on in litigation).

Singapore tenancy agreement 2026 — market norms for deposit, diplomatic clause, minor repairs cap, and stamp duty
Figure 2: The four “norms” most often negotiated — deposit, diplomatic clause, repairs cap, and stamp duty.

Lease stamp duty: the maths

Lease stamp duty (LSD) is the only tax on a Singapore tenancy. It is levied at 0.40% of total rent across the lease term, capped at four times the average annual rent for leases longer than 4 years. The duty is the tenant’s legal obligation under section 33 of the Stamp Duties Act, payable within 14 days of execution.

Lease term Stamp duty formula Notes
≤ 4 years 0.40% × total rent across the term Most common; covers all 12- and 24-month leases
> 4 years 0.40% × 4 × average annual rent Caps the duty for long leases
Lease with premium / variable rent BSD-style staircase rates apply to premium; LSD on the rent component Rare in residential — common in commercial
Singapore lease stamp duty worked examples 2026 for HDB, condo and landed properties
Figure 3: Worked LSD examples across HDB and private property at 2026 market rents.

The IRAS portal e-stamps the lease in real time. The tenant pays via PayNow, eNETS or credit card, prints the certificate, and brings the original to the lease signing. Many landlords now make production of the e-stamp certificate a precondition to handing over keys — a sensible safeguard, because once keys are handed over the landlord’s leverage drops sharply.

Negotiating the lease — what to push on, what to leave alone

Singapore tenancy agreements are negotiable. The points that move most often:

  • Diplomatic clause activation date. Tenants often ask for activation at month 9 instead of month 12. Landlords typically refuse. The 12-month default holds.
  • Minor repairs cap. Tenants ask for S$300; landlords often want S$150. The S$200 LivingPlus number is the comfortable middle.
  • Whitegoods inclusion. Whether refrigerator, washer, dryer, microwave, oven, vacuum and rice cooker are included is line-by-line negotiation. List each item by brand and model in the inventory schedule.
  • Repainting before handover. A clause requiring the tenant to repaint before move-out used to be standard. It is increasingly replaced by a fixed reinstatement fee (S$300–S$800) plus normal wear-and-tear treatment.
  • Pet clause. “No pets” is the default. Tenants with pets must negotiate a specific carve-out and an additional deposit. HDB has its own approved-breed list for flats.
  • Smoking. “No smoking inside the unit” is now standard, and landlords reasonably claim against deposit if walls and curtains carry residual smoke odour.

What happens if things go wrong

The Singapore framework for tenancy disputes is informal but well-trodden:

  • Small Claims Tribunals (SCT). Hears disputes ≤ S$20,000 (or up to S$30,000 with both parties’ consent in writing) for tenancies of up to 2 years. Hearings are tenant- and landlord-friendly: no lawyers in the courtroom, fees from S$10, decisions usually within 4–6 weeks. The most common claims are deposit deductions, damage to inventory, and unpaid rent.
  • State Courts. Larger disputes, longer leases, and complex commercial-residential overlaps. Lawyers represent both sides; costs follow the event.
  • HDB and the Housing & Estate Disputes Resolution Centre. For HDB rental disputes specifically, HDB will mediate before parties resort to the SCT.
  • Mediation via the Singapore Mediation Centre. Voluntary and confidential. Useful where the parties want to preserve a working relationship — for example, a landlord who wants the tenant to stay another year.

What this means for you

For tenants: read every clause. Push back on anything ambiguous. Pay LSD on time and keep the certificate. Photograph the unit on move-in and move-out. Save every WhatsApp message about repairs — these are evidence in any future SCT claim.

For landlords: use a template TA from a Singapore conveyancing lawyer (not a generic internet template). Check the tenant’s pass status throughout the lease. Inspect the unit twice during a 24-month lease — once at month 6, once at month 18 — with proper notice. Reply in writing to repair requests. The landlord’s deposit deduction is much harder to defend in the SCT if the inspection trail is thin.

What might come next

The Ministry of National Development has been studying the case for codifying residential tenancy law in Singapore — the United Kingdom, Australia and several jurisdictions in continental Europe have moved in this direction. As at April 2026, no draft Bill has been tabled. The likeliest medium-term reforms are: a statutory deposit scheme along the lines of the UK Tenancy Deposit Scheme; a standard tenancy agreement template published by URA or HDB; and clearer rules on the deductibility of fair wear and tear. None of these are imminent, but landlords and tenants who structure their TAs around the existing market norms are well-positioned for any future statutory framework.

Frequently asked questions

Who pays the property agent’s commission?

Singapore market practice is that each side pays its own agent. The landlord pays the landlord’s agent (typically 1 month of annual rent on a 24-month lease, half a month on a 12-month lease). The tenant typically pays the tenant’s agent only on shorter or smaller-rent leases (under S$3,500/month) where the landlord’s agent’s fee is too thin to share. CEA’s Code of Ethics and Professional Client Care requires written disclosure of who pays whom before any signing.

Can a tenant break the lease before the diplomatic clause activates?

Only if the landlord agrees, or if the landlord is in fundamental breach (uninhabitable conditions, refusal to make repairs, harassment). Otherwise, an early termination is a breach of contract. The tenant remains liable for rent until the landlord re-lets the unit; the security deposit is forfeited; the original agent’s commission is clawed back pro-rata. Most landlords are willing to release a tenant if a replacement tenant on equivalent terms is presented.

Can the landlord enter the property without notice?

No. The TA grants the tenant exclusive possession. The landlord may enter only with reasonable notice (typically 24 hours in writing) and at reasonable times, except in emergencies (fire, flood, gas leak). Repeated unannounced visits are a breach of the covenant for quiet enjoyment and can support a tenant’s claim for damages.

What if the tenant has overstayed or won’t leave?

Self-help eviction is unlawful in Singapore. The landlord must give the contractual notice (or, if the lease has expired, a notice to quit), and if the tenant still does not leave, file for a Writ of Possession at the State Courts. Locking the tenant out, removing belongings, or cutting utilities is a criminal offence under the Protection from Harassment Act 2014 and the Distress Act 1872.

Does GST apply to residential rent?

No. Residential rent is exempt from GST under the Fourth Schedule to the GST Act. GST applies only to commercial leases — and only when the landlord is GST-registered (i.e., turnover above S$1 million in a 12-month period).

Can a tenant sub-let to a third party?

Only with the landlord’s written consent. Most TAs have an express anti-subletting clause. Even where consent is given, the head tenant remains liable to the landlord for the sub-tenant’s behaviour, rent and damage. For HDB rentals, all sub-letting must additionally have HDB approval; unauthorised sub-letting is a serious offence and can result in compulsory acquisition of the flat.

Is a verbal lease enforceable?

A verbal residential lease for 3 years or less is technically enforceable under the Conveyancing and Law of Property Act, but in practice it is almost impossible to prove the terms. For any lease over 3 years, the law requires a written, signed deed, registered with the Singapore Land Authority. As a landlord or tenant, you should never proceed without a written, e-stamped TA.

Disclaimer. This article is general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Singapore tenancy law is governed by the Civil Law Act 1909, the Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1886, the Stamp Duties Act 1929, the Small Claims Tribunals Act 1984, and HDB regulations for public housing. Always read your specific tenancy agreement carefully and consult a licensed Singapore lawyer for high-value or unusual terms. Verify lease stamp duty rates against iras.gov.sg, HDB rental approval rules against hdb.gov.sg, and URA short-stay rules against ura.gov.sg.
Tenancy Agreement
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Lease Stamp Duty
Singapore Property
Renting Guide
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Singapore Property Insurance Guide 2026: Fire, MRTA, HPS & Contents Cover Decoded

Singapore Property Insurance Guide 2026: Fire, MRTA, HPS & Contents Cover Decoded

Property insurance in Singapore is one of those topics most homeowners discover only when something goes wrong — a kitchen fire, a burst pipe, a borrower’s sudden death. By then it is too late to negotiate a better policy. This 2026 guide walks you through every layer of cover a Singapore property owner can buy: HDB Fire Insurance, the Home Protection Scheme (HPS), private Mortgage Reducing Term Assurance (MRTA), Home Contents Insurance, and the building cover that sits inside your condo’s management corporation budget. Premiums, what each policy actually pays for, common gaps, and the cheapest legitimate way to cover yourself in 2026 — it is all here.

Quick Answer — what every Singapore homeowner should hold

  • HDB owners: Fire Insurance is compulsory. If you use CPF Ordinary Account to service your HDB loan, the Home Protection Scheme (HPS) is also auto-enrolled.
  • Condo owners: Building cover is paid through your monthly maintenance fees (MCST policy). You still need Home Contents and a private MRTA if you have a bank loan.
  • MRTA protects your family from a forced sale by repaying the outstanding mortgage on death, terminal illness, or total & permanent disability.
  • Home Contents covers furniture, electronics, jewellery, and personal liability — items the building policy excludes.
  • Indicative annual outlay for a S$1.5M condo with a S$1.05M loan: ~S$1,000–1,200 across MRTA + Contents + topped-up Fire cover.
  • Premiums vary 15–35% between insurers for identical cover — always compare 3+ quotes.

What “Property Insurance” Actually Means in Singapore

The phrase “property insurance” covers four distinct policies in the Singapore context, and the rules around each one differ by housing type. Understanding which is mandatory, which your bank insists on, and which you can safely skip is the difference between an over-insured budget and a real protection plan.

The four pillars are:

  • Fire Insurance — covers the building structure (walls, floors, ceilings, fixed fittings). Compulsory for HDB flat owners; built into the maintenance fees of every condominium via the Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST).
  • Home Protection Scheme (HPS) — a CPF-administered group term assurance that pays off your outstanding HDB loan if you die, become totally and permanently disabled, or are diagnosed with a terminal illness. Compulsory for HDB owners using CPF Ordinary Account funds to service the loan.
  • Mortgage Reducing Term Assurance (MRTA) — the private-sector equivalent of HPS, sold by life insurers. Most banks strongly recommend (and some require) MRTA for private property loans.
  • Home Contents Insurance — covers everything inside the four walls: furniture, white goods, electronics, jewellery, watches, plus personal liability if a guest is injured at your home.
Singapore property insurance guide 2026 — Fire vs HPS vs MRTA vs Home Contents comparison matrix
Figure 1: At-a-glance comparison of the four core property-insurance pillars in Singapore.

Fire Insurance — Compulsory for HDB, Bundled for Condos

Every HDB flat owner is required by law to maintain a Fire Insurance policy on the structure of the flat. The Housing & Development Board has appointed a single insurer (currently FWD Singapore) to underwrite a basic policy with a uniform 5-year premium of around S$5.30 to S$25.40 depending on flat type. The cover sum is set to rebuild the structure, not the contents — if you assume your renovation, kitchen cabinets, or solid-timber flooring is included, you are mistaken. Most HDB owners then top up with a Home Contents policy from a private insurer.

For private condominium owners, fire insurance for the building is paid for collectively by the MCST and recovered through monthly management fees. The MCST policy is typically a Comprehensive HOOIS (Home Owner’s Outline Insurance Schedule) covering the structure, common property, and original developer fittings. What it excludes: any owner-installed renovation upgrades, fitted furniture beyond the original handover spec, and contents. If your condo unit has been substantially renovated, you should buy a top-up renovation cover — insurers will assess your defects-handover-to-current condition and quote accordingly.

For landed property owners, building fire insurance is bought directly from a general insurer. Sums insured are based on the rebuilding cost (excluding land value) rather than market price, which is why a S$10M Good Class Bungalow on a 15,000 sq ft plot may insure for only S$2.5M of structure.

Home Protection Scheme (HPS) — HDB’s Built-In Mortgage Cover

The Home Protection Scheme is a mortgage-reducing term assurance plan administered by the CPF Board for HDB flat buyers. It is compulsory for any flat owner using their CPF Ordinary Account to service their HDB loan, and is auto-enrolled at the point you commit to using CPF for the monthly instalment. The premium is paid annually from your CPF OA — typically S$80 to S$200 per year for a healthy 30-something with an outstanding loan in the S$300,000–500,000 range.

HPS pays off the outstanding HDB loan in three scenarios: death, total and permanent disability (TPD), or terminal illness. The flat then passes to the surviving co-owners or beneficiaries free of mortgage debt. There is no payout to the family beyond clearing the loan — if you want a cash sum on top, HPS will not deliver it. For that you need a separate term-life policy.

You may apply to opt out of HPS only if you already hold an equivalent or better term-assurance policy — a deliberate carve-out designed to prevent over-insurance. The CPF Board reviews your alternative policy against minimum sum-assured and tenure benchmarks before granting the exemption.

Mortgage Reducing Term Assurance (MRTA) — The Private-Sector Equivalent

MRTA, also marketed as Decreasing Term Assurance (DTA) or Mortgage Insurance, performs the same function as HPS but for buyers of private properties or those servicing their HDB loan entirely in cash. It is sold by every major life insurer in Singapore and underwritten as a single-premium or annual-premium policy whose sum assured tracks the falling balance of your mortgage as you pay down principal.

Premiums depend on age, gender, smoking status, sum assured, and tenure. As a rough guide, a 35-year-old non-smoker buying MRTA on a S$1,050,000 25-year loan will see single-premium quotes of S$15,000–22,000, equivalent to about S$600–900 per year if paid annually. Many buyers fund the single premium from their CPF OA at the point of property completion — CPF rules permit this provided the policy is assigned to the property.

If you are buying a condo on a bank loan and your mortgage is your largest financial liability, MRTA is the single most cost-effective protection product available. A S$700/year MRTA premium pays off in any month you are unable to work, where the alternative (a forced sale into a falling market) destroys decades of equity.

Singapore property insurance guide 2026 — annual premium cost stack for a S$1.5M condo
Figure 2: Indicative annual premium outlay for a 35-year-old SC homeowner with a S$1.5M condo and S$1.05M loan.

Home Contents Insurance — The Most Underbought Policy

Home Contents Insurance is the most commonly skipped policy and, statistically, the one that pays out most often. It covers the loose property inside the four walls of your home: furniture, white goods, televisions, computers, kitchen appliances, jewellery, watches, art, musical instruments, and (within sub-limits) cash. It also covers personal liability — the legal cost if your child accidentally injures a visitor on your premises, or if water damage from your unit affects the unit below.

Premiums are remarkably affordable. A standard policy with S$30,000 contents cover and S$500,000 personal liability costs around S$120–220 per year at major insurers (NTUC Income, Etiqa, FWD, Tokio Marine, MSIG). Higher contents sums, jewellery riders, or all-risks cover for valuables sit at S$300–500 per year.

What is typically excluded: gradual wear and tear, mould, vermin damage, intentional damage by a household member, cosmetic damage, and items left in common corridors. Read the schedule carefully — the differences between insurers on what counts as “valuables” (above S$2,500 per article) and which valuables need declaration are material.

Which Policies Do You Actually Need?

The right insurance stack depends on whether you live in HDB or private property, how the property is financed, and whether you intend to rent it out. The flowchart below traces the decisions.

Singapore property insurance guide 2026 — decision flowchart showing which policies HDB and private buyers need
Figure 3: Five-question decision flow mapping owner profile to mandatory and recommended policies.

Summary — Indicative Annual Premiums by Property Profile

Profile Fire / Building HPS / MRTA Contents Total / Year
4-rm HDB owner-occupier (CPF loan) ~S$5 (5-yr premium) ~S$120 HPS ~S$140 ~S$265
5-rm HDB owner-occupier (cash loan) ~S$25 (5-yr premium) ~S$650 MRTA ~S$160 ~S$835
S$1.5M condo owner-occupier (bank loan) MCST top-up ~S$90 ~S$720 MRTA ~S$220 ~S$1,030
S$2.5M condo investor (rented out) MCST top-up ~S$140 ~S$1,200 MRTA Landlord cover ~S$420 ~S$1,760
Landed property (S$5M, owner-occupier) ~S$650 fire ~S$2,400 MRTA ~S$520 ~S$3,570

Worked Example — The Tan Family, S$1.5M Condo Buyer

Mr Tan (35, SC, non-smoker) and his wife (33, SC, non-smoker) have just collected keys to a S$1.5M condo in District 19. Their bank loan is S$1,050,000 over 25 years at a SORA-pegged rate currently at about 3.7%. They have no children but plan to start a family within two years. Here is how their insurance stack lines up.

  1. Fire / Building cover: Provided through the MCST policy — included in their monthly S$420 maintenance fee. They top up with a S$50,000 renovation cover at S$90/year, since their renovation upgrades (kitchen cabinetry, full marble flooring) are not part of the original developer handover.
  2. MRTA: Mr Tan is the sole borrower for tax-deduction reasons. They take a single-premium MRTA of S$17,500 funded from his CPF OA — equivalent to about S$700/year over the 25-year tenure. Sum assured starts at S$1,050,000 and decreases linearly with the loan balance.
  3. Home Contents: S$50,000 contents sum + S$1M personal liability + jewellery rider for Mrs Tan’s heirloom pieces. Annual premium: S$285.
  4. Mortgagee Interest: The bank carries this internally — Mr Tan does not pay separately, but it is one reason the bank’s spread sits at +0.75% over SORA rather than +0.5%.

Total annual outlay: ~S$1,075, or about S$90 a month. Against a household income of S$15,000/month, the protection is rounding error — but it is the difference between Mrs Tan keeping the home if Mr Tan dies, and being forced into a distressed sale.

Insurance Riders Worth Considering

Beyond the four core pillars, riders address specific risk pockets that many homeowners discover only after a claim:

  • Renovation cover — tops up the MCST policy to include your renovation upgrades. Premium scales with renovation spend; rule of thumb is 0.1–0.2% of renovation value per year.
  • Domestic helper liability — covers the legal liability of accidents your foreign domestic helper causes inside or outside your home. ~S$50–120/year, often bundled with helper accident insurance.
  • Loss of rent cover — for landlords. Pays a defined monthly rent if the property becomes uninhabitable due to an insured peril (e.g. fire). ~S$80–200/year on a Home Contents Landlord policy.
  • All-risks worldwide for valuables — covers jewellery, watches, art whether at home or away. Stacks cleanly on top of Home Contents.
  • Public-liability extension — raises personal liability cover from the standard S$500K up to S$2M, useful for landed property owners and high-rise condo owners on upper floors where falling object claims can be material.

Common Mistakes Singapore Owners Make

Because property insurance is dull and the worst-case scenarios feel remote, most owners default to the cheapest single-quote option and discover the gaps when a claim is denied. The five most common mistakes:

  1. Assuming HDB Fire Insurance covers contents — it does not. The FWD/HDB policy covers structure only.
  2. Letting MRTA lapse after refinancing — if you refinance to a different bank, you must re-assign your MRTA policy or switch to a fresh one. A surprising number of owners hold an MRTA policy that no longer points to their current lender.
  3. Not declaring jewellery and valuables — high-value items above S$2,500 each must be specified separately. Otherwise, the Home Contents policy caps any single-item claim at the unspecified-items sub-limit (typically S$5,000–10,000).
  4. Renovating extensively without telling the insurer — if a fire or flood damages your premium kitchen, the MCST policy will only restore the original developer spec. Without your own renovation cover, you self-fund the gap.
  5. Trusting bank-bundled policies — banks earn referral fees on bundled MRTAs and contents policies. Compare independently against direct insurer quotes; you will routinely save 10–25%.

What This Means for You

Insurance is the cheapest part of homeownership and the part with the lowest psychological return until something happens. The exercise to do today, regardless of how long you have owned your home, is simple: list every policy you currently hold, the sum insured, the renewal date, and the bank or insurer you bought it from. If you cannot complete that list in fifteen minutes, you almost certainly have a gap or a duplication. The total cost of being properly covered — even on a S$2.5M condo — rarely exceeds S$2,000 a year, less than a single mortgage instalment for most owners.

What Might Come Next

The Monetary Authority of Singapore has signalled interest in reforming retail insurance disclosure under its Financial Advisers Act review. Expect to see standardised “policy summary” documents for MRTA and Home Contents in 2027, similar to the Product Highlights Sheet for unit trusts. CPF Board has also been studying whether HPS should be extended to cover serious-illness scenarios beyond the current TPD definition; any such expansion would materially raise HPS premiums but reduce the case for private MRTA on top.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is HDB Fire Insurance enough on its own?

No. HDB Fire Insurance covers only the structure of the flat — the walls, floor slab, ceiling, and original developer-fitted items. It does not cover renovations, furniture, electronics, or any of your possessions. Owner-occupiers should pair it with Home Contents Insurance, which is sold separately by every major insurer for around S$120–220 per year.

Can I opt out of HPS if I have a private term-life policy?

Yes — the CPF Board permits HPS exemption if you can demonstrate an equivalent or better term-assurance policy is in force. The alternative policy must cover at least the outstanding HDB loan amount and run for the remaining loan tenure. Apply online via the CPF website with the policy schedule and a recent statement; approval typically takes 2–3 weeks. If the alternative policy lapses, HPS auto-resumes.

Should I buy single-premium or annual-premium MRTA?

Single-premium gives you a fixed cost upfront, payable from CPF OA, and locks in your insurability based on today’s health profile. Annual-premium spreads the cost but is repriced if you ever change tenure or sum assured. For most buyers under 40 in good health, single-premium delivers a 10–15% lifetime saving once you account for the CPF interest you forgo, but the convenience of paying from CPF rather than cash is significant. Annual-premium suits buyers who want the flexibility to switch insurers later.

Does my MCST condo policy cover my renovations?

Generally no. The Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST) policy covers the building structure and the original developer fittings — the kitchen and bathroom finishes that came with the unit at handover. Any subsequent renovation work, custom carpentry, designer fittings, or upgraded flooring is your responsibility. Buy a renovation cover or top-up through your home contents policy, sized to your actual renovation spend.

Will Home Contents Insurance pay out for a stolen Rolex?

Only if you specified it. Most policies treat any single article above S$2,500 as a “valuable” that must be individually declared on the schedule. Watches, jewellery, art, and rare collectibles fall into this category. If you have not declared a S$25,000 Rolex and it is stolen, the insurer pays the unspecified-items sub-limit (typically S$5,000–10,000), not the full value. Add a jewellery and watches rider for an extra S$50–120 per year per S$10,000 of declared value.

What happens to MRTA when I refinance?

The policy is assigned to a specific lender as collateral. When you refinance to a new bank, the policy must either be reassigned to the new lender or be replaced with a fresh policy. If you do nothing, the original MRTA may continue paying out to the old lender (now without a loan to settle), which means your family may eventually receive the residual but only after a contested administration process. Always notify your insurer the day you complete a refinance.

Does Home Contents cover my domestic helper’s belongings?

Most do not. The standard contents policy covers items belonging to the policyholder and household members — helpers are typically excluded. If you want to protect their personal items, look for a domestic-helper extension or take out a separate helper insurance policy (most foreign-domestic-helper insurance plans bundle a small personal effects cover at no extra cost).

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Disclaimer

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial, insurance, or legal advice. Premiums, sum-insured guidelines, scheme rules, and exemption criteria are illustrative as at April 2026 and subject to change at the discretion of the CPF Board, the Housing & Development Board, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, and individual insurers. Always verify the latest figures with primary sources — the CPF Board HPS page, the HDB Fire Insurance page, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, and the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore — and consult a licensed financial adviser before purchasing or replacing any policy.

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