Singapore Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) Guide 2026: Rates, Calculations and When It Applies

Singapore Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) Guide 2026: Rates, Calculations and When It Applies

Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) is Singapore’s principal tool for discouraging short-term property speculation. Introduced in 2010 and tightened several times since, SSD imposes a tax on sellers who dispose of their residential property within three years of purchase. It is distinct from the Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) paid at purchase and the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) — SSD applies solely to the sale side of the transaction and targets holding-period behaviour. For any property investor or owner considering a sale, understanding SSD is essential before signing an Option to Purchase.

Quick Answer: Singapore SSD Key Facts 2026

  • SSD rates (from 27 April 2023): Year 1 — 12%; Year 2 — 8%; Year 3 — 4%; Year 4 and beyond — 0%.
  • Who pays: The seller pays SSD, not the buyer. It is calculated on the higher of the sale price or the market value.
  • Properties covered: Residential properties only — private condos, landed houses, and ECs after privatisation. HDB flats are excluded from SSD (they have the MOP instead).
  • Administered by: IRAS (Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore).
  • Payment deadline: Within 14 days of signing the Option to Purchase (OTP) or agreement.
  • Remissions exist for death, bankruptcy, divorce, en bloc collective sale, and certain compulsory acquisitions.
  • SSD is not deductible against income tax — it is a capital transaction cost.
  • The holding period runs from the date of purchase (completion) to the date of sale (contract).

What Is Seller’s Stamp Duty and Who Administers It?

Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) is a stamp duty levied by IRAS on the seller of a residential property when the property is disposed of within three years of acquisition. It was first introduced on 20 February 2010 by the Ministry of Finance as part of a suite of cooling measures designed to curb short-term speculative buying and selling that had contributed to rapid price escalation in the aftermath of the 2009 property boom.

SSD is fundamentally different in purpose from BSD and ABSD. BSD is a transaction tax levied on all buyers regardless of intent. ABSD targets the demand side — discouraging multiple property ownership, especially by foreigners. SSD, by contrast, targets the supply side: it penalises sellers who sell too quickly, making “flipping” — buying property to sell within a short period at a profit — financially unattractive. The policy intent is to encourage genuine owner-occupation and long-term investment rather than short-term trading.

IRAS administers SSD. The seller’s solicitor is responsible for computing, stamping, and remitting the SSD to IRAS before the completion of the sale. SSD is a charge against the proceeds of sale and is typically deducted from the sale proceeds held by the seller’s solicitor before the seller receives the net cash.

Singapore SSD seller's stamp duty rates by holding period 2026 bar chart and table
Figure 1: Singapore SSD Rates by Holding Period 2026 — left panel shows the rate schedule, right panel shows the SSD amount on a S$1.5 million residential property. Source: IRAS 2026.

Current SSD Rates 2026: The Three-Year Window

The current SSD rate schedule, effective from 27 April 2023, applies to residential properties acquired on or after that date. For properties acquired before 27 April 2023, the rates that prevailed at the time of acquisition apply — but since April 2023 is now more than three years ago, virtually all transactions occurring today are within the current rate schedule or have already crossed the three-year SSD-free window.

The rates are straightforward: if you sell within the first year of ownership, SSD is 12% of the higher of the sale price or market value. Between one and two years, the rate drops to 8%. Between two and three years, it is 4%. After three full years from the date of acquisition, SSD falls to zero — the property may be sold without any SSD liability. The holding period is measured from the date the seller legally acquired the property (the date of completion, or in the case of a new launch, the date of the Sales & Purchase Agreement) to the date the seller enters into the agreement to sell (the OTP date for a resale, or the S&P date for a new launch).

For a property valued at S$1.8 million, the SSD exposure is: Year 1 — S$216,000; Year 2 — S$144,000; Year 3 — S$72,000; Year 4+ — S$0. These are substantial sums that fundamentally change the investment calculus for anyone considering a quick exit.

How SSD Is Calculated: The “Higher Of” Rule

A critical nuance that many sellers overlook is that SSD is calculated on the higher of the transacted price or the market value of the property at the time of sale — not simply on the contract price. IRAS may commission its own valuation if it suspects the declared sale price is below market. This prevents sellers from artificially depressing the sale price to reduce SSD. In most arm’s-length transactions the contracted price and market value are the same, but in related-party sales (e.g. selling to a sibling at a discount), IRAS will use the higher market value figure.

The SSD formula: SSD = Applicable Rate × Higher of (Sale Price or Market Value). There are no progressive tiers within each year — the rate applies to the full consideration amount. Sellers should confirm the applicable rate with their solicitor before signing the OTP, since any change in holding-period calculation can significantly alter the tax.

Net proceeds after seller's stamp duty SSD at different holding periods Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Net gain after SSD — S$1.5 million property sold at S$1.65 million (10% appreciation). The SSD at Year 1 (12%) consumes S$198,000, turning a gross gain of S$150,000 into a net loss of S$48,000 before other costs. Source: IRAS, illustrative calculation.

Which Properties Are Subject to SSD?

SSD applies to residential properties in Singapore: these include private condominiums, apartments, landed houses (terrace, semi-detached, detached), and Executive Condominiums (ECs) that have completed their privatisation (i.e. after the 10-year privatisation milestone from TOP). Mixed-use properties where part of the floor area is residential may attract partial SSD depending on the proportion of residential use — this is assessed by IRAS on a case-by-case basis.

Notably, SSD does not apply to HDB flats. HDB flat owners are governed by the Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) instead — a 5-year MOP for standard flats and a 10-year MOP for Plus and Prime classification flats. During the MOP, an HDB owner simply cannot sell. Once the MOP is cleared, HDB resale transactions carry no SSD liability whatsoever. This distinction means that the SSD burden falls exclusively on private property owners.

Commercial and industrial properties are also exempt from SSD — these asset classes have their own regulatory frameworks but do not carry residential SSD exposure. An investor who owns a private residential unit and a shophouse must assess SSD only in respect of the residential unit.

SSD Remissions: When IRAS May Waive or Reduce SSD

IRAS provides remissions (full or partial waivers) for SSD in specific circumstances where the sale is not voluntary or speculative. The key scenarios are as follows. In the case of death, if a property is disposed of by the estate of a deceased owner or transferred to a beneficiary, SSD is remitted — the disposal is not treated as a voluntary sale. For bankruptcy, if the Official Assignee sells the property as part of bankruptcy proceedings, SSD is remitted on the forced-sale transaction. In divorce proceedings, a transfer of property between divorcing spouses pursuant to a court order (Division of Matrimonial Assets) is not subject to SSD. For en bloc / collective sale, when a building or development is sold collectively under the Land Titles (Strata) Act through an en bloc process, SSD is remitted for the individual owners in that collective sale. Similarly, properties acquired compulsorily by the state under the Land Acquisition Act attract full SSD remission.

Remissions are not automatic — they must be claimed. The solicitor managing the transaction should identify whether a remission applies and file the appropriate application with IRAS. Unsolicited sales by genuine owner-occupiers who face sudden hardship (e.g. job loss, medical emergency) do not constitute remission grounds — only the specific categories above qualify. Buyers upgrading from an HDB flat to a private property and needing to sell quickly after ABSD remission are not eligible for SSD remission on the private property side unless their circumstances fall into one of the above categories.

Summary Table: SSD At a Glance 2026

Factor Details
Administered by IRAS (Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore)
Effective from (current rates) 27 April 2023
Year 1 rate (held < 1 year) 12% of sale price or market value (higher)
Year 2 rate (held 1–2 years) 8%
Year 3 rate (held 2–3 years) 4%
Year 4+ (held > 3 years) 0% (no SSD)
Who pays The seller
Payment deadline 14 days from OTP/agreement signing
Properties covered Residential — private condo, landed, privatised EC
HDB flats Exempt (MOP rules apply instead)
Remission scenarios Death, bankruptcy, divorce (court order), en bloc, compulsory acquisition
Tax deductibility Not deductible against income tax

Worked Example: The Full SSD Impact on an Investment Property Sale

Mr Chen purchased a 1,000 sqft condominium unit in the Outside Central Region (OCR) for S$1,400,000 in June 2024. By December 2025 (18 months later), the development has appreciated and he receives an offer of S$1,580,000. He is tempted to sell. Let us calculate the full financial picture.

Holding period: June 2024 to December 2025 = approximately 18 months = Year 2 (1–2 years). SSD rate: 8%.

SSD on S$1,580,000 at 8%: S$126,400.

Other sale costs: agent commission at 2% = S$31,600; legal fees (seller) = S$3,000; property tax adjustment to date of completion = S$1,200. Total other sale costs: S$35,800.

Purchase costs already sunk: BSD at purchase on S$1,400,000 = S$36,600; legal fees at purchase = S$3,500; ABSD if applicable = nil (SC second property was 20% ABSD = S$280,000 — included in total outlay). Let us use a scenario where Mr Chen’s first property was an HDB flat and he sold it within the same week, triggering the ABSD remission window, so effectively 0% ABSD was paid.

Gross gain: S$1,580,000 − S$1,400,000 = S$180,000.

Net position after SSD and sale costs: S$180,000 − S$126,400 (SSD) − S$35,800 (sale costs) = net loss of S$18,200, before factoring in purchase costs (BSD, legal) and financing costs (mortgage interest paid over 18 months — at 2.5% on S$1,050,000, approximately S$26,250 in interest payments).

Conclusion: A sale at 18 months with 12.7% nominal appreciation results in a net loss when SSD, transaction costs, and financing costs are properly accounted for. Mr Chen would need to achieve a sale price of at least S$1,648,000 — a 17.7% appreciation — just to break even at the 18-month mark. If he waits until Month 37 (past the 3-year SSD window), the same appreciation of S$180,000 becomes a net gain of approximately S$144,200 (gross gain less sale costs and BSD, before financing). This illustrates precisely why SSD achieves its policy intent.

SSD vs ABSD: How They Interact for Property Investors

Singapore’s property investor faces a layered stamp duty landscape. At purchase, BSD (1%–6%) and ABSD (0%–65% depending on buyer profile and property count) apply. At sale, SSD (0%–12%) applies for the first three years. These taxes do not offset each other — they are separate liabilities at separate points in time.

An SC buyer of a second property pays 20% ABSD at purchase and up to 12% SSD on an early sale — a combined transactional tax burden of 32% of the purchase price in a worst-case Year 1 sale scenario, on top of BSD. At these levels, property speculation in the short term is essentially economically unviable for individual investors, which is precisely the government’s stated intention. The ABSD remission available to HDB upgraders (where the HDB is sold within 6 months of private purchase) provides relief from ABSD but does not affect SSD — the SSD clock runs from the private property acquisition date regardless.

Singapore seller's stamp duty SSD policy timeline 2010 to 2026
Figure 3: Singapore SSD Policy Timeline 2010–2026 — introduction, successive tightening, 2017 rationalisation, and current position. Source: IRAS, MND, Government Gazette.

What Might Come Next

The SSD framework has been broadly stable since the April 2023 cooling measures, which left SSD rates unchanged while tightening ABSD. Industry observers and research desks generally expect the SSD structure to remain unchanged through the rest of 2026 and into 2027, barring a significant correction in private residential prices. The government has consistently signalled that Singapore’s property cooling measures are not designed as permanent fixtures but as calibrations to market conditions — any future SSD liberalisation is more likely to come alongside ABSD relaxation in a cooling-demand environment, rather than in isolation. Buyers and investors should not plan transactions around expected SSD changes; the base case is status quo.

One area to monitor is the treatment of ECs under SSD as the government’s May 2026 EC MOP extension (from 5 years to 10 years from TOP) works through the pipeline. The interplay between the extended EC MOP and the SSD three-year clock for privatised ECs means buyers of recently privatised ECs face a narrow window where both MOP-based restrictions and SSD restrictions overlap — though by the time privatisation occurs (10 years from TOP), any SSD liability would have long since lapsed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does SSD apply if I sell my property at a loss?

Yes. SSD is calculated on the higher of the sale price or market value, regardless of whether you make a profit or a loss on the transaction. If you paid S$2 million for a property and sell it for S$1.8 million within Year 1, the SSD is calculated on S$1.8 million (assuming that is the market value), giving an SSD liability of S$216,000 — on top of the S$200,000 capital loss. This makes early distressed sales of recently purchased property extraordinarily costly. The policy deliberately does not provide for an exemption when selling at a loss, as the government’s concern is speculative behaviour rather than the seller’s profit outcome.

When exactly does the SSD holding period start?

For a completed property (resale purchase or a completed development), the holding period starts on the date of completion — typically when the title transfers to the buyer upon payment of the balance purchase price. For a new launch (uncompleted property under progressive payment), IRAS uses the date the Sale and Purchase Agreement (S&P) was signed as the start date, not the TOP date. This means a buyer who signed an S&P in 2022 and received their keys in 2026 has already served well past the three-year window — no SSD applies on a subsequent sale. Conversely, a buyer who signed an S&P in January 2024 and sells the unit in February 2026 (before TOP) would be selling in Year 2 — an 8% SSD applies on the sub-sale price.

Can SSD be paid using CPF?

No. SSD is a charge against sale proceeds and must be paid in cash by the seller’s solicitor from the proceeds of sale. Unlike BSD, which buyers can settle from their CPF Ordinary Account, SSD is on the selling side and is deducted before the net proceeds are released to the seller. If the sale proceeds are insufficient to cover SSD (e.g. the property is heavily mortgaged), the seller must top up in cash.

How does SSD interact with an en bloc sale?

In a collective sale (en bloc) conducted under the Land Titles (Strata) Act, SSD is fully remitted for all owners participating in the collective sale — including owners who might still be within their SSD holding period. The rationale is that en bloc owners are not voluntarily choosing to sell; they are bound by the collective decision once the requisite majority approves the sale. The remission applies to all participating owners regardless of when they acquired their units, provided the collective sale is completed through the prescribed statutory process with IRAS confirmation.

Is SSD the same as the Additional Seller’s Stamp Duty (ASSR)?

There is no instrument in Singapore called “Additional Seller’s Stamp Duty (ASSR).” SSD is the only seller-side stamp duty for residential property. You may occasionally see references to SSD in older documents as distinct from “BSD-SSD” — this simply means the stamp duty payable by the seller, as opposed to the BSD payable by the buyer. Do not confuse SSD with ABSD: ABSD is paid by the buyer (not the seller) and applies based on the buyer’s residential property count, not the holding period.

I gifted my property to a family member — does SSD apply?

Yes, a gift or transfer at undervalue between related parties is still subject to SSD if the holding period has not elapsed. IRAS treats the market value of the property (not the consideration, if any) as the basis for SSD assessment. The only gift-related exemption is a transfer pursuant to a court order in divorce proceedings. A transfer to a child, sibling, or parent — even at nominal S$1 consideration — will attract SSD at the applicable rate on the market value, if the property was acquired within the past three years. This is one of the most common and costly misunderstandings around SSD.

Related Articles

Disclaimer

This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. SSD rates, remission criteria, and payment timelines are subject to change by IRAS and the Ministry of Finance at any time. All figures and rates quoted are as of June 2026. Stamp duty calculations involve factual determinations that depend on the specific circumstances of your transaction. Readers should verify all information with IRAS (www.iras.gov.sg) and consult a licensed conveyancing solicitor before entering into any property transaction. For complex scenarios — en bloc participations, related-party transfers, divorce settlements — professional legal advice is strongly recommended.

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Singapore First-Timer Home Buyer Complete Guide 2026: Grants, BTO vs Resale, HFE and Everything You Need

Singapore First-Timer Home Buyer Complete Guide 2026: Grants, BTO vs Resale, HFE and Everything You Need

Buying your first home in Singapore is one of the biggest financial decisions you will ever make — and the government has designed a system that genuinely rewards first-timers. From priority balloting in the Build-To-Order (BTO) exercise to grants worth up to S$230,000 for resale flat buyers, first-timer status unlocks advantages that second-timers and investors cannot access. This guide covers everything from how HDB defines a first-timer to the full buying timeline, so you can make the right choice with confidence.

Quick Answer: Key Facts for Singapore First-Timer Buyers 2026

  • First-timer status applies to Singapore Citizens (SC) and Permanent Residents (PR) who have never owned a subsidised HDB flat or private residential property in Singapore.
  • CPF housing grants can total up to S$230,000 for SC couple buying an HDB resale flat (EHG + Family Grant + PHG combined).
  • BTO priority balloting: first-timers get two ballot chances for every one chance given to second-timers.
  • HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) letter is mandatory before you can apply for any BTO or resale HDB flat — validity is 9 months.
  • ABSD: SC buying first property pays 0% ABSD; PR pays 5%; foreigners pay 65%.
  • MSR cap: monthly HDB/EC mortgage must not exceed 30% of gross monthly income.
  • BTO waiting time: 2.5–5 years for standard flats; resale is immediate.
  • New classification (2024 onwards): BTO flats are now categorised Standard, Plus, or Prime — each with different resale restrictions and grant levels.
  • MOP: standard flats require 5-year Minimum Occupation Period; Plus/Prime BTO and new ECs (from May 2026) require 10 years.
  • BSD is payable by all buyers regardless of first-timer status — progressive from 1% to 6% on purchase price.

What Makes You a First-Timer in Singapore’s Property System?

HDB defines a first-timer applicant as someone who has not previously received a housing subsidy from HDB. Practically, you are a first-timer if all the following are true: you have never owned an HDB flat (purchased directly from HDB), you have not previously received an HDB grant, and you have not owned a private residential property in Singapore in the 30 months before your flat application (this 30-month rule applies to resale applications). If you co-own a private property overseas, it does not automatically disqualify you for HDB purposes, but you must divest any Singapore private property.

The key distinction is subsidised housing: inheriting an HDB flat from a deceased parent does not strip your first-timer status, provided you sell it within the required period. Similarly, owning a commercial property or industrial unit does not affect your HDB eligibility. HDB reassesses your status at the point of application, so the 30-month rule runs backwards from the date you submit your HFE application.

First-timer home buyer eligibility and CPF housing grants matrix Singapore 2026
Figure 1: Singapore First-Timer Eligibility and Grant Overview — who qualifies and what grants are available in 2026. Source: HDB 2026.

CPF Housing Grants: What First-Timers Can Claim

The CPF housing grant system is tiered and means-tested. Higher grants are available to buyers with lower household incomes, with most grants phasing out at S$9,000 per month for couples. All grants are disbursed as CPF Ordinary Account (OA) credits — they reduce the cash you need for the purchase, but they accumulate accrued interest at 2.5% per annum that must be refunded to CPF when you sell.

Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) is the most generous and the most means-tested. For SC couples buying a BTO, EHG ranges from S$5,000 (income S$8,501–S$9,000) up to S$120,000 (income ≤S$1,500). For SC couples buying resale, the EHG is capped at S$80,000 (income ≤S$1,500). Singles aged 35 and above can claim up to S$60,000 for BTO and S$40,000 for resale. The EHG requires that at least one buyer is buying a flat with a remaining lease that can cover the youngest buyer until age 95.

Family Grant applies to resale flats only and is a flat amount: S$80,000 for SC couples, S$60,000 for SC + SPR couples. There is no income ceiling for the Family Grant itself, but the EHG already tapers to zero above S$9,000 household income, so high-income buyers effectively claim only the Family Grant.

Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) rewards buyers who choose a resale flat within 4 km of their parents or children, or who buy in the same town. Amounts range from S$10,000 (living within 4 km of parents) to S$30,000 (living with parents in the same flat). PHG is available to SC buyers only.

Half-Housing Grant: where one buyer is a first-timer and the other is a second-timer, the first-timer can still claim half the Family Grant — S$40,000 for SC + SC, S$30,000 for SC + SPR — on a resale flat purchase.

Maximum CPF housing grants for first-timer buyers by profile Singapore 2026 stacked bar chart
Figure 2: Maximum CPF Housing Grants by First-Timer Buyer Profile 2026. BTO buyers access EHG only; resale buyers can stack EHG + Family Grant + PHG. Source: HDB 2026.

The HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) Letter: Your First Step

Before you can ballot for a BTO or make an offer on an HDB resale flat, you must obtain an HFE letter from HDB. The HFE replaced the earlier Eligibility Letter (EL) in 2023 and now serves a dual purpose: it confirms your eligibility to purchase, and it indicates the CPF grants and HDB housing loan you may be entitled to. The HFE letter is valid for 9 months from its date of issue.

Applying for an HFE takes roughly 2–3 weeks. You submit an application through the HDB Flat Portal (homes.hdb.gov.sg), providing details of your household members, income documents, and ownership declaration. HDB pulls information from government databases — IRAS for income, SLA for property records — so you do not need to submit separate ownership declarations for most scenarios. If you plan to use an HDB loan, you receive a Loan Eligibility assessment alongside the HFE. If you prefer a bank loan, you should obtain an In-Principle Approval (IPA) from your chosen bank separately.

BTO vs Resale: The Core Decision for Every First-Timer

The most consequential decision for any first-timer is whether to buy a BTO flat or an HDB resale flat. This is not purely a financial decision — it involves trade-offs between price, location, waiting time, grant entitlements, and lifestyle.

BTO flats are sold by HDB directly at subsidised prices — typically 20–40% below the equivalent resale transaction in the same estate. The trade-off is time: you ballot for a flat first, and you wait for it to be built, which takes 2.5–5 years from booking to key collection. In the meantime, you and your partner typically have to continue renting or living with family. BTO flats in Plus and Prime zones (central estates and highly sought-after areas) carry additional resale restrictions under the 2024 classification framework, including a 10-year MOP and a clawback of HDB subsidy on resale.

Resale flats are immediately available and offer greater locational flexibility — you can buy in virtually any HDB estate, at any floor level, and move in within 8–12 weeks of completing the transaction. They are more expensive than BTOs on a per-unit basis, but first-timers can use the full resale grant stack (EHG + Family Grant + PHG), which partially offsets the premium. Resale flats also come with a shorter remaining lease, which affects CPF withdrawal limits and future resale value — so buyers should check that the remaining lease covers the youngest buyer to age 95.

BTO vs HDB resale price and waiting time comparison for first-timer buyers 2026
Figure 3: BTO vs HDB Resale — Price Range and Waiting Time for First-Timer Buyers 2026. BTO prices are after HDB pricing subsidy, before grants. Source: HDB 2026.

Financing Your First Home: LTV, MSR, TDSR and Choosing Your Loan

First-timer buyers have two loan options: an HDB Concessionary Loan or a bank loan. Understanding the constraints and advantages of each is critical, because the choice is largely irreversible — once you switch from an HDB loan to a bank loan, you cannot switch back.

HDB Concessionary Loan: available to SC buyers only (not PR-only households), with a combined household income cap of S$14,000 per month. The interest rate is pegged to the prevailing CPF OA rate plus 0.1%, currently 2.6% per annum. LTV ratio is 80%, and there is no cash down payment requirement beyond the minimum 20% top-up (which can be entirely from CPF). The monthly repayment must not exceed 30% of gross income (MSR rule).

Bank loans: available to all buyers. LTV is 75% for the first property, meaning a minimum 25% down payment (with at least 5% in cash and the remaining 20% from cash or CPF). Bank loan interest rates are tied to the Singapore Overnight Rate Average (SORA) — as of June 2026, the 3-month compounded SORA is approximately 1.07%, with typical bank packages for new HDB purchases ranging from 1.5% to 2.2% on floating-rate terms and 2.4%–2.7% on fixed-rate terms. Bank loans are subject to both MSR (30%) and TDSR (55%).

Stamp Duty for First-Timers

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) is payable on all property purchases in Singapore, without exception. It is calculated on the higher of the purchase price or the market value at a progressive rate: 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, and 5%–6% on amounts above that. For a S$500,000 HDB resale flat, BSD is approximately S$9,600. For a S$650,000 flat, BSD is approximately S$14,400. BSD is payable within 14 days of signing the Option to Purchase and can be paid from your CPF OA.

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) for SC buyers purchasing their first property is 0% — no ABSD applies. PR buyers purchasing their first property pay 5% ABSD, and foreigners pay 65% on any residential property. The ABSD rates announced in the April 2023 cooling measures remain in effect as of June 2026.

Summary Table: First-Timer Home Buying at a Glance

Topic HDB BTO (First-Timer SC Couple) HDB Resale (First-Timer SC Couple)
Max CPF Grants Up to S$120,000 (EHG only) Up to S$230,000 (EHG+FG+PHG)
Income Ceiling (loans/grants) S$14,000/mth (HDB loan); S$9,000/mth for max EHG Same; Family Grant has no separate income ceiling
Waiting Time 2.5–5 years from ballot to keys 8–12 weeks from OTP to keys
Loan Options HDB (2.6%) or bank loan (SORA-based) Same
Min Down Payment 20% (all CPF; 5% cash if bank loan) Same
BSD Payable (from CPF OA) Payable (from CPF OA)
ABSD (SC 1st property) 0% 0%
MOP (Standard) 5 years from key collection 5 years from key collection
MOP (Plus/Prime) 10 years; subsidy clawback on resale N/A (Plus/Prime applies to BTO only)
Ballot Priority 2× chances vs second-timer N/A (open market)

Worked Example: First-Timer Couple Buying Their First HDB Flat

Mr and Mrs Ng are a Singapore Citizen couple. Both are first-timers aged 29. Their combined gross monthly income is S$7,800. They are considering two options: a 4-room BTO flat at a non-mature estate, or a 4-room resale flat in Tampines.

Option A — BTO (non-mature estate, 4-room): Indicative price S$380,000. EHG entitlement at S$7,800/mth income: approximately S$45,000 (income bracket S$7,501–S$8,000, couple BTO). Effective price after EHG: S$335,000. HDB loan at 80% LTV: S$268,000. Monthly repayment at 2.6% over 25 years: S$1,218/mth — MSR = 15.6%, well within the 30% cap. BSD on S$380,000: S$7,100 (payable from CPF). Cash required: essentially S$0 if CPF OA balance is sufficient (S$67,000 down payment + BSD from CPF). Waiting time: approximately 3.5 years.

Option B — Resale (Tampines, 4-room, ~25 years remaining lease): Price S$620,000. Grant entitlement: EHG S$45,000 + Family Grant S$80,000 + PHG S$10,000 (living within 4 km of parents) = S$135,000 total grants. Effective cost after grants: S$485,000 cash/CPF. HDB loan at 80% LTV: S$496,000 (on purchase price; capped to MSR: at S$7,800/mth income, MSR cap S$2,340/mth, loan tenure 25yr @ 2.6% → max loan S$515,000 — CLEAR). Monthly repayment: approximately S$2,250/mth — MSR 28.8% PASS. BSD: S$13,800 from CPF. Cash outlay: S$800 (OTP exercise fee) + legal fees ~S$2,500. Move-in: approximately 10 weeks from OTP.

Decision: Option A is S$240,000 cheaper in sticker price but requires a 3.5-year wait. Option B is immediately available and offers full grant stacking. At S$7,800/mth combined income, both options are financially feasible. The couple should weigh the rental cost during the BTO wait period (estimated S$80,000–S$100,000 over 3.5 years if renting privately) against the S$240,000 BTO price advantage.

What First-Timers Often Get Wrong

The most common mistake is treating the HFE letter as a mere formality — in fact, it is the document that locks in your grant entitlement. Applying for an HFE too early (income changes between HFE and purchase can reduce grants) or too late (HFE takes 2–3 weeks, which can cause you to miss an OTP deadline) both have real financial consequences. A second common error is underestimating CPF accrued interest: every dollar of CPF and grants deployed for the property accumulates 2.5% interest annually, which must be refunded to CPF upon sale. On a S$300,000 CPF drawdown over 10 years, that refund obligation reaches approximately S$85,000 — significantly reducing net cash in hand at sale. Third, first-timers sometimes overlook the BSD timing difference between BTO (payable on exercise of the Sale and Purchase Agreement, typically several years after ballot) and resale (payable within 14 days of signing the OTP) — a BTO purchase technically defers the BSD cash outflow.

What Might Come Next

Industry observers note that the new Standard/Plus/Prime BTO classification, introduced in 2024, is still bedding in. The October 2026 BTO exercise is expected to offer approximately 7,970 flats across Bedok, Geylang, Sembawang, Tengah, Toa Payoh, and Yishun — providing first-timer couples with options across multiple towns. The Bedok Bayshore sites (adjacent to Bayshore MRT) are being watched closely as the first BTO flats in a new waterfront neighbourhood. Policy observers have also been monitoring whether HDB will adjust the EHG income bands as Singapore’s median household income continues to rise, though no changes have been announced as of June 2026. The 15-month Wait-Out Period (WOP) for private property owners who wish to purchase an HDB resale flat — introduced in September 2022 — remains in place, adding a structural floor to HDB resale demand as upgraders are prevented from buying immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I apply for a BTO as a first-timer if I currently live in a private property?

Yes, provided you are an SC citizen and have never previously purchased a subsidised HDB flat. However, if you (or your spouse) currently own a private residential property in Singapore, you must dispose of it within 6 months of receiving the keys to your BTO flat. Overseas private property does not disqualify you. The 30-month Look-Back Period applies to resale HDB flat applications, not BTO ballot applications — so private property owners can ballot for a BTO flat while still holding their private property, as long as they sell it after receiving keys.

My spouse is a second-timer. Do we still get first-timer benefits?

You are treated as an “essential occupier + first-timer” family unit. For BTO balloting, you get first-timer ballot priority (2 chances). For grants, you can still claim the EHG based on your individual first-timer status. For resale, you can claim the Half-Housing Grant (half the Family Grant amount) rather than the full Family Grant. Your spouse’s second-timer status does not eliminate your personal grant eligibility, but it does reduce the total grant quantum compared to an all-first-timer couple.

How long does the HFE letter application take, and when should I apply?

The HFE letter typically takes 2–3 weeks to process from the date of submission. You should apply before — not after — you identify a flat. For BTO applicants, apply at least 3 weeks before the BTO launch window opens. For resale buyers, apply before you start your flat search, since an OTP seller may ask you to exercise within 14–21 days, and you need your HFE confirmed before you can proceed to the resale portal. The HFE is valid for 9 months; if it expires, you must reapply.

Can I use CPF to pay for the Option to Purchase (OTP) fee and BSD?

No — the OTP option fee (S$500–S$1,000) and the OTP exercise fee (1% of purchase price) must be paid in cash. BSD, however, can be paid from your CPF OA once the Option to Purchase is exercised. Your solicitor will process the CPF withdrawal for BSD after the OTP is exercised and the conveyancing process begins. Cash payments made before CPF is available cannot be reclaimed from CPF later.

What is the Deferred Income Assessment (DIA) and does it affect my grants?

The Deferred Income Assessment (DIA) allows eligible first-timer couples who are full-time students, National Service (NS) personnel, or freelancers with irregular income to defer their income declaration until key collection, when the EHG quantum is then assessed. This prevents buyers from being penalised during a temporarily low-income phase. The DIA is not automatic — you must declare eligibility at the HFE application stage. If your income rises significantly between application and key collection, your EHG may be lower than expected.

What is the Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) and what can I do during it?

The MOP is the minimum period you must live in an HDB flat before you can sell it on the open market. For standard HDB flats purchased from HDB (BTO), the MOP is 5 years from the date you collect your keys. For Plus classification BTO flats, the MOP is 10 years. During the MOP, you cannot rent out the entire flat (you can rent out individual bedrooms, subject to HDB approval and quota rules). You also cannot purchase a private residential property in Singapore until the MOP is cleared, unless you are buying it to upgrade and will sell the HDB flat within 6 months.

How much cash do I actually need to buy my first HDB flat?

For an HDB loan (no bank loan), the minimum cash required is remarkably low. The 20% down payment can come entirely from CPF OA. BSD is payable from CPF. Legal fees (~S$2,000–S$3,000) are payable in cash. The OTP option fee (S$500–S$1,000) and exercise fee (1%) are in cash, but these are modest. Total cash outlay for a S$500,000 BTO with HDB loan and S$80,000 CPF balance: approximately S$6,000–S$8,000 in cash (legal fees + OTP fees). For a bank loan, the minimum 5% cash down payment on S$500,000 is S$25,000 — the largest single cash item.

Related Articles

Disclaimer

This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal, or conveyancing advice. Grant amounts, income ceilings, LTV ratios, and stamp duty rates are subject to change by HDB, IRAS, and MAS at any time. All figures quoted are as of June 2026. Readers should verify all information with official sources — HDB (www.hdb.gov.sg), IRAS (www.iras.gov.sg), MAS (www.mas.gov.sg), and CPF Board (www.cpf.gov.sg) — before making any property purchase decision. For complex situations involving second-timer spouses, foreign co-buyers, or inherited properties, consult a licensed conveyancing lawyer.

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Chuan Park

Chuan Park



NEW LAUNCH · LORONG CHUAN · DISTRICT 19

Chuan Park

Lorong Chuan 916-unit new launch by Kingsford and MCC Singapore
D19
District
99-year leasehold
Tenure
31 December 2028
TOP / VP
916
Total Units
916
Residential Units
D19
District
37,215.60 sqm
Site Area
From S$1.961M
Current From Price

Why Chuan Park

Chuan Park Chuan Park brings a 916-unit residential redevelopment back to the Lorong Chuan corridor, combining scale, rail access and family-sized layouts in an established District 19 neighbourhood.

01 · Address

D19 Location

Lorong Chuan, Singapore

02 · Scale

916 residential units + 2 shop units

5 blocks

03 · Tenure

99-year leasehold

Confirm the latest availability before shortlisting.

Project At-a-Glance

Project Name Chuan Park
Developer Chuan Park Development Pte Ltd (Kingsford-MCC)
Address Lorong Chuan, Singapore
District D19
Tenure 99-year leasehold
Total Units 916 residential units + 2 shop units
Site Area 37,215.60 sqm
Plot Ratio 2.1
Blocks 5 blocks
TOP / VP 31 December 2028 (estimated vacant possession)
Legal Completion 31 December 2031

Viewing Preparation

Use the factsheet, selected floor plans and site plan below to compare layouts, arrival points and facility zones before a viewing.

Confirm current pricing, stack availability and final specifications before booking.

Unit Mix and Sizes

Bedroom Type Size / Range Availability Note
2 Bedroom 65 / 77 sqm (LR) Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
2 Bedroom + Study 68 / 69 / 81-82 sqm Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
3 Bedroom Classic 85-104 sqm Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
3 Bedroom Deluxe 95 / 96 / 112 sqm Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
3 Bedroom Premium 112-140 sqm Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
4 Bedroom Classic / Premium 124-156 sqm Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list
5 Bedroom 144 / 171 sqm (LR) Subtype count varies by latest balance-unit list

Unit areas and availability may change. Confirm the latest stack, price and size information before shortlisting.

Indicative Pricing

Entry Units
From S$1.961M

2BR + Study, 743-883 sqft

Family Units
From S$3.171M

3BR, 1,206-1,507 sqft

Larger Units
From S$3.557M

4BR; 5BR from S$3.939M

Available units from S$1.961M; 2BR from S$2.030M, 2BR+Study from S$1.961M, 3BR from S$3.171M, 4BR from S$3.557M and 5BR from S$3.939M. Source: Chuan Park public price list updated 19 Mar 2026, accessed 29 Apr 2026.

Why Buyers Are Watching

  1. 1
    Large 916-unit redevelopment beside the Lorong Chuan residential corridor.
  2. 2
    Five-block scale with full condominium facilities and two shop units.
  3. 3
    Site plan and diagrammatic layout references are available below for stack and facilities review.
  4. 4
    Unit range starts from 2-bedroom homes; no 1-bedroom layout is listed in the available floor-plan set.
  5. 5
    Estimated vacant possession is 31 December 2028.
  6. 6
    Nearby MRT, schools and Serangoon/Lorong Chuan amenities support owner-occupier demand.

Location and Connectivity

MRT

Lorong Chuan MRT corridor

The project sits in the Lorong Chuan / Serangoon Garden area.

Schools

Neighbourhood schools

Catalogue highlights nearby schools and established landed/residential precincts.

Amenities

NEX / Serangoon Garden

Serangoon, Bishan and Ang Mo Kio amenities are reachable from the site.

Roads

CTE / PIE access

Central and north-east road connections support citywide access.

Chuan Park location map

Schools Nearby

School Planning Confirm current school distance bands and eligibility with OneMap and MOE before relying on any school-distance claim.

Lifestyle and Amenities

Daily Convenience

Review nearby retail, food, transport and park connections before shortlisting stacks.

Neighbourhood Fit

Compare the surrounding precinct with your commute, school and lifestyle needs.

Viewing Check

Confirm walking routes, traffic patterns and future works during your site visit.

Site Plan

Chuan Park actual site plan

Actual site plan showing blocks, facilities, access points and internal landscaping.

Floor Plans (Selected)

Representative actual floor plans by unit type. The full floor-plan PDF belongs in the download button below this section.

Chuan Park starts from 2-bedroom layouts, so selected thumbnails begin at the smallest available unit type.

Chuan Park 2 Bedroom + Study Type B2 floor plan

2 Bedroom + Study Type B2
Chuan Park 3 Bedroom Classic Type C7 floor plan

3 Bedroom Classic Type C7
Chuan Park 4 Bedroom Type D1 floor plan

4 Bedroom Type D1
Chuan Park 5 Bedroom Type E1 floor plan

5 Bedroom Type E1
Full Floor Plans PDF
Selected layout pages prepared as a clean PDF download.

Download Full Floor Plan PDF

Elevation and Stack Chart

Refer to the site plan, selected layouts and full floor-plan PDF for stack orientation, floor levels and facing checks.

Facilities (30+)

Pool DeckClubhouseGymLandscape CourtyardsFunction RoomsFamily FacilitiesArrival CourtSmart Home Provisions

Gallery

Developer and Consultant Team

Chuan Park Development Pte Ltd (Kingsford-MCC)

Before committing, verify the latest developer licence, project account details and contractual documents with the appointed sales team.

Sustainability and Specifications

Specifications, finishes, smart-home provisions and sustainability ratings vary by unit. Refer to the latest developer brochure and sale documents for final approved details.

Project Timeline

Launch / Sales Phase Live new-launch project page
TOP / Vacant Possession 31 December 2028 (estimated vacant possession)
Legal Completion 31 December 2031

Project Factsheet

A shareable 2-page PDF snapshot of everything on this page — bring it to viewings, forward it to family.

Download the Full Sales Pack

PDF · Factsheet

Chuan Park Factsheet

2-page project factsheet with key facts, unit mix and buyer notes.

Download Factsheet

PDF · Floor Plans

Full Floor Plans

Selected floor-plan pages and layouts for quick comparison.

Download Floor Plans

Image · Site Plan

Site Plan

Site plan showing blocks, facilities and arrival points.

Download Site Plan

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Chuan Park located?
Lorong Chuan, Singapore
Who is the developer?
Chuan Park Development Pte Ltd (Kingsford-MCC)
How many units are there?
916 residential units + 2 shop units
What is the current from-price?
Available units start from S$1.961M based on the public price list updated 19 Mar 2026. Confirm stack-specific pricing, discounts and availability before shortlisting.

Ready to see Chuan Park in person?

Request current availability, developer pricing, showflat slots and financing checks.

Enquire Now

Related Buying Guides

ABSD Singapore 2026

Stamp-duty planning before purchase.

Condo Buying Guide

Budget, timeline and financing basics.

Property Investment

Holding cost and exit considerations.

Disclaimer: Prices, availability, areas, specifications and timelines may change without notice. Buyers should verify all details with the developer-appointed sales team and relevant authorities before committing.

Property Showdown: Aurea vs Chuan Park

Property Showdown: Aurea vs Chuan Park

[This post was first published on Little Big Red Dot on 4th March 2025]

Editor’s update (April 2026): For a full breakdown of Aurea at Golden Mile — unit mix, pricing, sky terraces, TOP Q2 2029 timeline, connectivity and the complete project factsheet — read our comprehensive Aurea at Golden Mile project guide.

This is a new segment which we will be featuring on Little Big Red Dot. As property is always a hot topic, we thought “why not start a property showdown type blogpost?” I have been blogging about property and investing for quite a good number of years. If you would like to read my blog about investing, you can access it at daryllum.com.

Now back to the very first Property Showdown blog article on Little Big Red Dot. We are going to compare two very recent launches. Aurea at Beach Road by Far East Organization and Perennial Holdings and Chuan Park by Kingsford Development and MCC Singapore.

Property Showdown: Aurea vs Chuan Park

Property Showdown: Aurea vs Chuan Park

 

We will be breaking down this showdown into 7 categories. They are:

  1. Distance to the nearest MRT Station
  2. Number of MRT stops to the city centre (Raffles Place MRT Station)
  3. Distance to the nearest hawker centre
  4. Distance to the nearest shopping mall
  5. Primary schools within a 1 kilometre radius
  6. Price per square foot
  7. Premium over the resale units in the vicinity

 

Category 1: Distance to the nearest MRT Station

Let us look at Aurea for a start. The nearest MRT station in this case would be Nicoll Highway MRT Station. This is a station on the circle line.

The walk from Aurea to Nicoll Highway MRT Station

The walk from Aurea to Nicoll Highway MRT Station

The distance from Aurea to Nicoll Highway MRT Station is 700 meters. According to Google Maps, the walk will take 9 minutes. In this case, there is a portion of the walk that is unsheltered. I am assuming that you would be able to link from Aurea to Golden Mile Complex and subsequently Golden Mile Tower, as it was before. Then the last leg of the journey, about a third of the 700 meters, would be unsheltered.

Chuan Park’s distance to its nearest MRT station, Lorong Chuan MRT Station, is a lot shorter. The development is located literally next to the MRT station. Lorong Chuan MRT Station is similarly located along the Circle Line. It would take just a minute to walk the 64 meters to Lorong Chuan MRT Station from Chuan Park.

The walk from Chuan Park to Lorong Chuan MRT Station

The walk from Chuan Park to Lorong Chuan MRT Station

The winner for category 1: Chuan Park!

 

Category 2: Number of MRT stops to the city centre (Raffles Place MRT Station)

This is not even a close fight. From Nicoll Highway MRT Station to Raffles Place MRT Station is just 4 mere stations. You will need to make a change from the Circle Line to the North South Line at Marina Bay. The total journey would take about 8 minutes and cost $1.29.

Nicoll Highway MRT to Raffles Place MRT

Nicoll Highway MRT to Raffles Place MRT

Lorong Chuan MRT Station is also on the Circle Line. However, the MyTransport App has got me making two transfers. One at Serangoon MRT Station to the North East Line and again at Dhoby Ghaut to the North South Line. This journey encompasses 9 stations and will take 17 minutes. It will also cost $1.77 which is more.

The winner for category 2: Aurea!

 

Category 3: Distance to the nearest hawker centre

If you live in Aurea and are feeling hungry, you could actually just walk to The Golden Mile. That is the refurbished Golden Mile Complex. I would expect there to be food options. However, it is important to have a hawker centre close by. Firstly, that is where most Singaporeans get their food from. Secondly, it is the more cost effective option. But most importantly, the food at hawker centres are just really good!

If you are familiar with the old Golden Mile Centre, Golden Mile Food Centre is located just across the road.

Location of Aurea

Location of Aurea

Since Aurea is located right next to the old Golden Mile Complex or the upcoming The Golden Mile, Golden Mile Food Centre is similarly just across the road. It would take you a mere 4 minutes to walk the 280 meters to get your meal at Golden Mile Food Centre.

Walk from Aurea to Golden Mile Food Centre

Walk from Aurea to Golden Mile Food Centre

Chuan Park is surrounded by other condominiums. There is no food centre that is close by. Well not close like how Aurea is to Golden Mile Food Centre. Perhaps you can get some food at the New Tech Park across the road?

Location of Chuan Park

Location of Chuan Park

The nearest hawker centre is the one at Serangoon Gardens. That is 2 kilometres away and it will take you 28 minutes to get there. There is almost no shelter along the journey. You could also drive there. Getting a parking lot during peak hours is challenging though. There is of course no option to take an MRT to this area.

The walk from Chuan Park to Serangoon Garden Market

The walk from Chuan Park to Serangoon Garden Market

If you are looking for a wet market, there is one at Serangoon Central. It is located at Block 267 Serangoon Avenue 3. Once again, it is not near. It is 1.7 kilometres away and it will take you 24 minutes to walk the relatively unsheltered route. Of course you could hop on the MRT and take a station down to get to Serangoon MRT Station. That still does not bring you exactly to the wet market. You still have to take a short walk.

The walk from Chuan Park to Serangoon Central Market

The walk from Chuan Park to Serangoon Central Market

The winner for category 3: Aurea!

 

Category 4: Distance to the nearest shopping mall

Aurea is located right next to The Golden Mile. I would think that there should be a link from Aurea to The Golden Mile. This is an artist’s impression of how The Golden Mile retail would look like.

The Golden Mile Retail

The Golden Mile Retail

The nearest shopping mall from Chuan Park would be Nex. Nex is located 1.3 kilometres away and it would take you 18 minutes to walk there. You could take the MRT down to Serangoon MRT Station to get to Nex.

The walk from Chuan Park to Nex

The walk from Chuan Park to Nex

Yes taking one MRT station down avails you to Nex which is larger than The Golden Mile. However, the residents at Aurea could similarly take one MRT station down to get to Suntec City, Millenia Walk and Marina Square. There is definitely more retail and dining options there as compared to what is offered at Nex.

The winner for category 4: Aurea!

 

Category 5: Primary schools within a 1 kilometre radius

This is the kiasu category. I am only going to measure primary school distances because that is sometimes the reason why Singaporeans purchase properties in a certain area. I am not listing Secondary School and tertiary options. My source of reference if elite.com.sg. So shout out to them for creating this online resource tool.

I could not input Aurea’s postal code as it turned in an error. Hence I used the postal code of the building next door. Whatever the case, there is clearly no primary school within the 1 kilometre radius of Aurea.

Schools within 1 kilometre to Aurea

Schools within 1 kilometre to Aurea

In contrast, there are three schools within a 1 kilometre radius of Chuan Park. The closest is St Gabriel’s Primary School at 0.428 kilometres, which is an all boys’ school. Both CHIJ Our Lady of Good Counsel and Yangzheng Primary School are both at 0.590 kilometres. CHIJ Our Lady of Good Counsel is an all girl’s school.

Schools within 1 kilometre to Chuan Park

Schools within 1 kilometre to Chuan Park

The winner for category 5: Chuan Park!

 

Category 6: Price per square foot

At the point of writing, Aurea’s pricing has yet to be released. Indicative launch prices start from SGD$2,750 per square foot (psf). That should be for the less desirable units. Namely those on lower levels. I would believe that prices would be closer to just under SGD$3,000 psf.

Chuan Park was sold at an average price of SGD$2,579 psf. That works out to approximately 20% less than prices at Aurea. When it comes to affordability, sometimes that small difference makes a lot.

The winner for category 6: Chuan Park!

 

Category 7: Premium over resale units in the vicinity

A large proportion of buyers will eventually sell their properties. This despite them saying that they are not speculators and are in the market for the long run. When a property is sold, it competes not only with units in the same development but with units in neighbouring developments. The location attributes of a development are essentially very similar to those of neighbouring developments due to the fact that they are all in the same location. Hence it is very important to understand the market that is in the area. A new project launch will definitely cost more than those in the resale market. Especially as those in the resale market are longer down the road in their 99-year lease decay.

I will just choose one development. The closest development to the developments in question. Let us first look at what developments Aurea will be up against in the vicinity. The nearest developments are City Gate and Concourse Skyline. City Gate is nearer hence we will use that as the point of comparison.

The average psf at City Gate is SGD$2,082. Assuming Aurea has an average psf of SGD$2,850, this works out to a premium of 36.9%.

Prices of City Gate from Feb 24 to Feb 25

Prices of City Gate from Feb 24 to Feb 25

The appropriate development to compare Chuan Park to would be The Springbloom. It is across the road and has Lorong Chuan MRT Station next to it as well. Goldenhill Park Condominium is a freehold development whereas Chuan Park and The Springbloom are 99-year leasehold developments. In this aspect, there is no lease decay for Goldenhill Park Condominium. It would be more appropriate for us to consider The Springbloom. The premium exists because the new development has a fresher 99-year lease.

Prices of The Springbloom from Feb 24 to Feb 25

Prices of The Springbloom from Feb 24 to Feb 25

The average psf for The Springbloom is SGD$1569. Therefore, Chuan Park is a whopping 64% premium over The Springbloom.

Just for general knowledge, not for comparison’s sake, here are the prices of Goldenhill Park Condominium.

Prices of Goldenhill Park Condominium from Feb 24 to Feb 25

Prices of Goldenhill Park Condominium from Feb 24 to Feb 25

The winner for category 7: Aurea!

 

The final score:

Aurea 4 vs Chuan Park 3!

Congratulations Aurea!

Aurea is the winner of our first ever Property Showdown!

Aurea is the winner of our first ever Property Showdown!

 

Yours sincerely,

Daryl

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