Buying a Condo in Singapore 2026: OTP, Stamp Duties, TDSR and Step-by-Step Process Explained

Buying a Condo in Singapore 2026: OTP, Stamp Duties, TDSR and Step-by-Step Process Explained

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Quick Answer — Buying a Condo in Singapore 2026: Key Facts

  • Any Singapore Citizen (SC), Permanent Resident (SPR), or foreigner may buy a private condominium — no eligibility restrictions apply beyond the owner-occupier requirement lifted for private property.
  • Bank loans cover up to 75% LTV; minimum cash downpayment is 5% of purchase price; the remaining 20% may come from CPF OA.
  • Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) cap: 55% of gross monthly income. No Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) applies to private property.
  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is payable by everyone: S$44,600 on a S$1.5M condo; S$69,600 on S$2.0M.
  • Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD): 0% for SC buying their first property; 20% for SC second property; 60% for foreigners.
  • For resale condos, the Option to Purchase (OTP) process runs 14 days; completion typically 70–90 days. New launch condos use a booking fee/S&P process taking 8–12 weeks to first payment milestone.
  • Condo prices range from roughly S$700K (OCR 1BR) to S$6.5M+ (CCR 4BR) in 2026.
  • No Capital Gains Tax applies in Singapore — profits on sale are generally tax-free (Seller’s Stamp Duty applies if sold within 4 years).

A private condominium is the most aspirational stepping stone in Singapore’s property ladder. It represents the point at which a buyer exits the HDB framework — and its attendant rules — and enters the open market. Yet the process of buying a condo, especially for first-timers, involves a layer of documents, timelines, and financial calculations that can feel daunting. This guide walks through every stage: from eligibility and financing, to the Option to Purchase (OTP), stamp duties, CPF rules, and what you will actually pay before you get the keys.

All figures are current as at 11 June 2026. Regulations on loan-to-value (LTV), TDSR, and stamp duties are set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), and the CPF Board respectively.

Who Can Buy a Condo in Singapore?

Private condominium units are open to all buyers regardless of citizenship or residency status — Singapore Citizens, Singapore Permanent Residents, and foreigners may all purchase. There is no income ceiling, no minimum occupation period restriction prior to purchase, and no ethnic integration quota. The key constraints are purely financial: ABSD rates, LTV limits, and TDSR/income requirements.

One constraint that often surprises first-time private buyers: if you currently own an HDB flat, you must dispose of it within six months of taking possession of the condo (if you are an SC) — failing to do so means you will have paid 20% ABSD on the condo and will face IRAS penalties. This “sell first” obligation is the operational heart of the Singapore upgrader journey and we cover it in detail in our HDB Upgrading Guide 2026.

Condo Price Ranges in Singapore 2026

Prices vary dramatically by location. Singapore’s private residential market is segmented into three main regions: Outside Central Region (OCR), Rest of Central Region (RCR), and Core Central Region (CCR). OCR encompasses the heartland suburbs — Tampines, Sengkang, Jurong, Punggol. RCR covers the city fringe — Queenstown, Toa Payoh, Bishan, Eunos. CCR is prime — Districts 9, 10, 11, Marina Bay, Sentosa.

Singapore condo price ranges by region 2026 — OCR RCR CCR comparison bar chart
Figure 1: Singapore private condo price ranges by unit type and region (2026). OCR = Outside Central Region; RCR = Rest of Central Region; CCR = Core Central Region. Source: URA, industry transaction data.

For a 3-bedroom unit in 2026, an OCR condo typically transacts at S$1.4M–S$1.9M; the same unit in the CCR can reach S$2.6M–S$4.5M or beyond for prime addresses. New launches carry a new-launch premium over resale units of roughly 5–15% in most districts.

New Launch vs Resale: Key Differences

The most fundamental decision before buying a condo is whether you are looking at a new launch (bought directly from the developer, often before the building is complete) or a resale unit (bought from a private seller on the open market).

New launches are typically launched with deferred payment: a booking fee of 5% (cash only), then 15% at S&P signing (within 8 weeks), then progressive payments tied to construction milestones. You take possession 3–5 years after booking. During that period, no rental income and no physical inspection of the unit. The upside: you lock in today’s price and CPF/mortgage cashflow spreads across years. Developers often offer stamp-duty absorption or furniture voucher promotions on slow-moving units.

Resale condos are completed units. You can inspect them, move in within 10–12 weeks of OTP exercise, and rent them out immediately. The OTP process involves a 1% option fee, followed by 14 days to decide and exercise. On exercise, you pay a further 4% (totalling 5% of purchase price), then complete within 70–90 business days.

Feature New Launch Resale Condo
Payment structure Progressive (booking fee → milestones) Full 5% on OTP + balance at completion
Time to possession 3–5 years (from booking) 10–12 weeks from OTP exercise
Physical inspection Show unit only (not actual unit) Full inspection possible
Rental income Only after TOP (3–5 years) Immediately after completion
CPF + loan drawdown Progressive during construction Full drawdown at completion
SSD risk Only on re-sale within 4 years of TOP Applies if sold within 4 years of purchase
Price premium vs resale Typically +5–15% for comparable location Benchmark price
Renovation needed? Bare unit; full reno required Often move-in ready or partial reno

The Condo Buying Process — Step by Step

Singapore condo buying process step-by-step timeline 2026 — OTP exercise BSD ABSD completion
Figure 2: Step-by-step condo buying timeline for a resale transaction. New launch timelines differ: milestone payments replace the single-completion structure.

For a resale condo, the legal process is tightly choreographed:

Step 1 — Loan Pre-Approval (IPA). Before making any offer, obtain an In-Principle Approval (IPA) from your chosen bank. This confirms your borrowing capacity and signals seriousness to sellers. IPAs are valid for 30 days.

Step 2 — Property Search & Negotiation. View units, compare recent caveats on URA’s Real Estate Information System (REALIS), and negotiate the price. Once agreed, the seller’s representative issues the OTP.

Step 3 — Receive and Pay OTP Option Fee (1%). The option fee is typically 1% of the purchase price (negotiable for very high-value properties). This gives you the exclusive right to purchase for 14 days.

Step 4 — Exercise OTP (+ 4% cash). Within 14 days, your lawyers will advise you to exercise the OTP by paying the remaining 4% exercise fee (total 5% paid). At this stage, you engage a conveyancing lawyer if you haven’t already.

Step 5 — Stamp Duty: BSD + ABSD (within 14 days of OTP). Both BSD and ABSD must be stamped within 14 calendar days of signing the OTP. Late payment incurs IRAS penalties. BSD can be reimbursed from CPF post-stamping; ABSD must be paid in cash.

Step 6 — CPF Drawdown & Mortgage Disbursement. Your lawyers submit the CPF withdrawal application and lodge a caveat at the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). The bank releases the loan funds.

Step 7 — Completion (S&P / Transfer). Typically within 70–90 days of OTP exercise for a resale condo. Title transfers, keys are handed over.

Financing a Condo Purchase: LTV, TDSR and Loan Options

Private condo buyers borrow from commercial banks (not HDB). The key regulatory frameworks are:

Loan-to-Value (LTV) limits. For your first property mortgage with a bank: LTV 75%, meaning you can borrow up to 75% of the purchase price or valuation (whichever is lower). For a second property, LTV drops to 45%; third and subsequent to 35%. These MAS limits were last updated in August 2024, when the HDB loan LTV was reduced from 80% to 75%.

Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR). No more than 55% of your gross monthly income may be committed to total debt obligations — home loan, car loan, credit card minimum payments, personal loans, all included. Banks apply a stress test interest rate of 4.0% (as at 2026) regardless of the actual offered rate, which is usually lower.

No MSR for private property. The Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) — which caps housing loan payments at 30% of income — only applies to HDB flats and ECs bought from developers. Private condo buyers only need to satisfy TDSR.

Interest rates. Most banks in 2026 offer SORA-pegged packages (3-month SORA at approximately 2.4%) or fixed-rate packages. All-in rates for 30-year private property loans typically range 3.1%–3.8% in mid-2026. Always compare SIBOR-to-SORA transition implications with your relationship manager. More detail in our Singapore Home Loan Complete Guide 2026.

Stamp Duties: BSD and ABSD Explained

Every condo buyer pays Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) — a progressive tax on purchase price. On top of that, ABSD applies for second-and-subsequent properties or non-citizens:

Purchase Price BSD Payable Effective BSD Rate
S$800,000 S$18,600 2.33%
S$1,200,000 S$33,600 2.80%
S$1,500,000 S$44,600 2.97%
S$2,000,000 S$69,600 3.48%
S$2,500,000 S$94,600 3.78%
S$3,000,000 S$119,600 3.99%
S$4,000,000 S$219,600 5.49%

For ABSD, remember: SC 1st property = 0% ABSD; SC 2nd = 20%; SC 3rd+ = 30%; SPR 1st = 5%; SPR 2nd = 30%; Foreigner = 60% (all properties). Full details in our ABSD Complete Guide 2026.

Total upfront cost to buy S$1.5M condo by buyer profile 2026 — BSD ABSD downpayment comparison
Figure 3: Total upfront cash and CPF required for a S$1.5M condo across buyer profiles (2026). LTV 75% assumed (25% downpayment). BSD S$44,600 applies to all profiles.

Using CPF to Buy a Condo

Your CPF Ordinary Account (OA) may be used to pay the downpayment (the 20% non-cash portion) and ongoing monthly mortgage instalments for a private condo, subject to:

The Valuation Limit (VL): total CPF usage cannot exceed the lower of the purchase price or the valuation at the time of purchase — so if you pay S$1,650,000 for a condo valued at S$1,600,000, your CPF ceiling is S$1,600,000.

The Withdrawal Limit (WL): once you have drawn CPF up to the VL and still have an outstanding bank loan, you may draw a further 20% of VL provided you have set aside the applicable Basic Retirement Sum (BRS — S$106,500 in 2026) in your CPF accounts.

The 5% cash rule: the minimum 5% downpayment must be in cash. CPF may only fund the remaining 20% of the 25% total downpayment.

Critically: every dollar of CPF drawn for property accrues interest at 2.5% per annum compounding. When you eventually sell, you must refund the principal plus all accrued interest back to your CPF OA. This does not reduce your profit on paper, but it does reduce the cash you take home from the sale. Read the full analysis in our CPF Private Property Guide 2026.

Choosing Between OCR, RCR and CCR

The three-region framework is more than a price guide — it reflects fundamentally different buyer profiles, rental markets, and investment theses:

OCR (Outside Central Region) is where most Singaporean families and HDB upgraders buy. Yields are strongest here — typically 3.8%–4.8% gross for 2BR/3BR units — because rental demand from expats, young professionals, and domestic upgraders is broad. Capital appreciation can be rapid when an infrastructure catalyst (a new MRT line, a GLS announcement) lands nearby. The tradeoff: commute times to CBD are longer, and CCR-calibre tenants (senior bankers, diplomats) rarely rent in OCR.

RCR (Rest of Central Region) is the sweet spot for many: city-fringe convenience, more manageable entry prices than CCR, yet close enough to attract both expat and local renters. Districts 3, 10 (parts), 14, 15, 20 are all RCR. Yields run 3.2%–4.2%. New launches here have outperformed on price appreciation in the 2020–2026 run, driven by URA master-plan transformations (Queenstown, Kallang, Pearl’s Hill).

CCR (Core Central Region) is Singapore’s luxury and investment-grade market. Prices per square foot range from S$2,500 to S$5,000+ for prime District 9/10/11 addresses. Rental yields are the weakest (2.5%–3.5%) because asset values are high, but capital preservation in USD/GBP/EUR terms attracts significant foreign (FTA-exempt) and ultra-high-net-worth demand. The 60% ABSD has effectively handed CCR supply to the FTA-exempt buyer pool.

Worked Example: Mr & Mrs Chen Buy Their First Condo

Profile: SC couple, first private property, joint income S$16,000/mth

Property: 3-bedroom OCR condo in Sengkang, S$1,650,000. Freehold.

BSD: S$180K×1% + S$180K×2% + S$640K×3% + S$500K×4% + S$150K×5% = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$20,000 + S$7,500 = S$52,100

ABSD: 0% (SC, first residential property)

Financing: Bank loan 75% LTV = S$1,237,500 @3.2% 30yr
Monthly repayment = approximately S$5,354/mth
TDSR = S$5,354 / S$16,000 = 33.5% — PASS (below 55% ceiling)

Downpayment (25%): S$412,500
  — Cash (min 5%): S$82,500
  — CPF OA (up to 20%): S$330,000

Total upfront outlay:
Downpayment: S$412,500
BSD (can reimburse from CPF after stamping): S$52,100
Legal & conveyancing fees: ~S$4,200
Grand total: ~S$468,800

Note on SSD: If the Chens sell within 4 years of purchase, SSD applies: 16% (Year 1), 12% (Year 2), 8% (Year 3), 4% (Year 4). They plan to hold long-term, so SSD is not a concern. Full details: SSD Guide 2026.

What This Means for Singapore Property Buyers in 2026

The private condo market in 2026 sits in a period of relative stability after the sharp price run of 2020–2023. URA’s private residential price index for Q1 2026 shows OCR prices up 1.1% quarter-on-quarter — moderate, not frothy. Interest rates, while above the near-zero era of 2010–2021, have stabilised: 3M SORA has hovered around 2.4% since late 2025. The TDSR and LTV framework means buyers are better-capitalised than in previous cycles.

For SC first-timers, the 0% ABSD window is exceptionally powerful: you can buy a S$1.6M condo and pay zero ABSD. Compare this to your SPR peer who pays 5% (S$80,000) or your foreigner colleague who pays 60% (S$960,000). Singapore citizenship carries extraordinary financial value in the property market — an advantage worth leveraging before your second purchase triggers the 20% ABSD.

What Might Come Next for the Condo Market

The Government’s track record on cooling measures is well-established: when private prices accelerate beyond what income growth can justify, additional rounds of ABSD increases, LTV tightening, or supply-side intervention (GLS increases) follow. The 2H2026 GLS programme announced in June 2026 adds approximately 4,010 private residential units to the Confirmed List — a signal that supply is being managed upward to prevent affordability deterioration.

Speculation (not official MAS guidance): if private price growth accelerates beyond 5–6% annually in the second half of 2026, the Government may revisit ABSD or TDSR thresholds, as it has done in April 2023. Buyers with strong holding power and clear owner-occupier intent are best insulated from policy risk; leveraged short-term investors should be especially mindful of SSD exposure within the four-year window.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I buy a condo while still owning an HDB flat?

Yes — but with significant financial consequences. An SC who holds an HDB flat and buys a private condo will trigger 20% ABSD on the condo (second property rate), as they are deemed to hold two residential properties. To avoid ABSD, most upgraders adopt a “sell first, buy second” sequence, disposing of the HDB before exercising the condo OTP. Alternatively, the ABSD remission scheme allows an SC couple to buy a replacement home while still owning the first property, provided they sell the first within six months of the later of the condo’s purchase or its TOP date. See our full analysis in the HDB Upgrading Guide 2026.

Is there a minimum income to buy a private condo?

There is no statutory minimum income requirement. However, the TDSR framework means that your borrowing capacity — and therefore the price range you can access with a loan — is directly tied to gross income. A borrower with S$6,000/mth gross income is limited to a monthly mortgage payment of approximately S$3,300 (55% TDSR). At 3.2% over 30 years, that equates to roughly a S$762,000 loan. At 75% LTV, the maximum purchase price would be around S$1,016,000. Buyers with no debt obligations will find this headroom useful; those with car loans and credit card debt will find it tighter.

What is the difference between freehold and 99-year leasehold condos?

In Singapore, freehold (FH) and 999-year leasehold condos hold title in perpetuity, while 99-year leasehold (LH99) condos revert to the State at lease expiry. As a practical matter, a 99-year leasehold condo built today has roughly 92–95 years remaining — well within the CPF “cover to age 95” rule for most buyers. LH99 condos are typically 10–15% cheaper than equivalent freehold units, and price growth on LH99 units can be equally strong within the first 30 years. CPF usage becomes restricted once remaining lease falls below a threshold that does not cover the youngest buyer to age 95. Read more about lease decay implications in our related investment analysis.

Can I use CPF to pay ABSD?

No. ABSD (and BSD) must be paid in cash within 14 days of signing the OTP or S&P Agreement. However, you may apply to CPF Board to reimburse BSD from your OA after it has been stamped — so while the cash must flow out first, you can recover the BSD component from CPF. ABSD remains a pure cash cost and cannot be reimbursed from CPF.

What happens if I cannot exercise the OTP within 14 days?

If you fail to exercise the OTP within 14 days, the option lapses and the seller retains your 1% option fee as forfeiture. You have no further obligation to proceed with the purchase. If you have already stamped the OTP (i.e. paid BSD), you may apply to IRAS for a refund of part of the stamp duty paid — though this process involves fees and is not guaranteed. Always ensure your financing is in order before paying the option fee.

Is there Capital Gains Tax on condo profits in Singapore?

Singapore does not levy a Capital Gains Tax (CGT). Profits from the sale of a private condo are generally not taxable, provided the activity is not deemed a trade (i.e. you are not treated as a property dealer by IRAS). The exception is the Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) — introduced as a transaction deterrent — which applies at 16%/12%/8%/4% if you sell within 4 years of purchase respectively. Beyond the four-year holding window, there is no SSD and no CGT. See our detailed SSD Guide 2026.

Can a foreigner buy a condo in Singapore, and how much does it cost?

Yes — foreigners may purchase private condominium units without restrictions (other than ABSD). However, the ABSD rate for foreigners is 60% of the purchase price or valuation (whichever is higher). On a S$1.5M condo, that is S$900,000 in ABSD alone, on top of BSD of S$44,600. Citizens of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, and the United States are entitled to Singapore Citizen ABSD rates under Free Trade Agreement provisions — so an American buying their first Singapore condo pays 0% ABSD. Our Foreign Buyer Guide 2026 covers the full picture.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. All figures are current as at 11 June 2026 and are subject to change by MAS, IRAS, CPF Board, or HDB. LTV, TDSR, and ABSD rules are regularly reviewed by the Singapore Government. Always verify current rates at IRAS, MAS, and CPF Board, and engage a licensed conveyancing lawyer and mortgage broker before committing to any property transaction.

Singapore Property Conveyancing Guide 2026: OTP, S&P Agreement, Legal Fees and Timelines Explained

Singapore Property Conveyancing Guide 2026: OTP, S&P Agreement, Legal Fees and Timelines Explained

Quick Answer: Conveyancing in Singapore 2026

  • Conveyancing is the legal process of transferring property ownership in Singapore, handled by licensed Singapore lawyers.
  • For private property, it involves an Option to Purchase (OTP), exercise of the OTP, and completion — typically over 8–12 weeks.
  • HDB resale transactions use the HDB Resale Portal and take approximately 8–10 weeks after HDB approval.
  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) and Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD, if applicable) must be paid within 14 days of signing the OTP or S&P Agreement.
  • Legal fees for buyers typically range from S$2,200 to S$5,000 depending on property price; sellers pay S$1,800–S$4,200.
  • Disbursements (search fees, caveats, IRAS e-Stamping) add a further S$500–S$1,500 per transaction.
  • A conveyancing lawyer lodges a caveat on the title to protect the buyer’s interest between OTP exercise and completion.
  • CPF funds used for the purchase are refunded with 2.5% per annum accrued interest upon sale — factor this into your net proceeds calculation.

What Is Property Conveyancing?

Conveyancing is the Singapore legal process by which ownership of land or property is formally transferred from seller to buyer. Every private residential transaction — whether a new launch, resale condominium, landed property, or executive condominium — requires a conveyancing lawyer admitted to the Singapore Bar under the Legal Profession Act (Cap. 161). No individual may conduct their own conveyancing in Singapore; you must appoint a licensed law firm.

The Singapore Land Authority (SLA) maintains the land register under the Land Titles Act (Cap. 157). Separately, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) collects Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) and Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) via its e-Stamping portal. Your lawyer interfaces with both agencies on your behalf, making the choice of conveyancing firm a meaningful decision — not just a rubber stamp on your property purchase.

HDB flat transactions follow a slightly different route: they use the HDB Resale Portal and require HDB’s administrative approval, but buyers and sellers still appoint separate law firms (or use HDB’s approved conveyancing panel) to handle legal documents.

Step 1 — The Option to Purchase (OTP)

The OTP is a unilateral contract granting the buyer an exclusive right to purchase the property at an agreed price within a specified period. Under the Law Society of Singapore’s Conditions of Sale 2012, the standard OTP gives the buyer a 14-day option period from the date of grant. During this window, the property is effectively taken off the market.

Option fee: Typically 1% of the agreed purchase price, paid by cheque or cashier’s order to the seller (or seller’s lawyer). This fee is forfeited if the buyer does not exercise the option. It is not part of BSD — it is consideration for the option contract.

Exercising the OTP: The buyer exercises by paying a further 4% exercise fee (bringing the deposit to 5% total). BSD and ABSD are due within 14 days of exercising the OTP. Failure to pay on time attracts a late payment penalty of 5% per annum on the unpaid amount plus a flat 1% penalty.

Completion: Standard completion is 8–10 weeks after exercise. The buyer pays the remaining 95% of the purchase price (less any CPF utilised and bank loan disbursement) on completion day, and receives the keys and certificate of title.

Step 2 — The Sale and Purchase Agreement

Once the OTP is exercised, the seller’s lawyers typically issue a formal Sale and Purchase (S&P) Agreement within 2–4 weeks. The S&P Agreement sets out all conditions of sale including: completion date, vacant possession, included fixtures and fittings, representations and warranties on title, and risk allocation between exchange and completion.

For HDB resale flats, there is no separate S&P Agreement — instead, the parties register their Intent to Sell and Intent to Buy via the HDB Resale Portal, and HDB issues the resale completion letter setting the completion appointment.

Singapore property conveyancing timeline 2026 - OTP to completion business days
Figure 1: Typical conveyancing timeline for a resale private property in Singapore, measured in business days from OTP grant.

Step 3 — Stamp Duties: BSD and ABSD

Stamp duties are collected by IRAS under the Stamp Duties Act (Cap. 312). They are the buyer’s obligation. The Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) rates as at 7 June 2026 are:

Purchase Price Bracket BSD Rate
First S$180,000 1%
Next S$180,000 2%
Next S$640,000 3%
Next S$500,000 4%
Next S$1,500,000 5%
Remainder above S$3,000,000 6%

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) applies on top of BSD for second and subsequent properties (Singapore Citizens), all purchases by Singapore Permanent Residents, and all purchases by foreigners and entities. For a complete ABSD table, see the LovelyHomes ABSD Singapore 2026 Guide.

Step 4 — Appointing Your Conveyancing Lawyer

You should appoint your conveyancing lawyer before you sign the OTP, so that they can advise you on the option terms and perform preliminary title searches. The Law Society of Singapore’s Conveyancing Practice Directions require lawyers to advise clients on conflicts of interest — the same law firm generally cannot act for both buyer and seller in the same transaction.

Your lawyer’s duties as buyer’s solicitor include: conducting all title searches; preparing or reviewing the S&P Agreement; handling BSD/ABSD payment to IRAS; lodging a caveat at SLA to protect your interest; liaising with your bank’s lawyers on mortgage documentation; requisitioning CPF funds from CPF Board; and attending completion to receive title from the seller.

Singapore conveyancing legal fees 2026 - buyer and seller estimates by property price
Figure 2: Estimated conveyancing legal fees for buyers and sellers by property price, Singapore 2026. Obtain written fee quotes from your firm before proceeding.

Legal Fees and Disbursements

Law Society scale fees for residential conveyancing were abolished in 2009, meaning firms now charge freely. As a buyer, expect to pay S$2,200–S$5,000 in professional fees depending on transaction price and complexity. On top of professional fees, your lawyer will pass through disbursements — out-of-pocket costs charged at cost. Typical disbursements include:

  • SLA title search: approx. S$30–S$80
  • SLA caveat registration: approx. S$64.45 (includes GST)
  • Bank mortgage registration: approx. S$350–S$500
  • SLA transfer lodgement fee: approx. S$28–S$38 per instrument
  • CPF requisition fee: approx. S$15–S$25 per utilisation
  • Property valuation fee: S$300–S$1,200 depending on property type

Budget approximately S$500–S$1,500 in disbursements for a straightforward private resale transaction, in addition to professional fees.

Singapore property buying costs comparison 2026 - HDB resale vs private condo BSD ABSD legal fees
Figure 3: Total upfront buying costs including BSD, ABSD and legal fees — HDB resale vs private condo at three price points, Singapore 2026.

Summary: Key Conveyancing Facts at a Glance

Item HDB Resale Private Resale New Launch
OTP / booking fee S$1 (HDB prescribed) Typically 1% of price Booking fee 5% on S&P day
OTP exercise fee N/A — HFE/portal process 4% within 14 days Further progress payments
BSD payment deadline 14 days from HDB flat offer letter 14 days from exercise 14 days from S&P date
Standard completion period 8–10 weeks (HDB schedule) 8–12 weeks from exercise On TOP or CSC date
Caveat filed by HDB portal (automatic) Buyer’s lawyer Developer’s panel lawyer
Buyer legal fees (indicative) S$1,500–S$2,200 S$2,200–S$5,000 S$2,200–S$3,500
Seller legal fees (indicative) S$1,000–S$1,800 S$1,800–S$4,200 N/A (developer pays)
CPF accrued interest on refund 2.5% p.a. on OA withdrawn 2.5% p.a. on OA withdrawn 2.5% p.a. on OA withdrawn

Worked Example: Mr and Mrs Koh Buy a Resale Condominium in Queenstown

Mr and Mrs Koh are Singapore Citizens purchasing their second property — a resale 2-bedroom condominium in Queenstown (District 3) for S$1,600,000. They are selling their HDB flat simultaneously (see our HDB Upgrader Guide 2026 for ABSD remission timing).

  • Option fee (1%): S$16,000 — paid by cashier’s order on grant of OTP.
  • BSD at exercise: 1% × S$180,000 + 2% × S$180,000 + 3% × S$640,000 + 4% × S$500,000 + 5% × S$100,000 = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$20,000 + S$5,000 = S$49,600
  • ABSD remission: If HDB sold within the stipulated window, ABSD is remitted for SC joint first-time private purchase. If outside the window, ABSD at 20% = S$320,000 — manage this timing carefully.
  • Buyer’s legal fees: Approx. S$3,400 professional + S$900 disbursements = S$4,300
  • Valuation fee: S$700
  • Bank loan: S$1,200,000 at 3.0% p.a. over 30 years = S$5,058/mth; TDSR 36.1% on joint income S$14,000/mth — PASS.
  • Completion cash balance: S$1,600,000 − S$80,000 (deposit) − S$1,200,000 (bank) − S$100,000 (CPF) = S$220,000 cash

The entire conveyancing process, from OTP grant to completion, spans approximately 10 weeks — aligning with the typical resale timeline shown in Figure 1 above.

What to Watch in 2026 and Beyond

Singapore’s conveyancing framework has remained largely stable since the Land Titles Act was modernised in 1994, but two pressure points are worth watching. First, the Ministry of Law has periodically reviewed whether HDB flat conveyancing should be further streamlined through the portal — licensed lawyers remain mandatory as at 2026. Second, the SLA has been progressively digitalising title documents towards a fully electronic land registry, which reduces search turnaround times and potentially disbursement costs.

For buyers, the practical implication is that while stamp duties remain the dominant cost item (dwarfing legal fees for most transactions), shopping for a competitive legal fee quote matters more the larger your transaction. For a second-property private condominium purchaser, ABSD is typically 20–60 times larger than legal fees — making ABSD remission timing the single most important conveyancing consideration of all.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use the same lawyer as the seller?

Generally no. The Law Society’s Conveyancing Practice Directions prohibit a single law firm from acting for both buyer and seller in the same residential transaction — a conflict-of-interest rule designed to protect both parties. Exceptions exist for new launch sales where developer panel lawyers act for the developer, but you as the buyer still engage your own firm. Having separate representation ensures your lawyer’s duty runs exclusively to you.

What happens if I miss the BSD payment deadline?

BSD and ABSD must be paid within 14 days of signing the OTP or S&P Agreement. Late payment attracts a penalty of 5% per annum on the unpaid stamp duty, plus a flat penalty of 1% of the unpaid duty under the Stamp Duties Act. Your conveyancing lawyer will typically pay stamp duties on your behalf immediately on instruction — ensure you have sufficient cleared funds in your account by the day of exercise.

What is a caveat and why does my lawyer lodge one?

A caveat under the Land Titles Act is a formal notice lodged at the Singapore Land Registry (via SLA) once you have exercised the OTP. It signals to the world — including any subsequent buyer, mortgagee, or judgment creditor — that you have a legal interest in the property. This prevents the seller from dealing with the property inconsistently with your purchase contract during the period between exercise and completion. The caveat lodgement fee is approximately S$64 and is a standard disbursement.

How does CPF work in a property purchase?

Singapore Citizens and PRs may use their CPF Ordinary Account (OA) savings towards the purchase price and monthly mortgage instalments, subject to a Valuation Limit (VL) of 100% of the lower of purchase price or valuation, and a Withdrawal Limit (WL) of 120% of VL for properties with at least 30 years remaining lease. CPF monies withdrawn for property must be refunded with 2.5% p.a. accrued interest upon sale — returned to your own CPF account. See our HDB Upgrader Guide for worked CPF refund calculations.

What is the difference between new launch and resale conveyancing?

New launch transactions involve a developer under a Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act licence. Instead of an OTP, you sign a Standard Sale and Purchase Agreement in the prescribed form under the Housing Developers Rules, and pay a booking fee (typically 5%) on the day of signing. Stamp duties are payable within 14 days. Completion occurs on the issue of the Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) or Certificate of Statutory Completion (CSC), which may be 2–5 years from booking. Your CPF usage and bank loan terms must be structured to accommodate drawdowns aligned with the developer’s progress billing schedule.

Can a foreigner buy Singapore property and what additional steps apply?

Foreigners may purchase private condominium units, executive condominiums that have reached their 10-year privatisation mark, and Sentosa Cove landed properties — subject to the Residential Property Act (Cap. 274). The conveyancing process is identical, except that ABSD at 60% of the purchase price is payable by foreigners on any residential property purchase as at 2026. US, Swiss, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Liechtenstein nationals benefit from Free Trade Agreement (FTA) exemptions and are treated at Singapore Citizen rates for ABSD purposes. See our Singapore Foreign Buyer Property Guide 2026.

What happens on completion day?

Completion is typically conducted at the seller’s lawyer’s office. Your bank disburses the loan directly to the seller’s lawyers; your CPF Board requisition is remitted; and you or your lawyer presents cashier’s orders for any remaining cash. The seller hands over keys and access cards. Title transfers on completion — your lawyer registers the transfer at SLA (typically processed within 1–3 business days). You will receive a Land Register printout confirming your name as the registered proprietor.

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Disclaimer: This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Conveyancing procedures, stamp duty rates, and CPF rules are subject to change. All figures, fees, and timelines cited are based on information available as at 7 June 2026. Readers should consult a licensed Singapore conveyancing lawyer and a Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) licensed financial adviser for advice specific to their circumstances. Authoritative references: IRAS (iras.gov.sg), Singapore Land Authority (sla.gov.sg), CPF Board (cpf.gov.sg), Law Society of Singapore (lawsociety.org.sg).

Singapore Stamp Duty Complete Guide 2026: BSD, ABSD, SSD and ACD Explained

Singapore Stamp Duty Complete Guide 2026: BSD, ABSD, SSD and ACD Explained

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Singapore stamp duty is not a single tax — it is a suite of four distinct levies that can collectively add hundreds of thousands of dollars to the cost of a property transaction. Understanding each one, when it applies, and how to calculate it is essential before you sign any Option to Purchase. This guide covers all four: Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD), Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD), Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD), and Additional Conveyance Duty (ACD).

All figures are current as at 31 May 2026. For the authoritative position, always refer to the IRAS Stamp Duty page and consult a licensed conveyancing lawyer before transacting.

Quick Answer — Singapore Stamp Duty at a Glance

  • BSD — payable by EVERY buyer on every property purchase. Progressive rates 1%–6%.
  • ABSD — additional levy on top of BSD. Singapore Citizens pay 0% on their first property, 20% on their second, 30% on their third+. PRs pay 5%/30%/35%. Foreigners pay 60% on any residential property.
  • SSD — payable by the SELLER if the property is sold within 3 years of purchase. Rates: 12% (Year 1), 8% (Year 2), 4% (Year 3), nil thereafter.
  • ACD — applies when residential property is transferred indirectly through corporate equity. Flat 33% on the residential property value component.
  • BSD and ABSD are payable within 14 days of the Option to Purchase (OTP) or Sale & Purchase Agreement.
  • SSD is payable within 14 days of the sale contract.
  • CPF cannot be used to pay stamp duty at the point of purchase — you must pay in cash first, then apply for CPF reimbursement.
  • ABSD remission is available to Singapore Citizen couples replacing their matrimonial home — subject to conditions and strict timelines.

What Is Stamp Duty and Why Does Singapore Use It?

Stamp duty is a transaction tax levied on documents that effect the transfer of a property or shares in a property-holding entity. In Singapore, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) administers all stamp duties under the Stamp Duties Act (Cap. 312). The modern stamp duty regime serves two purposes: raising revenue, and acting as a macro-prudential tool to moderate speculative demand in the residential property market.

When you buy a residential property, you will encounter BSD and possibly ABSD. When you sell, SSD may apply if you sell too quickly. If a property changes hands through an equity transfer in a company, ACD enters the picture. Each levy has its own trigger, its own rate schedule, and its own payment deadline.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) — the Baseline Tax Every Buyer Pays

BSD is the foundational property transaction tax. Every buyer — regardless of citizenship, residency status, or how many properties they already own — pays BSD on every property purchase. It is computed on the higher of the purchase price or the market value of the property at the time of acquisition.

The rates are progressive for residential property:

Purchase Price / Market Value BSD Rate Max BSD from This Tier
First S$180,000 1% S$1,800
Next S$180,000 2% S$3,600
Next S$640,000 3% S$19,200
Next S$500,000 4% S$20,000
Next S$1,500,000 5% S$75,000
Above S$3,000,000 6% No cap

A separate, flat-rate BSD schedule applies to non-residential property (commercial, industrial): 1% on the first S$180,000, 2% on the next S$180,000, and 3% on the remainder — capped at 3%. The progressive residential schedule shown above took effect for instruments executed on or after 15 February 2023, when the 5% and 6% tiers were introduced for high-value transactions.

Worked example (BSD only, S$1.5M residential condo):

First S$180,000 × 1% = S$1,800
Next S$180,000 × 2% = S$3,600
Next S$640,000 × 3% = S$19,200
Next S$500,000 × 4% = S$20,000
Total BSD = S$44,600

BSD is a fixed cost — there is no way to reduce it lawfully short of negotiating a lower purchase price. It is also not remissible (there are no BSD remission schemes for residential buyers equivalent to the ABSD remission).

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) — the Policy Lever

ABSD was introduced in December 2011 and has been raised five times since, most recently in April 2023. It is the single largest upfront cost for most second-property buyers and foreigners. ABSD is levied on top of BSD, at a flat rate on the entire purchase price.

Total stamp duty BSD plus ABSD by buyer profile Singapore 2026 — SC SPR foreigner entity table
Figure 1: Total stamp duty (BSD + ABSD) payable by buyer profile and property price — Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS.

The current ABSD rate schedule (applicable to instruments executed on or after 27 April 2023) is:

Buyer Profile 1st Property 2nd Property 3rd & Subsequent
Singapore Citizen (SC) 0% 20% 30%
Singapore Permanent Resident (SPR) 5% 30% 35%
Foreigner (individual) 60% 60% 60%
Entity (company, trustee) 65% 65% 65%
Housing developer 40%* 40%* 40%*

* 5% of the developer ABSD is non-remittable. The remaining 35% is remittable upon completing the project and selling all units within 5 years.

FTA nationals — citizens of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, and the United States — are accorded Singapore Citizen ABSD treatment under the respective Free Trade Agreements.

For a detailed breakdown of ABSD remission schemes (including the Married Couple Remission for upgraders), see our ABSD Complete Guide 2026.

Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) — the Anti-Flipping Tax

SSD was introduced in February 2010 to discourage short-term residential property speculation. It is paid by the seller (not the buyer) when a residential property is disposed of within three years of its acquisition. The rate depends on how quickly the seller flips the property:

Seller's Stamp Duty SSD rates by holding period Singapore 2026
Figure 2: SSD rates by holding period — residential property, Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS.

SSD is calculated on the higher of the sale price or the market value at the time of disposal. The holding period is measured from the date of purchase (execution of the Sale & Purchase Agreement) to the date of sale (execution of the disposal S&P). SSD does not apply to properties acquired before 20 February 2010, nor does it apply to commercial or industrial property.

Note: If you inherit a property and subsequently sell it, the SSD holding period runs from the original purchase date (the date the deceased acquired the property), not from the date of inheritance. This is a common source of confusion. If a parent bought a condo in 2024 and passed away in 2025, and the heir sells in early 2026, SSD at 8% could still apply.

The SSD is the reason most investor-buyers hold Singapore residential property for at least three years before selling. In practice, the combination of SSD and the time needed to recover transaction costs (BSD + ABSD + legal fees + agent commissions) means the effective minimum hold for a profitable flip is typically four to five years.

Additional Conveyance Duty (ACD) — the Entity Transfer Tax

ACD was introduced in May 2017 to close a loophole that allowed buyers to acquire residential property held in companies without paying ABSD — by buying shares in the company rather than the property directly. Under the ACD regime, a transfer of equity interests in a residential-property-holding entity is taxed as if it were a direct property acquisition.

ACD applies when:

  • The acquirer obtains a significant ownership interest (≥50%) in an entity (company, trust, or partnership);
  • That entity holds Singapore residential property as its primary asset; and
  • The residential property component exceeds a de minimis threshold.

The ACD rate is 33% on the residential property value component, levied on top of the existing stamp duty on the share transfer (which is normally 0.2%). For a $10 million residential property held in a company, an ACD transaction could trigger an additional $3.3 million in duty — making it broadly equivalent in cost to a direct ABSD transaction.

ACD is highly specialised and typically arises in commercial real estate transactions, family wealth restructuring, or en-bloc-related scenarios. Most individual residential buyers will never encounter it. If you are structuring a transaction that involves acquiring shares in a company that holds Singapore residential property, engage a tax adviser with stamp-duty expertise before proceeding.

Summary: All Four Singapore Stamp Duties at a Glance

Duty Who Pays When It Applies Rate (Residential) Deadline
BSD Buyer All property purchases 1%–6% progressive 14 days from OTP/S&P
ABSD Buyer 2nd+ property / foreigner / entity 0%–65% flat on full price 14 days from OTP/S&P
SSD Seller Sold within 3 years of purchase 4%–12% flat on full price 14 days from disposal S&P
ACD Acquirer of equity ≥50% stake in residential-property entity 33% on resi property value 14 days from share transfer

Comprehensive Worked Example: SC Couple Upgrading from HDB to Private Condo

Mr & Mrs Pang are Singapore Citizens. They own a Bishan 5-room HDB flat (purchased 2018, fully paid under CPF). They want to buy a S$2,000,000 2-bedroom freehold condo in District 10 and sell the HDB afterwards. Here is the full stamp duty picture:

Scenario A: Buy the condo BEFORE selling the HDB

Because they still own the HDB, the condo is their second residential property. ABSD at 20% is triggered.

  • BSD on S$2,000,000: S$64,600
  • ABSD (20%): S$400,000
  • Total stamp duty: S$464,600
  • However, they can apply for the ABSD Married Couple Remission — they get the S$400,000 back if they sell the HDB within 6 months of the later of (a) the condo’s purchase date or (b) its TOP date.
  • They must pay the ABSD upfront in cash and wait for the refund.

Scenario B: Sell the HDB FIRST, then buy the condo

After selling the HDB, they hold zero residential properties. The condo becomes their first residential property. Zero ABSD.

  • BSD on S$2,000,000: S$64,600
  • ABSD: S$0
  • Total stamp duty: S$64,600
Total stamp duty worked example three buyer profiles at S 2 million Singapore 2026
Figure 3: Total stamp duty at S$2,000,000 — SC 1st property, SC 2nd property, and SPR 2nd property compared. Source: IRAS 2026.

Scenario B saves the Pangs S$400,000 and avoids the need for the remission application. The trade-off is the risk of not finding a new home before the HDB sale completes — and potentially needing temporary accommodation in the interim. Many upgrading couples use a bridging loan to manage this gap.

When Does Stamp Duty Really Matter? — Why These Numbers Are So Significant

Stamp duty in Singapore is, by international standards, among the highest in the world for non-citizen buyers. A foreign individual purchasing a S$3 million residential property in 2026 faces: BSD of approximately S$119,600 plus ABSD of S$1,800,000 — a total of S$1,919,600, or 64% of the purchase price. This is intentional: the Government has consistently stated that Singapore’s residential property market is primarily for Singaporeans to live in, and the ABSD is the mechanism that enforces that policy goal.

For Singapore Citizens, the numbers are far more manageable — but still significant. A first-time buyer at S$2 million pays S$64,600 in BSD alone. For an upgrader buying their second property at the same price, adding S$400,000 in ABSD transforms what might otherwise be a healthy financial decision into a transaction that requires either substantial cash reserves or careful sequencing via the remission route.

Stamp duty also has a secondary effect on the property market as a whole: it creates a minimum holding period incentive. Investors who pay BSD and ABSD on entry need their property to appreciate by at least those amounts — plus legal costs, agent commissions, and financing costs — before they break even on a sale. This structurally discourages short-term speculation and was a deliberate part of the policy design when rates were raised in 2021 and 2023.

What Might Change in 2026 and Beyond?

This section is speculative analysis, not official policy.

As at May 2026, there has been no signal from the Ministry of Finance or MAS of imminent changes to the stamp duty regime. Private residential prices rose 0.9% in Q1 2026 — a moderate pace that does not, on its own, suggest further tightening is imminent. The Government has traditionally intervened when quarterly price growth exceeds 2–3% or when transaction volumes indicate re-entry of speculative buyers.

Watch for the following triggers that could lead to a review: (1) sustained quarter-on-quarter private price growth above 2% for two or more consecutive quarters; (2) a significant rise in foreign buyer transactions as a proportion of total; (3) a global interest rate environment that makes Singapore dollar assets more attractive to offshore capital. Conversely, a sharp economic slowdown could prompt targeted relief — as was done in 2020 with the COVID-19 stamp-duty deferral scheme.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my CPF to pay stamp duty?

No, not at the point of payment. BSD and ABSD (and SSD for sellers) must be paid in cash by the statutory deadline. After the duty has been stamped and paid, you may apply to withdraw from your CPF Ordinary Account to reimburse the cash outlay, provided the property qualifies under CPF Board rules and you have sufficient OA balance. The CPF withdrawal is a reimbursement step, not a direct payment channel.

Does SSD apply if I sell because of financial hardship?

There are no hardship exemptions to SSD built into the Stamp Duties Act. SSD is triggered automatically on any disposal within 3 years of purchase, regardless of the reason for sale. IRAS has no general discretion to waive SSD except in the specific circumstances defined in the Act (e.g. compulsory acquisition by the state). If you are facing distress and need to sell within the SSD window, factor the SSD cost into your net sale proceeds before deciding.

My spouse is a foreigner. Do we pay 60% ABSD on our first home together?

For a jointly-owned first matrimonial home where one owner is a Singapore Citizen and the other is a foreigner, the couple can apply for ABSD remission to be taxed at the SC rate (0% on a first property). The remission is available for a property that will be used as the couple’s matrimonial home, and conditions must be met. The ABSD is still payable upfront at the foreigner rate; the remission is applied for thereafter. Engage a conveyancing lawyer well before the OTP is exercised to ensure the remission application is properly structured.

Is stamp duty payable on a property gift (transfer without payment)?

Yes. BSD (and ABSD where applicable) is computed on the market value of the property at the time of transfer, even if no money changes hands. A parent transferring a private condo to an adult child as a gift is treated as a purchase at market value for stamp duty purposes. The child is treated as the buyer and must pay BSD and ABSD based on their own buyer profile and existing property count.

How is stamp duty calculated for an uncompleted property (new launch)?

For an uncompleted unit bought directly from the developer, the stamp duty is computed on the purchase price stated in the Sale & Purchase Agreement (which is executed at the point of booking the unit). ABSD — where applicable — is payable within 14 days of the S&P execution, which means the full ABSD amount is due upfront even though the project may not complete for several years. The Married Couple Remission window (6 months to sell the existing property) runs from the later of the S&P date or the Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) date.

Does stamp duty apply to HDB flat purchases?

Yes. BSD applies to all HDB flat purchases (new BTO and resale) at the same progressive rates as private residential property. For new BTO flats, BSD is computed on the selling price set by HDB; for resale, it is on the higher of the resale price or HDB’s valuation. ABSD also applies to HDB flat purchases under the same rules — although Singapore Citizen first-time buyers pay 0% ABSD, meaning only BSD is due. SPR first-time buyers face 5% ABSD even on an HDB flat purchase.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Stamp duty rates and remission rules may change. Always verify the current position with the IRAS Stamp Duty page and the Ministry of Finance. Consult a licensed conveyancing lawyer or tax specialist before transacting.

Singapore Property Checklist for First-Time Buyers 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Singapore Property Checklist for First-Time Buyers 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Singapore Property Checklist for First-Time Buyers 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Quick Answer — Key Facts for First-Time Buyers in 2026

  • Singapore Citizens buying their first residential property pay 0% ABSD — only BSD applies
  • Maximum grants for HDB buyers: EHG S$120,000 + CPF Housing Grant S$80,000 = up to S$200,000 combined
  • Bank loan LTV: 75% (private property); HDB concessionary loan: 90% — but you must not own other property and meet income ceiling
  • TDSR ceiling: 55% of gross monthly income; MSR ceiling for HDB/EC: 30%
  • BSD on S$700k HDB resale: ~S$17,400; on S$1.4M condo: ~S$44,600 — payable within 14 days of OTP
  • Always sell your current home before buying a second one to avoid triggering the 20% SC second-property ABSD
  • Conveyancing lawyer and IPA (In-Principle Approval) should be secured before you commit to an OTP

Buying your first property in Singapore is one of the largest financial decisions you will ever make — and one of the most bureaucratically complex. Between eligibility rules, grant calculations, loan approvals, stamp duties, and legal processes, first-time buyers in 2026 face a matrix of decisions that can take months to navigate correctly. The cost of getting it wrong — particularly on ABSD, CPF rules, or MOP requirements — can run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

This checklist is designed to walk you through every step of the Singapore property buying process in the right sequence. Whether you are planning to buy an HDB flat (BTO or resale), an executive condominium, or a private condo or landed property, the framework below applies — with notes on where the process diverges for each property type.

The 10-Step Singapore Property Buying Checklist

Singapore first-time property buyer 10-step checklist 2026
Figure 1: The 10-step Singapore property buying process — applicable to HDB resale and private property purchases, 2026.

Step 1 — Determine Your Eligibility

Before browsing listings, you need to know what you are legally allowed to buy. Singapore’s property eligibility framework is citizenship-dependent and property-type-specific.

Singapore Citizens (SC) have the broadest access: they can purchase HDB flats (BTO, resale, EC), private condominiums, and (with restrictions) landed property. There is no property ownership limit per se, but each additional residential property increases your ABSD exposure significantly — from 0% on the first to 20% on the second.

Singapore Permanent Residents (SPR) may purchase resale HDB flats (with a family nucleus and after three years of PR), private condominiums, and certain ECs on the open market. SPRs pay 5% ABSD on their first residential property purchase. They cannot buy new BTO flats directly and face additional HDB Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP) restrictions on resale flats.

Foreigners (non-PR) are restricted to private condominiums and certain commercial properties. They pay 60% ABSD on any Singapore residential property. Nationals from Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, and the United States are treated as Singapore Citizens for ABSD purposes under FTA provisions.

If you are buying a BTO HDB flat, additional eligibility conditions apply: income ceiling (S$7,000/mth for 2-room Flexi, S$14,000/mth for 3-room and above), family nucleus requirement for most schemes, first-timer status, and the Ethnic Integration Policy quota at the block and neighbourhood level.

Step 2 — Secure Your In-Principle Approval (IPA)

An IPA (also called an AIP — Approval In Principle) from a bank or, for HDB loans, HDB itself, is your preliminary loan commitment. It is not the final loan offer, but it tells you — and the seller’s agent — how much you can borrow, which in turn defines your maximum purchase price.

For bank loans, the key constraints are the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) at 55% of gross monthly income, and the Loan-to-Value (LTV) limit of 75% for private property. For HDB concessionary loans, the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) of 30% applies (your monthly loan repayment cannot exceed 30% of gross income), and the LTV is 90%. However, to qualify for a HDB loan, your household income must not exceed S$14,000/mth, and you must not own any private residential property.

Secure your IPA before viewing seriously or making any offers. An IPA is typically valid for 30 days (bank) or 6 months (HDB HLE), and it will save you from falling in love with a property you cannot actually finance.

Step 3 — Set Your Total Budget Including All Costs

First-time buyer upfront costs comparison HDB resale versus private condo Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Estimated upfront cash outlay for a Singapore Citizen first-time buyer — HDB resale S$700k vs new launch private condo S$1.4M. Source: IRAS BSD tables, MAS LTV framework, May 2026.

Your headline property price is just the beginning. The full upfront cost of purchasing includes Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD), the down payment (with a mandatory cash component), legal fees, and in some cases agent commission. For a first-time SC buyer, ABSD is zero — but BSD is unavoidable.

Cost Item HDB Resale S$700k Private Condo S$1.4M Notes
Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) S$17,400 S$44,600 Payable in cash within 14 days of OTP
ABSD (SC, 1st property) S$0 S$0 0% for SC first property — confirm ownership count
Down Payment (cash portion) S$70,000 (10%) S$280,000 (20% of 25%) Minimum 5% cash for HDB; 5% cash for private (rest CPF)
Legal Fees (conveyancing) ~S$2,500 ~S$5,000 Includes title search, CPF charge registration
Agent Commission (buyer side) ~S$7,000 (1%) S$0 New launch: developer pays; resale private: negotiated
Total Estimated Cash Outlay ~S$96,900 ~S$329,600 Remainder of down payment can use CPF OA

Note that for private property, only the first 5% of the purchase price must be paid in cash (before or at OTP exercise). The remaining 20% of the 25% down payment can come from CPF Ordinary Account. For HDB loans, only 5% cash is required upfront — the remaining 85% is funded by the HDB concessionary loan.

Steps 4–6 — Research, Engage Your Lawyer Early, and View Properties

The biggest mistake first-time buyers make is viewing properties extensively before understanding their financing ceiling and legal standing. The reverse sequence — finance and legal first, then view — saves both time and negotiating leverage.

Property type selection (Step 4) depends on your income, CPF balance, timeline, and lifestyle priorities. The decision matrix in Figure 3 below compares HDB, private condo, and EC across the key dimensions first-time buyers care about most.

HDB versus private condo versus EC decision matrix for first-time buyers Singapore 2026
Figure 3: HDB vs Private Condo vs Executive Condominium — first-time buyer decision matrix, May 2026.

Engaging a conveyancing lawyer early (Step 5) is advice most first-time buyers receive too late. A good conveyancing lawyer will review the OTP before you sign it, not after. They will flag title issues, outstanding mortgages on the property, caveat searches, and CPF charge implications — all of which affect whether and at what price you should proceed. Legal fees for a straightforward purchase are modest (S$2,500–S$5,000) relative to the transaction value; do not treat them as a cost to defer.

When viewing properties (Step 6), check the remaining lease tenure carefully — especially for HDB flats and older freehold condominiums. CPF Ordinary Account funds cannot be used if the remaining lease does not cover the youngest buyer to age 95. A 60-year-old resale HDB flat may look attractively priced, but the financing and CPF limitations will materially alter your actual cost of acquisition.

Steps 7–8 — Exercise the OTP and Pay Stamp Duty

When you have identified your property, the seller will issue an Option to Purchase (OTP) in exchange for an option fee (typically 1% of the purchase price). You have a defined window — 21 calendar days for private property under the standard Law Society OTP — to exercise the option by paying the exercise price (typically another 4–9% for private, with the first 1% option fee credited) or walk away (forfeiting the 1% option fee).

Within 14 days of the OTP signing date, you must pay Buyer’s Stamp Duty (and ABSD if applicable) to IRAS via e-Stamping. Late payment attracts penalties starting at 5% of the duty payable. BSD cannot be paid from CPF — it must be in cash. This is why ensuring you have sufficient liquidity before signing the OTP is essential.

Steps 9–10 — Sale & Purchase Agreement and Completion

After exercising the OTP, your lawyer will coordinate the formal Sale and Purchase (S&P) Agreement, CPF Ordinary Account authorisation, and the loan drawdown with your bank. For new launch condominiums, the payment schedule follows the Progressive Payment Scheme (NPS) — where each tranche is tied to construction milestones — or the full lump-sum payment at completion for resale. The Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) for executive condominiums was abolished on 8 May 2026 — all new EC purchases now follow the Normal Payment Scheme (NPS).

At completion (or key collection for BTO), your lawyer discharges their obligations and you register as the new owner at the Singapore Land Authority. Arrange for SP Group and StarHub connectivity, conduct a thorough defects inspection, and retain the developer’s or seller’s maintenance obligations where applicable.

Worked Example — SC First-Time Buyer, S$700k HDB Resale in Tampines

Ms Tan, a 31-year-old Singapore Citizen, is buying her first home — a 4-room HDB resale flat in Tampines listed at S$700,000. She earns S$6,800 per month. She has applied for an Enhanced Housing Grant (EHG) and CPF Housing Grant (CHG), and has S$120,000 in her CPF Ordinary Account.

Grants calculation: At S$6,800/mth (singles scheme), EHG = S$35,000 (approximately, based on the singles-rate EHG table at ~S$6,500–S$7,000 bracket). If she buys with a co-applicant (e.g. her mother, Singles scheme not applicable — assuming she buys as a single first-timer), or as a couple. For simplicity, assume Ms Tan buys jointly with her fiancé (combined income S$10,500/mth): EHG = S$40,000 + CHG = S$80,000 = S$120,000 total grants applied to the purchase price, reducing the effective cost.

BSD: On S$700,000 = (1%×S$180k) + (2%×S$180k) + (3%×S$340k) = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$10,200 = S$15,600 (payable in cash within 14 days).

Financing: Grants reduce the purchase price for grant disbursement, but BSD is still calculated on the full S$700,000 transaction price. HDB concessionary loan: 90% LTV on S$700,000 – grants S$120,000 = net S$580,000 → 90% = S$522,000 loan. Monthly repayment at 2.6% over 25 years: approximately S$2,370. MSR check: S$2,370 ÷ S$10,500 = 22.6% — within the 30% MSR ceiling.

Cash outlay at purchase: BSD S$15,600 + 10% down payment S$70,000 (min S$35,000 cash; balance from CPF OA) + legal S$2,500 + agent S$7,000 = approximately S$95,100 total, of which a minimum S$57,600 must be in cash (with the rest from CPF OA).

What to Watch in 2H 2026

Singapore’s property market for first-time buyers in the second half of 2026 will be shaped by three key developments. First, the June 2026 BTO exercise offering 6,900 flats across Bishan, Ang Mo Kio, Bukit Merah, Sembawang, and Woodlands will open for applications in mid-June — this is the largest BTO exercise of the year and the first to include Bishan Lakeview units in over four decades. First-timers with strong ballot positioning should register their interest before the application window closes.

Second, bank interest rates continue to ease in Singapore: the three-month SORA fell to approximately 1.20% as at May 2026, and major banks’ fixed-rate packages (2-year) now sit in the 1.75–1.85% range. For first-time buyers with long planning horizons, locking a rate now before any policy shift is worth discussing with a mortgage broker.

Third, the EC market is adjusting to the 8 May 2026 changes: the Deferred Payment Scheme is gone, the MOP is 10 years (up from five), and the first-timer quota has expanded to 90%. First-timers with the income and budget to qualify for an EC now have a higher allocation probability than at any point in the past five years — but they also face a longer hold requirement before they can monetise the property.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to pay ABSD as a first-time Singapore Citizen buyer?

No. Singapore Citizens purchasing their first residential property pay 0% ABSD. You pay only Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD), which is a progressive tax starting at 1% on the first S$180,000 and rising to 6% on the portion above S$3,000,000. However, if you own any residential property at the time of OTP signing — including inherited property or a share in a property — you will be treated as a second-property buyer and face 20% ABSD. Always verify your property ownership profile via the IRAS myTax Portal before signing any OTP.

Can I use CPF to pay Buyer’s Stamp Duty?

No. BSD (and ABSD, if applicable) cannot be paid from your CPF Ordinary Account. These duties must be paid in cash within 14 days of the OTP signing date. CPF OA funds can, however, be used toward the property’s down payment (subject to the Valuation Limit), monthly mortgage instalments, and certain legal fees. Ensure you have sufficient cash liquidity to cover stamp duties before you exercise any OTP.

What is the difference between HDB loan and bank loan for first-time buyers?

An HDB concessionary loan charges a fixed rate of 2.6% per annum (0.1% above CPF OA rate), allows up to 90% LTV, and can be refinanced to a bank later (irreversibly — you cannot switch back to HDB loan once moved to a bank). A bank loan currently offers fixed rates of approximately 1.75–1.85% for a two-year lock-in (as at May 2026), requires a minimum 25% down payment with 5% in cash, and requires a stress test. For buyers who prioritise certainty and lower initial cash outlay, the HDB loan is simpler. For those who want to minimise total interest over a long loan tenure, a bank loan often saves significantly more — but exposes you to rate refixing risk every 2–3 years. See our Home Loan Comparison Singapore 2026 guide for a detailed worked comparison.

How long does the HDB BTO process take from ballot to key collection?

The full BTO cycle — from launch ballot to key collection — typically takes four to five years for standard construction timelines, though some projects take longer. The sequence is: Launch (application window) → Ballot result (2–3 months) → Flat selection queue (typically 6–12 months) → Sign S&P Agreement (within the selection window) → Construction period (3–4 years typically) → Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) → Key collection. For buyers who need housing sooner, resale HDB flats, Sale of Balance Flats (SBF), or private property are the alternatives. See our HDB BTO Ballot System 2026 guide for full ballot probability data by flat type and estate classification.

What happens if I sign an OTP and then cannot secure a loan?

If your bank does not approve the final loan (distinct from the IPA, which is only in-principle), you will forfeit the option fee (typically 1% of the purchase price) and potentially face claims from the seller if the failure to complete is attributable to financing. This is why securing a firm IPA before signing the OTP is essential. Most conveyancing lawyers will recommend including a financing condition in the OTP for resale transactions, which allows you to withdraw and recover the option fee if you cannot secure financing by a specified date — though sellers do not always agree to such conditions in competitive markets.

Can foreigners buy HDB flats or ECs in Singapore?

No. Foreigners (non-PR) cannot purchase HDB flats (BTO or resale) or new ECs from developers. They are restricted to private condominiums and most commercial/industrial property. A foreign national would pay 60% ABSD on any Singapore residential property purchase. The only exception is citizens of the five FTA countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, USA) who are treated as Singapore Citizens for ABSD purposes — but even these buyers cannot purchase HDB flats or new ECs, as that restriction is based on citizenship/PR status, not on ABSD rates.

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Disclaimer: This checklist is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. All figures, grant amounts, BSD rates, LTV limits, and loan terms cited are based on publicly available sources including IRAS, HDB, MAS, and CPF Board as at May 2026, and are subject to change. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Consult a licensed conveyancing lawyer, financial adviser, and HDB/CEA-registered property agent before making any property transaction. Verify current grants, rates, and eligibility conditions at HDB.gov.sg, IRAS.gov.sg, and MAS.gov.sg.

Foreigners Buying Property in Singapore 2026: ABSD, Eligibility and the Full Cost Guide

Foreigners Buying Property in Singapore 2026: ABSD, Eligibility and the Full Cost Guide

Quick Answer

  • Foreigners (non-PR, non-SC) may purchase private residential property — condominiums, apartments, strata-titled units — in Singapore without restriction, subject to a 60% Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) payable to IRAS.
  • Foreigners cannot buy HDB flats (resale or BTO) and cannot buy landed residential property (houses, semi-detached, bungalows) without prior approval from the Singapore Land Authority (SLA), which is rarely granted.
  • Executive Condominiums (ECs) become available to foreigners only after privatisation. For ECs from GLS sites tendered from 8 May 2026 onwards, privatisation occurs at 15 years from TOP; earlier ECs remain at 10 years.
  • The 60% ABSD applies to the entire purchase price and must be paid within 14 days of exercising the Option to Purchase (OTP).
  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is payable by all buyers regardless of nationality. On a S$2.5M purchase, BSD is approximately S$94,600.
  • Foreigners can obtain a mortgage from Singapore-licensed banks. LTV limit is 75% for a first property loan with no existing housing loans, subject to Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) of 55%.
  • Commercial and industrial property carries no ABSD — foreigners may purchase shophouses, office units, factories, and warehouses without the 60% surcharge.
  • Nationals of the USA, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland are exempt from ABSD on their first residential purchase under Free Trade Agreement commitments.

What Is the ABSD and Who Administers It?

The Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) is a surcharge levied by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) on the purchase or acquisition of residential property in Singapore, on top of the standard Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD). Introduced in December 2011 as a demand-side cooling measure, the ABSD has been adjusted multiple times. The most significant recent change for foreigners was on 27 April 2023, when the rate was doubled from 30% to 60%.

The policy objective is explicit: ABSD prioritises home ownership for Singaporeans and ensures that property remains affordable for residents. Non-resident buyers must bear a substantial additional cost — and this is intentional. Singapore’s Ministry of National Development has consistently maintained that residential property is primarily for citizens, and the 60% rate is designed to reflect that priority firmly.

Singapore property eligibility by buyer type 2026 — foreigners PRs and citizens comparison table
Figure 1: Property Eligibility by Buyer Type — Singapore 2026 | Source: HDB, URA, SLA, IRAS

ABSD Rates by Buyer Profile (Effective 27 April 2023)

ABSD is charged on the higher of the purchase price or the property’s market value. The table below shows the current rates, administered by IRAS, for residential property in Singapore:

Buyer Profile 1st Property 2nd Property 3rd+ Property
Singapore Citizen 0% 20% 30%
Singapore Permanent Resident (PR) 5% 30% 35%
Foreigner (non-PR, non-SC) 60% — flat rate, regardless of how many properties held in Singapore
Corporate entity / trust 65% — flat rate on residential property

Source: IRAS, effective 27 April 2023. FTA exemptions apply for nationals of the USA, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway.

ABSD rates by buyer profile Singapore 2026 — foreigners pay 60% on all residential property
Figure 2: ABSD Rates by Buyer Profile — Singapore 2026 | Source: IRAS, effective 27 April 2023

Free Trade Agreement (FTA) Exemptions

Under Singapore’s FTA commitments, nationals of the USA, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland are treated on par with Singapore Citizens for ABSD on their first residential property purchase. This means a US national buying their first Singapore condo pays 0% ABSD. On second and subsequent purchases, the SC schedule applies. The exemption is for individuals only; US-incorporated companies do not benefit. IRAS requires passport proof of nationality when claiming the FTA exemption.

What Foreigners Can Buy — and Cannot Buy

Permitted (60% ABSD where residential): Private condominiums, private apartments, strata-titled units, SOHO units with residential classification. ECs after privatisation (15 years from TOP for new GLS-launched ECs from 8 May 2026; 10 years for earlier ECs). Sentosa Cove landed property. Commercial shophouses, strata office units, retail units, industrial factories, warehouses — all without residential ABSD.

Not permitted without special approval: Landed residential property outside Sentosa Cove (houses, semi-detached, bungalows, terraced houses). The SLA may grant approval under the Residential Property Act in exceptional circumstances, but approvals are rare.

Strictly prohibited: HDB flats (both new BTO and resale). HDB housing is reserved for Singapore citizens and permanent residents under the Housing and Development Act. ECs during their MOP and privatisation period are also off-limits to foreigners.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) — Payable by Everyone

BSD is levied by IRAS on every property purchase in Singapore, regardless of nationality. For residential property, the tiered rates are: 1% on the first S$180,000; 2% on the next S$180,000; 3% on the next S$640,000; 4% on the next S$500,000; 5% on the next S$1,500,000; and 6% on amounts above S$3,000,000. On a S$2.5M purchase, total BSD = S$94,600.

Purchase Price Tier BSD Rate BSD on This Tier
First S$180,000 1% S$1,800
Next S$180,000 (up to S$360,000) 2% S$3,600
Next S$640,000 (up to S$1,000,000) 3% S$19,200
Next S$500,000 (up to S$1,500,000) 4% S$20,000
Next S$1,500,000 (up to S$3,000,000) 5% Up to S$75,000
Remainder above S$3,000,000 6% Variable

Sellers’ Stamp Duty (SSD) — The Anti-Flip Tax

SSD is administered by IRAS and applies to all sellers who dispose of residential property within three years of purchase, regardless of nationality. The rates are: 12% within 1 year; 8% within 2 years; 4% within 3 years; nil thereafter. For a foreigner who has paid 60% ABSD, an SSD liability on a short-term resale would be a severe additional burden. Foreign buyers must plan for a meaningful long-term holding horizon.

Holding Period SSD Rate
Up to 1 year 12%
1 to 2 years 8%
2 to 3 years 4%
More than 3 years Nil

Financing — LTV, TDSR, and Mortgage Options

Foreigners may borrow from Singapore-licensed banks subject to MAS macro-prudential rules identical to those applied to residents. The LTV limit is 75% for a first property loan with no existing housing loans (reducing to 55% for a second and 35% for a third). The TDSR cap is 55% of gross monthly income. Loan tenors run up to 35 years, typically reduced by age exceeding 65. Most major Singapore banks lend to foreigners — DBS, OCBC, UOB, Standard Chartered, and HSBC all do so, subject to enhanced documentation requirements including overseas income proof and a valid work pass or Long-Term Visit Pass.

The Buying Process — Step by Step

  1. Arrange in-principle approval: Approach at least two Singapore banks before making offers. Allow 5–10 working days.
  2. Engage a CEA-licensed agent: For new launches, no buyer commission is payable; for resale, co-broking arrangements vary.
  3. Option to Purchase (OTP): On resale, the seller grants an OTP valid for 21 days; a 1% option fee is paid. For new launches, a 5% booking fee is paid directly to the developer.
  4. Pay BSD and ABSD: Both due within 14 days of OTP exercise. On a S$2.5M purchase, this means wiring S$94,600 (BSD) + S$1,500,000 (ABSD) to IRAS — a total of S$1,594,600 within a fortnight of signing.
  5. Engage a conveyancing solicitor: A Singapore-qualified solicitor handles title searches, mortgage documentation, and lodgement with SLA’s eConveyancing portal.
  6. Completion: For resale, typically 8–12 weeks. For new launches, completion occurs at TOP/CSC, which may be 3–5 years away.

Worked Example: Mr David Harrington Buys a S$2.5M CCR Condo

Mr David Harrington, 42, is a British national on an Employment Pass earning S$25,000/month gross. He purchases a two-bedroom unit in District 9 at S$2,500,000, with no existing property loans in Singapore.

Total upfront cash required for foreigner buying SGD 2.5M condo Singapore 2026 cost breakdown
Figure 3: Total Upfront Cash Required — Foreigner Buying SGD 2.5M CCR Condo (2026)
Cost Item Amount (SGD) Notes
25% downpayment (cash) 625,000 75% LTV → loan of S$1,875,000
Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) 94,600 IRAS; payable within 14 days of OTP
ABSD (60% x S$2,500,000) 1,500,000 IRAS; payable within 14 days of OTP
Stamp duty on mortgage (0.4% x loan) 7,500 On S$1,875,000 loan amount
Legal / conveyancing fees (est.) 3,500 Singapore-licensed solicitor
Valuation fee (est.) 600 Required by lender
Total upfront cash required 2,231,200 Excluding ongoing mortgage payments

Monthly mortgage at 3.30% p.a. over 20 years on S$1,875,000 ≈ S$10,633/month. TDSR check: S$10,633 ÷ 55% = S$19,333 minimum monthly gross income required. Mr Harrington’s S$25,000/month comfortably qualifies. However, stamp duties alone represent 63.8% of the purchase price — the property must appreciate significantly for the investment to make financial sense on a net basis.

What This Means for Foreign Buyers

Despite the 60% ABSD headline rate, Singapore continues to attract foreign buyers for structurally sound reasons. Singapore offers secure freehold and 99-year leasehold titles with one of the most transparent property title systems in Asia. There is no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no wealth tax. The SGD has historically been stable and appreciating against most major currencies, and Singapore’s rule of law is consistently ranked among the best globally.

For high-net-worth buyers from jurisdictions with currency risk, political instability, or restricted capital mobility — particularly from certain parts of Southeast Asia, China, and the Middle East — paying 60% ABSD is the premium for a stable, internationally recognised store of value. For US nationals, who pay 0% ABSD on their first purchase thanks to the FTA, Singapore offers one of the most favourable entry points into any developed-market property system globally.

What Might Come Next

The 60% ABSD rate for foreigners is unlikely to be reduced in the near term. Singapore’s government has consistently adjusted rates upward when demand has been firm, and the April 2023 doubling was a clear statement of direction. The EC policy changes of 8 May 2026 — extending MOP to 10 years and privatisation to 15 years, abolishing the Deferred Payment Scheme — further indicate a tightening trajectory. Foreign buyers should plan their acquisitions assuming the 60% rate will persist for the foreseeable future and structure their financial planning accordingly.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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

Yes. Holding an Employment Pass does not confer Singapore PR status, so the buyer is classified as a foreigner for ABSD purposes — meaning 60% ABSD applies. There is no minimum residency duration requirement to purchase private residential property. The buyer must satisfy the bank’s TDSR requirements using their Singapore employment income (fully counted) and any overseas income (subject to a bank haircut, typically around 30% on variable income).

Are there properties foreigners can buy without the 60% ABSD?

Yes. Commercial and industrial properties do not attract the residential ABSD. Strata office units, retail units, commercial shophouses, industrial factories, and warehouses can all be purchased by foreigners without the 60% surcharge. Many foreign investors therefore channel their Singapore property exposure through commercial assets or Singapore REITs listed on SGX, which provide property-linked returns without the ABSD burden.

Can a foreigner married to a Singapore Citizen pay lower ABSD?

Not directly on a joint purchase. If the property is purchased in the Singapore Citizen spouse’s name alone (sole ownership) and it is the SC’s first property, no ABSD is payable. However, if both names appear on the title, the foreigner’s inclusion triggers 60% ABSD. Many cross-nationality couples place the first property in the SC’s sole name. On subsequent purchases in joint names, ABSD at the SC second-property rate of 20% applies. Seek independent legal and tax advice before structuring ownership this way, as there are CPF, mortgage liability, and estate planning implications.

When exactly must the ABSD be paid?

ABSD must be paid within 14 days of the date on which the liability arises — typically the date of exercising the OTP or the date of the Sale and Purchase Agreement, whichever is earlier. Late payment attracts a 5% per annum penalty interest plus potential IRAS prosecution under the Stamp Duties Act. There is no grace period. The full ABSD amount must be available on or before the deadline, not merely committed in a loan facility.

Is ABSD refundable if the purchase falls through after the OTP is exercised?

Generally, no. Once the ABSD liability arises, it is payable regardless of whether the transaction completes. IRAS may consider a remission application in exceptional circumstances if a transaction is aborted, but this is not guaranteed. The ABSD Married Couple Remission — which allows one SC/PR spouse to sell their existing property within six months of a joint purchase and claim a refund — does not apply to foreigners. Always consult a licensed conveyancing solicitor before exercising any OTP if there is uncertainty about financing, as the ABSD liability is triggered on signing.

Can a foreigner buy a shophouse and occupy the upper residential floor?

This depends on the shophouse’s URA zoning and approved use. If the upper floors are classified as residential under the Residential Property Act, a foreigner cannot purchase without SLA approval (rarely granted). Some shophouses are zoned entirely commercial or approved for mixed use with the upper floors treated as non-residential. The correct approach is to check the URA Master Plan zoning and the specific approved use with a conveyancing solicitor before making any offer, as the legal classification is significant and not always obvious from the building’s physical appearance.

Does a foreigner pay ABSD on a privatised Executive Condominium?

Yes. Once an EC is privatised, it is treated as private residential property and all standard ABSD rules apply — including the 60% rate for foreigners. For ECs launched under GLS tenders from 8 May 2026, privatisation occurs at 15 years from TOP; earlier ECs privatise at 10 years from TOP. Buyers purchasing privatised ECs in the secondary market should verify the specific EC’s TOP date and calculate the privatisation milestone accordingly before making an offer.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Stamp duty rates, eligibility rules, and financing guidelines are subject to change by IRAS, MAS, HDB, SLA, and URA. Always verify current rates at iras.gov.sg and consult a licensed Singapore conveyancing solicitor, a CEA-registered real estate professional, and a licensed mortgage adviser before committing to any property transaction. All figures are illustrative based on publicly available data as at 16 May 2026.

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