Using CPF Ordinary Account for Property in Singapore: Complete Guide 2026

Using CPF Ordinary Account for Property in Singapore: Complete Guide 2026

Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

  • CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds can be used for the down payment, monthly mortgage instalments, stamp duty, and legal fees on eligible Singapore properties.
  • Your usable CPF is capped by two limits: the Valuation Limit (VL = lower of purchase price or market value) and the Withdrawal Limit (WL = 120% of VL).
  • Every dollar of CPF used accrues interest at 2.5% per annum, compounded monthly — this must be returned to your CPF (not cash) when you sell.
  • CPF can be used for HDB flats, private condominiums, and Executive Condominiums (ECs), but not for commercial or industrial properties.
  • For older leasehold properties, CPF usage is pro-rated or disallowed if the remaining lease does not cover the youngest buyer to age 95.
  • If you are aged 55 or older, you may only use CPF for property after setting aside the Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) in your Retirement Account (RA).
  • The accrued interest obligation can significantly reduce your net cash proceeds on sale — the worked example below shows the full mathematics.

What Is CPF OA and Why Does It Matter for Property?

The Central Provident Fund (CPF) Ordinary Account is one of three CPF sub-accounts held by every Singapore citizen and permanent resident. Administered by the CPF Board, the OA earns a minimum interest rate of 2.5% per annum (with a floor of 3.5% on the first S$20,000 of combined CPF savings under the Extra Interest policy, subject to conditions), making it one of the highest-yielding risk-free savings instruments in Singapore.

For most Singaporeans, CPF OA constitutes the single largest source of accessible funds outside their take-home pay. The rules governing how OA savings may be deployed for property are therefore among the most practically important aspects of personal finance in Singapore. Understanding them — including the less-publicised accrued interest obligation — is essential before committing to any property purchase.

The CPF Board regulates all property-related OA withdrawals under the CPF Act and the Housing Withdrawal Limits framework. The relevant rules apply to purchases from Housing and Development Board (HDB), private developers, and resale sellers alike.

What Can You Use CPF OA For?

CPF OA funds may be applied to four categories of property-related expenditure, subject to the limits described in the next section.

CPF OA usage table 2026 - down payment monthly instalments stamp duty accrued interest
Figure 1: CPF OA usage — what you can and cannot pay for. OA funds cover down payment, monthly loan instalments, stamp duty, and legal fees; commercial property and non-SC buyer shares are excluded.

Down Payment. For an HDB loan, there is no mandatory cash down payment — the full 10% option fee and 10% balance downpayment required by HDB may be funded from OA. For a bank loan on an HDB flat, the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ceiling is 75%, requiring a 25% downpayment of which at least 5% must be cash; the remaining 20% may come from OA. For private property with a bank loan at 75% LTV, the 25% downpayment may be funded entirely from OA subject to the Valuation Limit.

Monthly Mortgage Instalments. As long as the outstanding loan amount plus accrued CPF interest used does not exceed the Withdrawal Limit, OA may be applied monthly to reduce or eliminate your cash instalment. Many buyers use a combination of OA and cash once OA is running low.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD). BSD, payable to the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) within 14 days of the Option to Purchase being exercised, may be paid from OA. On a S$750,000 HDB resale flat, BSD is S$18,600 — a substantial saving in upfront cash.

Legal and Conveyancing Fees. Solicitor fees for the purchase (typically S$2,000–S$3,500 for HDB, S$3,000–S$6,000 for private) may be paid from OA up to the actual amount charged.

How Much CPF Can You Use? Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit

CPF property withdrawals are governed by two thresholds set by the CPF Board:

  • Valuation Limit (VL): the lower of (a) the purchase price and (b) the market value assessed at the date of purchase. For new HDB BTO flats, the VL is the purchase price. For resale properties, the VL is whichever is lower — a resale flat purchased above valuation does not allow additional CPF withdrawals above the CPF Board’s assessed value.
  • Withdrawal Limit (WL): 120% of the Valuation Limit. Once total CPF withdrawals (including accrued interest) equal the WL, no further CPF may be used for that property. At that point, all further mortgage instalments must be paid in cash.

Example: a resale HDB flat purchased at S$680,000 where the CPF Board’s assessed value is S$660,000 gives a VL of S$660,000 and a WL of S$792,000. If you have used S$550,000 CPF principal and S$180,000 accrued interest (total S$730,000), you still have S$62,000 of headroom before hitting the WL.

The Accrued Interest Obligation — The Hidden Cost

This is the aspect of CPF property usage that catches many owners off guard. Every dollar of CPF withdrawn from your OA for property continues to earn the 2.5% OA interest rate as though it had never left. The CPF Board records the principal withdrawn plus the compound interest that would have accrued had the funds remained in OA. This running total is your accrued interest obligation.

When you sell the property, the full amount — principal plus accrued interest — must be refunded to your CPF account. It does not go to your bank account. You receive cash only from whatever is left after repaying the mortgage, returning CPF, and paying transaction costs.

CPF accrued interest compounding chart 2026 - principal and interest to return on HDB sale
Figure 2: Accrued interest grows at 2.5% p.a. on S$500K of CPF used. After 25 years, approximately S$172K in additional interest must be returned to CPF on top of the S$500K principal. The right panel illustrates net cash proceeds for an HDB sold at S$1.2M.

At 2.5% compounded monthly over 25 years, a S$500,000 CPF withdrawal balloons to approximately S$672,000 that must return to CPF — a S$172,000 obligation that reduces your cash-in-hand on sale. This is not a penalty; the money goes back to your own CPF account and continues earning interest. But it profoundly affects the cash you receive at the point of sale, which matters for upgraders who need proceeds to fund the next purchase.

CPF Usage by Property Type

The rules differ slightly depending on the type of property being purchased.

HDB BTO Flats. Citizens buying a new BTO flat enjoy the most straightforward CPF access. Down payment, BSD, legal fees, and monthly HDB loan instalments may all be paid from OA. There is no minimum cash requirement if you take an HDB loan.

HDB Resale Flats. CPF may be used in the same way for resale flats, subject to the Valuation Limit. If you pay a Cash-over-Valuation (COV) premium above the assessed value, that excess cannot be funded from CPF — it must be cash.

Private Condominiums and ECs. Bank loans for private property and ECs follow the same VL/WL framework. The minimum cash requirement of 5% of the purchase price still applies for first-time buyers under the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) rules for ECs, but the remainder of the 25% downpayment may come from OA. For private condominiums, only the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) applies — there is no MSR constraint.

Executive Condominiums. ECs are treated as private property from the CPF perspective, but buyers must also satisfy HDB’s income ceiling (S$16,000 per month for standard ECs) and eligibility criteria. CPF usage follows the standard private property rules.

Leasehold Properties and the Age-95 Rule

Since 1 May 2019, CPF usage for properties with shorter remaining leases has been restricted under the CPF Housing Withdrawal Limits for properties with shorter leases framework. The core principle is that the lease must cover the youngest buyer to at least age 95 to allow unrestricted CPF usage.

If the remaining lease covers the youngest buyer to exactly age 95, full CPF usage up to the WL is allowed. If it falls short, the CPF usage cap is pro-rated in proportion to the remaining lease as a fraction of the age-95 benchmark. If the remaining lease at purchase is below 20 years, CPF cannot be used at all. This rule particularly affects older private condominiums and some HDB flats approaching the end of their 99-year or 103-year leases.

CPF OA eligibility matrix 2026 - which properties can use CPF Singapore
Figure 3: CPF OA eligibility matrix — leasehold restrictions, commercial exclusions, and joint-purchase rules summarised by property type.

Using CPF After Age 55

When a CPF member turns 55, a Retirement Account (RA) is created by transferring funds from the OA and Special Account. To continue using OA for property after age 55, the member must first set aside the Basic Retirement Sum (BRS) in the RA. For 2026, the BRS is S$106,500, the Full Retirement Sum (FRS) is S$213,000, and the Enhanced Retirement Sum (ERS) is S$319,500. Members who have pledged their property may use a lower threshold, but the pledge reduces eventual CPF LIFE payouts. Any OA balance above the BRS threshold remains available for property use.

Summary Table

Item HDB (Loan / Bank) Private Condo / EC Key Restriction
Down Payment Up to 100% OA (HDB loan); 20% OA + 5% cash (bank loan) Up to 20% OA + 5% cash min VL applies
Monthly Instalment Full from OA (up to WL) From OA (up to WL) Cash after WL hit
BSD From OA From OA Pay within 14 days of OTP
Legal Fees From OA From OA Capped at actual fees
Accrued Interest Rate 2.5% p.a. compounded monthly 2.5% p.a. compounded monthly Returned to CPF on sale
Valuation Limit Lower of price/value Lower of price/value COV must be cash
Withdrawal Limit 120% of VL 120% of VL No CPF use after WL hit
After Age 55 OA above BRS (S$106,500 in 2026) OA above BRS RA must be funded first
Leasehold <60yr remaining Pro-rated by age-95 rule Pro-rated by age-95 rule Nil if <20yr remaining
Commercial / Industrial Not permitted Not permitted Residential property only

Worked Example: Mr and Mrs Lim — HDB Resale in Bishan 2026

Mr and Mrs Lim (both Singapore Citizens, aged 32 and 30) purchase a 5-Room HDB resale flat in Bishan for S$780,000. The CPF Board assesses the market value at S$770,000, giving a Valuation Limit of S$770,000 and a Withdrawal Limit of S$924,000.

They take a bank loan at 75% LTV: loan S$585,000 at 3.0% p.a. over 25 years = S$2,773 per month. The 25% downpayment is S$195,000, of which 5% (S$39,000) must be cash; the remaining S$156,000 comes from their combined OA.

Item Amount (S$) Source
Down Payment (20%) 156,000 CPF OA
Down Payment (5% min cash) 39,000 Cash
BSD (1%x180K + 2%x180K + 3%x390K) 19,500 CPF OA
Legal Fees (est.) 3,200 CPF OA
Total CPF at Completion 178,700

After 15 years, assuming the Lims have used their combined OA consistently to service the mortgage, total CPF withdrawn is approximately S$498,000 (principal instalments plus upfront costs). At 2.5% p.a. compounded monthly, accrued interest over 15 years on the average CPF balance used is approximately S$112,000, bringing total CPF to return to S$610,000.

If the flat sells for S$1,050,000 (appreciation of approximately 35% over 15 years), the net position is as follows. Outstanding loan balance after 15 years of a 25-year mortgage: approximately S$255,000.

Item Amount (S$)
Sale Price 1,050,000
Less: Outstanding Loan Balance (255,000)
Less: Agent Commission (1%) (10,500)
Less: Legal Fees (conveyancing) (2,500)
Less: CPF Refund (principal plus accrued interest) (610,000)
Net Cash Proceeds 172,000
CPF Returned to Account (available for next property) 610,000

The S$172,000 cash proceeds plus S$610,000 returned to CPF gives the Lims a total of S$782,000 to deploy toward their next property — roughly equivalent to their original property purchase price. This illustrates how CPF recycling works across property transactions.

Why This Matters: The OA Rate vs. Mortgage Rate Decision

With CPF OA earning 2.5% and current bank mortgage rates ranging from 2.8% to 3.3% (3-month compounded SORA plus bank spread as of mid-2026), the gap between CPF earning rate and borrowing cost has narrowed substantially from the peaks of 4% and above seen in 2023–2024. This changes the calculus on whether to maximise CPF usage or conserve OA for retirement. When borrowing costs exceed OA returns by more than 1%, deploying CPF to reduce the loan balance is mathematically superior. When rates are close or below 2.5%, retaining OA to compound for retirement may be more advantageous.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the CPF Board periodically review the OA rate floor. Currently, the OA floor of 2.5% has been maintained since 1 January 1999 as a legislative minimum under the CPF Act, providing a reliable benchmark for planning.

What Might Come Next

CPF housing policy tends to evolve incrementally rather than through sudden overhauls. The most likely near-term adjustments involve the leasehold age-95 rule, which may be extended or refined as Singapore’s ageing housing stock becomes a more pressing policy issue. The CPF Advisory Panel’s 2016 recommendations (on which the BRS/FRS/ERS structure is based) are due for periodic review, and the BRS itself rises by approximately 3.5% annually, making future property top-up obligations modestly more demanding for older buyers each year. Buyers considering leveraging CPF for property in 2027 and beyond should monitor the CPF Board’s annual circular for BRS adjustments, typically published each January.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use CPF OA to pay the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD)?

No. CPF OA cannot be used to pay ABSD. ABSD is a separate stamp duty charge levied by IRAS on top of the standard BSD, and the CPF Board’s Housing Withdrawal Scheme only permits OA withdrawals for BSD, not ABSD. ABSD must be paid in cash. On a second property purchase in 2026, a Singapore Citizen pays 20% ABSD — on a S$1.2M condo, that is S$240,000 in cash that cannot be sourced from CPF. This is one reason why the ABSD is a significant barrier to property investment for most CPF-dependent buyers. See our complete ABSD guide for full rate tables.

What happens to CPF accrued interest if I never sell the property?

If you never sell during your lifetime, the accrued interest obligation forms part of your estate. Upon your death, the property may be transferred to beneficiaries, but any CPF used must still be accounted for under the CPF Nomination and Housing Withdrawal Scheme. Beneficiaries who receive the property inherit both the asset and the outstanding CPF charge — if they subsequently sell, the full principal plus accrued interest still returns to the deceased’s CPF account (and is distributed per the nomination or Public Trustee rules). For a detailed discussion of property inheritance mechanics, see our Singapore Property Succession Guide 2026.

Can I use my spouse’s CPF OA for my property?

Yes, if you are co-owners on the property title. Both owners listed on the title deed may each deploy their individual OA toward the same property — the Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit apply to the property as a whole, not to each individual. The CPF Board tracks each member’s contribution separately. If one party’s OA is exhausted first, the other’s OA can continue funding monthly instalments. A spouse who is not listed on the title deed cannot use their CPF for that property. This is why adding a co-owner with strong CPF reserves is a common strategy for financing larger purchases.

Can a Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) use CPF OA for property?

Yes. SPRs contribute to CPF and are eligible to use their OA for property under the same framework as Singapore Citizens, with two key differences: SPRs cannot purchase new HDB BTO flats (they may only buy resale HDB flats after obtaining SPR status for at least 3 years), and SPRs pay higher ABSD rates (5% on first property purchase as of 2026, versus 0% for SCs). Within those eligibility constraints, the OA usage rules — Valuation Limit, Withdrawal Limit, accrued interest, leasehold restrictions — apply identically to SPRs and SCs.

Should I maximise CPF OA use or pay more cash to reduce my loan?

The answer depends on the spread between your mortgage rate and the OA rate. If your bank mortgage rate is 3.0% and your OA earns 2.5%, deploying OA saves you 3.0% but foregoes 2.5% — a net benefit of 0.5% per annum. If rates fall below 2.5% (which occurred briefly in 2021), retaining OA is mathematically better. Beyond pure arithmetic, CPF provides a capital buffer for unexpected liquidity needs (subject to CPF Act withdrawal rules after age 55), whereas cash reduces the loan balance immediately. Most financial advisers in Singapore recommend a hybrid approach: use OA for monthly instalments while maintaining a cash buffer of 6–12 months of mortgage payments for emergencies.

Can I top up my CPF OA with cash specifically to pay for property?

Not directly. You cannot make a voluntary cash top-up designated for property payments — CPF top-ups go to the Special Account (for retirement savings) or Retirement Account (after age 55), not the OA. However, if you make a Voluntary Contribution to CPF (splitting across OA/SA/Medisave in proportion to the prevailing allocation rates), the OA portion increases and becomes available for property use in the normal way. The 2026 allocation rate for members below 35 is 23% of wages to OA out of a total 37% CPF contribution rate. Top-ups and their tax-relief implications are governed by IRAS guidelines.

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Disclaimer

This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. CPF rules, interest rates, retirement sums, and withdrawal limits are subject to change — readers should verify all figures with the CPF Board at cpf.gov.sg, HDB at hdb.gov.sg, and IRAS at iras.gov.sg before making any property or financial decisions. Consult a licensed mortgage broker, financial adviser, or conveyancing solicitor for advice tailored to your personal circumstances.

HDB Upgrader’s Complete Guide 2026: From HDB Flat to Private Property

HDB Upgrader’s Complete Guide 2026: From HDB Flat to Private Property

Quick Answer — HDB Upgrader Guide Singapore 2026

  • MOP first: You must fulfil the Minimum Occupation Period (5 years for most flats; 10 years for Prime and Plus flats launched from August 2024) before selling your HDB flat on the open market or buying a private residential property while retaining the flat.
  • Two upgrade strategies: “Sell first, buy later” avoids ABSD on your private purchase (you are a first-time private buyer). “Buy first, sell later” triggers 20% ABSD on the private property for SCs — S$270,000 on a S$1.35M condo — though an ABSD remission is available if you sell within 6 months.
  • CPF refund: When you sell your HDB flat, all CPF OA monies used for the purchase — plus accrued interest — must be refunded to your CPF account. The net cash you receive is the sale price minus the outstanding HDB loan (if any) and the CPF refund.
  • Grant repayment: CPF Housing Grants (EHG, Family Grant, etc.) used for the HDB flat do not need to be repaid upon sale — they are subsumed into the CPF OA refund.
  • HDB loan discharged on sale: The HDB loan is discharged at the point of the flat sale. Any outstanding balance is deducted from the sale proceeds before cash is released.
  • Private property financing: After selling your HDB flat, you are eligible for a bank loan of up to 75% LTV for a private property purchase. You cannot use an HDB concessionary loan for private property.
  • ABSD remission (SC married couples): If you buy a private property before selling your HDB flat, you can claim an ABSD refund if the HDB flat is sold within 6 months of completing the private purchase.

Who is an HDB Upgrader?

In Singapore’s property lexicon, an HDB upgrader is a flat owner — typically a Singapore Citizen couple who purchased a Housing & Development Board flat as their first home — who subsequently wishes to sell the flat and purchase a private residential property. The upgrade journey is one of the most significant financial decisions many Singaporeans make: it unlocks accumulated HDB equity, introduces bank mortgage financing (with its stricter credit requirements), and subjects the buyer to ABSD unless the timing is managed carefully.

The upgrader market is a structural pillar of Singapore’s private residential demand. According to the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), HDB upgraders historically account for 30–40% of new private condominium sales in Outside Central Region (OCR) developments. Policy levers — chiefly ABSD and MOP duration — are calibrated in part to pace the rate at which HDB flat owners enter the private market.

Understanding the mechanics of the upgrade journey — from MOP completion to key collection — is essential to avoid costly timing errors, particularly the S$270,000+ ABSD cash outlay that catches many upgraders off guard.

Step 1: Confirm Your MOP Status

The Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) is the period during which an HDB flat owner must occupy the flat as their principal residence before they are permitted to sell it on the open market or to purchase a private residential property.

The standard MOP is 5 years from the date the keys are collected (the date of possession), not from the date the sale was exercised or the mortgage was drawn. The MOP clock stops if the flat is rented out in full, if the flat owner stays overseas for extended periods, or in other prescribed circumstances — so owners who sublet their flat prematurely may find their effective MOP extended.

For Prime and Plus classification flats launched from August 2024 onwards under the new HDB classification framework, the MOP is 10 years, and additional ownership restrictions apply (including an income ceiling on resale buyers and a clawback provision on subsidy). Owners of these flats face a longer upgrader journey.

HDB upgrader journey 5 steps timeline Singapore 2026

Figure 1: The HDB upgrader’s journey — five key steps from MOP completion to private property key collection. Source: HDB | lovelyhomes.com.sg

Step 2: Understand What You Will Receive from the HDB Sale

The sale of your HDB flat generates two streams of value: a cash component and a CPF refund. The distinction matters enormously for financial planning, because the CPF refund goes back into your CPF Ordinary Account — it cannot be used freely as cash, though it can be used for the down payment and stamp duty on your subsequent private property purchase.

The CPF OA refund comprises: (a) the principal CPF OA amount withdrawn for the flat, and (b) accrued interest — the notional interest CPF Board charges on those withdrawn funds at the CPF OA rate (currently 2.5% p.a. on the first S$20,000 of OA, 3.5% p.a. thereafter, effective 1 January 2024). Accrued interest compounds over the full holding period and can be significant: on S$150,000 CPF withdrawn over 8 years, accrued interest at 2.5% compounding amounts to approximately S$34,000.

HDB sale proceeds by flat type cash vs CPF refund 2026 median prices

Figure 2: Estimated HDB sale proceeds by flat type — cash component vs CPF OA refund, based on 2026 median resale prices. Source: HDB | lovelyhomes.com.sg

If there is an outstanding HDB concessionary loan, the remaining balance is deducted from sale proceeds before cash is released to the seller. HDB loan interest rate is currently set at the CPF OA rate + 0.1% (i.e. approximately 2.6% p.a.), making it among the most competitive mortgage rates in Singapore — but flat owners who have used HDB loans extensively may find less net cash available after discharge.

Step 3: Decide on Your Upgrade Strategy — Sell First or Buy First?

The single most consequential decision in the upgrade journey is the sequencing of transactions: do you sell your HDB flat before purchasing the private property, or do you purchase first and sell after?

The sell-first strategy means you complete the sale of your HDB flat, receive the sale proceeds (cash + CPF refund), arrange interim accommodation (typically renting), and then purchase the private property as a first-time private-property buyer. The key advantage: you pay 0% ABSD on the private purchase (for SC buyers with no other property). The key risk: you may miss your preferred private property while searching for one during the rental period, and the private property market may move against you in the interim.

The buy-first strategy means you exercise an OTP on a private property while still owning the HDB flat, paying 20% ABSD on the private purchase price in cash. You then have 6 months from the date of completing the private property purchase (Legal Completion) to sell the HDB flat and apply for an ABSD remission refund from IRAS. If the HDB flat is sold within 6 months, IRAS refunds the ABSD paid (less a processing deduction of 0.1% p.p. on the refunded amount, effective from certain periods). If you miss the 6-month window, the ABSD is forfeited — a potentially catastrophic financial loss.

ABSD cost comparison sell first vs buy first HDB upgrader Singapore 2026

Figure 3: ABSD cost comparison — “sell first” avoids ABSD entirely; “buy first” triggers 20% ABSD but may be remitted if HDB flat sold within 6 months. Source: IRAS | lovelyhomes.com.sg

Summary Table: Key Upgrader Decision Points

Decision Point Sell First, Buy Later Buy First, Sell Later (+ ABSD remission)
ABSD upfront S$0 (first-time private buyer) 20% on purchase price (e.g. S$270,000 on S$1.35M) — cash only
ABSD recovery N/A — not paid Refundable if HDB sold within 6 months of private completion
CPF available Full CPF refund from HDB sale usable for private downpayment CPF still tied up in HDB until flat sold
Accommodation Must rent during search period Can stay in HDB until private is ready
Market risk Private prices may rise during rental period Locks in private price; HDB sale price uncertainty
Bridge financing Not required May need bridging loan if cash-flow is tight
MOP Standard flat 5 years from possession 5 years from possession
MOP Prime/Plus flat 10 years from possession 10 years from possession

Worked Example: The Tan Family Upgrade

Profile: Mr Tan (SC, 42) and Mrs Tan (SC, 40) own a 4-room HDB flat in Bishan, purchased in 2016 for S$470,000 using an HDB concessionary loan of S$376,000. MOP completed May 2021. Current market value: S$620,000. Outstanding HDB loan: S$92,000 (after 10 years of repayments). Total CPF OA withdrawn (both): S$185,000. Accrued CPF interest: S$42,000. Combined gross income: S$13,000/month.

HDB Sale proceeds:

  • Sale price: S$620,000
  • Less HDB loan discharge: S$92,000
  • Less CPF refund (principal + accrued interest): S$227,000
  • Net cash proceeds: S$301,000
  • CPF OA balance after refund: S$227,000 (reusable for private purchase)

Target private property: 3-bedroom resale condominium in Bishan (D20), S$1,380,000.

Sell-first strategy (0% ABSD):

  • BSD = 1% × S$180,000 + 2% × S$180,000 + 3% × S$640,000 + 4% × S$380,000 = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$15,200 = S$39,800 (can use CPF OA)
  • 25% down payment = S$345,000 (5% cash min = S$69,000; remaining S$276,000 from CPF OA)
  • Available CPF OA after BSD: S$227,000 − S$39,800 = S$187,200 → cash shortfall of S$276,000 − S$187,200 = S$88,800 (to be covered by net cash proceeds S$301,000)
  • Bank loan: 75% × S$1,380,000 = S$1,035,000 at 3.5% over 25 years → monthly S$5,183
  • TDSR: S$5,183 / S$13,000 = 39.9% — PASS (well within 55% cap)
  • Total cash outlay: S$69,000 (down) + S$88,800 (CPF shortfall) + S$0 ABSD + S$8,000 legal fees = ~S$165,800 in cash

Buy-first strategy (20% ABSD, remission expected):

  • ABSD = 20% × S$1,380,000 = S$276,000 cash upfront (before HDB sale)
  • The Tans must fund S$276,000 ABSD + S$345,000 down payment + S$39,800 BSD simultaneously — total cash need: S$660,800 at exercise. If their HDB sale is completed within 6 months of private legal completion, IRAS refunds S$276,000 ABSD (less 0.1% = S$275,724 net refund).
  • Risk: HDB not sold within 6 months → S$276,000 lost.

Verdict: For the Tan family, sell-first is clearly superior — the net cash from HDB sale is sufficient to fund the private purchase without triggering ABSD, and TDSR is comfortably met. Buy-first requires bridge financing of ~S$660,000 simultaneously, which is feasible but expensive and risky if HDB sale stalls.

Why This Matters: Common Upgrader Mistakes

The three most expensive upgrader mistakes in Singapore each carry a six-figure price tag. First, miscounting the MOP: flat owners who sublet their entire flat for periods during the MOP — even with HDB approval — pause the MOP clock, sometimes discovering that their expected MOP date is later than they assumed. A single year’s delay translates into a year’s additional rent if the family has already moved out.

Second, assuming ABSD remission is automatic: the IRAS remission must be actively applied for, with evidence of the HDB sale completion. Families who miss the 6-month window — even by days — forfeit the remission entirely. Delays in HDB sale registration at the HDB Hub can erode the 6-month window; upgraders should build in a buffer and not list the HDB flat for sale at the last possible moment.

Third, ignoring CPF accrued interest: many upgraders are surprised to find that their CPF OA balance after the flat sale is materially lower than expected, because accrued interest — compounding for 5–10 years — has grown the CPF refund obligation substantially. This reduces the CPF available for the private property down payment and may require a larger cash component.

What Might Come Next: Policy Outlook for Upgraders

The Singapore government has shown a willingness to adjust ABSD policy in response to market conditions. The August 2024 introduction of the Prime and Plus HDB flat classification — with its 10-year MOP — signals an intent to slow the entry of Prime/Plus flat owners into the private market, preserving HDB estates as long-term communities rather than transient stepping-stones.

The ABSD remission for SC married couples remains in place as at July 2026. There is periodic market commentary that the 6-month window may be reduced if private prices accelerate — buyers should not rely on the remission window remaining unchanged. IRAS reviews the scheme in conjunction with broader cooling measure calibration.

On financing, MAS guidelines on TDSR and LTV have been stable since 2023. Any future tightening — such as a reduction in the 75% LTV cap for bank loans on private residential property — would increase the cash required for the down payment and could reduce upgrader demand at higher price points.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Can I buy a private property while still in my HDB flat’s MOP?

No. HDB rules prohibit flat owners from owning or purchasing a private residential property in Singapore during the MOP. You must wait until the MOP is fully served before exercising an OTP on a private property. If you purchase a private property during the MOP, HDB may compulsorily acquire your flat. The prohibition covers direct ownership — owning shares in a company that owns private property is a separate issue and subject to its own rules.

2. Do I have to sell my HDB flat when I buy a private property?

No — you are not legally required to sell your HDB flat when you purchase a private property after MOP completion, provided you pay the applicable ABSD (20% for SC buying a 2nd residential property). Many upgraders choose to retain the HDB flat as a rental asset. However, renting out an HDB flat requires HDB approval, and both flat owners must be at least 35 years old (for non-family schemes). Also note: retaining both properties means the HDB flat rental income may affect TDSR calculations for the private property mortgage.

3. How long does an HDB resale typically take to complete?

An HDB resale transaction typically takes 8–12 weeks from the date an Option to Purchase (OTP) is granted to the HDB Hub’s completion and key handover. The process involves the HDB resale portal submission within 7 days of exercising the OTP, a First Appointment (HDB confirms eligibility), and a Second Appointment (key handover). Delays can occur if there are CPF accrued interest calculations to resolve, outstanding town council arrears, or if HDB flat type or scheme eligibility checks surface issues.

4. What is a bridging loan and when do upgraders need one?

A bridging loan is a short-term loan from a bank that covers the period between purchasing the new private property and receiving the proceeds from the HDB flat sale. Upgraders who adopt the buy-first strategy often need a bridging loan to fund the initial private property down payment (or ABSD, if applicable) before their HDB sale proceeds are available. Bridging loans in Singapore typically carry interest rates of 5–7% per annum and are repaid in full when the HDB sale is completed. They are a useful tool but add cost — every month the bridge is outstanding costs approximately S$400–S$500 per S$100,000 borrowed.

5. Can I use CPF OA from my HDB sale refund to pay the ABSD on my new private property?

No. ABSD must be paid entirely in cash — it cannot be funded from CPF OA. This is one of the most important cash-flow constraints in the upgrade journey. At S$270,000 ABSD on a S$1.35M private property, an upgrader using the buy-first strategy must have S$270,000 in cash available at the point of OTP exercise, in addition to the cash portion of the 25% down payment. CPF OA (including the refund from the HDB sale) can be used for the BSD and the down payment for the private property, but not for ABSD.

6. What happens if I cannot sell my HDB flat within 6 months for the ABSD remission?

If the HDB flat is not sold (legal completion of resale) within 6 months of the private property’s legal completion, the 20% ABSD paid upfront is forfeited — it is not refundable under any extension of time. IRAS does not grant extensions. If you have not yet found a buyer for the HDB flat and the 6-month deadline is approaching, you may need to price the flat more aggressively to accelerate the sale. This is why upgraders using the buy-first strategy typically list their HDB flat for sale as soon as they have exercised the OTP on the private property.

7. Are there any grants available to HDB upgraders buying private property?

No — CPF Housing Grants (EHG, Family Grant, Step-Up Grant, Singles Grant, Proximity Housing Grant) are only available for HDB flat purchases, not for private residential property. When you upgrade to a private property, you do not receive any government grant. The only financial assistance is the ability to use your CPF OA savings for the private property down payment and BSD, subject to the CPF Withdrawal Limit and Valuation Limit rules.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. ABSD rates, MOP requirements, CPF rules, HDB regulations, and financing policies are subject to change. Readers should verify current information with the relevant authorities — the Housing & Development Board (HDB) at hdb.gov.sg, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) at iras.gov.sg, the Central Provident Fund Board (CPF) at cpf.gov.sg, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) at mas.gov.sg — and consult a licensed conveyancing solicitor and/or a registered estate agent before making any property transaction decisions.

Singapore Joint Property Ownership Guide 2026: Tenancy-in-Common vs Joint Tenancy Explained

Singapore Joint Property Ownership Guide 2026: Tenancy-in-Common vs Joint Tenancy Explained

Quick Answer — Joint Property Ownership Singapore 2026

  • Two legal structures: Joint Tenancy (equal shares, right of survivorship) and Tenancy-in-Common (any split, no survivorship — shares pass via will).
  • ABSD is profile-based: each co-buyer pays ABSD according to their own buyer profile and property count — there is no ABSD discount for buying jointly.
  • CPF is individual: each co-owner draws from their own CPF Ordinary Account (OA) in proportion to their ownership share.
  • TDSR applies jointly: both co-buyers’ incomes are combined, and so are all their existing financial obligations — the 55% TDSR ceiling covers the full loan repayment.
  • Decoupling is possible for properties held as Tenancy-in-Common — one co-owner buys out the other’s share, paying ABSD only on the acquired portion. Not possible for Joint Tenancy without first converting.
  • Right of survivorship in Joint Tenancy automatically transfers the deceased’s share to the surviving owner — bypassing probate. TIC shares fall under the estate and require a will or intestacy rules.
  • Singapore Citizens buying together as first-time buyers pay 0% ABSD. If either buyer already owns a residential property, they pay 20% ABSD on the full price.

What is Joint Property Ownership in Singapore?

When two or more people purchase a residential property together in Singapore, they become co-owners. Singapore law recognises two forms of co-ownership: Joint Tenancy and Tenancy-in-Common. The choice between them affects inheritance, the ability to sell independently, stamp duty strategy, and — crucially — your exposure to the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) on future purchases.

Joint ownership is extremely common in Singapore. Most married couples purchasing an HDB flat or private condominium do so as joint owners, combining incomes to pass the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) and Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) thresholds set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). Unmarried siblings, parents and children, and business partners also frequently co-purchase investment properties.

Understanding the legal and financial mechanics before you sign the Option to Purchase (OTP) is essential. The ownership structure you choose on day one determines what options you have years later — including whether you can decouple to buy a second property without ABSD.

Joint Tenancy vs Tenancy-in-Common: The Core Differences

The two ownership structures share the feature that all co-owners are equally responsible for the mortgage — both are jointly and severally liable to the lender. Beyond that, they diverge significantly.

Joint Tenancy treats the property as a single, indivisible whole. Each owner holds an equal share by law — a married couple in joint tenancy each hold 50%, regardless of how much each contributed to the purchase. If one owner dies, their interest automatically passes to the surviving owner(s) by the right of survivorship, outside of the deceased’s estate. This is why joint tenancy is the default choice for married couples: it avoids probate complications and ensures the family home passes seamlessly.

Tenancy-in-Common, by contrast, allows co-owners to hold defined, unequal shares — for example, 70/30 or 80/20 — reflecting their respective CPF and cash contributions. Each co-owner’s share is a distinct legal interest that they can will to a beneficiary, sell independently (with the other owner’s knowledge but not necessarily consent, depending on the sale structure), or use as a platform for decoupling. There is no right of survivorship: if a Tenancy-in-Common co-owner dies intestate, their share passes under Singapore’s Intestate Succession Act, not automatically to the co-owner.

Joint tenancy vs tenancy-in-common comparison table Singapore 2026

Figure 1: Key differences between Joint Tenancy and Tenancy-in-Common in Singapore. Source: Singapore Land Authority (SLA) | lovelyhomes.com.sg

How ABSD Applies to Joint Property Purchases

The Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD), administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), applies whenever a buyer acquires an additional residential property. For joint purchases, the rule is straightforward but often misunderstood: ABSD is computed based on the profile of the buyer who attracts the higher rate.

This means that if a Singapore Citizen (SC) and a Permanent Resident (PR) buy together, and the PR is deemed to be acquiring a second property (5% ABSD applies to PRs on their first property, 25% on their second), the ABSD rate applicable to that joint purchase reflects the higher-rate buyer’s position. The full ABSD is computed on the full purchase price.

More practically: an SC married couple buying their first property together pay 0% ABSD. But if either spouse already owns a property — even one inherited or received as a gift — the couple faces a 20% ABSD on the full price of the new purchase. At S$1.5 million, that is S$300,000 payable in cash (ABSD cannot be funded from CPF OA). This is the biggest single financial surprise for HDB upgraders who have not sold their flat before exercising an OTP on a new property.

ABSD rates for joint property purchases by buyer profile Singapore 2026

Figure 2: ABSD rates for joint purchases by buyer-profile combination. ABSD is computed on the full purchase price. Source: IRAS | lovelyhomes.com.sg

CPF Usage in Joint Property Purchases

The Central Provident Fund (CPF) Board allows each co-owner to use their own CPF Ordinary Account (OA) savings towards a jointly-owned property, subject to the Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit rules. Each co-owner’s CPF usage is capped in proportion to their ownership share.

For HDB properties, this is straightforward: each co-owner uses their OA for the down payment and monthly mortgage servicing, with the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) capping total repayments at 30% of gross monthly income. For private properties (condominiums, landed homes, ECs post-privatisation), the TDSR cap of 55% of gross monthly income applies. Critically, CPF usage for private property is also subject to the Valuation Limit — once total CPF withdrawn equals the property’s original purchase price or valuation (whichever is lower), further CPF can only be used if the property has at least 60 years’ remaining lease at the time of purchase, and CPF usage may be further pro-rated for properties with shorter leases.

In a Tenancy-in-Common structure, CPF accrued interest — the interest CPF Board charges on OA monies withdrawn for property — must be refunded to each co-owner’s CPF account upon sale, proportionally. This accrued interest accumulates at the CPF OA interest rate (currently 2.5% per annum on the first S$20,000, 3.5% thereafter — effective 1 January 2024) and can significantly reduce the net cash proceeds from a property sale after many years of ownership.

Decoupling: Converting Ownership to Access a Second Property

Decoupling is a legal strategy whereby one co-owner transfers or sells their share in a jointly-owned property to the other, so that the departing co-owner is no longer a property owner and can subsequently purchase a second property as a “first-time buyer” — paying 0% ABSD (for SCs) instead of 20%.

Decoupling requires the property to be held as Tenancy-in-Common. A Joint Tenancy must first be severed (converted to TIC) via a Deed of Severance lodged with the Singapore Land Registry before decoupling can proceed. The process involves: (1) severing the joint tenancy if applicable; (2) the selling co-owner executing a Transfer Instrument conveying their share to the buying co-owner; (3) the buying co-owner paying ABSD on the acquired share’s value (not the full property value, if they already own the remaining share); and (4) legal fees typically S$3,000–S$5,000 per party.

IRAS scrutinises decoupling transactions under anti-avoidance provisions. Where the transfer is purely nominal and consideration is not reflective of market value, IRAS may challenge the arrangement. Always engage a licensed conveyancing solicitor and ensure the transfer price is at or close to open-market value for the share being transferred.

Note: As at 2026, HDB flats cannot be decoupled in the same manner as private residential properties, due to HDB rules prohibiting partial transfers of HDB flat ownership except in specific circumstances (e.g. matrimonial transfers upon divorce, or change in family nucleus for eligibility purposes). The decoupling strategy is therefore most relevant to private residential property owners.

Upfront Cost Comparison: Sole vs Joint Purchase

Upfront costs comparison sole vs joint property purchase Singapore 2026 at S$1.5M

Figure 3: Upfront costs for sole vs joint purchase at S$1.5M — SC buyer profiles (25% down payment assumed, bank financing). Source: IRAS | lovelyhomes.com.sg

The upfront cost difference between a joint first-time purchase and a joint purchase where one party already owns a property is substantial. The chart above illustrates the ABSD component: for a couple buying their first property together at S$1.5 million, there is no ABSD. If either party already owns a home, the couple pays S$300,000 in ABSD — entirely in cash — in addition to the 25% down payment of S$375,000 and BSD of approximately S$43,800. Total upfront outlay jumps from roughly S$418,800 to S$718,800.

Summary Table: Joint Ownership at a Glance

Factor Joint Tenancy Tenancy-in-Common
Shares Equal (50/50 by law) Any ratio (e.g. 70/30)
Survivorship Auto-transfer to survivor Passes to estate / will
Independent sale of share Not possible Possible (co-owner’s interest)
Decoupling eligibility Must sever JT first Yes — directly possible
CPF usage Each owner’s OA (50/50) Each owner’s OA (in share ratio)
ABSD profile Higher of two profiles applies Higher of two profiles applies
TDSR calculation Combined income, combined obligations Combined income, combined obligations
Best suited for Married couples, family home Investors, unequal contributors, decoupling strategy

Worked Example: Lim Couple — Joint Purchase with ABSD Implication

Scenario: Mr Lim (SC, 38) and Mrs Lim (SC, 36) are HDB flat owners (4-room in Tampines, purchased 2019 — MOP completed August 2024). They wish to buy a 2-bedroom resale condominium in District 19 for S$1,350,000 as a joint investment property without first selling their HDB flat.

Buyer profiles: Both Mr and Mrs Lim own the HDB flat jointly. A second property purchase makes both of them “second-time buyers”.

ABSD payable: SC buying 2nd residential property = 20% ABSD.

  • ABSD = 20% × S$1,350,000 = S$270,000 (payable in cash within 14 days of OTP exercise)
  • BSD = 1% × S$180,000 + 2% × S$180,000 + 3% × S$640,000 + 4% × S$350,000 = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$14,000 = S$38,600 (can use CPF OA)
  • 25% down payment = S$337,500 (at least 5% in cash, remainder CPF OA)
  • Total upfront ≈ S$646,100 (cash component alone ≈ S$337,500 + S$270,000 = S$607,500)

TDSR check: Bank loan 75% × S$1,350,000 = S$1,012,500 at 4.0% over 25 years → monthly repayment ~S$5,330. Combined gross income S$14,000/month. TDSR = S$5,330 / S$14,000 = 38.1% — well within the 55% cap. ✓

Alternative (sell first): If the Lims sell their HDB flat before exercising the OTP on the condo, their subsequent purchase is as first-time buyers (assuming they have no other property). ABSD = 0%. Total upfront drops by S$270,000. The trade-off: interim accommodation costs and the risk of timing the property market.

Why This Matters: Common Joint-Ownership Mistakes

Joint property ownership mistakes in Singapore typically fall into three categories. The first is choosing the wrong structure: couples who intend to decouple later but buy in Joint Tenancy find they must pay additional legal fees for the severance step — a cost and delay that Tenancy-in-Common would have avoided from the outset.

The second is overlooking the ABSD trigger: many buyers assume that buying jointly means only one of them “owns” the property, or that ownership below 50% is somehow exempt from ABSD. IRAS does not distinguish — any ownership interest in a residential property, however small, counts for ABSD-profile purposes.

The third is CPF accrued interest surprise at exit: couples who have used substantial CPF OA funds over a long holding period are often shocked to discover that the CPF Board requires full refund of withdrawn amounts plus accrued interest upon sale. On a property held for 15 years with S$300,000 CPF withdrawn, accrued interest at 2.5–3.5% per annum compounds to over S$130,000 — meaningfully reducing net cash proceeds.

What Might Come Next: Policy Outlook

The Singapore government has made clear in successive Budget and National Day Rally statements that property cooling measures — including ABSD — remain calibrated to prevent speculative demand and preserve housing affordability. There is no current signal that ABSD rates for joint purchases will be relaxed. If anything, the 2023 rate hikes (to 60% for foreigners and 20% for SC second-time buyers) indicate that the authorities remain willing to tighten when prices surge.

On decoupling, IRAS has not yet announced specific anti-avoidance regulations targeting Tenancy-in-Common transfers between spouses, but practitioners note increased scrutiny on transactions where the transferring price deviates materially from open-market value. Buyers considering decoupling in 2026 should document their transactions carefully and obtain an independent valuation.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) long-run supply pipeline — including the Government Land Sales (GLS) programme’s 4,745-unit Confirmed List for the second half of 2026 — is intended to moderate price growth over the medium term, which may reduce the urgency of complex joint-ownership strategies for buyers who can wait.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Can a Singapore Citizen and a foreigner buy a property together in Singapore?

Yes, but the ABSD implication is significant. Where one co-buyer is a foreigner (non-SPR), the applicable ABSD rate for the joint purchase is the foreigner rate of 60%, applied to the full purchase price. This applies regardless of which co-owner holds what share. Foreigners purchasing residential property in Singapore are restricted to non-landed residential property (condominiums, apartments) in most cases — landed residential property requires prior approval from the Minister for Law under the Residential Property Act.

2. How does Joint Tenancy affect my estate planning?

In a Joint Tenancy, the right of survivorship overrides any will you have written with regard to that property. If you hold your home in Joint Tenancy and your will directs that the property should go to your children, your will is ineffective on that point — the property passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant(s). If you want to direct your property interest via your will, you must convert your ownership to Tenancy-in-Common first by executing a Deed of Severance. The conversion does not affect the mortgage and can be done at any time without triggering ABSD or BSD.

3. Does adding a co-owner to an existing property trigger ABSD?

Yes. Adding a co-owner to a property that you already own involves a transfer of a partial interest in that property. The new co-owner is treated as acquiring a property interest, and ABSD applies based on their buyer profile and property count — on the market value of the share being transferred. An exception applies for transfers between spouses under certain conditions (e.g., for love and affection or matrimonial transfer), but these require careful legal structuring. Always consult a solicitor before adding a co-owner.

4. Can I use my CPF OA to pay the other co-owner’s share of the purchase price?

No. CPF OA funds can only be used to service your own share of the property — you cannot top up a co-owner’s shortfall using your CPF. Each co-owner’s CPF contribution is limited to their proportional ownership share. For example, in a 70/30 Tenancy-in-Common property priced at S$1,000,000, the 70% owner can withdraw from their CPF OA up to 70% of the Valuation Limit, and the 30% owner up to 30%.

5. What is the ABSD remission for married couples buying their first property together?

There is no ABSD to remit in the first place — Singapore Citizens buying their first residential property pay 0% ABSD regardless of whether they buy jointly or alone. The relevant remission for couples applies when an SC married couple buys a second property together: they can apply for an ABSD remission (refund) if they sell their existing property within 6 months of completing the purchase of the new private property. The remission is not automatic — it must be applied for via IRAS within 6 months of the sale completion of the first property.

6. What happens to a jointly-owned property during a divorce?

Upon divorce, jointly-owned property is subject to the division of matrimonial assets under the Women’s Charter. The court may order the property to be sold and proceeds split, or direct one spouse to transfer their share to the other — with the receiving spouse paying any applicable stamp duty on the transfer. Transfers ordered by the court in matrimonial proceedings may be eligible for ABSD and BSD remission; consult a family law solicitor for the applicable rules, which have specific conditions.

7. Can I decouple if my property has an outstanding HDB concessionary loan?

Decoupling is only relevant for private residential properties — not HDB flats. HDB flats cannot be decoupled in the same way because HDB rules prohibit partial transfers of flat ownership except in prescribed circumstances (divorce, death, change of flat ownership for eligibility purposes, etc.). If you want to apply decoupling strategy, you must first complete your HDB flat’s Minimum Occupation Period, sell the flat, and then purchase two separate private properties — one in each spouse’s name — to avoid the ABSD on a second property.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Property ownership structures, ABSD rates, CPF rules, and HDB regulations are subject to change. Readers should verify information with the relevant authorities — the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) at iras.gov.sg, the Central Provident Fund Board (CPF) at cpf.gov.sg, the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) at sla.gov.sg, and the Housing & Development Board (HDB) at hdb.gov.sg — and consult a licensed conveyancing solicitor and/or a registered property agent before making any property transaction decisions.

Singapore Mortgage Refinancing Guide 2026: When to Refinance, How Much You Save

Singapore Mortgage Refinancing Guide 2026: When to Refinance, How Much You Save

Quick Answer: Singapore Mortgage Refinancing 2026 — Key Takeaways

  • Refinancing replaces your existing home loan with a new one from a different bank, typically to secure a lower interest rate; repricing keeps the same bank but renegotiates the rate.
  • The best time to refinance is when your lock-in period expires — usually 2–3 years after taking the loan. Refinancing within the lock-in incurs a break cost of typically 1.5% of the outstanding loan amount.
  • Typical savings in 2026: a borrower refinancing a S$700,000 loan from 3.80% (a 2024-vintage fixed rate) to 2.90% (current refinance rate) saves approximately S$78,000 in total interest over 25 years, or around S$260/month.
  • Transaction costs are modest: legal fees run S$1,800–S$3,000; valuation fees S$300–S$600; some banks offer full legal subsidy packages for refinancers.
  • SORA-pegged floating rates (Singapore Overnight Rate Average) offer potential savings when rates fall but expose you to upward repricing; fixed rates provide certainty for 2–3 years.
  • CPF OA funds can service the new loan, but the CPF accrued interest rule means any CPF monies used must be repaid (with accrued interest at 2.5% p.a.) on eventual sale.
  • Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) still applies at refinancing — you must prove the new monthly repayment stays within 55% of your gross monthly income.
  • Process timeline: from application to completion is typically 4–8 weeks; allow 3 months before lock-in expiry to start comparing packages.

In Singapore’s rate environment of 2024–2026, tens of thousands of homeowners took out fixed-rate mortgages at 3.50%–4.00% when the US Federal Reserve was tightening monetary policy. As those lock-in periods approach their two-year anniversary, refinancing has moved from a niche financial exercise to a mainstream priority. This guide explains exactly when to refinance, how to calculate whether it is worth it, what the process looks like and what to watch out for.

Refinancing vs Repricing: What Is the Difference?

These two terms are often conflated, but they involve distinct processes with different cost structures:

Refinancing means taking out a new home loan from a different bank to repay your existing loan. The new bank’s solicitors handle the discharge of the old mortgage and registration of the new one. You bear legal costs (S$1,800–S$3,000), valuation fees (S$300–S$600), and potentially a break cost if you exit before the lock-in period ends. Many banks offer legal subsidy packages that rebate S$1,800–S$2,500 to offset these costs for loans above a certain quantum.

Repricing means renegotiating your interest rate with your existing bank without changing lenders. The bank may offer this as a retention offer when your lock-in approaches expiry. Repricing is simpler and cheaper (typically S$200–S$800 in administration fees), but the rate offered is often not as competitive as what a new lender will offer to win your business. The trade-off is convenience versus maximum savings.

Rule of thumb: Always get competing quotes before accepting a repricing offer from your current bank. The rate gap between a repricing offer and an aggressive refinance package from a rival bank is often 0.30%–0.60% — which on a S$700,000 loan translates to S$2,100–S$4,200 per year in interest savings.
Singapore mortgage rates comparison SORA vs fixed rate refinancing 2026
Figure 1: Left — typical mortgage rate offerings in Singapore as at July 2026, showing the current 2yr and 3yr fixed rates for new purchases and refinancing. Right — monthly repayment comparison for a S$700,000 loan at three rate scenarios over 25 years. Floating SORA-pegged rates are currently below most fixed offerings. Source: major Singapore bank public rate sheets, July 2026.

When Should You Refinance?

The single most important factor is the lock-in period. Most Singapore bank home loans carry a lock-in of 2–3 years, during which refinancing or full redemption triggers a penalty — typically 1.5% of the outstanding loan amount. On a S$700,000 outstanding balance, that is a S$10,500 penalty. You should almost never refinance within the lock-in unless the rate savings are dramatic and you have a very long holding horizon.

Outside the lock-in, refinancing is worth pursuing if the new rate is at least 0.50% lower than your current all-in rate. Below that threshold, the transaction costs (legal fees, valuation, time) may not justify the exercise unless your loan quantum is very large. The breakeven analysis in the next section provides the full framework.

Other triggers that make refinancing particularly timely:

  • Your property has appreciated significantly, improving your Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio and qualifying you for a lower rate tier.
  • Your income has increased, qualifying you for a larger loan or improving your TDSR buffer, allowing you to reduce the loan tenure and total interest.
  • Interest rates in the market have fallen materially (as has been occurring in Singapore in 2025–2026 as the Fed easing cycle feeds through to SORA and fixed-rate offerings).
  • You want to switch from a floating-rate package (with rate uncertainty) to a fixed-rate package for budget certainty.

How Much Can You Save? The Breakeven Calculation

The refinancing decision is fundamentally a breakeven analysis: total savings from a lower rate versus total cost of switching. Here is the framework:

Step 1 — Calculate monthly repayment saving:
Monthly saving = [Old monthly payment] − [New monthly payment]
Example: Old rate 3.80%, new rate 2.90%, loan S$700,000, 25 years remaining.
Old payment: S$700,000 × 0.038/12 × (1+0.038/12)^300 / ((1+0.038/12)^300−1) = S$3,609/month
New payment: S$700,000 × 0.029/12 × (1+0.029/12)^300 / ((1+0.029/12)^300−1) = S$3,349/month
Monthly saving: S$260

Step 2 — Calculate total switching cost:
Legal fees: S$2,500 (conservatively; some banks subsidise S$1,800–S$2,500)
Valuation fee: S$500
Total cost: S$3,000 (or as low as S$700 if legal subsidy applies)

Step 3 — Calculate breakeven period:
Breakeven = Total cost ÷ Monthly saving = S$3,000 ÷ S$260 = approximately 11.5 months
With full legal subsidy: S$700 ÷ S$260 = approximately 2.7 months

If you plan to hold the property for more than 12 months after refinancing (virtually all owner-occupiers will), the refinancing exercise pays for itself many times over.

Mortgage refinancing savings calculator Singapore 2026 two scenarios total interest comparison
Figure 2: Total interest savings across two refinancing scenarios. Scenario A (S$700k, 25 years remaining, 3.80%→2.90%) saves approximately S$78,000 in total interest. Scenario B (S$500k, 20 years remaining, 3.50%→2.90%) saves approximately S$38,000. Note: figures are illustrative estimates based on standard amortisation; actual savings depend on your bank’s compounding convention and any prepayment. Source: LovelyHomes calculations using standard reducing-balance methodology.

Choosing Between SORA Floating and Fixed Rate

Singapore bank mortgages are broadly offered in two flavours: floating rate (pegged to the Singapore Overnight Rate Average, or SORA, plus a spread) and fixed rate (a guaranteed rate for a defined period, usually 2–3 years).

As at July 2026, 3-month compounded SORA is approximately 2.35% per annum, and bank spreads on SORA packages run from 0.45% to 0.65%, giving an all-in floating rate of approximately 2.80%–3.00%. This is lower than most 2-year or 3-year fixed offerings (2.90%–3.40%). The floating rate appears attractive at current levels — but it will reprice every quarter as SORA moves, and there is no guarantee it stays below fixed rates in 2027–2028 if global rate pressures return.

For borrowers who:

  • Have a tight monthly budget and cannot absorb rate increases → choose fixed rate (2–3 years).
  • Expect to sell within 2 years (and want no lock-in) → choose a floating package with no lock-in.
  • Are refinancing opportunistically and comfortable with rate uncertainty → floating SORA may deliver better outcomes if rates continue declining.

Many borrowers opt for a hybrid: fixed rate for 2 years to lock in current savings, then assess the rate environment at the next repricing/refinancing window.

The 6-Step Refinancing Process

Singapore mortgage refinancing process 6 steps 2026
Figure 3: The mortgage refinancing process in Singapore from lock-in check to new mortgage commencement. Most homeowners complete the process in 4–8 weeks. Starting 3 months before your lock-in expiry gives you enough time to compare packages without pressure. Source: LovelyHomes.

The process works as follows in more detail:

Step 1 — Check lock-in period: review your current Letter of Offer (LOO) or contact your bank. Note the exact lock-in expiry date. If lock-in ends in 3 months or less, start immediately.

Step 2 — Compare packages from ≥3 banks: use mortgage brokers or direct bank websites. Compare: all-in rate, lock-in period, legal subsidy quantum, clawback conditions (most banks claw back subsidies if you refinance again within 3 years), late payment penalties.

Step 3 — Calculate break-even: use the formula above. Factor in any legal subsidy. Confirm the new bank’s loan quantum by checking your LTV (outstanding loan vs current valuation).

Step 4 — Apply and submit documents: typically required — NRIC/passport, last 3 months’ payslips, last 2 years’ NOA or CPF annual statement (for self-employed), last 3 months’ CPF transaction history, latest mortgage statement, title deed or SLA record search. Processing time: 2–3 weeks.

Step 5 — Valuation and Letter of Offer: the new bank orders a valuation (S$300–S$600; usually paid by borrower). On approval, a formal LOO is issued. Read all conditions carefully — especially the lock-in, penalty clauses and clawback on subsidies.

Step 6 — Legal completion: appoint a solicitor (often from the bank’s panel to qualify for subsidy). The solicitor handles mortgage discharge from old bank and registration of new charge. The process takes 2–4 weeks from LOO acceptance. On completion, the old loan is fully redeemed and the new mortgage commences.

Summary: When Refinancing Makes Sense

Situation Refinance? Reason
Lock-in expired, rate gap ≥0.50% Yes Savings clear the transaction cost in <12 months
Lock-in expired, rate gap <0.25% No / Reprice only Transaction costs may outweigh savings on small loans
Within lock-in, penalty 1.5% No Break cost typically exceeds 3–5 years of rate savings
Property value up significantly Yes, if lock-in expired Better LTV unlocks lower rate tier
Planning to sell within 12 months No Insufficient time to recover transaction costs
Want certainty vs. floating rate Switch to fixed Budget certainty has value beyond raw rate comparison
Want maximum saving now Floating SORA package SORA ~2.80% is below fixed rates as at July 2026

Worked Example: The Tan Household Refinancing Decision

Mr and Mrs Tan are Singapore Citizens who purchased a D15 condominium in March 2024 at S$1,450,000. They took a S$1,087,500 (75% LTV) bank loan at a 2-year fixed rate of 3.80% per annum. Their lock-in expires in March 2026 (which has now passed). Their outstanding balance as at July 2026 is approximately S$1,040,000 with 23 years remaining.

Current monthly payment: S$1,040,000 @3.80%, 23 years = S$5,730/month
Proposed refinance rate: 2-year fixed at 2.90% from Bank B
New monthly payment: S$1,040,000 @2.90%, 23 years = S$5,323/month
Monthly saving: S$407
Annual saving: S$4,884

Transaction costs:
Legal fees: S$2,800 (solicitors for discharge and new mortgage)
Valuation: S$500
Legal subsidy from Bank B: S$2,000
Net out-of-pocket cost: S$1,300

Breakeven: S$1,300 ÷ S$407/month = 3.2 months

Total interest saving over 23 years (rough estimate): S$112,000

Verdict: Refinancing is strongly justified. The Tan household breaks even in just over 3 months, and with Bank B’s legal subsidy absorbing most of the switching cost, the exercise is essentially self-funding within a quarter. Their combined TDSR at S$5,323/month on S$18,000 combined income is 29.6% — well within the 55% cap.

What Might Come Next

Singapore mortgage rates are tied to global monetary conditions via SORA, which tracks the US Federal Reserve’s policy rate with a lag. If the Fed continues its easing cycle into 2027 — as futures markets tentatively suggest — SORA could drift lower, making floating-rate packages increasingly attractive. However, the US election cycle, inflation trajectory and any geopolitical disruptions could reverse this direction quickly.

For 2026 specifically, the window of opportunity for borrowers with 2024-vintage fixed loans at 3.50%–4.00% approaching lock-in expiry is now open. Industry data suggests Singapore mortgage refinancing volumes in Q1–Q2 2026 have exceeded 2023 levels as a result. Borrowers who act in 2026 are capturing a rate environment that is materially better than two years ago; those who wait may find rates have either risen again or the best packages are no longer available.

What is the difference between a lock-in period and a clawback period?
A lock-in period is the minimum period you must hold the loan before you can redeem or refinance it without penalty. Refinancing within the lock-in typically triggers a break cost of 1.50% of the outstanding loan amount. A clawback period is separate and relates to any subsidies the bank gave you when you took the loan — legal subsidies, cashback and valuation fee rebates. If you refinance to a different bank within the clawback period (commonly 3–5 years), the new bank will not claw back anything, but your existing bank may require you to return the subsidies it paid. Clawback clauses vary by bank and package — always read the fine print in your Letter of Offer.
Can I refinance an HDB loan to a bank loan?
Yes — you can refinance from an HDB concessionary loan (currently 2.60% p.a.) to a bank loan. This is sometimes done when a borrower wants a longer tenure or wishes to free up CPF OA funds (by paying down the HDB loan with cash). However, the move is irreversible: once you switch from an HDB loan to a bank loan, you cannot return to an HDB loan. You also lose the flexibility of the HDB concessionary rate, which is pegged to the CPF OA rate plus 0.10% and tends to be more stable than market rates. As at July 2026, SORA-based bank floating rates (approximately 2.80%) are marginally higher than the HDB rate (2.60%), making the switch financially neutral to slightly negative at current rates — but bank packages with lock-ins set now may offer competitive 2-year fixed rates of 2.90%–3.10%. Consider this decision carefully and model the scenarios over your full remaining tenure.
Does TDSR apply when refinancing?
Yes, TDSR (Total Debt Servicing Ratio) applies at the point of refinancing. The bank will re-assess your income and all existing credit obligations (car loans, personal loans, outstanding credit card balances) to ensure the new monthly mortgage repayment, combined with all other debt obligations, does not exceed 55% of your gross monthly income. In practice, most refinancers who took a loan 2–3 years ago and have maintained their income pass TDSR comfortably — the new repayment is typically lower than the old one. If your income has fallen since the original loan, however, you may face difficulties qualifying for the same loan quantum at refinancing, especially if property values have declined and the bank’s fresh valuation results in a lower LTV ceiling.
How do I know if my property has appreciated enough to get a better rate?
When you refinance, the new bank orders a fresh valuation of your property. If the valuation comes in higher than when you originally purchased (e.g., your outstanding loan is S$700,000 but your property is now valued at S$1,200,000, giving an LTV of 58%), some banks offer lower rates for loans below a certain LTV threshold (typically 60% or 70% LTV). Check whether the bank’s rate sheet distinguishes by LTV tier. Additionally, a higher valuation means the bank is lending against a more valuable asset, which improves its credit comfort. If you believe your property has appreciated significantly, it is worth commissioning a preliminary desktop valuation before formally applying.
What documents do I need to refinance a Singapore home loan?
Standard documentation required for a refinancing application in Singapore includes: (1) NRIC or Singapore passport; (2) last 3 months’ payslips (for salaried employees) or last 2 years’ Income Tax Notice of Assessment (for self-employed or variable-income earners); (3) CPF contribution history for the past 12 months (downloadable from the CPF website); (4) latest mortgage statement showing outstanding balance and remaining tenure; (5) property title or SLA records search printout; (6) IRAS property tax statement (to confirm Annual Value); and (7) bank statements for the past 3 months if requested for income verification. Some banks also require the original Letter of Offer from your current bank. Preparing these in advance shortens the processing time from 2–3 weeks to 1–2 weeks.
Can I use CPF to pay off the legal fees when refinancing?
No. Legal fees and valuation fees at refinancing must be paid in cash. CPF Ordinary Account (OA) funds can only be used to service the ongoing monthly mortgage repayments (subject to the Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit rules) and, at the point of original purchase, for the downpayment and BSD. The transaction costs associated with refinancing — solicitors’ fees, valuation, any break cost — are out-of-pocket cash expenses. However, if a bank offers a legal subsidy rebate as part of its refinancing package, that rebate is typically credited to your loan account or paid directly to your solicitor, effectively reducing your cash outlay to near zero. Always check the terms of any subsidy before signing.
Is there a minimum loan amount to refinance in Singapore?
Most Singapore banks have an informal minimum loan quantum of around S$300,000 for refinancing to be commercially viable, as the legal and administrative processing costs are fixed regardless of loan size. For very small outstanding balances (below S$200,000 with only 5–8 years remaining), the interest saving may not justify the switching cost — a simple repricing request to your existing bank is likely more appropriate. There is no regulatory minimum loan size; the practical constraint is economic: at S$200,000 outstanding and a 0.50% rate saving, the annual interest saving is only S$1,000, which barely covers legal fees. Larger loan balances (S$500,000 and above) consistently produce compelling breakeven timelines of under 12 months when switching from a high-rate vintage to current market rates.
Disclaimer: The information in this article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Mortgage interest rates, SORA, TDSR rules, bank packages and CPF withdrawal limits are subject to change. The calculations in this article use standard reducing-balance amortisation methodology and are for illustrative purposes only — your actual savings will vary depending on your bank’s compounding convention, exact outstanding balance, remaining tenure and prevailing market rates at the time of refinancing. Always obtain independent advice from a licensed financial adviser, mortgage broker or your bank before making any refinancing decision. LovelyHomes does not act as a licensed financial adviser and does not receive referral fees from any bank or broker.

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HDB vs Condo Singapore 2026: Complete Comparison Guide

HDB vs Condo Singapore 2026: Complete Comparison Guide

Quick Answer: HDB vs Condo in 2026 — Key Takeaways

  • Cost gap is wide: a new 4-room BTO costs from S$350,000–S$500,000; an equivalent OCR condo easily costs S$900,000–S$1,200,000 — two to three times more upfront.
  • Only Singapore Citizens can buy new HDB flats; Singapore Permanent Residents (SPRs) and foreigners are restricted to resale HDB (SPR only, with limitations) or private residential.
  • ABSD applies to condos as a second property: a SC buying a second condo pays 20% ABSD on top of BSD; HDB upgraders face this fully.
  • CPF can fund both, but the accrued interest rule means proceeds from selling an HDB flat are partially returned to CPF, reducing actual cash profit.
  • Rental yield: HDB resale flats gross 3.0%–4.5%; OCR condos 3.2%–4.0%; the HDB advantage narrows significantly when considering non-owner-occupancy restrictions (10-year MOP rule for subletting applies).
  • Capital appreciation (2015–2026): HDB resale PPI is up approximately 44%; private residential PPI is up approximately 45% — broadly similar over a 10-year horizon.
  • Condos offer facilities (pool, gym, function rooms, 24-hour security) that HDB blocks do not; this premium is priced in and reflected in maintenance fees of S$300–S$700/month.
  • Decision rule of thumb: if your household income is below S$14,000/month, start with HDB (BTO or resale) to benefit from CPF grants and lower entry cost; graduate to private once equity has built up.

For most Singaporeans, the question is not simply “which is better?” — it is “which is right for me, right now?” The HDB vs condo decision shapes your finances, lifestyle and options for the next decade. This guide breaks down every dimension — purchase cost, ongoing fees, rental potential, capital growth, rules and restrictions — with real 2026 numbers so you can make an informed call.

The Financial Case: Upfront Costs Compared

The starkest difference between HDB and private condominium ownership is the entry cost. A new HDB Build-To-Order (BTO) 4-room flat in a non-mature estate is priced from around S$350,000–S$500,000, subsidised by the Housing & Development Board (HDB) under the principle that public housing should remain affordable. An equivalent-sized (800–900 sqft) resale condominium in the Outside Central Region (OCR) typically changes hands at S$950,000–S$1,300,000 — roughly double to triple the cost.

This gap widens further once you account for BSD, legal fees, and the minimum downpayment. A first-timer Singapore Citizen (SC) buying a BTO flat pays no ABSD and a modest BSD of S$9,000–S$14,000 on an S$450,000 flat; the same buyer purchasing an S$1,000,000 condo pays BSD of S$32,600 and must stump up at least S$250,000 in cash or CPF as the 25% minimum downpayment (with at least 5% in cash if using a bank loan).

Cost comparison HDB vs condo Singapore 2026 — purchase price, BSD, downpayment
Figure 1: Cost comparison across four property types for a Singapore Citizen first-timer (2026 figures). New Launch CCR condo shown at S$2,100,000 — typical of D9/D10/D11; note that BSD alone exceeds the entire purchase price of a BTO flat. Source: HDB, URA, IRAS.

HDB grants add another layer of advantage for eligible buyers. A first-timer SC household with combined monthly income of S$9,000 qualifies for the Enhanced Housing Grant (EHG) of up to S$80,000 on a BTO flat, plus a Family Grant of S$50,000 on a resale HDB flat. These grants are non-repayable and come directly off the purchase price. No such grants exist for private property purchases.

The Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) is the trade-off: HDB flat owners must live in the flat for five years (ten years for Prime and Plus classification flats since August 2024) before selling or renting out the entire flat. Condo owners face no MOP restriction — they can sell or rent from day one, subject only to Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) if selling within three years.

Ongoing Costs: Monthly Commitments

Purchase price is only the beginning. The true cost of ownership includes monthly mortgage repayments, MCST maintenance fees (condos), conservancy and service charges (HDB), property tax, fire insurance and — for condos — sinking fund contributions.

For a 4-room HDB resale flat at S$560,000, the monthly mortgage on an HDB concessionary loan (2.60% per annum, 25 years, 80% loan) is approximately S$2,040. Monthly Service & Conservancy Charges (S&CC) for a 4-room flat average S$60–S$80 per month. Property tax for an owner-occupied HDB flat is effectively zero for most flat values, as the Annual Value (AV) is low and owner-occupier rates are 0% on the first S$8,000 AV.

For a 3-bedroom condo at S$1,200,000 (OCR), the monthly mortgage on a bank loan (3.50% fixed for two years, 75% LTV, 25 years) is approximately S$4,498. On top of this, MCST monthly fees typically range from S$350 to S$700 depending on the development’s facilities and share value. Property tax for a S$1,200,000 condo is roughly S$2,400–S$3,000 per year (owner-occupier rate on the estimated AV).

Over a 25-year holding period, the total interest cost is another S$180,000–S$300,000 for HDB borrowers versus S$300,000–S$550,000 for condo borrowers — a function of both the higher principal and higher interest rates on bank loans.

Rental Yield and Investment Returns

A common misconception is that condos automatically deliver higher rental yields. In Singapore, rental yields are a function of entry price, not just rental income — and since HDB flats are bought at subsidised prices, their yield on cost is frequently competitive with, or even superior to, condos.

Gross rental yield comparison HDB vs condo Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Gross rental yield ranges across property types in Singapore (2026, based on URA and HDB rental transaction data). HDB resale flats frequently match OCR condos on a gross yield basis. Net yield narrows further for condos due to maintenance fees and property tax. Source: URA, HDB.

However, the comparison is not straightforward. HDB flat owners face the five-year MOP restriction: you cannot rent out the entire flat during the MOP. After the MOP, you can sublet the whole flat with HDB’s approval (renewable every two or three years). Condo owners can rent out their unit immediately with no approval required. This flexibility premium is significant for investors who need early income.

For HDB upgraders buying a second property (a condo), ABSD applies at 20% for SCs — a substantial carry cost that compresses net returns. At S$1,200,000, ABSD of S$240,000 alone represents roughly 14 years of net rental income at S$18,000 per year. The breakeven horizon for an HDB upgrader buying an investment condo is therefore much longer than it appears at first glance.

Capital Appreciation: 2015–2026 in Data

Over the past decade, both HDB resale and private residential markets have delivered broadly similar capital appreciation. The HDB Resale Price Index (RPI) rose from a base of 100 in 2015 to approximately 144 by mid-2026 — a gain of around 44%. The URA Private Residential Property Price Index (PPI) moved from 100 to approximately 145 over the same period — a gain of about 45%.

HDB resale vs private residential price index 2015 to 2026 Singapore
Figure 3: HDB Resale Price Index versus URA Private Residential PPI, indexed to 100 in Q1 2015. Both asset classes have appreciated by approximately 44–45% over the 10-year horizon, though private residential showed greater volatility during 2021–2022. Source: HDB, URA.

The similarity masks important nuances. Private residential, particularly in the Core Central Region (CCR), outperformed in the 2021–2022 run-up, with some freehold D9/D10 developments gaining 25–35% in that window alone. HDB resale surged particularly in 2021–2023 as the pandemic-era demand for larger flats collided with restricted BTO supply, pushing mature estate 5-room flat prices above S$800,000 in some cases.

The key driver for private property appreciation is often freehold tenure and location within the CCR or RCR. A 999-year leasehold condo in Buona Vista has historically held its value better than a 60-year leasehold shoebox unit in an OCR new launch. HDB flats, by contrast, are all 99-year leasehold from the date the land was granted — and the lease decay effect becomes visible once the flat crosses 40 years, reducing bank loan quantum and CPF withdrawal eligibility.

Rules and Restrictions

Ownership eligibility is a fundamental constraint. HDB flats can only be owned by Singapore Citizens (BTO) or SCs/SPRs together (resale, with restrictions on ethnic composition under the Ethnic Integration Policy). Foreigners cannot own HDB flats at all. Private condominiums are open to all nationalities, though foreigners pay a punishing 60% ABSD on residential property purchases.

Subletting rules differ sharply. An HDB resale owner must wait for the MOP before subletting the entire flat; individual bedroom subletting is permitted during the MOP (maximum two non-Malaysian foreigners or six occupants). Condo owners can sublet their entire unit immediately, subject to a minimum rental period of three consecutive months (per URA rules since 2017). No renewal approval is required.

Redevelopment risk affects both. HDB estates are periodically redeveloped under SERS (Selective En-bloc Redevelopment Scheme) — owners are compensated at market value and offered replacement flats in the same or nearby precinct. For private condos, collective sales (en bloc) require 80% owner consent (90% for those less than ten years old) and full market pricing. En bloc payouts can be transformative for owners of older developments in prime locations.

Lifestyle Considerations

Condos typically offer facilities that HDB estates cannot match: swimming pools, gymnasiums, BBQ pavilions, function rooms, tennis courts and 24-hour concierge security. These amenities command a monthly maintenance fee but can significantly improve daily quality of life, particularly for families with young children or individuals who value recreational facilities within walking distance of home.

HDB towns are generally well-served by public transport, hawker centres, supermarkets and community clubs — the infrastructure of neighbourhood life is built into the planning template. Mature estates such as Toa Payoh, Tampines and Ang Mo Kio offer a richness of amenity that many suburban condos cannot match. For families prioritising proximity to good primary schools, both HDB and private addresses are relevant depending on the school’s 1 km radius — ownership type does not automatically determine school access.

Summary Comparison Table

Factor New HDB BTO (4-room) HDB Resale (4-room) New Launch Condo (OCR) Resale Condo (OCR)
Typical price range S$350k–S$500k S$450k–S$750k S$900k–S$1.4M S$850k–S$1.3M
Who can buy SC only (family/single ≥35) SC + SPR (family nucleus) All nationalities All nationalities
ABSD (SC 1st property) Nil Nil Nil Nil
ABSD (SC 2nd property) N/A (can’t buy BTO if owns private) 20% (if owns private) 20% 20%
CPF grants available Up to S$120,000 (EHG + others) Up to S$130,000 (EHG + FG + PHG) None None
MOP / subletting restriction 5 years (Prime/Plus: 10 years) 5 years from completion None — rent immediately None — rent immediately
Gross rental yield (2026) N/A (MOP applies) 3.0%–4.5% 3.2%–4.0% (OCR) 3.2%–4.0% (OCR)
Monthly maintenance S&CC: ~S$65/month S&CC: ~S$65/month MCST: S$350–S$700/month MCST: S$350–S$700/month
Tenure 99-year leasehold 99-year leasehold (residual) 99-year or freehold 99-year or freehold
En bloc potential SERS (government-initiated) SERS (government-initiated) Collective sale (80% consent) Collective sale (80% consent)

Worked Example: The Lim Family Decision

Mr and Mrs Lim are a Singapore Citizen couple, aged 32, with a combined monthly income of S$9,200. They are first-time buyers and must decide between a resale HDB 4-room flat in Tampines at S$560,000 and a resale 3-bedroom condo in Pasir Ris at S$1,050,000.

Option A — HDB Resale 4-room at S$560,000:

  • Enhanced Housing Grant (EHG): S$55,000 (income S$9,200/month)
  • Family Grant: S$50,000 (buying resale from non-related seller)
  • Total grants: S$105,000
  • Effective purchase price net of grants: S$455,000
  • BSD on S$560,000: S$11,400
  • HDB loan at 80%: S$448,000 @2.60% per annum, 25 years → S$2,030/month
  • MSR check: S$2,030 ÷ S$9,200 = 22.1% — well within 30% cap. PASS
  • Monthly S&CC: ~S$65
  • Total monthly housing cost: approximately S$2,095

Option B — Condo resale at S$1,050,000:

  • BSD: S$33,900 (no grants)
  • ABSD: S$0 (first property for SC)
  • Bank loan at 75%: S$787,500 @3.50% fixed, 25 years → S$3,940/month
  • Minimum cash downpayment (5%): S$52,500 cash
  • TDSR check: S$3,940 ÷ S$9,200 = 42.8% — within 55% TDSR. PASS
  • Monthly MCST fees: approximately S$450
  • Total monthly housing cost: approximately S$4,390

Verdict: Option A leaves S$2,295/month more in monthly cash flow — that is S$27,540 per year, or roughly S$275,000 over 10 years that can be redeployed into investments, education or a future upgrade to private property. For the Lim family at their income level, the HDB route captures S$105,000 in grants, stays well within the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) limit, and preserves significant financial flexibility.

What Might Come Next

The gap between HDB and private property prices is a live policy concern for the government. The August 2024 classification of BTO flats into Prime, Plus and Standard tiers — with differentiated MOP and subsidy recovery rules — signals that HDB will continue to be the primary vehicle for owner-occupier housing, while private property is positioned as a step-up or investment option for those who have built equity.

Cooling measures, including the current ABSD framework (20% for SCs on their second property), are explicitly designed to deter HDB upgraders from treating condo investment as a wealth-building short-cut. Whether the 20% rate will be adjusted in the near term is speculative; the Ministry of Finance (MOF) has consistently stated that measures will remain “calibrated” to prevent property from becoming a speculative asset class.

For buyers who are watching the market, the coming quarters offer one potential catalyst: the URA Q2 2026 full data release (expected 24 July 2026) will show whether the +0.5% QoQ private residential price gain in Q2 reflects stabilisation or early softening. HDB resale volumes have remained resilient at around 6,000–7,000 transactions per quarter, suggesting continued strong end-user demand regardless of investment sentiment.

Is it better to buy HDB or condo as a first-time buyer in Singapore?
For most first-time Singapore Citizen buyers, the HDB route delivers better value at the point of entry — government grants of up to S$120,000 (BTO) or S$130,000 (resale), lower purchase prices, lower BSD, and the option of an HDB concessionary loan at 2.60% per annum. A condo purchase as a first property is financially viable only if your household income and existing savings can comfortably service the higher loan amount within TDSR limits and fund the larger cash downpayment. Many buyers follow a two-step path: BTO or resale HDB first, build equity over the MOP period (5 years), then sell and upgrade to private property — potentially without ABSD if the HDB flat is sold before purchasing the condo.
Can I buy both an HDB flat and a condo at the same time?
You can own an HDB flat and a private property concurrently, but only after the HDB flat’s MOP has been fulfilled. During the MOP, you must dispose of any private residential property you own (or co-own) within 6 months of taking possession of the HDB flat. Once the MOP is complete, you may purchase a condo — but as a second property, Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) of 20% (for SCs) applies on the condo’s purchase price. This ABSD is payable in cash (it cannot come from CPF). If you sell the HDB flat and purchase the condo within 6 months, the MAS Remission allows the ABSD to be waived for SCs buying their replacement private property — but the HDB flat must already be sold before the condo is purchased.
Do HDB flats appreciate as well as condos?
Over the past decade (2015–2026), HDB resale and private residential prices have appreciated at broadly similar rates — approximately 44% and 45% respectively on a price index basis. However, the absolute dollar gains differ greatly due to the price differential. An HDB flat bought at S$450,000 that appreciates 44% gains S$198,000; a condo bought at S$1,100,000 that appreciates 45% gains S$495,000. The condo’s larger absolute gain can be leveraged (bank loans allow 75% LTV vs HDB’s 80%) but comes at the cost of a larger initial outlay and higher carrying costs. Additionally, HDB flats with 50 or fewer years remaining on their lease face declining value as CPF withdrawal rules become more restrictive and bank loan quantum shrinks.
What are the ABSD implications when upgrading from HDB to condo?
When a Singapore Citizen upgrades from an HDB flat to a private condo, ABSD of 20% applies on the condo’s purchase price if the HDB flat is still owned at the time of the condo purchase. To avoid ABSD, the HDB flat must be sold first — you then buy the condo as a “first property” (no ABSD for SC). If for practical reasons you need to buy the condo before the HDB sale is completed, you will pay the full 20% ABSD upfront. IRAS allows a ABSD Remission for SCs who are replacing their sole residential property: you must sell the HDB flat within 6 months of the condo’s Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) or purchase date, whichever is later, and apply for the remission within 6 months of selling the HDB flat. This remission is only available to SCs, not SPRs.
Can foreigners buy HDB flats in Singapore?
No. Singapore Permanent Residents (SPRs) can purchase HDB resale flats only (not new BTO flats), provided they form a family nucleus with at least one other SPR or SC. SPRs must also observe the Non-Citizen Quota for the block and neighbourhood they are buying into, and are subject to their own MOP of five years before they may sell. Foreigners (non-citizens, non-PRs) are not permitted to purchase any HDB flat. Foreigners may only own private residential property in Singapore, including condominiums and apartments in non-landed developments. They pay ABSD of 60% on any residential property purchase, making the Singapore private market among the most heavily taxed for foreign buyers globally.
What is the difference in monthly costs between HDB and condo ownership?
The monthly cost gap is substantial. A 4-room HDB resale flat at S$560,000 with an HDB loan (2.60%, 25 years, 80% LTV) costs approximately S$2,030 in mortgage repayments plus S$65 in Service & Conservancy Charges — around S$2,095 total. An equivalent-sized condo at S$1,100,000 with a bank loan (3.50%, 25 years, 75% LTV) costs approximately S$4,130 in mortgage repayments plus S$450 in MCST maintenance fees — around S$4,580 total. The monthly gap of approximately S$2,485 represents significant funds that HDB owners can redirect to savings, investments or early loan repayment. Property tax is another differentiator: owner-occupied HDB flats are effectively zero-rated for most income brackets, while a S$1.1M condo carries approximately S$2,000–S$3,000 per year in property tax at owner-occupier rates.
Should I wait for BTO or buy HDB resale?
The BTO route offers lower prices (subsidised by HDB) and higher grant quantum, but involves a waiting time of 3–5 years from ballot to key collection. The resale route offers immediate possession and a wider selection of locations, including mature estates near top schools or MRT stations, but at higher market prices. In terms of financial outcome over 10 years, BTO buyers typically fare better on cost-per-square-foot — but the 3–5 year waiting period has a real opportunity cost if rental costs must be borne in the interim. Buyers who need a flat quickly, are closer to 40 and want certainty, or prefer a specific mature estate, often find resale more practical. The EHG and Family Grant are available for both BTO and resale purchases, though resale buyers also qualify for the Proximity Housing Grant (S$30,000 if living within 4 km of parents) which BTO buyers do not.
Disclaimer: The information in this article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal or property investment advice. Property prices, rental yields, stamp duty rates, CPF rules, HDB eligibility criteria, and mortgage interest rates can change at any time. The figures cited reflect publicly available data from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), Housing & Development Board (HDB), Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), and CPF Board as at July 2026. Readers should verify all information with the relevant government agencies and consult a licensed property agent, financial adviser or lawyer before making any property purchase or investment decision.

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