Singapore Stamp Duty Calculator 2026: BSD and ABSD Explained

Singapore Stamp Duty Calculator 2026: BSD and ABSD Explained

Singapore stamp duty is not a single charge — it is two separate taxes that stack on top of each other depending on who you are and what you already own. The Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) applies to every residential purchase. The Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) applies on top if you are buying a second property, if you are a Singapore Permanent Resident, or if you are a foreigner. Understanding both — and being able to calculate them accurately before you commit — is the single most important financial step in any Singapore property transaction.

This guide explains the 2026 BSD and ABSD rate schedules in full, shows you how to calculate your stamp duty liability step by step, and works through concrete examples at common price points. All figures reflect the rate schedules currently in force: the 2023 BSD schedule and the 27 April 2023 ABSD rates. For the authoritative source, always verify at iras.gov.sg/taxes/stamp-duty/for-property.

Quick Answer — Singapore Stamp Duty Calculator 2026

  • BSD applies to ALL buyers at the same progressive rate: 1% on first S$180k, 2% next S$180k, 3% next S$640k, 4% next S$500k, 5% next S$1.5M, 6% above S$3M.
  • ABSD stacks on top: Singapore Citizens pay 0% on their first property, 20% on a second, 30% on a third or more.
  • PRs pay 5% ABSD on a first property, 30% on a second, 35% on a third or more.
  • Foreigners pay 60% ABSD on any residential property.
  • For a S$1.5M property, a Singapore Citizen buying their first home pays BSD of S$44,600 — roughly 3% of the price. A foreigner buying the same property pays S$44,600 BSD plus S$900,000 ABSD.
  • BSD is typically payable within 14 days of signing the Option to Purchase (OTP); ABSD within 14 days of signing the Sale & Purchase Agreement, or within 14 days of exercising the OTP.
  • ABSD may be financed by CPF Ordinary Account for Singapore Citizens buying their first or subsequent homes, but BSD can also be paid from CPF OA.
  • Married SC/SPR couples may claim an ABSD remission on a second property if they dispose of the first within 6 months of purchase (or TOP for new launches).
  • Developers are subject to 35% ABSD with a remission available on residential development land if units are sold within the prescribed period.

What Is Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD)?

BSD is a tax levied by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) on the purchase or acquisition of property — residential and non-residential alike. It is calculated on the higher of the purchase price or the property’s market value. BSD has existed in Singapore since 1929 and was most recently revised upward in February 2023 when the Government added the 5% band (on the portion from S$1.5M to S$3M) and the 6% band (above S$3M) as part of its broader property market management effort.

BSD is non-negotiable: every buyer — Singapore Citizen, PR, foreigner, or entity — pays BSD. The rate schedule is progressive, meaning each increment of purchase price is taxed at its own marginal rate. The total BSD payable grows with the purchase price but as a percentage of price it rises only gradually because the higher rates apply only to the marginal portion above each threshold.

BSD Buyer Stamp Duty rates by price band Singapore 2026
Figure 1: BSD rate schedule by price band (2023 schedule, effective 15 February 2023) and cumulative BSD payable at selected purchase prices. Source: IRAS.

BSD Calculation — Step by Step

To calculate BSD manually, work through each price band in order and tax only the portion that falls within that band:

Price Band Rate Max BSD in Band
First S$180,000 1% S$1,800
Next S$180,000 2% S$3,600
Next S$640,000 3% S$19,200
Next S$500,000 4% S$20,000
Next S$1,500,000 5% S$75,000
Remainder above S$3,000,000 6%

Quick BSD shortcuts: For a S$1,000,000 purchase, BSD = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$15,000 (S$500k × 3%) = S$24,600. For S$1,500,000: S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$20,000 = S$44,600. For S$2,000,000: S$44,600 + S$25,000 (S$500k × 5%) = S$69,600.

What Is Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD)?

ABSD is a separate tax introduced by the Government in December 2011, initially to cool a rapidly rising residential property market. It has been raised five times since — most recently and most significantly on 27 April 2023, when ABSD for foreigners doubled from 30% to 60% and rates for Singaporeans and PRs buying additional properties were substantially increased. ABSD is not a progressive tax: it applies at a flat percentage rate to the entire purchase price.

Unlike BSD, ABSD depends on who you are and how many residential properties you already own. “Already own” means at any point in the world — IRAS will ask for a statutory declaration confirming your existing property holdings, including overseas properties for the purpose of determining if you are an SC or PR “first-time” buyer.

ABSD Additional Buyer Stamp Duty rates by buyer profile Singapore 2026
Figure 2: ABSD rates by buyer profile as at 27 April 2023. Rates are applied to the full purchase price. Source: IRAS.

ABSD by Buyer Profile — The Key Numbers

The table below summarises the complete 2026 ABSD rate schedule:

Buyer Profile 1st Property 2nd Property 3rd+ Property
Singapore Citizen (SC) 0% 20% 30%
Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) 5% 30% 35%
Foreigner (non-SC, non-SPR) 60% 60% 60%
Entity (company, trust, etc.) 65% 65% 65%

Important nuance — joint purchases: When a property is bought jointly, the higher rate applies to the entire transaction. A Singapore Citizen buying with a foreigner spouse pays 60% ABSD on the whole purchase price — not a blended rate. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of ABSD and catches many buyers off guard.

Stamp Duty Worked Example — Three Buyer Profiles

The following three worked examples use a purchase price of S$1.5 million — a broadly representative price point for a mass-market private condominium in 2026.

Buyer A: SC purchasing first residential property
BSD: S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$20,000 = S$44,600
ABSD: 0% × S$1,500,000 = S$0
Total stamp duty: S$44,600 (about 2.97% of purchase price)

Buyer B: SC already owning one residential property (upgrader)
BSD: S$44,600 (same as Buyer A)
ABSD: 20% × S$1,500,000 = S$300,000
Total stamp duty: S$344,600 (about 22.97% of purchase price)

Buyer C: Foreigner (e.g. EP holder, British national)
BSD: S$44,600
ABSD: 60% × S$1,500,000 = S$900,000
Total stamp duty: S$944,600 (about 62.97% of purchase price)

The difference between Buyer A and Buyer C — on the same S$1.5M property — is S$900,000. This is why foreigners buying Singapore residential property typically need to buy at a meaningful discount to replacement cost for the investment to make financial sense.

Total stamp duty BSD plus ABSD payable by price point and buyer profile Singapore 2026
Figure 3: Total stamp duty (BSD + ABSD) payable by three buyer profiles at three purchase prices (S$800k, S$1.5M, S$2.5M). Left panel: absolute S$ amounts. Right panel: as a percentage of purchase price. Source: IRAS rates; calculations by LovelyHomes.

ABSD Remissions — When You Can Get It Back (or Avoid It)

ABSD paid upfront may be refunded under specific circumstances via ABSD remissions administered by IRAS. The key remissions applicable in 2026 are:

1. SC/SPR Married Couple Remission on Second Property

A married couple in which at least one spouse is a Singapore Citizen, and who together purchase a residential property as their second property, may apply for an ABSD remission — but only if they sell their first residential property within 6 months of the completion of the second purchase (for a completed property) or within 6 months of the TOP of the new property (for an uncompleted unit). The refund is of the ABSD paid on the second purchase. Both spouses must be co-owners on the second purchase to qualify.

This remission is critically important for HDB flat owners considering upgrading to a private property: you must either sell first (and thus hold no property at exercise) or invoke the remission route by selling within 6 months. Many upgraders prefer to sell first to avoid committing S$300,000–S$600,000 of ABSD upfront.

2. Developer ABSD Remission on Residential Development Land

Property developers purchasing land for residential development are subject to 35% ABSD (as entities pay 65%, but licensed developers on qualifying residential land are subject to 35%) with a remission available if the project is completed and all units are sold within the prescribed period — typically 5 years from the date of acquisition for most sites. Projects that do not sell all units within the deadline will have a clawback of the remitted ABSD with interest, which is why Singapore developers have a strong incentive to price aggressively as the deadline approaches.

3. Remissions for Housing Developers — ABSD (Housing Developers) Regime

Under specific circumstances, including the development of public housing or certain integrated developments, additional remission mechanisms may apply. These are complex and project-specific; the developer’s solicitors will advise on eligibility at the time of tender or acquisition.

When Is Stamp Duty Payable?

BSD must be paid within 14 days of signing the OTP (or the Sale & Purchase Agreement if no OTP was issued). ABSD must be paid within 14 days of exercising the OTP (i.e., signing the Sale & Purchase Agreement) or within 14 days of signing the OTP itself if there is no separate exercise. In practice, your solicitor will advise on the precise deadline for your transaction and manage payment on your behalf.

Failing to pay on time attracts penalties: IRAS charges a late payment penalty of up to 10% of the stamp duty amount, plus interest. The clock starts from the execution date, not from when you receive the demand. Most Singapore conveyancing firms send a reminder before the deadline and arrange payment via e-stamping through the IRAS portal.

Paying Stamp Duty Using CPF

Both BSD and ABSD may be paid from the CPF Ordinary Account (OA), subject to the property being eligible for CPF usage. This is a significant benefit for Singapore Citizens and PRs who have built up CPF savings — it means stamp duty does not need to be funded entirely from cash. However, remember that all CPF withdrawals for property are subject to the CPF accrued interest rule: when the property is eventually sold, the CPF principal plus accrued interest (currently 2.5% per annum) must be refunded to your CPF OA before you receive your cash proceeds. This means ABSD paid from CPF today has a compounding cost over the holding period.

Why Stamp Duty Matters for Your Investment Analysis

Stamp duty is not a trivial transaction cost in Singapore — for a second property buyer, it represents a significant upfront capital commitment that materially affects the economics of property investment. A Singapore Citizen buying a second S$2M condominium pays S$69,600 BSD plus S$400,000 ABSD — a combined S$469,600 that is non-refundable (absent the married-couple remission). To break even on that investment, assuming the property appreciates at 3% per annum and the buyer holds for five years, the property needs to appreciate from S$2M to approximately S$2.37M just to recover the stamp duty — before financing costs, maintenance, property tax, and any renovation expenditure.

This is precisely the calculation that has driven the shift in Singapore’s private property market since 2023: the effective entry cost for second-property investors and foreigners has increased substantially, which explains the divergence between first-home buyer activity (robust, because 0% ABSD for SCs) and investor activity (more selective, because the hurdle rate is significantly higher).

Peer comparison: in Hong Kong, the equivalent additional stamp duty for non-residents was set at 30% in 2023 and has since been partially relaxed. Australia charges a foreign buyers’ stamp duty surcharge of 7%–8% at the state level in most jurisdictions. Singapore’s 60% ABSD for foreigners is among the highest residential property transaction taxes in the world.

What Might Come Next — Stamp Duty Outlook

There is no official signal as of July 2026 that the Government intends to revise ABSD rates downward in the near term. The property market has been absorbing the 2023 rates with transaction volumes moderating but prices remaining broadly resilient — particularly in the Core Central Region (CCR), where wealthier buyers have shown a willingness to pay the premium. The Government has made clear that its priority is affordability for Singapore Citizens purchasing their first home, not the investment segment.

What could prompt a revision? Two scenarios are most discussed: first, a sharp cyclical downturn in Singapore residential prices that threatens economic stability and household wealth; second, a regulatory decision that ABSD is no longer necessary as a cooling measure because the market has structurally rebalanced. Neither condition currently applies. The most that market observers speculate is a modest easing of SPR ABSD rates — from 5% to a lower figure for first purchases — if SPR numbers and integration policy makes this desirable. Any changes would be announced in a Budget Statement or a dedicated MAS/MOF press release with immediate effect.

Summary — Key Stamp Duty Facts for 2026

Item Key Fact
BSD — Who pays All buyers, residential and non-residential
BSD — Administered by Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS)
BSD — Current schedule 1%/2%/3%/4%/5%/6% (effective 15 Feb 2023)
ABSD — SC first property 0% (exempt)
ABSD — SC second property 20% of purchase price
ABSD — Foreigner 60% of purchase price (any residential property)
ABSD — Joint purchase higher rate Highest applicable rate governs entire purchase
Payment deadline (BSD & ABSD) 14 days from signing OTP / S&P Agreement
CPF usable for stamp duty? Yes — from CPF OA, subject to CPF accrued interest rule

Frequently Asked Questions

Does BSD apply to HDB flat purchases?

Yes. BSD applies to every property purchase in Singapore, including HDB resale flats and Build-to-Order (BTO) flats when they are first purchased from HDB. BTO buyers pay BSD on the flat purchase price. Because BTO prices are typically well below S$500,000, the BSD amount is modest — usually S$4,800–S$11,800 for a 4-room or 5-room BTO flat. Resale HDB buyers pay BSD on the resale price (or valuation, if higher). BSD can be paid from the CPF Ordinary Account for HDB flat purchases.

Is ABSD payable on industrial or commercial property?

No. ABSD applies only to residential property. Commercial properties (shophouses, office units, industrial units, strata retail) are subject to BSD only. This distinction is significant for investors: buying a commercial property as a second or third purchase does not trigger ABSD, whereas buying a residential property as a second or third purchase does. This is one reason some Singapore property investors look at commercial assets as a way to deploy capital without incurring the second-property ABSD surcharge.

If I own an overseas property, does that count for ABSD?

For Singapore Citizens and PRs, overseas properties generally do not count when determining the ABSD property count. ABSD counts residential properties situated in Singapore. This means a Singaporean who owns a flat in London can still buy their first Singapore property as an “SC first purchase” at 0% ABSD. However, you must still make a statutory declaration of your property holdings, and IRAS’s lawyers will verify the position. The rules are complex and it is advisable to seek professional legal advice if you own overseas property and are unsure of your ABSD status.

Can I use SRS funds to pay stamp duty?

No. The Supplementary Retirement Scheme (SRS) funds can only be used for investments in specific SRS-approved instruments (such as shares, unit trusts, and insurance) and for retirement withdrawals. Property stamp duties — neither BSD nor ABSD — are an eligible use of SRS funds. Only CPF OA funds can be used to pay stamp duty on eligible property purchases.

I am an Employment Pass holder buying my first property in Singapore. What stamp duty do I pay?

An Employment Pass (EP) holder who is not a Singapore Citizen or PR is treated as a foreigner for stamp duty purposes and pays the full 60% ABSD plus BSD on any residential property purchase. There is no ABSD exemption for EP holders, long-term pass holders, or Entrepass holders. The Government introduced specific relaxations for nationals of certain countries under Free Trade Agreements (the USA, nationals of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland under the EUSFTA-equivalent bilateral arrangements), where the ABSD is reduced to 15% — but these are narrow categories. All other foreigners pay 60%.

What happens if I underpay or make an error on my stamp duty calculation?

IRAS takes stamp duty compliance seriously. If you underpay — whether through an honest calculation error or a deliberate understatement of the property count — IRAS can issue an assessment for the unpaid amount plus a penalty of up to 400% of the unpaid duty. Voluntary disclosure (contacting IRAS before they identify the discrepancy) results in reduced penalties. Your conveyancing solicitor is required to verify stamp duty calculations before submission, which is the primary safeguard against errors in practice.

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Disclaimer

This article is produced by LovelyHomes for general information purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Stamp duty rates and rules are set by the Government of Singapore and administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS). While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy as at the date of publication (2 July 2026), readers should verify all figures directly with IRAS at iras.gov.sg and obtain independent professional advice — from a licensed conveyancing solicitor and/or a tax adviser — before making any property purchase decision.

Singapore HDB Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) 2026: Complete Guide — Rules, Restrictions and Upgrade Options

Singapore HDB Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) 2026: Complete Guide — Rules, Restrictions and Upgrade Options

Quick Answer: HDB MOP Singapore 2026

  • Standard HDB BTO and resale flats have a 5-year Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) counted from the date you collect the keys (TOP/possession date), not from when you sign the Sales & Purchase agreement.
  • Plus and Prime (PLH) classification flats introduced from the August 2024 BTO exercise have a longer 10-year MOP, reflecting their more desirable locations and heavier subsidy.
  • During MOP, you cannot sell your flat, rent out the entire flat, or purchase any other residential property in Singapore — including private property or an overseas residential investment.
  • You CAN rent out individual HDB bedrooms with prior HDB approval, and run approved home-based businesses from your flat during MOP.
  • Executive Condominiums (ECs) have a 5-year MOP before they can be sold to Singapore Citizens and PRs, and a 10-year window before they are fully privatised and open to foreign buyers.
  • Breaching MOP rules can result in compulsory acquisition of the flat by HDB at a value set by HDB — typically below market value. Criminal penalties may also apply under the Housing & Development Act.
  • After MOP, you can sell the flat, upgrade to a private property, and — for HDB sellers upgrading to private — apply for ABSD remission if you complete the sale within 6 months of purchasing the private property.

What Is the HDB Minimum Occupation Period (MOP)?

The Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) is a statutory rule administered by the Housing & Development Board (HDB) that requires flat owners to physically occupy their HDB flat for a minimum period before they can sell it on the open market, rent it out entirely, or purchase other residential property in Singapore. The MOP is a key plank of Singapore’s public housing philosophy: HDB flats are subsidised national assets intended primarily as homes rather than investment vehicles, and the MOP is one mechanism through which HDB ensures flats remain owner-occupied.

The MOP was first introduced in the 1970s and has been refined multiple times since, most recently in 2024 with the introduction of the Plus and Prime flat classifications under the enhanced HDB framework. Understanding which MOP applies to your flat — and what you can and cannot do during that period — is critical before making any property decisions.

HDB MOP by flat type Singapore 2026 — Standard 5 years, Plus and Prime 10 years, EC 5 then 10 years
Figure 1: HDB Minimum Occupation Period by flat type, Singapore 2026. Plus and Prime classification flats (introduced from August 2024 BTO exercise) carry a 10-year MOP, double the Standard flat MOP. Source: HDB.

MOP Duration by Flat Type (2026)

Flat Type MOP Duration MOP Start Date Notes
Standard BTO Flat 5 years Date of key collection Applies to all pre-Aug 2024 BTO; continued for Standard classification from Aug 2024
Plus Classification BTO Flat 10 years Date of key collection From Aug 2024 BTO exercise; typically near MRT/town centres; subsidy clawback on resale
Prime / PLH Classification BTO Flat 10 years Date of key collection Central-location flats; subsidy clawback ~6–9% of resale price; income ceiling at resale
HDB Resale Flat 5 years Date of resale completion Fresh 5-year MOP runs from the date the resale transaction is completed (not from when the previous owner moved in)
Executive Condominium (EC) 5 years → 10 years Date of TOP At 5yr can sell to SC/PR; at 10yr fully privatised — open to foreigners (60% ABSD applies)
HDB Sale of Balance Flats (SBF) 5 years Date of key collection SBF flats unsold from previous BTO exercises; Standard classification MOP applies

Important note on the Plus and Prime MOP: The new 10-year MOP for Plus and Prime flats applies only to flats launched under the August 2024 BTO exercise onwards. Flats purchased in earlier exercises, even if they are in desirable locations that would now be classified as Plus or Prime, retain their original 5-year MOP. To confirm which classification applies to your flat, check your HDB flat portal or the original flat details under your BTO exercise.

What You Cannot Do During the HDB MOP

HDB MOP rules matrix 2026 — what you can and cannot do during the minimum occupation period
Figure 2: HDB MOP rules — allowed and prohibited activities during the Minimum Occupation Period. Source: HDB Housing & Development Act.

Selling the Flat

You cannot sell your HDB flat on the open resale market before your MOP is complete. This applies even if you face financial hardship — HDB does not grant MOP exemptions for distressed sellers. The only exception is a compulsory acquisition by HDB or by the State for public purposes, which is not initiated by the flat owner. If you attempt to sell before MOP, the transaction will be rejected by HDB’s system during the eligibility check.

Renting Out the Entire Flat

Renting out the entire flat (as a whole unit) is not allowed during MOP. This applies to both short-term and long-term rental arrangements. Platforms such as Airbnb and similar short-term rental services are also not permitted on HDB flats — the minimum lease tenure for any rental on HDB flats is three consecutive months. After MOP, whole-flat rental is allowed with HDB prior approval and is subject to the non-Malaysian foreign tenant quota.

Purchasing Other Residential Property in Singapore

During MOP, you and your co-owners on the flat cannot purchase any other private residential property in Singapore. This restriction extends to new launch condominiums, resale condominiums, Executive Condominiums (as a new buyer), landed property, and private apartments. Purchasing a second HDB flat is also not allowed during MOP.

Crucially, HDB’s definition of “residential property” in the MOP context refers to Singapore property only. There is no restriction on purchasing overseas residential property during MOP — only Singapore residential property is covered.

Purchasing a Second HDB Flat

HDB’s policy generally allows only one HDB flat per family nucleus at any time. Applying for a second BTO, SBF, or resale flat during MOP is not permitted. Once MOP is fulfilled, you may apply for a second HDB flat under specific schemes (e.g., the Studio Apartment scheme for elderly, or a new BTO after disposing of the first flat).

What You CAN Do During the HDB MOP

Rent Out Individual Rooms

Renting out individual bedrooms in your HDB flat (while you continue to live in the flat) is permitted during MOP, subject to HDB’s prior written approval. You must apply through the HDB Flat Portal before subletting. Each tenancy must be for a minimum of six months (for whole-flat subletting after MOP) or at least three months for room rental. Non-Malaysian foreign tenants are subject to the non-Malaysian quota: a maximum of two non-Malaysian foreign tenants per flat in the same block is the guideline, though HDB publishes real-time quota data by block.

Run Approved Home-Based Businesses

HDB permits flat owners to operate home-based businesses during MOP, subject to type and scale restrictions. Category 1 businesses (no employees visiting, no clients visiting, no signage) are allowed without prior approval. Category 2 businesses (up to two non-resident employees, clients may visit in small numbers) require prior approval from HDB. Manufacturing, food businesses, or any business that involves goods storage, noise, or frequent deliveries is not permitted.

Refinance to a Bank Loan

Switching from an HDB housing loan to a bank loan (or switching between bank loan packages) is allowed during MOP. There is no MOP restriction on refinancing decisions, and many flat owners take advantage of the 5-year MOP period to monitor interest rate movements and refinance when rates are favourable. MAS’s LTV and TDSR rules govern the refinancing terms.

When Does the MOP Start and End?

The MOP starts from the date you collect your keys (for BTO and SBF flats, this is the TOP date; for resale flats, this is the date of completion of the resale transaction — both milestones are reflected in your HDB Flat Portal). The MOP does not start from the date you sign the Sales & Purchase Agreement or from the date you pay the initial booking fee.

You can check your MOP end date in the HDB Flat Portal under “My Flat” → “Purchase Details”. The portal clearly shows whether your MOP has been fulfilled. Do not rely on verbal estimates from agents or CPF advisers — always verify on the portal directly.

One nuance: physical occupation is expected during MOP. HDB conducts periodic checks to ensure flat owners are residing in the flat. Extended overseas absences without HDB’s knowledge have been cited in compulsory acquisition cases. If you must be overseas for an extended period (e.g., for work), inform HDB and keep the flat in a lived-in condition.

Executive Condominium (EC): The Hybrid MOP Rules

Executive Condominium EC MOP and privatisation timeline Singapore 2026 — 5-year and 10-year milestones
Figure 3: Executive Condominium MOP and privatisation timeline. During the first 5 years, EC owners face HDB-equivalent MOP restrictions. At the 5-year mark, ECs can be sold on the open market to SC and PR buyers. At 10 years, ECs are fully privatised and open to foreign buyers (60% ABSD applies). Source: HDB, URA.

Executive Condominiums occupy a hybrid position between public and private housing. They are built by private developers but are sold at a subsidised price to qualifying buyers (income ceiling S$16,000 per month household income as of 2026). From a MOP standpoint, ECs are treated like HDB flats for the first 5 years:

During years 1–5: EC owners cannot sell their unit, rent out the whole unit, or purchase any other Singapore residential property. The rules are identical to HDB MOP. Critically, the 5-year MOP runs from the TOP date, not the booking date — for large EC projects, this can mean a 3–4 year gap between booking and TOP, followed by 5 more years of MOP, making the effective holding period 8–9 years from initial purchase commitment.

After year 5 (first privatisation): The EC can be sold on the open resale market to Singapore Citizens and Singapore PRs. It cannot yet be sold to foreigners, and ECs in the first 5–10 year window are not listed on the private market as “privatised condos” — they trade in a narrower SC/SPR market. ABSD rules for the buyer apply (5% for PR 1st property, 30% for PR 2nd+, etc.).

After year 10 (full privatisation): The EC is fully privatised and treated identically to a private condominium. Foreigners may purchase it, though the 60% foreigner ABSD applies. Owners may also rent the entire unit without prior HDB approval at this stage.

Plus and Prime Flat Additional Restrictions After MOP

The 2024 housing framework introduced substantive additional conditions for Plus and Prime classification flats beyond just the longer 10-year MOP. These are restrictions that run with the flat even after MOP and affect future resale:

Subsidy clawback: When you sell a Plus or Prime flat after your MOP, HDB claws back a portion of the subsidy embedded in the original purchase price — approximately 6–9% of the resale price, payable to HDB. This clawback is calculated as a percentage of the resale transaction price, not the original purchase price, so it increases in dollar terms as the flat appreciates.

Income ceiling for buyers: Buyers of Plus and Prime resale flats are subject to an income ceiling (the ceiling is the same as for BTO buyers — S$14,000/month for 4-room and larger Plus flats as of 2026). This narrows the pool of eligible resale buyers and may dampen price appreciation relative to Standard flats.

Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP): As with all HDB resale flats, EIP quotas apply — both block and neighbourhood levels. Buyers must check the relevant block’s EIP availability before submitting an offer.

After MOP: Your Property Upgrade Options

Once your MOP is fulfilled, your options expand significantly. The most common upgrade path is from HDB flat to private condominium. The timing of this upgrade carries stamp duty implications:

Option A — Sell HDB first, then buy private: You clear the HDB flat, receive sale proceeds (net of CPF refund), and purchase the private property as a “first property” — no ABSD for SC buyers, 5% ABSD for PR buyers. This is the most common and financially efficient path but requires temporary accommodation between the two transactions.

Option B — Buy private first, then sell HDB (concurrent ownership): As an SC buying private property while still owning an HDB flat (post-MOP), you pay 20% ABSD on the private property purchase. You then have six months from the private property’s completion (or from the purchase date for resale private properties) to sell the HDB flat and apply for an ABSD remission from IRAS. If the HDB is sold within six months, IRAS refunds the 20% ABSD. If you miss the six-month window, the 20% ABSD is forfeited.

The six-month window starts from either the issue of Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) for a new private property or the date of exercise of the OTP for a resale private property. Given the complexity of timing, many HDB upgraders consult a lawyer and financial adviser before committing to Option B.

The 15-Month Wait-Out Period: From Private Back to HDB

The wait-out period is often confused with MOP. They are different rules targeting different situations. The 15-month wait-out period (introduced in September 2022) applies to private property owners who want to purchase an HDB resale flat. If you own or recently disposed of a private property, you must wait 15 months from the date of disposal before you can purchase an HDB resale flat.

This rule does not apply to HDB MOP — it is a separate downstream restriction. For example, if you complete your HDB MOP, sell your HDB flat, buy a private condo, and then later want to downgrade back to HDB, you must wait 15 months after selling the private condo before buying an HDB resale flat. This rule applies to both SC and PR private property owners.

Worked Example: The Tan Family’s Upgrade Journey

Mr and Mrs Tan (both Singapore Citizens) purchased a 4-room BTO flat in Punggol under the Standard classification in September 2019. They collected their keys in August 2021. Their MOP end date is therefore August 2026 — five years from key collection.

In March 2026, Mrs Tan checks the HDB portal and sees MOP will end in 5 months. The couple begin their private condo search. They find a 3-bedroom OCR resale condo in Jurong East priced at S$1.5M in June 2026.

They choose Option B (buy private first). As SC buying a second property: BSD ~S$42,600 + ABSD 20% = S$300,000. They pay S$342,600 in stamp duties. Their flat is still within MOP (keys August 2021, MOP August 2026 — they are just before MOP end), so HDB must confirm MOP end before they list the flat for sale.

After August 2026 (MOP fulfilled), they list their HDB flat. Sell it in October 2026 for S$780,000 — within the 6-month window from the condo OTP exercise date of June 2026. IRAS refunds the S$300,000 ABSD. Net stamp duty retained: S$42,600 BSD only. The family books temporary accommodation for 2 months while bridging the purchase and sale timelines.

Total net proceeds from HDB: S$780,000 − CPF refund S$220,000 (principal + accrued interest) − agent 1% S$7,800 − legal S$2,500 = net S$549,700 cash. The upgrade is financially viable.

Will MOP Rules Change?

The 10-year MOP for Plus and Prime flats is a relatively recent policy (from August 2024) and unlikely to be rolled back in the near term. If anything, the trend in Singapore public housing policy has been toward tightening MOP and adding post-MOP conditions rather than relaxing them, as the government works to ensure HDB flats remain primary homes rather than investment properties. The subsidy clawback mechanism for Plus and Prime flats may be extended to more flat types if HDB determines that Standard flat resale prices are diverging too sharply from BTO prices in certain areas. Buyers should model their long-term exit strategy under current rules and build in buffer for possible tightening.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I stay overseas during my HDB MOP?

You are expected to physically occupy the flat during MOP, but there is no absolute rule against overseas travel. Extended absences (months or years) without HDB’s knowledge can attract scrutiny, and in confirmed cases of non-occupation, HDB may commence compulsory acquisition proceedings. If you need to relocate overseas temporarily for work (e.g., on a company secondment), inform HDB in writing and keep the flat utilities active. HDB conducts inspection exercises and spot checks and has compulsorily acquired flats where owners were clearly not residing in them during MOP.

Does my MOP reset if I add or remove an owner from the flat?

No — adding or removing an owner (for example, through marriage or divorce) does not reset the MOP clock. The MOP continues to run from the original key collection date. However, any change of ownership within MOP is a restricted transaction and must be approved by HDB. Not all ownership changes are approved during MOP — for example, transferring a flat to an ineligible person would be rejected. Consult HDB or a lawyer before any ownership change within the MOP window.

Can I buy an overseas investment property during MOP?

Yes. The HDB MOP restriction applies only to Singapore residential property. There is no restriction on purchasing overseas property (residential or commercial) during MOP. You are not required to declare overseas property purchases to HDB. However, if you are financing an overseas property purchase with a Singapore bank loan, that loan will be factored into your TDSR for future Singapore loan applications. From a Singapore tax perspective, rental income from overseas property is taxable in Singapore as foreign-sourced income if remitted to Singapore.

What happens if I breach the MOP?

A breach of MOP (typically: selling the flat, subletting the entire flat, or buying other residential property in Singapore without completing MOP) can result in HDB compulsorily acquiring the flat. HDB sets the acquisition price, which is typically the assessed market value minus a penalty deduction — in practice, this means the owner receives significantly less than the open-market value they would have received after MOP. In the most serious cases involving deliberate deception or fraud (e.g., falsely declaring occupancy), criminal charges may be brought under the Housing & Development Act, which carries fines of up to S$5,000 and/or imprisonment.

Does MOP apply to inherited HDB flats?

If you inherit an HDB flat from a deceased owner, the MOP of the original owner does not transfer to you as a fresh 5-year obligation. Instead, the inherited flat is subject to HDB’s estate rules — the eligible inheritor (e.g., a spouse or child who meets eligibility criteria) may retain the flat. If the inheritor already owns a flat, they may need to dispose of one within six months. Inherited flats that have not yet met MOP at the time of death are subject to HDB’s direction — in practice, HDB often allows the eligible inheritor to complete the remaining MOP. Always consult HDB’s estate administration team for inherited flat cases.

Can I buy a private property if my HDB is still within MOP and my spouse is not on the HDB title?

No — the restriction applies to the entire family nucleus (owner and spouse / co-habitant), not just the named owners on the HDB title. If one spouse is within MOP on an HDB flat, the other spouse (even if not on the HDB title) is also restricted from purchasing Singapore residential property. HDB looks at the family nucleus holistically. Attempting to buy private property in a non-owning spouse’s name to circumvent MOP is a known scheme that HDB and IRAS are alert to — it will be scrutinised and may result in both the stamp duty assessment and a referral for investigation.

Is there a MOP for HDB shophouses or commercial units?

No. MOP is specific to HDB residential flat units. HDB shophouses (commercial properties on the ground floor of HDB blocks) are governed by different rules and do not carry a MOP. Commercial properties generally do not have any MOP equivalent — you can sell or rent them freely at any time after purchase. The restrictions and ABSD rules that apply to residential property do not apply to commercial property purchases.

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Disclaimer

This article provides general information about HDB MOP rules as at July 2026 and is not legal or financial advice. MOP durations, clawback percentages, and related policy conditions may change. Always verify current MOP status for your flat at hdb.gov.sg and check the specific BTO exercise details in your Lease Agreement. For estate planning, inheritance, and structural ownership changes, consult a Singapore-qualified lawyer. For ABSD remission eligibility, consult IRAS at iras.gov.sg.

Foreigner Buying Property in Singapore 2026: Complete Guide — ABSD, Eligible Properties and Process

Foreigner Buying Property in Singapore 2026: Complete Guide — ABSD, Eligible Properties and Process

Quick Answer: Can Foreigners Buy Property in Singapore?

  • Foreigners may freely purchase private condominiums and apartments in Singapore — there is no quota or prior approval requirement for these properties.
  • Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) of 60% applies to any foreigner buying any Singapore residential property (effective 27 April 2023).
  • Foreigners cannot buy HDB flats (public housing) or Executive Condominiums during their 10-year Minimum Occupation Period.
  • Foreigners cannot buy mainland Singapore landed property without Singapore Land Authority (SLA) approval; Sentosa Cove is a designated exception.
  • Singapore Permanent Residents (PRs) pay 5% ABSD on their first residential property and 30% on subsequent purchases; PRs can buy HDB resale flats but not BTO flats.
  • The Loan-to-Value (LTV) limit is 75% for most foreign buyers on their first property from a Singapore-regulated bank — a minimum 5% cash downpayment is required.
  • BSD (Buyer’s Stamp Duty) also applies to all buyers; on a S$2M purchase BSD is approximately S$69,600 (effective 3.48%).

Foreigners Buying Property in Singapore: The Full Picture

Singapore has long attracted foreign capital into its property market, offering political stability, rule of law, transparent ownership records, and strong capital preservation. Despite the 60% ABSD surcharge introduced in April 2023, the city-state remains one of Asia’s most liquid and credible real estate markets for overseas investors.

Understanding Singapore’s property restrictions is, however, non-negotiable before committing capital. This guide explains who qualifies as a foreign buyer, what you can and cannot purchase, the full stamp duty liability, the buying process, and what due diligence steps are essential before signing an Option to Purchase (OTP).

The statutory framework governing foreign property ownership in Singapore is primarily the Residential Property Act (Chapter 274), administered by the Singapore Land Authority (SLA), and the Stamp Duties Act, administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS).

ABSD rates by buyer profile Singapore 2026 — foreigner 60%, PR 5%/30%, SC 0%/20%/30%
Figure 1: ABSD rates by buyer status, Singapore 2026. Effective rates per IRAS/MND as of 27 April 2023. Foreigner rate (any residential property) is 60%. Source: IRAS, Ministry of National Development.

Who Is Classified as a Foreign Buyer in Singapore?

For the purposes of Singapore property law and stamp duty, buyers are classified into three main groups:

Buyer Type Definition HDB Resale? Private Condo? ABSD (1st Prop.)
Singapore Citizen (SC) Holds Singapore citizenship 0%
Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR/PR) Holds Singapore PR (Blue IC) ✓ (with quota) 5%
Foreigner Neither SC nor PR 60%
Entity (company/trust) Any non-individual legal entity ✓ (with caveats) 65%

For couples where one partner is an SC and the other is a foreigner, the ABSD rate used depends on the higher-rated buyer — so an SC+foreigner couple purchasing together pays ABSD at the foreigner rate of 60% (or a remission may apply if the SC spouse is purchasing their first property — check with your solicitor). Married couples who are both SC and PR also have specific treatment and should get a stamp duty assessment before exercising an OTP.

What Can Foreigners Buy (and Not Buy) in Singapore?

The Residential Property Act places strict controls on foreign ownership of “restricted residential property”, which covers landed housing on the Singapore mainland. Non-restricted residential property (including all private condominiums and apartments in strata-titled developments) may be purchased freely by foreigners, subject to paying the applicable ABSD.

Singapore property eligibility matrix 2026 — what foreigners, PRs and citizens can buy
Figure 2: Property Eligibility Matrix for Singapore Buyers (2026). Foreigners have unrestricted access to private condominiums and commercial property, but are excluded from HDB flats, ECs during MOP, and mainland landed housing without prior SLA approval. Source: SLA, HDB, URA.

What Foreigners CAN Buy (Freely)

Private strata-titled condominiums and apartments are the primary vehicle for foreign property investment in Singapore. This includes condominiums in CCR (Core Central Region, Districts 9, 10, 11), RCR (Rest of Central Region), and OCR (Outside Central Region). Foreigners may purchase new launches from developers, resale units on the open market, and serviced apartments under residential titles.

Sentosa Cove landed property is an exception to the landed restriction. The government has designated Sentosa Cove as an approved area where foreigners may purchase bungalows, semi-detached and terrace houses. A Restricted Residential Property Approval is still processed through SLA, but approval is generally granted for bona fide purchasers. Sentosa Cove units attract a Land Betterment Charge (LBC) alongside normal stamp duties.

Commercial and industrial property — shophouses, office units, retail strata units, industrial buildings, and similar non-residential assets — may be purchased by foreigners without ABSD (though BSD and other charges apply). Many investors access Singapore property through shophouses and commercial strata units precisely to avoid the residential ABSD.

What Foreigners CANNOT Buy (Without Approval)

HDB flats (all types: BTO, resale, DBSS) are restricted to Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents, and even PRs face sub-quotas under the Ethnic Integration Policy. Foreigners have no pathway to HDB ownership.

Executive Condominiums (ECs) are hybrid public-private housing. During the first 10 years (from TOP), ECs cannot be sold to foreigners. After 10 years, ECs are fully privatised and foreigners may purchase them, but ABSD at 60% applies.

Mainland Singapore landed residential property — including detached houses, semi-detached houses, terrace houses, and cluster housing — requires prior SLA approval. In practice, the SLA rarely approves applications from foreigners without substantive economic contribution to Singapore (e.g., Global Investor Programme). Applications that are approved often involve conditions and lengthy processing times.

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD): The 60% Reality

The 60% ABSD rate for foreigners, introduced on 27 April 2023 under the Stamp Duties (Amendment) Act, doubled the previous rate of 30%. It is assessed on the higher of the purchase price or the market value of the property, and must be paid within 14 days of the exercise of the OTP (or within 30 days for documents executed overseas).

ABSD is administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS). Penalties for late payment are 5% of the ABSD due per annum, and IRAS does not grant extensions except in extraordinary circumstances. Importantly, ABSD cannot be financed through a bank loan — it must be paid entirely in cash from the buyer’s own funds. On a S$2M purchase, that is S$1.2M in cash for ABSD alone, payable within two weeks of exercising the OTP.

For Singapore Permanent Residents, the ABSD rate on a first residential property is 5% (S$100,000 on a S$2M purchase) and 30% on any subsequent residential property. PRs who hold a joint purchase with an SC spouse buying their first property may apply for an ABSD remission to reduce the effective ABSD to 0% — this requires both parties to be first-time residential property owners.

ABSD remission schemes exist for certain qualifying situations: developers remission (for licensed developers undertaking development), housing upgrader remission (for SCs who sell their HDB/private property within six months of purchasing a new private property), and the joint-purchase SC/PR first-timer remission. None of these apply to typical foreigner purchasers.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD): Applies to Everyone

Buyer’s Stamp Duty applies to all property purchases regardless of nationality. The progressive rate schedule for residential property is: 1% on the first S$180,000; 2% on the next S$180,000; 3% on the next S$640,000; 4% on the next S$500,000; 5% on the next S$1,500,000; and 6% on the remainder. On a S$2M purchase, BSD amounts to approximately S$69,600 (an effective rate of about 3.48%). BSD must also be paid within the same 14-day window as ABSD.

Total acquisition cost comparison S$2M condo Singapore 2026 — SC vs PR vs foreigner
Figure 3: Total upfront acquisition cost for a S$2M private condominium (1st property) in Singapore 2026. For a foreign buyer, BSD + ABSD alone amount to S$1,269,600 — approximately 63.5% of the purchase price. Source: IRAS, MND.

Financing: LTV Limits, Downpayment and the TDSR

Contrary to some misconceptions, foreigners are not automatically barred from obtaining Singapore bank loans. Singapore-regulated banks (DBS, OCBC, UOB, Standard Chartered, Citibank, HSBC, and others) will assess foreign borrowers on the basis of their income, credit history, Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR), and Loan-to-Value (LTV) limits set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

For a first property purchase, the LTV limit is 75%. The minimum 5% cash downpayment must come from the buyer’s own cash (CPF is only available to Singapore Citizens and PRs). Foreign buyers with no Singapore income need to satisfy the TDSR threshold — monthly total debt obligations must not exceed 55% of gross monthly income. Banks will typically require at least 12 months of salary crediting, employment letters, and often a personal visit to the branch or relationship manager in Singapore.

Foreign buyers should also note that rental income from the property cannot be used to service the TDSR calculation until it is actually received — only documented, existing income is recognised. A pre-approval (Approval-in-Principal) from the bank before exercising the OTP is strongly recommended.

Step-by-Step: How a Foreigner Buys a Singapore Condo

  1. Engage a Singapore-registered property lawyer before viewing properties. The lawyer will advise on eligibility, stamp duty liability, and contract review. (Note: marketing agents in Singapore are CEA-licensed but are not lawyers — do not rely on agents for legal advice.)
  2. Identify the property and negotiate the price with the seller or developer. For new launches, register for the sales chart; for resale, negotiate via the seller’s agent or directly.
  3. Obtain an Approval-in-Principal (AIP) from your chosen bank before committing to an OTP. This confirms your borrowing capacity and avoids the risk of losing your OTP fee if financing falls through.
  4. Exercise the Option to Purchase (OTP). For resale condos, an OTP fee (typically 1% of the purchase price) is paid to reserve the unit. The buyer then has 14 days to exercise the OTP by paying a further 4% (totalling 5% as initial deposit). For new launches, the process involves an Expression of Interest (EOI), booking fee (typically 5%), and signing the Sale and Purchase (S&P) Agreement.
  5. Pay ABSD and BSD within 14 days of exercising the OTP (or 30 days for overseas documents). Both must be paid in cash — ABSD cannot be financed.
  6. Complete legal requisitions. Your solicitor conducts title searches, confirms the title is free of encumbrances, and coordinates with the seller’s solicitor.
  7. Complete the purchase (typically 8–12 weeks after exercising the OTP for resale; longer for new launches under progressive payment). The balance of the purchase price is funded by the bank loan drawdown and your cash downpayment (after netting off the 5% deposit).
  8. Register the transfer at the Singapore Land Registry (part of SLA). Your solicitor handles this.

Worked Example: Mr Tanaka — Japanese Expat Buying His First Singapore Condo

Mr Tanaka is a Japanese national on an Employment Pass, working in Singapore in financial services. He earns S$22,000 per month and wants to purchase a 2-bedroom resale condominium in the Tanjong Pagar area (CCR, District 2) priced at S$2,200,000.

Stamp duties: BSD on S$2.2M = S$77,600. ABSD at 60% = S$1,320,000. Total stamp duties = S$1,397,600 (all payable in cash within 14 days of OTP exercise).

Downpayment: LTV 75% → bank loan S$1,650,000. Minimum 5% cash = S$110,000. Total cash for downpayment = S$110,000 (at minimum; remainder to 25% = S$440,000 may come from own funds).

Total cash required at exercise/completion: Stamp duties S$1,397,600 + cash downpayment (25% = S$550,000) + legal fees ~S$5,500 = approximately S$1,953,100 in cash.

Financing: Bank loan S$1,650,000 at 3.2% for 25 years = approx S$7,960/month. TDSR: S$7,960 / S$22,000 = 36.2% — within the 55% threshold. Mr Tanaka qualifies.

Annual property tax (non-owner-occupied, AV ~S$60,000): approximately S$8,100/year at the progressive non-owner-occupied rate.

Mr Tanaka proceeds. His total acquisition cost is S$2,200,000 (purchase) + S$1,397,600 (ABSD+BSD) + S$5,500 (legal) + S$1,200 (valuation) = S$3,604,300 — 63.8% more than the purchase price alone. This underscores why ABSD materially changes the investment economics for foreign buyers.

Permanent Residents (PRs): A Different Calculation

Singapore Permanent Residents occupy a middle ground between citizens and foreigners. PRs may purchase private condominiums and HDB resale flats (subject to EIP quotas). PRs cannot buy HDB BTO flats, HDB SBF flats, or DBSS flats. PRs cannot purchase Executive Condominiums in the open market during the first 5 years from TOP.

ABSD for a PR on a first residential property is 5%. On a S$2M condo, that is S$100,000 — significantly less than the 60% charged to foreigners. A PR who already owns one residential property pays 30% ABSD on any subsequent purchase.

PR couples where one spouse holds SC status buying their first property together may apply for ABSD remission to 0%, provided neither party has previously owned a Singapore residential property. This remission is claimed after purchase and ABSD must first be paid upfront — the refund is processed by IRAS typically within 6–9 months.

Is Singapore Property Still Worth Buying at 60% ABSD?

The 60% ABSD is a deliberate policy tool designed to cool speculative demand from foreign buyers while preserving market access for Singapore residents. For most retail foreign buyers, the financial case for buying residential property is difficult to justify when stamp duties exceed 60% of the purchase price — the break-even point on a 3% annual rental yield, after accounting for stamp duties, legal fees, property tax, and mortgage costs, extends beyond most reasonable investment horizons.

Where foreign buyers continue to transact is typically at the very high end of the market — ultra-high-net-worth individuals purchasing CCR properties as wealth preservation, Singapore-listed family offices, and buyers relocating permanently who intend to apply for PR or citizenship within a few years and factor in the eventual ABSD remission refund.

The data supports this: in the first half of 2026, foreign buyers accounted for approximately 3–5% of private residential transactions, compared to 8–12% before April 2023. That said, Singapore’s fundamentals — rule of law, transparent land registry, liquid resale market, strong SGD, and proximity to Southeast Asian business flows — mean demand endures at the right price point.

Could the 60% ABSD Come Down?

The 60% ABSD rate is not permanent by law but reflects current government policy priorities around housing affordability for Singaporeans. Any relaxation would require the government to be satisfied that the local property market has cooled sufficiently and that the risk of foreign-driven price inflation has abated. As of mid-2026, with private home prices continuing to rise modestly and HDB resale prices experiencing back-to-back quarterly declines, there is no indication the government intends to reduce the 60% rate in the near term. However, targeted remissions — for specific investor visa holders, for instance — are possible as policy instruments.

PRs seeking eventual SC status should also note that citizenship typically takes 2–5 years from the grant of PR, and SC buyers receive ABSD remission on their primary residence. Those who purchase property as a PR and subsequently acquire citizenship may apply to IRAS for a partial ABSD refund under the transitional remission framework, subject to specific conditions on timing and property use.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner on an Employment Pass buy a Singapore condo?

Yes. Employment Pass or other work visa holders are classified as foreigners for property purchase purposes. They may freely purchase private strata-titled condominiums and apartments in Singapore, subject to paying 60% ABSD plus BSD. There is no minimum residency period, income requirement, or government approval needed — only sufficient funds and a qualifying bank loan assessment.

Does buying Singapore property help with a PR or citizenship application?

Property ownership does not directly count as a contribution for Permanent Residency or citizenship applications, which are assessed by the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) based on employment, economic contribution, and community integration. However, property ownership may be a supporting indicator of long-term commitment to Singapore in an immigration file. Investing through the Global Investor Programme (GIP) — which involves minimum fund investments or business set-up — is a more direct pathway to PR for high-net-worth individuals.

Can foreigners buy landed property in Sentosa Cove?

Yes. Sentosa Cove is a designated area under the Residential Property Act where foreigners may purchase landed residential property (bungalows, semi-detached, and terrace houses) subject to SLA approval, which is generally granted for bona fide buyers. The 60% ABSD still applies to the purchase. Sentosa Cove units also attract Land Betterment Charge if the land use intensity is being maximised, and buyers should factor in the annual property tax, MCST fees for island-wide facilities, and the higher-than-average maintenance costs of landed property.

Can a foreigner avoid ABSD by buying through a Singapore company?

No — and attempting to do so is treated as tax avoidance under Singapore law. Entities (companies, trusts, LLPs) pay 65% ABSD on residential property, which is higher than the foreigner rate. The government has also introduced anti-avoidance provisions under the Stamp Duties Act to disregard arrangements that are designed to circumvent ABSD. IRAS has the power to assess ABSD on the underlying beneficial owner in such cases. The correct approach is always to take proper legal and tax advice before structuring any property acquisition.

Can a foreigner rent out a Singapore condo after buying?

Yes, subject to URA rules on short-term versus long-term rental. Private condominiums may be rented on leases of at least three consecutive months under URA’s guidelines (short-term rentals of less than three months require special use authorisation). Rental income is taxable under Singapore income tax; non-residents pay a flat 22% withholding tax on gross rental income unless a tax filing is made to IRAS to claim deductions for mortgage interest and maintenance, which typically reduces the effective tax rate. A tax agent or CPA familiar with Singapore non-resident landlord rules is recommended.

What happens to my property if I leave Singapore?

Foreigners may retain ownership of Singapore private property indefinitely regardless of their visa status or residence in Singapore. If you sell within three years of purchase, Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) of 12% (Year 1), 8% (Year 2), or 4% (Year 3) applies. There is no restriction on repatriating sale proceeds out of Singapore. Capital gains are not taxed in Singapore (there is no capital gains tax), and gains from the disposal of a property investment are generally treated as capital and not taxable income — though if disposal is frequent enough to constitute a trade, IRAS may take a different view.

What documents does a foreigner need to buy Singapore property?

You will need: a valid passport; evidence of source of funds (bank statements, investment account records, or proof of the sale of another asset); proof of income (payslips, employment contract, and — for business owners — audited accounts and bank statements for your business); an Approval-in-Principal (AIP) from a Singapore bank if financing; and a Singapore Tax Identification Number or NRIC/FIN for IRAS stamp duty payment purposes. Your Singapore property solicitor will guide you through the precise documentation checklist, which varies slightly by bank and by whether you are buying new launch or resale.

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Disclaimer

This article provides general information about the rules applicable to foreigners purchasing property in Singapore as of July 2026. It is not legal, financial, or tax advice. The ABSD, BSD, and LTV figures cited reflect the most recently published rates from IRAS and MAS; always verify current rates at iras.gov.sg and mas.gov.sg before transacting. The Residential Property Act and Stamp Duties Act are administered by the SLA and IRAS respectively — consult both official sources and a Singapore-qualified lawyer before making any property purchase decision. Past property performance does not guarantee future returns.

URA Q2 2026 Flash Estimates: Singapore Private Home Prices Rise +0.5%, CCR Leads as RCR and OCR Soften

URA Q2 2026 Flash Estimates: Singapore Private Home Prices Rise +0.5%, CCR Leads as RCR and OCR Soften

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) released the flash estimate for the private residential property price index for 2nd Quarter 2026 on 1 July 2026. The headline number — a +0.5% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) increase — represents a notable deceleration from the +0.9% recorded in Q1 2026, and is driven by diverging performances across market segments: the Core Central Region (CCR) surging, while the Rest of Central Region (RCR) and the Outside Central Region (OCR) softened on a quarterly basis.

Quick Answer — Key Numbers

  • Overall PPI: +0.5% QoQ in Q2 2026 (vs +0.9% in Q1 2026).
  • Non-landed (overall): -0.1% QoQ (vs +1.3% in Q1 2026).
  • Core Central Region (CCR): +2.0% QoQ — the strongest performing segment.
  • Rest of Central Region (RCR): -1.4% QoQ — the weakest performing segment.
  • Outside Central Region (OCR): -0.2% QoQ (vs +2.2% in Q1 2026).
  • Landed properties: +2.6% QoQ — a sharp reversal from -0.4% in Q1 2026.
  • Transaction volume: 5,420 units (up to mid-June 2026) — broadly comparable to 5,413 in Q1 2026.
  • Full-year 2026 GLS Confirmed List: 9,320 units — over 50% above the 10-year annual average.
  • Full Q2 2026 real estate statistics are due from URA on 24 July 2026.

The Q2 2026 Flash Estimate in Context

Flash estimates are preliminary figures compiled by URA based on stamp duty data and developer sales data from 1 April 2026 to mid-June 2026. They are inherently incomplete — the final figures released on 24 July 2026 will incorporate the full quarter’s transactions and typically differ by a modest margin from the flash estimate. URA cautions that “the public is advised to interpret the flash estimates with caution.”

With that caveat noted, the Q2 2026 flash estimate signals a meaningful shift in the composition of price growth. After a broad-based Q1 2026 rally — where OCR non-landed prices surged +2.2% and the overall index rose +0.9% — Q2 2026 shows the market rotating: luxury and landed properties strengthened, while mass-market and mid-tier segments gave back some of Q1’s gains.

Segment-by-Segment Analysis

URA private residential property price change Q1 vs Q2 2026 flash estimate CCR RCR OCR landed Singapore
Figure 1: Quarter-on-quarter price change by market segment — Q1 2026 actual vs Q2 2026 flash estimate. Source: URA Real Estate Statistics Flash Estimate, 1 July 2026.

Core Central Region (CCR) — +2.0% QoQ: The prime districts (Districts 1–4 and 9–11) outperformed all other segments in Q2 2026. The CCR had been relatively subdued in Q1 2026 (+0.6% QoQ) as the 60% ABSD for foreigners continued to dampen overseas buyer interest. The Q2 2026 rebound suggests domestic high-net-worth and upgrader demand — supported by declining SORA rates from their 2023–2024 peaks — is reasserting itself. The CCR also benefits from limited new supply relative to other segments. This is consistent with the observed trend of luxury landed and GCB (Good Class Bungalow) transactions picking up in the first half of 2026.

Rest of Central Region (RCR) — -1.4% QoQ: The RCR — covering areas such as Toa Payoh, Bishan, Tiong Bahru, and Queenstown — recorded the sharpest quarterly decline. This is likely a partial correction after strong new launch activity in prior quarters pushed RCR prices higher. As developers digested existing inventory and new launch momentum slowed, transacted prices softened. The RCR remains well above its Q1 2025 levels on a year-on-year basis.

Outside Central Region (OCR) — -0.2% QoQ: The OCR, which includes suburban regions such as Jurong, Tampines, Sengkang, and Punggol, saw a modest dip after its strong Q1 2026 performance (+2.2% QoQ). This retreat is consistent with the broader pattern of HDB upgrader demand normalising as the pool of HDB households completing the five-year MOP works through the system. Developer sales volumes in the OCR remained healthy, but headline prices moderated.

Landed properties — +2.6% QoQ: Landed homes (terraced houses, semi-detached, bungalows, and Good Class Bungalows) posted the strongest quarterly gain and reversed the -0.4% QoQ decline recorded in Q1 2026. Landed supply is structurally limited — only Singapore Citizens can purchase most landed property — and demand from citizens seeking generational family homes has remained firm. The combination of limited new landed supply, declining mortgage rates, and resilient household wealth among long-tenured Singapore Citizens supported this rebound.

Segment Q1 2026 QoQ Q2 2026 QoQ (Flash) Key Driver
Overall PPI +0.9% +0.5% Deceleration; landed and CCR offset OCR/RCR softening
Non-landed (all) +1.3% -0.1% RCR and OCR drag outweigh CCR gain
CCR (Core Central) +0.6% +2.0% Luxury demand, declining rates, domestic upgrader activity
RCR (Rest of Central) +0.8% -1.4% Post-launch correction; new supply absorption
OCR (Outside Central) +2.2% -0.2% HDB upgrader normalisation; MOP pipeline moderating
Landed -0.4% +2.6% Structural scarcity, SC-only demand, rate environment

Transaction Volume: Stable Demand

Sale transaction volume in Q2 2026 stood at approximately 5,420 units (up to mid-June 2026), compared to 5,413 in Q1 2026. URA describes this as “broadly comparable,” indicating that buyer activity has not meaningfully contracted despite the overall price deceleration. This stable transaction count, combined with decelerating prices, is consistent with a market that is finding equilibrium rather than declining.

Supply Pipeline: Government Accelerating Delivery

URA 2026 GLS confirmed list 9320 units and quarterly private residential transaction volume Singapore
Figure 2: Left — 2026 GLS Confirmed List units by half-year. Right — quarterly private residential sale transaction volume Q1 2025 to Q2 2026 (partial). Source: URA Real Estate Statistics; GLS Programme announcements 2026.

The government is maintaining a deliberate high supply stance. In 2H2026, a further 4,745 private residential units will be launched under the Confirmed List, bringing the full-year 2026 Confirmed List total to 9,320 units — over 50% higher than the past 10-year annual average of approximately 6,200 units per year. Including Executive Condominiums, approximately 61,000 private residential units are expected to be completed over the coming years, a significant pipeline that URA believes will ensure housing demand is met and price stability is maintained.

This supply commitment is a significant policy signal. It suggests the government does not intend to ease supply constraints even as price growth moderates, reinforcing the view that the cooling measures and ABSD framework are working as intended — slowing speculation without triggering price declines.

What This Means for Buyers, Sellers, and Investors

For buyers, the Q2 2026 data offers a nuanced picture. The mass market (OCR) and mid-tier (RCR) segments are showing mild softening — suggesting that patient buyers may find slightly better negotiating conditions in these segments than they did in Q1 2026. The CCR and landed markets, however, are moving in the opposite direction: buyers in these segments should not expect discounts. The high supply pipeline is a medium-term comfort: completions over the next few years should provide genuine choice and prevent runaway price inflation. However, the pipeline has not yet translated into meaningful price softening, suggesting underlying demand remains robust.

For sellers, the Q2 data does not indicate a price collapse. Year-on-year growth remains positive across all segments, and the overall PPI is still trending upward, albeit modestly. Sellers in well-positioned OCR and RCR projects who have held for several years remain in a strong position. The SSD framework (12%/8%/4%/NIL for years 1–4) means that sellers who purchased in 2024 or later face significant exit costs if selling within the SSD window.

For investors, the data reinforces the divergence between segments. CCR and landed are the standout performers in Q2 2026. The 60% foreigner ABSD remains a barrier for non-resident investors, but for Singapore Citizens with the means to invest in CCR or landed property, Q2 2026 shows meaningful appreciation. For OCR investors, the combination of high supply, modest price growth, and stable rental yields suggests a more measured outlook for capital appreciation over the near term.

What Might Come Next: Full Q2 Data on 24 July 2026

The flash estimate is compiled on approximately 75% of the full quarter’s transactions. The final figures, due 24 July 2026, will incorporate the complete Q2 2026 transaction set and may revise the initial numbers upward or downward. Historically, flash-to-final revisions for the Singapore private residential PPI have been small (typically within 0.2–0.4 percentage points). Analysts and market participants will also be watching for the detailed breakdown by property type, floor area, and specific district — context that flash estimates do not provide.

Beyond the Q3 2026 data, the key macro variables are: MAS exchange rate management and global trade uncertainty (the July 2026 economic environment remains “highly uncertain” per URA’s own framing), Federal Reserve policy direction, the HDB resale market trajectory (which feeds upgrader demand for OCR private condos), and developer launch volumes in 2H2026. The 2H2026 GLS Confirmed List launches, if absorbed at decent pricing, will provide a fresh read on developer confidence and buyer appetite going into 2027.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the URA Private Residential Property Price Index (PPI)?

The URA PPI is a quarterly index compiled by the Urban Redevelopment Authority tracking changes in private residential property prices in Singapore. It covers all non-landed private residential transactions (apartments and condominiums) across the CCR, RCR, and OCR, as well as landed residential properties (terraced houses, semi-detached, bungalows). The index uses a hedonic regression methodology to control for changes in the quality mix of transactions, so a change in the PPI reflects a genuine price change rather than a change in the type of units sold. The full methodology is available on the URA website.

Why did CCR outperform while RCR and OCR declined in Q2 2026?

The divergence reflects two distinct demand drivers. CCR demand is primarily driven by domestic high-net-worth buyers, ultra-high-net-worth families, and some foreign buyers (despite the 60% ABSD). This cohort is less interest-rate sensitive and more influenced by portfolio diversification and lifestyle considerations. The CCR has also had limited new supply recently. RCR and OCR demand, by contrast, is driven more by the upgrader segment — HDB families completing their MOP and seeking private homes. This segment is more price-sensitive, and after a strong Q1 2026 driven by several new launch openings, some cooling was natural as those launches digested inventory.

Does the +0.5% QoQ increase mean property prices are still rising?

On a quarter-on-quarter basis, yes — the overall index still increased by 0.5% in Q2 2026. The PPI has not declined. Year-on-year growth (Q2 2025 vs Q2 2026) will be clearer when the full Q2 2025 data is confirmed as the base. The deceleration from +0.9% in Q1 2026 to +0.5% in Q2 2026 is meaningful but not alarming in the context of Singapore’s historical property cycle. As context: the index fell sharply in 2022 after cooling measures were introduced, and the recovery from 2023 onward has been gradual and measured.

What impact does the 9,320-unit GLS pipeline have on prices?

Supply additions work with a lag — land sold today typically enters the market as completed units two to four years later. The 9,320-unit 2026 GLS Confirmed List, together with the broader 61,000-unit pipeline of completions expected over the coming years, should exert a moderating influence on prices over the medium term. However, if economic conditions remain supportive and demand is sustained, large supply additions may simply be absorbed without sharp price declines. Singapore’s housing demand is underpinned by population growth, household formation, and the continued desire for private homeownership among its relatively affluent resident population.

When will the full Q2 2026 real estate statistics be released?

URA will release the full set of Q2 2026 real estate statistics, including the finalised PPI, rental index, number of units in the pipeline, and detailed transaction data by district and property type, on 24 July 2026. This release will also cover the private rental market, development pipeline, and unsold inventory. LovelyHomes will update this article and publish additional analysis once the full data is available.

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Disclaimer: This article is produced for general informational and editorial commentary purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or property advice. Property market statistics, index values, and GLS programme details are sourced from URA’s official releases. Flash estimates are preliminary and subject to revision on 24 July 2026. LovelyHomes is not responsible for investment decisions made on the basis of this commentary. Always consult licensed financial advisers and CEA-registered property salespersons before making property purchase or investment decisions. Primary source: URA press release, 1 July 2026.

Singapore HDB Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) 2026: Quotas, SPR Limits and How It Affects Your Flat Purchase

Singapore HDB Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) 2026: Quotas, SPR Limits and How It Affects Your Flat Purchase

When you decide to buy an HDB resale flat in Singapore, you may encounter an unusual hurdle that has no equivalent in most other housing markets: your ethnicity matters. The Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP), administered by the Housing & Development Board (HDB) since 1 March 1989, sets maximum proportions for each of Singapore’s three broad ethnic categories — Chinese, Malay, and Indian & Others — at both the block and neighbourhood level. If the sale of a flat would push the proportion of your ethnic group beyond the designated quota, HDB will not approve the transaction.

Understanding the EIP — how it works, who it affects, when a block is quota-full, and how the related Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) Quota interacts with it — is essential for any resale HDB buyer, seller, or property professional in 2026.

Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

  • The EIP sets maximum ethnic proportions at two levels: the block (individual HDB building) and the neighbourhood (surrounding precinct).
  • Current quotas: Chinese up to 87% (block) / 84% (neighbourhood); Malay up to 25% (block) / 22% (neighbourhood); Indian & Others up to 15% (block) / 12% (neighbourhood).
  • EIP applies only to HDB resale transactions — not to new BTO flat applications, which are managed separately.
  • A buyer whose ethnic group has exceeded the block or neighbourhood quota cannot purchase a resale flat in that block or neighbourhood until the proportion drops back below the limit.
  • The SPR Quota is a separate restriction: SPR households are limited to 5% of units in any block and 8% in any neighbourhood in non-mature HDB estates.
  • Sellers can sell to any ethnically eligible buyer — the EIP restricts buyers, not sellers.
  • A flat in a quota-full block may be priced lower than comparable units in non-restricted blocks, as the pool of eligible buyers is smaller.
  • You can check whether a specific block is EIP- or SPR-quota-full using HDB’s online e-service before making an offer.

What Is the Ethnic Integration Policy?

The EIP was introduced by the Singapore government in 1989, during a period when natural market forces were producing ethnic concentration in certain HDB estates — reversing the government’s longstanding policy of distributing ethnic groups evenly across public housing. Before 1989, resale transaction patterns had allowed Chinese Singaporeans to cluster in newer, higher-demand estates, while Malay and Indian households remained concentrated in older estates. The EIP was HDB’s mechanism to enforce ethnic integration as a social policy objective, reflecting Singapore’s commitment to multiracialism as a founding principle of the nation.

The policy is administered by HDB under the Housing and Development Act. HDB sets the quota limits and updates them periodically (though they have been broadly stable for many years) based on Singapore’s national ethnic composition as measured by the Department of Statistics Singapore (SingStat).

EIP Block and Neighbourhood Quotas — The Numbers

HDB Ethnic Integration Policy 2026 block and neighbourhood quotas for Chinese Malay Indian Singapore
Figure 1: EIP Block and Neighbourhood Quotas (2026) versus approximate national ethnic composition. Source: HDB Ethnic Integration Policy guidelines; SingStat population data.

The current EIP quotas are set above the national composition to give headroom for natural movement while still preventing concentration. A block is considered quota-full for a particular ethnic group when adding one more household of that group would breach the block-level cap. At that point, only buyers of a different ethnic group (or mixed-race buyers whose reported ethnicity is in a different category) can purchase units in that block until existing residents move out and reduce the proportion.

The two-tier system (block + neighbourhood) means a buyer might face no restriction at the neighbourhood level but encounter a quota-full block — or vice versa. Both must be satisfied before HDB will approve the transaction.

Ethnic Group Block Quota Neighbourhood Quota Who Is Counted
Chinese 87% 84% SC and SPR registered as Chinese
Malay 25% 22% SC and SPR registered as Malay
Indian & Others 15% 12% SC and SPR registered as Indian, Eurasian, or Others
SPR Households (non-mature estates) 5% 8% SPR-only households (no SC members) — non-mature estates only

Who Is Affected and How?

HDB EIP and SPR Quota buyer eligibility matrix 2026 — SC SPR foreigner affected or not
Figure 2: Matrix showing how the EIP and SPR Quota affect different buyer profiles in 2026. Source: LovelyHomes editorial based on HDB guidelines.

The SPR Quota — A Separate Overlay

HDB SPR Quota 2026 — 5% block and 8% neighbourhood cap for Singapore Permanent Residents non-mature estates
Figure 3: SPR Quota limits for non-mature HDB estates: 5% per block and 8% per neighbourhood. The SPR Quota is separate from and additional to the EIP ethnic quotas. Source: HDB Singapore.

The Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) Quota was introduced in 2010 and is a distinct policy from the EIP, though both are administered by HDB. The SPR Quota limits SPR-only households to 5% of units in a block and 8% in a neighbourhood, but only in non-mature HDB estates. Mature estates — broadly, estates established before 1990, such as Toa Payoh, Ang Mo Kio, and Queenstown — are exempt from the SPR Quota.

A household qualifies as “SPR-only” (i.e., subject to the SPR quota) if all owners and occupants are SPRs with no Singapore Citizens. Households that include at least one SC are not counted against the SPR Quota, even if the flat is primarily purchased by an SPR. This means an SC-SPR couple is exempt from the SPR Quota (though they still face the EIP ethnic quota for the SPR’s ethnicity classification).

How to Check EIP and SPR Quota Status Online

HDB provides a free e-service on its website that allows prospective buyers to check the EIP and SPR Quota status of a specific block before making an offer. The tool requires the block number and the buyer’s IC number (or similar identifier). It returns a clear indication of whether the buyer’s ethnic group is eligible to purchase in that block and neighbourhood at the time of enquiry. This check should be the first thing any resale buyer does after identifying a property of interest — before arranging viewings, making verbal offers, or paying any booking fees.

Note that quota status is dynamic: a block that is quota-full today may become eligible again in weeks if a unit in the over-represented ethnic group is sold to a buyer of a different ethnicity. Conversely, a block that is eligible today may become quota-full by the time you complete your Option to Purchase exercise.

Worked Example: The Ramanan Family — Indian SPR Couple in Punggol

Mr and Mrs Ramanan are a married couple of Indian ethnicity holding Singapore Permanent Residence. They wish to purchase a 4-room resale flat in Punggol, which is a non-mature estate. Before viewing, they check HDB’s e-service.

  • EIP check — Indian & Others quota: HDB’s e-service shows the specific block they are interested in has an Indian & Others proportion of 12% at block level — within the 15% block quota. They are eligible.
  • SPR Quota check: The same block has an SPR-only household proportion of 6.2% — above the 5% block cap. The Ramanan family, as an SPR-only household, cannot purchase in this block despite passing the EIP ethnicity check.
  • Resolution: Mr and Mrs Ramanan check an adjacent block in the same neighbourhood. That block has an SPR-only proportion of 3.8% and an Indian & Others proportion of 11.4% — both within limits. They proceed to make an offer on a unit there.

This example illustrates how the SPR Quota can be the binding constraint even when ethnicity is not an issue, and why checking both quotas before viewing is essential for SPR buyers in non-mature estates.

Impact on Flat Prices: When a Block Is Quota-Full

When a block is quota-full for the dominant ethnic group (typically Chinese), the pool of eligible buyers shrinks significantly — sometimes to just two or three per cent of potential buyers. This reduced marketability can suppress prices for those units relative to comparable flats in non-restricted blocks. Sellers may accept lower offers because their buyer pool is smaller. Conversely, buyers who happen to be of the rarer ethnicity eligible to purchase in a quota-full block may find better value in those units.

Industry observation suggests that the price discount for a flat in a quota-full Chinese block (where only Malay and Indian & Others buyers are eligible) can range from 3% to 8% below comparable non-restricted flats, depending on the estate and flat type. This is not an official figure from HDB or any regulator — it reflects observed transacted price trends — and buyers should form their own view.

EIP and New Launches (BTO Flats)

The EIP as described above applies to resale transactions. For new BTO flats, HDB manages ethnic integration differently: at the allocation stage, HDB applies similar ethnic proportion targets when assigning balloted flats to successful applicants. Buyers do not interact with the EIP directly when applying for a BTO flat — HDB handles the integration mechanically during the allocation process. Once allocated, the flat is subject to the standard Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) of five years before it can be sold on the resale market, at which point the EIP would apply to the buyer in the resale transaction.

What Might Come Next

The EIP has remained broadly unchanged since 1989, though quota levels have been adjusted marginally over the decades in line with shifting national demographic compositions. As Singapore’s population continues to evolve — with a declining Chinese majority share and growing Indian community share in newer cohorts — HDB may review quota levels periodically. The introduction of the SPR Quota in 2010 reflects the government’s willingness to add new layers to the integration framework as housing market dynamics shift. Whether the EIP will be extended or modified to address new demographic realities (such as multiracial households whose classification is more complex) is a policy question that HDB and the Ministry of National Development (MND) are best placed to address.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the EIP apply if I am buying a new BTO flat directly from HDB?

Not in the same direct way. When you apply for a BTO flat, you do not check EIP quota status yourself — HDB manages ethnic integration during the allocation process administratively. However, the result is functionally similar: HDB ensures that no single ethnic group exceeds the policy proportions in any block. For resale flats, the responsibility shifts to the buyer to check EIP eligibility before making an offer. This is one of the key differences between the BTO and resale processes.

What happens if the block becomes quota-full after I make my offer but before HDB approval?

HDB assesses EIP eligibility at the point of resale application submission, not at the time of the initial offer. If the block became quota-full between your offer and your application, HDB may decline the transaction. This is why solicitors and experienced buyers recommend submitting the HDB resale application as quickly as possible after exercising the OTP. The window between OTP exercise and HDB approval submission is typically one to four weeks, during which quota status can change if another transaction is approved first.

Can a mixed-race (Eurasian or multiracial) buyer choose which ethnic category to use for EIP purposes?

No. Ethnic classification in Singapore follows the IC (identity card) classification, which is assigned at birth and follows the father’s ethnicity for Singapore Citizens. Mixed-race individuals may carry a dual classification in some circumstances, but for HDB and EIP purposes, the primary classification on their NRIC is used. If a buyer feels their classification is incorrect or outdated, they should first seek to update it with the Immigration & Checkpoints Authority (ICA) before applying to purchase a resale flat.

If I am an SC married to a foreigner, which ethnicity is counted for EIP?

For an SC-foreigner household, the flat ownership is registered in the SC’s name (foreigners cannot own HDB flats). The EIP is therefore assessed based on the SC’s ethnicity. The foreign spouse is listed as an approved occupant but not as an owner. This means the EIP constraint tracks the SC, not the foreigner’s nationality or ethnicity.

Does the SPR Quota apply if my household has one SC and one SPR?

No. The SPR Quota only applies to households where all registered owners and occupants are SPRs — i.e., there is no SC in the household. A household with at least one SC member is exempt from the SPR Quota (though the EIP ethnic quota still applies based on the SC’s ethnicity). This distinction is important for SC-SPR couples planning to buy in a non-mature estate.

Are there any exemptions to the EIP for certain types of buyers?

There are limited circumstances where HDB may grant an EIP exemption, but these are rare and not publicly detailed. Elderly Singaporeans wishing to live near family members, or specific compassionate cases, may apply for HDB’s consideration. In practice, the EIP is enforced consistently and buyers should not assume an exemption will be granted. The practical solution for most buyers facing a quota-full block is to expand their search to nearby blocks or different neighbourhoods where their ethnic group has quota space.

Can an SPR couple buy in a mature estate without facing the SPR Quota?

Yes. Mature estates (broadly, those established before 1990) are exempt from the SPR Quota. An SPR-only household can purchase a resale flat in a mature estate such as Toa Payoh, Queenstown, Ang Mo Kio, Bedok, or Clementi without the SPR Quota constraint. They would, however, still be subject to the standard EIP ethnic quota for the owner’s ethnicity. This makes mature estate resale flats generally more accessible for SPR buyers, though they typically command higher prices than comparable flats in non-mature estates.

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Disclaimer: This article is produced for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or property advice. Ethnic Integration Policy quotas, SPR Quota limits, and HDB eligibility rules are administered by the Housing & Development Board and are subject to periodic review. Always verify current EIP and SPR Quota status for a specific block using HDB’s e-service at www.hdb.gov.sg before making any property purchase decisions. For personalised advice on your specific circumstances, consult a CEA-registered property salesperson or solicitor.

Singapore Condo Buying Process 2026: Step-by-Step from Offer to Keys — OTP, BSD, ABSD and Completion

Singapore Condo Buying Process 2026: Step-by-Step from Offer to Keys — OTP, BSD, ABSD and Completion

Buying a condominium in Singapore is one of the largest financial decisions most households will ever make. Whether you are a first-timer upgrading from an HDB flat, a permanent resident purchasing your first private home, or a foreigner entering Singapore’s property market, the process involves multiple stages, strict regulatory requirements, and substantial upfront costs. This guide walks you through every step — from checking your eligibility and financing to collecting your keys and settling in — so you can proceed with confidence and without surprises.

Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

  • A Singapore condo purchase follows 10 distinct stages: eligibility check → search → offer → OTP → solicitor/valuation → exercise OTP (S&P) → bank loan → requisitions → completion → post-completion.
  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is payable by all buyers; rates run from 1% to 6%, administered by IRAS.
  • Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) applies to Singapore citizens purchasing a second or subsequent residential property, Singapore Permanent Residents from their first purchase, and all foreigners — rates range from 5% to 65% of the purchase price.
  • The Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) cap is 55% of gross monthly income; the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) cap of 30% applies only to HDB loans, not private condo purchases.
  • The minimum cash down payment is 5% of the purchase price (for bank loans); the remainder of the 25% LTV shortfall can come from CPF Ordinary Account funds.
  • Completion of a resale condo typically takes 10–12 weeks after option exercise; a new launch can take 3–5 years to TOP depending on construction progress.
  • Legal fees for a condo purchase typically run S$2,500–S$4,000 for a standard transaction, covering title search, requisitions, and completion.
  • A In-Principle Approval (IPA) from your bank should be obtained before making any offer — it costs nothing and lasts 30 days.

What Is a Condominium in Singapore?

Under Singapore law, a condominium is a privatised residential development governed by the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA), administered by the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) and the relevant Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST). Condominiums differ from HDB flats in that they are privately built and sold, carry strata titles, are managed by an MCST, and typically feature shared amenities such as a swimming pool, gymnasium, and security. They can be sold on a freehold, 999-year leasehold, or 99-year leasehold basis. The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) regulates the development, sale, and advertising of private residential property, while IRAS administers stamp duties.

Step 1 — Check Your Eligibility and Financing

Before viewing a single showflat or property listing, establish your financial position. Singapore’s Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) mandates that all residential loans are subject to the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) of 55% — meaning all monthly debt obligations (including the proposed mortgage) cannot exceed 55% of gross monthly income. Unlike HDB purchases, private condo purchases are not subject to the 30% Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) cap.

Obtain an In-Principle Approval (IPA) from a bank before making any offer. The IPA is free, takes one to three working days, and tells you the maximum loan quantum, indicative interest rate, and monthly repayment. As at 1 July 2026, Singapore bank SORA-linked packages are pricing at approximately 1.15%–1.35% spread over the 3-Month Compounded SORA (currently around 1.07%), giving effective rates of approximately 2.22%–2.42%. Fixed-rate packages for two-year terms are available at approximately 2.55%–2.80%.

Simultaneously, check your ABSD profile: Are you a Singapore Citizen (SC), Permanent Resident (SPR), or foreigner? How many residential properties do you currently own or have you previously owned? Your ABSD liability — which can add 0% to 65% of the purchase price — will directly affect your cash requirements.

Step 2 — Property Search and Viewings

Search listings on URA’s Real Estate Information System (REALIS) for actual transacted prices, which reflect what buyers actually paid rather than asking prices. For new launches, request access to the developer’s showflat; for resale units, arrange viewings through the seller’s representative. Compare stacks, floor plans, and psf prices across comparable transactions before forming a view on value.

At this stage, commission your own valuation if considering a resale unit — banks will only loan against the lower of the transacted price or the formal valuation. A gap between the two means cash top-up from your own funds.

The 10-Step Buying Process — Visual Overview

Singapore condo buying process 2026 — 10-step timeline from offer to keys
Figure 1: The Singapore condo buying process in 10 steps — from eligibility check to post-completion. Source: LovelyHomes editorial, based on CEA and IRAS guidelines 2026.

Step 3–4 — Making an Offer and the Option to Purchase (OTP)

For a resale condo, the buying process is governed by the Controller of Housing under the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act for new launches, and by common law for resale. In a resale transaction, the buyer and seller agree on a price, and the seller grants the buyer an Option to Purchase (OTP). The buyer pays an option fee (typically 1% of the purchase price), which grants them the exclusive right to buy the property within 14 calendar days. During this 14-day window, the buyer must arrange financing, engage a solicitor, and decide whether to proceed.

For a new launch, the process differs: buyers register an Expression of Interest (EOI) or join a ballot, attend a showflat, and — if selected — pay a 5% booking fee to receive the Sales & Purchase Agreement (S&P) from the developer. For a new EC (Executive Condominium), additional eligibility rules under HDB guidelines apply.

Step 5–6 — Engaging Your Solicitor and Exercising the OTP

Once you have decided to proceed, engage a solicitor immediately. Your solicitor will conduct a title search via the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) to confirm ownership, identify any caveats or encumbrances (outstanding mortgages, charges, or restrictive covenants), and raise legal requisitions with government agencies. To exercise the OTP, the buyer pays a further 4% of the purchase price (bringing the total deposit to 5%) and receives the signed S&P agreement. The balance of the purchase price is payable on completion, typically 10–12 weeks later for a resale unit.

BSD is payable within 14 days of exercising the OTP (for Singapore-issued documents) and can be paid from CPF Ordinary Account funds. ABSD is payable within 14 days of executing the S&P agreement and must be paid in cash.

Stamp Duty Deep-Dive: BSD and ABSD

Singapore BSD rates 2026 and ABSD rates by buyer profile — condo buying stamp duty guide
Figure 2: Left — BSD rates by purchase price band (IRAS 2026). Right — ABSD rates by buyer profile (IRAS 2026). SC = Singapore Citizen, SPR = Singapore Permanent Resident.

BSD is levied on all residential property purchases in Singapore, at progressive rates administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS): 1% on the first S$180,000, 2% on the next S$180,000, 3% on the next S$640,000, 4% on the next S$500,000, 5% on the next S$1,500,000, and 6% on amounts above S$3,000,000. On a S$1,600,000 condo, BSD amounts to S$49,600.

ABSD is an additional stamp duty introduced by the government to moderate investment demand. As at 1 July 2026, key ABSD rates are: SC 1st property 0%, SC 2nd 20%, SC 3rd+ 30%; SPR 1st property 5%, SPR 2nd+ 30%; foreigners (all) 60%; entities (all) 65%. ABSD must be settled in cash within 14 days of the date of the instrument — it cannot be paid using CPF funds.

Buyer Profile BSD (S$1.6M) ABSD Rate ABSD Amount Total Stamp Duty
SC — 1st property S$49,600 NIL NIL S$49,600
SC — 2nd property S$49,600 20% S$320,000 S$369,600
SC — 3rd+ property S$49,600 30% S$480,000 S$529,600
SPR — 1st property S$49,600 5% S$80,000 S$129,600
Foreigner — any property S$49,600 60% S$960,000 S$1,009,600

Total Cash Required — Three Buyer Profiles for a S$1.6M Condo

Total cash required to buy a S$1.6M condo Singapore 2026 — SC first property, SC second property, foreigner
Figure 3: Breakdown of total cash required to purchase a S$1,600,000 condominium in Singapore under three buyer profiles (2026). ABSD and down payment assumptions based on MAS LTV framework and IRAS stamp duty rates. Source: LovelyHomes editorial analysis.

Step 7 — Applying for Your Bank Loan

After exercising the OTP, your solicitor notifies the bank to proceed with the formal loan. The bank issues a Letter of Offer (LO), which sets out the loan quantum, interest rate structure, lock-in period (typically two to three years), and prepayment penalty. Review the LO carefully before signing. The Loan-to-Value (LTV) limit for a first housing loan is 75% of the lower of the purchase price and the bank’s valuation; for a second outstanding housing loan, LTV drops to 45%; for a third or subsequent, 35%. These limits are set by MAS and were last revised in September 2022.

Note that CPF Ordinary Account funds can be used to service the monthly instalment and to pay for the BSD — but not for ABSD or cash top-up arising from a valuation gap.

Step 8–9 — Requisitions, Title Search and Completion

Your solicitor will raise legal requisitions with IRAS (property tax status), the Land Transport Authority (road interpretation plan), the Public Utilities Board (water and drainage charges), and other relevant authorities. These take five to ten working days. On completion, the buyer’s solicitor forwards the balance purchase price (net of the deposit already paid) to the seller’s solicitor, who simultaneously releases the title. Your caveat is lodged at SLA on the same day, protecting your interest. Keys are handed over and you become the registered proprietor.

Worked Example: The Teo Family — SC Couple Buying a 2nd Property

Mr and Mrs Teo are Singapore Citizens purchasing a 3-bedroom OCR condo in Tampines at S$1,600,000 as their second residential property. They currently own an HDB flat in Bedok (MOP cleared), which they are retaining. Their combined gross monthly income is S$18,000.

  • BSD: S$49,600 — paid from CPF Ordinary Account.
  • ABSD (20%, 2nd property SC): S$320,000 — paid in cash at signing.
  • Down payment: 55% (LTV 45% for 2nd property) = S$880,000 total equity. Minimum 25% cash = S$400,000; remaining 30% (S$480,000) may come from CPF OA.
  • Bank loan: S$720,000 at 2.35% (2yr fixed); monthly repayment ~S$3,180. TDSR = 17.7% — well below 55% cap.
  • Legal fees: ~S$3,200.
  • Total cash outlay at completion: S$400,000 (cash downpayment) + S$320,000 (ABSD) + S$3,200 (legal) = S$723,200 cash; CPF drawdown S$529,600 (BSD + remaining downpayment).

This example illustrates why a Singapore Citizen buying a second residential property must maintain substantial liquid reserves — ABSD alone accounts for S$320,000 that must be settled in cash.

Why This Matters: Cooling Measures and the Investment Calculus

Singapore’s layered stamp duty framework — BSD plus ABSD plus Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) — is a deliberate policy tool that the Ministry of Finance and MAS use to moderate speculative activity and maintain housing affordability. Since April 2023, when ABSD was raised sharply (SC 2nd property from 17% to 20%; foreigner from 30% to 60%), transaction volumes among investment buyers have moderated but have not collapsed. Demand from owner-occupiers and upgraders has remained resilient, underpinned by Singapore’s robust employment market and steady inflow of high-net-worth residents. URA’s Q2 2026 Flash Estimates, released 1 July 2026, show the overall PPI still rising — +0.5% QoQ — even as the market digests the significant supply pipeline of 61,000 units expected to complete over the next few years.

New Launch vs Resale — Which Should You Buy?

New launches offer the ability to select your unit from a plan, benefit from the Progressive Payment Scheme (PPS), and potentially capture price appreciation between the launch date and TOP. However, they carry construction risk, deferred occupation, and you cannot see the exact finished product. Resale condos offer immediate entry, known physical condition, and existing community — but require cash top-up for any valuation gap. A thorough due diligence process, including engaging a structural inspector (approximately S$300–S$600) and reviewing the MCST’s financials, is advisable for resale condos.

What Might Come Next

With 9,320 private residential units on the 2026 GLS Confirmed List — over 50% above the 10-year annual average — supply is rising. URA’s full Q2 2026 data (due 24 July 2026) will clarify whether the modest +0.5% QoQ growth reflects genuine price moderation or a base effect from a particularly strong Q1. Analysts are watching whether the Federal Reserve’s policy trajectory, MAS exchange rate management, and global economic uncertainty will affect the purchasing power of foreign buyers who still face a 60% ABSD threshold. For Singapore Citizens buying within their first property, the outlook remains favourable — ABSD-free access to the market at a time when interest rates are declining from their 2023–2024 peaks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my CPF to pay ABSD?

No. ABSD must be paid entirely in cash. This distinguishes it from BSD, which can be settled using CPF Ordinary Account funds. ABSD must be paid to IRAS within 14 days of executing the instrument (typically the Sales & Purchase Agreement), so you must have the cash available before signing. This is one reason why financial planners recommend stress-testing your liquidity before committing to a second property purchase.

What happens if the bank valuation is lower than my purchase price?

If the bank’s formal valuation is S$1,550,000 but you are purchasing at S$1,600,000, the bank will only lend against the lower figure. With a 75% LTV, your loan quantum drops to S$1,162,500 instead of S$1,200,000 — meaning you must fund the S$37,500 shortfall from cash or CPF. This is known as a cash over valuation (COV) situation, though HDB uses this term more formally. For private condos, always check comparable transactions on URA REALIS and obtain a preliminary estimate from your bank before committing.

How long does a resale condo purchase take from offer to keys?

From the date the OTP is exercised to legal completion, the typical timeline is 10–12 weeks. The first four weeks involve legal requisitions, title search, and bank processing. Completion is then scheduled between the buyer’s and seller’s solicitors to align with the bank’s disbursement schedule. Delays can arise from outstanding property tax arrears, disputed caveats, or bank processing backlogs during peak periods. Build contingency time into your planning, especially if you need to vacate your current home simultaneously.

Do I need a solicitor, or can I use the developer’s panel firm for a new launch?

For a new launch, the developer’s solicitors handle the S&P agreement on a panel basis, and buyers can use them without engaging separate legal representation — the fee is typically absorbed by the developer. However, it is strongly advisable to engage your own independent solicitor (approximately S$2,500–S$3,500 for a standard new launch transaction) so that someone is specifically acting in your interests, reviewing payment schedules, and flagging any unusual conditions. For resale transactions, you must engage your own solicitor.

Can a foreigner buy any type of condo in Singapore?

Foreigners (non-citizens, non-PRs) may purchase units in private condominiums and apartments in Singapore without restriction, subject to the 60% ABSD. However, foreigners cannot purchase HDB flats, executive condominiums within the first 10 years of completion, or landed residential property (houses, bungalows, semi-detached, or terraced) without prior approval from the Land Dealings Approval Unit (LDAU) under SLA. Approval is rarely granted except in exceptional circumstances of permanent residency or significant economic contribution.

What is the Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD), and does it affect my purchase?

SSD is payable by the seller, not the buyer — but it affects the seller’s net proceeds and can influence pricing and negotiation. SSD rates are 12% (if sold within 1 year), 8% (within 2 years), 4% (within 3 years), and nil beyond. If you plan to resell within three years, factor SSD into your exit modelling. On a S$1,600,000 condo sold at S$1,750,000 in 18 months, SSD at 8% = S$140,000 — wiping out most of the gross gain.

Is there a minimum occupation period for private condos?

There is no Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) for private condos in the same sense as HDB flats. However, the SSD effectively imposes a three-year hold before selling without penalty. If you purchased using an HDB resale flat that was originally classified under the MOP rules, you would also need to comply with those rules separately before buying the private property (unless you are an SC buying as a 2nd property). Confirm with HDB if any concurrent ownership obligations apply to your specific situation.

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Disclaimer: This article is produced for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Property prices, stamp duty rates, LTV limits, TDSR thresholds, and interest rates are subject to change by the relevant Singapore authorities (URA, IRAS, MAS, SLA, HDB, CPF Board). Readers should consult licensed financial advisers, solicitors, and CEA-registered property salespersons before making any property purchase decisions. Always verify current rates directly with IRAS at www.iras.gov.sg and MAS at www.mas.gov.sg.

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