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

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

Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

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

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

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

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

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

What Can You Use CPF OA For?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Accrued Interest Obligation — The Hidden Cost

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

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

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

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

CPF Usage by Property Type

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

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

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

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

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

Leasehold Properties and the Age-95 Rule

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

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

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

Using CPF After Age 55

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

Summary Table

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

What Might Come Next

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

Frequently Asked Questions

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Disclaimer

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

JLD White Site Launched 3 July 2026: Up to 1,200 Homes and 186,000 sqm Mixed-Use Development at Jurong Lake District

JLD White Site Launched 3 July 2026: Up to 1,200 Homes and 186,000 sqm Mixed-Use Development at Jurong Lake District

Singapore’s Jurong Lake District (JLD) took a significant leap forward on 3 July 2026 when the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) launched the tender for a major White site at Town Hall Link under the second-half 2026 Government Land Sales (GLS) Confirmed List. The site, adjacent to the Jurong Town Hall national monument and flanked by two MRT lines, is earmarked for up to 1,200 private residential units and a minimum of 40,000 sqm of office space within a total potential Gross Floor Area (GFA) of 186,139 sqm. It is the most significant new residential supply announcement for JLD in several years, and it reinforces the Government’s long-standing commitment to transforming the Jurong corridor into Singapore’s largest mixed-use business district outside the city centre.

Quick Answer — JLD White Site at a glance

  • What: URA has launched a GLS tender for a White site at Town Hall Link, Jurong Lake District.
  • Scale: 186,139 sqm total GFA — minimum 40,000 sqm office, up to 1,200 residential units, 44,000 sqm complementary uses.
  • MRT access: Direct connection to Jurong East MRT interchange (EWL + NSL + JRL) and the future CR19 Cross Island Line station (2032).
  • Context: Part of Singapore’s decentralisation strategy; JLD is targeted to become the largest mixed-use business node outside the CBD.
  • Tender close: 17 November 2026, 12 noon.
  • Property implication: First major new private residential supply in the JLD precinct for several years; expect strong developer interest and premium pricing on award.

What Is the JLD White Site and Why Does It Matter?

A White site in Singapore’s GLS framework is a land parcel where the developer is given significant flexibility in determining the mix of uses, subject to minimum requirements. At Town Hall Link, the developer must deliver at least 40,000 sqm of office space (non-negotiable) and may add up to 1,200 private residential units alongside 44,000 sqm of complementary commercial uses such as retail, serviced apartments, hotel, sports and recreational facilities, community spaces, medical clinics, or visitor attractions. The White classification is typically reserved for strategically significant sites where the Government wants the market to determine the optimal product mix — making this tender a test of developer confidence in the JLD vision.

The significance of this announcement extends well beyond the site itself. JLD has been a Government-backed transformational project for more than a decade, anchored by the relocation of Singapore’s second CBD away from the congested city core. The area has seen the revitalisation of the 90-hectare Jurong Lake Gardens, the completion of the Jurong Region Line (JRL), and plans for the Cross Island Line (CRL) station at CR19 in the heart of the precinct (targeted for opening in 2032). The Town Hall Link White site is “seamlessly connected” to the Jurong East MRT interchange via multi-level pedestrian linkages, according to URA.

JLD white site 2026 key facts — GFA 186,139 sqm, 40,000 sqm office, up to 1,200 residential units, tender closes 17 November 2026
Figure 1: JLD Town Hall Link White Site — Key Facts and GFA Breakdown (Source: URA PR26-53, 3 July 2026)

The JLD Vision: Decentralisation in Action

Singapore’s decentralisation strategy is a long-held urban planning objective. Concentrating economic activity exclusively in the Central Business District and Orchard Road corridor creates congestion, inflates commercial rents, and forces workers into lengthy commutes. JLD is the flagship expression of the alternative vision: a large-scale, self-sustaining regional centre in the west of Singapore, integrating employment, retail, housing, and recreational space in a single walkable precinct.

The Government has invested heavily in the infrastructure backbone. The Jurong Lake Gardens, opened in phases from 2019, provides 90 hectares of recreational greenery wrapping around Jurong Lake and the Chinese and Japanese Gardens. The JRL, opened in stages from 2026, connects the precinct to Tengah, Choa Chu Kang, and Boon Lay. The forthcoming CR19 station on the Cross Island Line will add a further orbital connection in 2032, making JLD one of the best-connected suburban nodes in Singapore’s rail network.

Complementing the White site, two major anchor projects are already under development nearby: the New Science Centre (relocating from its Jurong East home of four decades) and the Jurong Gateway Hub, an integrated development comprising a bus interchange, offices, shops, a library, a community club, and sports facilities. Together with the White site, these projects will define the physical character of the precinct for the next generation.

What the White Site Means for Property Buyers and Investors

Dimension Detail Property Implication
New supply Up to 1,200 private residential units at Town Hall Link First significant new private supply in the JLD precinct for several years; relieves latent demand from west Singapore buyers
Price premium JLD White site is likely an RCR or OCR premium location; comparable JLD projects (J’den, Lake Grande) have traded at S$2,000–S$2,500 psf Expect developer ask price in the S$2,200–S$2,800 psf range on new launch; potential for appreciation as JLD matures
MRT connectivity Jurong East interchange (3 lines) + future CR19 (CRL, 2032) Transport connectivity among the best in any non-central precinct; key demand driver for both owner-occupiers and investors
Tender timeline Tender closes 17 November 2026; award ~January 2027; launch likely 2027–2028; TOP ~2032–2033 Buyers planning a JLD purchase should not expect keys before 2032; factor progressive payment schedule and interim housing into planning
Office anchor Min. 40,000 sqm office must be delivered; targets MNC tenants and financial/professional services firms Office anchor strengthens daytime population and amenity spending, supporting residential values in the precinct
Government commitment New Science Centre, Jurong Gateway Hub, JRL, CRL CR19 all delivering 2026–2032 Infrastructure already committed; limited execution risk vs speculative master plans in other regions

JLD Property Market Context

The private residential market in the JLD corridor has been characterised by limited new supply in recent years. J’den (formerly JEM 2 / Jurong Point 2 site), launched in 2023, sold briskly at an average of approximately S$2,450 psf at launch, underscoring demand from west Singapore buyers seeking integrated development proximity. Older condominiums in the area (Lake Grande, Parc Westlake, Lakeville) have traded resale at lower psf levels but have appreciated meaningfully over their launch prices.

The White site at Town Hall Link is a different proposition: a larger, more prominent, and better-connected site adjacent to both heritage (Jurong Town Hall) and nature (the future park). Developers tendering for this site will need to deliver a mixed-use product integrating office, residential, and retail — a complex brief that typically appeals to the largest developers with integrated development track records. The 1,200-unit residential cap, while meaningful, represents a medium-density residential component within a predominantly commercial site.

For buyers tracking west Singapore property, the White site tender provides a clear signal: JLD is still an active, Government-supported investment in Singapore’s urban future. The tender award (expected early 2027) and any subsequent launch announcement will be significant market events for the west corridor.

What to Watch Next

The tender closes on 17 November 2026. Bids are expected from Singapore’s major developers, and possibly consortia given the scale and complexity of the White site requirements. The tender award will reveal the market’s view of JLD land value — a key data point for pricing expectations on the eventual new launch. Any premium bid above market expectations would signal high developer confidence in JLD residential absorption; a cautious single bidder would suggest more measured enthusiasm.

Separately, the full Q2 2026 URA private residential data release (expected ~24 July 2026) will include CCR, RCR, and OCR transaction data that contextualises JLD’s position in the wider market. The Q2 flash estimate showed overall prices up +0.5% with CCR leading — a context in which a well-connected, large-scale JLD development arriving in 2027–2028 could attract strong demand from both upgraders and investors seeking alternatives to pricier CCR addresses.

Frequently Asked Questions About the JLD White Site

What is a White site in Singapore’s GLS programme?

A White site is a land parcel sold by URA under the Government Land Sales programme where the developer has flexibility to incorporate a range of uses — residential, commercial, hotel, recreational, and community — subject to minimum requirements set by URA. The White classification is used for strategic locations where the Government wants the private market to determine the most commercially viable use mix, while ensuring a minimum anchor use (in this case, 40,000 sqm of office) is delivered to support the Government’s planning goals. White sites are typically larger and more complex than single-use residential or commercial sites, and they attract the largest and most financially capable developers.

When will the JLD White site residential units be available for purchase?

The tender closes on 17 November 2026. Following award (likely early 2027), the developer will typically spend 12–18 months on design, approvals, and construction preparation before launching for sale. A reasonable estimate for launch to the public is late 2027 to 2028. Construction of a mixed-use development of this scale typically takes 4–5 years, suggesting Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) around 2032–2033 — which coincides with the opening of the CR19 Cross Island Line station in the heart of JLD. Buyers interested in this project should plan for a progressive payment schedule over this period and interim housing arrangements.

How does the JLD White site compare to other west Singapore property options?

The JLD White site will deliver a qualitatively different product from most west Singapore residential projects. Its direct connection to the Jurong East interchange (which currently serves the East-West Line, North-South Line, and Jurong Region Line) and the future CR19 station makes it exceptionally well-connected — comparable connectivity exists in only a handful of suburban locations in Singapore. The adjacent Jurong Town Hall national monument and future park provide irreplaceable location attributes. However, buyers should note that the residential component is capped at 1,200 units within a larger commercial development, meaning the residential element is not a standalone condominium but part of an integrated mixed-use project — similar to Duo Residences in Bugis or Marina One Residences at Marina Bay. Pricing will reflect this premium integrated product positioning.

Is Jurong Lake District a good area for property investment?

JLD has strong structural fundamentals as a long-term investment: committed Government infrastructure, rail connectivity improving through 2032, a large employment base (Jurong East, International Business Park, Biopolis in one-stop range), and a diversified demographic base. The risk factors are the long development timeline (appreciation is gradual rather than immediate), competition from other west corridor supply (Tengah, Bukit Batok, Jurong East BTO supply is meaningful), and execution risk on the commercial components of the mixed-use development. Industry analysts generally view JLD as a medium-term (5–10 year) capital appreciation story rather than a short-term trading position. The announcement of the White site tender strengthens the longer-term investment case. As with all property investments, buyers should assess their own holding capacity and financial position carefully before committing.

What is the Cross Island Line and why does it matter for JLD?

The Cross Island Line (CRL) is a new MRT line currently under construction by the Land Transport Authority. It will run across Singapore from Changi in the east to Jurong in the west, passing through several major nodes including Clementi, Jurong Lake District, and Ang Mo Kio. The CR19 station, located in the heart of JLD, is planned to open in 2032. When operational, CR19 will add a key orbital connection to the existing East-West Line and North-South Line services at Jurong East interchange, effectively giving JLD three distinct MRT lines through the precinct. This level of rail connectivity is rare outside the central area of Singapore, and it is a significant long-term demand driver for both commercial and residential property in JLD.

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Disclaimer: This article is based on URA press release PR26-53 dated 3 July 2026 and publicly available Government data. Residential unit count, GFA figures, and MRT opening dates are as stated by URA and LTA and are subject to change. Price projections, investment analysis, and developer interest assessments represent editorial analysis only and do not constitute financial advice. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult licensed professionals before making any property purchase decision. For the authoritative site details, visit URA Land Sales. LovelyHomes does not provide financial or property advisory services.

Singapore HDB Upgrader Guide 2026: Steps, Costs, ABSD Remission and Timing

Singapore HDB Upgrader Guide 2026: Steps, Costs, ABSD Remission and Timing

HDB upgrader — the Singaporean who has served their Minimum Occupation Period, built up equity in their flat, and now wants to step up to a private condo or a larger resale flat — is one of the most financially significant actors in Singapore’s property market. For many families, this is the single largest financial decision of their lives: timing it correctly can mean saving S$300,000 in ABSD; getting it wrong can mean paying that sum in full, in cash, within 14 days. This guide walks through every step, cost, rule, and strategy for the Singapore HDB upgrader in 2026.

Quick Answer — HDB upgrader essentials

  • MOP requirement: You must complete the 5-year Minimum Occupation Period on your HDB flat before selling it or buying a private residential property.
  • Three upgrade paths: Bigger HDB resale (no ABSD), Executive Condo EC (no ABSD, income ceiling S$16,000), or private condo (ABSD 20% if buying before selling).
  • ABSD remission window: If you buy a private condo before selling your HDB, you pay ABSD 20% upfront — but IRAS will refund it if you sell your HDB within 6 months of the private OTP date.
  • Financial pressure point: ABSD on a S$1.5M condo is S$300,000 cash — ring-fenced before the 14-day ABSD payment deadline.
  • CPF accrued interest: Budget for the CPF principal + accrued interest refund on HDB sale — this reduces your immediate cash payout but returns money to your CPF OA.
  • TDSR impact: Buying before selling your HDB means your HDB loan is still on your record for TDSR purposes — get the stress test done early.

Who Is the HDB Upgrader?

The HDB upgrader broadly refers to a Singapore household that currently owns an HDB flat (BTO or resale) and plans to move to a higher-value property — either a bigger or better-located HDB resale flat, an Executive Condominium (EC), or a private condominium or landed property. The upgrade motivation is typically a combination of changing family needs (growing household size, desire for better facilities), improved household income over time, and investment considerations (private property appreciates differently from HDB).

In 2026, upgrader demand remains a significant driver of both the HDB resale market and the new private launch market. The typical upgrader profile is a dual-income Singapore Citizen couple in their mid-30s to mid-40s, with a paid-down HDB flat carrying S$300,000–S$600,000 in equity, and combined income sufficient to pass the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) stress test for a S$1.2M–S$2M condominium.

HDB upgrade pathways 2026 comparison — bigger HDB resale, executive condo EC, or private condo
Figure 1: Three HDB Upgrade Pathways Compared — Bigger HDB Resale, EC, and Private Condo (Source: HDB, MAS, IRAS 2026)

Step 1 — Check Your MOP Status

The Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) is the first gate every HDB upgrader must pass. You must have physically occupied your flat for the full MOP period before you can sell it on the open market or purchase a private residential property.

MOP durations in 2026 depend on flat classification. Standard BTO and resale HDB flats (both mature and non-mature estates) carry a 5-year MOP from the date the keys are collected. Plus and Prime classification flats introduced under the new framework carry a 10-year MOP. Executive Condominiums are HDB-administered at purchase and carry a 5-year MOP for resale; they are fully privatised after 10 years.

The MOP clock begins from the date of key collection (for BTO) or completion (for resale). It runs continuously regardless of whether you remain in the flat or rent it out (in some cases). Partial absence — such as working overseas — may pause the MOP clock, and you must reconfirm your MOP status with HDB before proceeding.

MOP Warning for Plus/Prime Flat Buyers: If you purchased a Plus or Prime classification BTO flat (launched from the August 2023 exercise onwards), your MOP is 10 years, not 5 years. Buyers who purchased these flats in 2023–2024 will not be able to upgrade to private property until 2033–2034 at the earliest. Factor this extended lock-up into your long-term planning.

Step 2 — Choose Your Upgrade Path

Once MOP is confirmed, you have three main upgrade paths. Each carries different ABSD treatment, financing rules, income restrictions, and flexibility.

Path A: Bigger HDB Resale Flat. The most financially conservative option. Upgrading from a 3-room to a 5-room or executive flat in a different estate carries no ABSD (you are not buying a second property — you are buying another HDB flat while selling the first). You can use an HDB housing loan (LTV 80%) and may qualify for the Step-Up CPF Housing Grant (up to S$15,000 for second-timers buying a 4-room or smaller resale flat). The downside is that HDB resale flats do not appreciate in the same way as private property and cannot be rented out without restriction.

Path B: Executive Condominium (EC). An EC sits between public and private housing. At launch, it is sold by a developer under HDB rules — meaning no ABSD at purchase (it is treated as a first-timer residential property). You must divest your existing HDB flat within 6 months of EC completion (TOP), otherwise penalties apply. The household income ceiling is S$16,000/month. After 5 years from TOP, you can sell on the open market to Singapore Citizens and PRs; after 10 years, it is fully privatised and can be sold to foreigners. Bank financing only — no HDB loan for EC.

Path C: Private Condominium or Landed Property. The most expensive and financially demanding path. If you buy a private property before selling your HDB flat, you are technically holding two residential properties simultaneously — triggering ABSD of 20% for Singapore Citizens. You have two sub-options: sell your HDB first (safer, no ABSD, but you need interim accommodation), or buy first and claim the ABSD remission by selling within the 6-month window.

HDB to condo upgrade cost breakdown 2026 — ABSD S$300,000 cash, downpayment, BSD, legal fees for S$1.5M condo
Figure 2: Cost Breakdown for Upgrading to Private Condo S$1.5M — SC Couple (2nd Property) (Source: IRAS, MAS 2026)

The ABSD Remission Strategy — Buy First, Sell Later

The most common upgrader strategy for those targeting private property is the “buy first, sell later” approach using the ABSD remission for married couples (where at least one spouse is a Singapore Citizen). Under this framework:

  • You sign the OTP for the private property and pay ABSD 20% (for SC) within 14 days of OTP date — in cash.
  • You simultaneously list and market your HDB flat for sale.
  • You must complete the sale of your HDB flat within 6 months of the private property OTP date (not completion date).
  • Within 6 months of HDB sale completion (and within the original 6-month window), you file for the ABSD remission with IRAS.
  • If approved, IRAS refunds the full ABSD paid, with no interest (i.e., you have effectively loaned the Government S$300,000 interest-free for up to 6–12 months).

The risk is liquidity: you need S$300,000+ in ready cash to pay the ABSD at the 14-day deadline. If you cannot sell your HDB within 6 months — due to market conditions, a slow transaction, or a buyer who defaults — the ABSD is not refunded. Some upgraders bridge the gap with a bridging loan, but these are expensive (typically prime + 1–2%) and have their own TDSR implications.

HDB upgrader timeline Singapore 2026 — MOP, OTP, HDB sale, ABSD remission 6-month window
Figure 3: HDB-to-Condo Upgrade Timeline — Key Milestones and the Critical 6-Month ABSD Remission Window (Source: IRAS, HDB 2026)

Summary: Upgrade Path Comparison at a Glance

Factor Bigger HDB Resale Executive Condo (EC) Private Condo
ABSD None (HDB-to-HDB, sell first) None at purchase 20% SC if buying before selling HDB; refundable if HDB sold within 6 months
Financing HDB loan (80% LTV) or bank Bank loan only Bank loan only
Income Ceiling None for resale; S$14,000 for BTO S$16,000/month None
MOP to Sell New Property 5 years (10 for Plus/Prime) 5 years (privatised at 10 years) No MOP (private property)
CPF OA Usable? Yes (HDB and bank loans) Yes (bank loan) Yes (up to Valuation Limit)
Rental Flexibility Restricted — HDB rules apply Restricted pre-privatisation Full rental freedom
Typical Price Range S$350K–S$800K S$900K–S$1.6M S$1.2M–S$3M+

Financial Planning for the Upgrade

Beyond the ABSD, upgraders must plan for a cluster of costs that come together at roughly the same time. A disciplined approach models each of the following:

CPF accrued interest on HDB sale proceeds: Your CPF principal withdrawn for the HDB flat, plus 2.5% p.a. compounded interest for every year you held it, must be refunded to your CPF OA from the HDB sale proceeds. On a S$350,000 CPF withdrawal held for 8 years, accrued interest is approximately S$78,000 — meaning S$428,000 goes back to CPF, not to your cash pocket (though it is available for the condo purchase).

TDSR with two loans: If you buy the condo before selling your HDB, both your HDB loan instalment and the projected condo loan instalment are counted in your TDSR. On a combined income of S$15,000/month, the 55% TDSR cap allows maximum total monthly debt obligations of S$8,250. If your HDB instalment is S$1,500 and the projected condo instalment is S$5,800, your combined TDSR is 48.7% — within limits. Lenders will also stress-test the condo loan at a higher rate (currently 4%), so run this calculation carefully.

6-month bridging period cash buffer: Between paying the private property ABSD, the downpayment, and waiting for the HDB sale to complete and CPF refund to process, upgraders need a substantial cash buffer. Industry guidance suggests setting aside at least 12 months of combined mortgage payments plus the full ABSD amount as liquid savings before signing the private OTP.

Worked Example: The Lim Family’s Upgrade

Profile: Mr and Mrs Lim, SC couple, combined income S$14,500/month. Own a 4-room Punggol BTO flat (keys August 2020), CPF OA balance: Mr S$182,000, Mrs S$145,000. Cash savings: S$380,000. Target: OCR 3-bedroom condo at S$1.55M.

MOP check: Keys August 2020 → MOP satisfied August 2025 ✓

BSD on S$1.55M: S$46,600 (from CPF OA) ✓

ABSD (SC 2nd property): S$310,000 — must be paid in cash at OTP

Downpayment: Bank loan 75% LTV = S$1,162,500 loan. Remaining 25% = S$387,500. Min cash 5% = S$77,500. Balance from CPF = S$310,000

Cash required at OTP: ABSD S$310,000 + option fee 1% S$15,500 = S$325,500 cash within 14 days of OTP

TDSR check: Projected condo instalment at 3.5% over 25yr = S$5,802/mth. HDB instalment still on record: S$1,340/mth. Combined S$7,142/mth ÷ S$14,500 = 49.3% ✓ (under 55%)

HDB sale (6 months after OTP): Sold for S$760,000. CPF refund: S$319,000 (principal) + S$38,000 (accrued 5.5yr at 2.5%) = S$357,000 to CPF OA. Outstanding HDB loan: S$368,000. Net cash from HDB sale: S$760,000 − S$368,000 − S$357,000 (CPF) − S$8,000 (legal/misc) = S$27,000 net cash

ABSD remission: IRAS refunds S$310,000 ABSD within ~10 weeks of HDB sale completion ✓

Net position post-transaction: S$27,000 new cash + S$310,000 ABSD refund + S$357,000 new CPF OA balance → strong CPF position for condo loan repayments; minimal cash surplus (S$337,000 pre-condo closing costs from HDB cash + ABSD refund)

Common Mistakes HDB Upgraders Make

Forgetting ABSD is cash: The single most common error. Buyers who have set aside the full downpayment in CPF but do not have liquid cash for the ABSD face a crisis at the 14-day deadline. No lender will advance ABSD as part of the mortgage; no CPF withdrawal is permitted for ABSD.

Not accounting for the CPF refund: Many upgraders estimate their HDB “profit” as sale price minus outstanding loan, forgetting that a large CPF principal and accrued interest amount must first be returned to CPF. This can reduce cash-in-hand from the HDB sale by S$200,000–S$450,000 depending on how long the flat was owned and how much CPF was used.

Missing the 6-month window: If the HDB sale process hits delays — a buyer who withdraws, a bank valuation dispute, or an HDB resale application processing delay — the 6-month window can expire. Once it does, the ABSD is not refunded. Upgraders should list the HDB flat immediately after signing the private OTP, price it competitively, and have legal conveyancing engaged in parallel.

Underestimating TDSR exposure: Some upgraders are surprised when their bank pre-approval does not cover the desired loan quantum because the HDB loan is still reflected in their TDSR. Always get a fresh In-Principle Approval (IPA) with both loans in scope before signing the private OTP.

What Might Come Next for HDB Upgraders

Singapore’s cooling measures framework has not changed since April 2023, and upgrader ABSD at 20% represents the base cost of accessing private property while still holding an HDB flat. The Government has shown no appetite for relaxing this rate in the near term, given its explicit goal of moderating speculative demand from HDB-to-private upgraders. Any future relaxation would likely be preceded by a sustained period of flat or declining private property prices.

The emergence of Plus and Prime HDB classification flats, with 10-year MOPs and restrictions on renting out to non-family members, has already created a two-tier HDB resale market. Upgraders who purchased Plus or Prime flats in 2023–2024 face a much longer lock-up, and their upgrading flexibility will be significantly constrained until the early-to-mid 2030s. The long-term impact of this policy on upgrader dynamics is still playing out.

Frequently Asked Questions About HDB Upgrading

Do I have to sell my HDB flat before buying a private condo to avoid ABSD?

You do not have to sell first, but if you buy before selling, you will pay ABSD 20% (SC) or 30% (PR) upfront in cash. The ABSD remission framework allows you to claim a full refund if you sell your HDB within 6 months of signing the private OTP. The “sell first” approach avoids the ABSD cash outlay entirely but means you need temporary housing between HDB completion and condo handover (which can be 2–4 years for new launches). Most upgraders choose “buy first, sell within 6 months” to avoid the gap, provided they have sufficient cash for the ABSD.

Can I use my HDB flat’s rental income to help with the TDSR for the condo loan?

Yes — but only if you have HDB’s approval to sublet the flat and you can provide documented rental income. Lenders typically apply a haircut of 30% to rental income when calculating TDSR (i.e., only 70% of gross rental income is counted as qualifying income). If your HDB flat generates S$2,500/month in verified rental income, S$1,750 may be added to your income base for TDSR purposes. Note that owner-occupiers on MOP cannot legally sublet their entire flat until MOP is completed, so this applies primarily to upgraders who have already completed MOP and chosen to rent out their HDB while purchasing a condo.

What happens if I fail to sell my HDB within 6 months and miss the ABSD remission?

If you do not sell your HDB within 6 months of the private OTP date, you forfeit the ABSD remission permanently. The S$300,000+ ABSD you paid in cash is retained by IRAS — it cannot be recovered. This is a catastrophic financial outcome for most households. To mitigate this risk: price your HDB competitively from day one, engage conveyancing lawyers for both transactions simultaneously, and do not accept a buyer for the HDB who requires more than 8–10 weeks to complete. If you are approaching the 5-month mark and the HDB has not sold, consider drastically reducing the asking price or seeking legal advice on options.

Is an EC a good upgrade target compared to a private condo?

An EC offers a unique value proposition: you buy at a price typically S$200,000–S$500,000 below a comparable private condo in the same location, with the same physical quality (developer-built to private standards). The trade-off is the HDB ownership conditions for the first 5–10 years — no subletting to foreigners, must divest HDB within 6 months of EC TOP, and income ceiling of S$16,000. For upgraders who meet the income ceiling and are comfortable with the constraints, ECs have historically outperformed many private condo segments in capital appreciation after privatisation at 10 years. However, ECs are only available as new launches — there is currently no resale EC from a developer; the secondary market is for existing privatised ECs sold by owners.

Can both spouses use their CPF OA for the condo purchase even if they are selling the HDB?

Yes. Once the HDB sale is completed, CPF refunds (principal + accrued interest) are credited back to each owner’s CPF OA in proportion to their respective CPF usage on the flat. Those refreshed CPF OA balances can then be applied to the condo purchase — for downpayment, monthly loan repayments, and BSD — subject to the condo’s own Valuation Limit. Many upgraders rely on this CPF “recycling” to fund a significant portion of the condo downpayment after the ABSD remission is returned to their bank account.

What is the Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) impact when upgrading?

Seller’s Stamp Duty applies to private residential properties sold within 3 years of purchase — at 12% (Year 1), 8% (Year 2), or 4% (Year 3). HDB flats are exempt from SSD. For most HDB upgraders, SSD is not relevant to the HDB sale (no SSD applies). SSD would only become relevant if you later sold the private condo within 3 years of purchase — which is an important consideration for upgraders who buy a new-launch condo that is still under construction. If market conditions deteriorate and you needed to exit quickly, SSD could cost S$180,000+ on a S$1.5M condo sold in Year 1.

Related Articles

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. ABSD rates, MOP rules, CPF withdrawal limits, and TDSR/MSR parameters are set by the Government and may change. All figures reflect the framework as at 3 July 2026. Readers should verify current rules with HDB, IRAS, and CPF Board, and consult a licensed financial adviser and property solicitor before proceeding with any upgrade transaction. LovelyHomes does not provide financial, legal, or property advisory services.

Singapore CPF for Property Guide 2026: How to Use Your OA, Valuation Limits and Accrued Interest Explained

Singapore CPF for Property Guide 2026: How to Use Your OA, Valuation Limits and Accrued Interest Explained

CPF for property Singapore — your Central Provident Fund Ordinary Account (CPF OA) is almost certainly your largest source of savings, and the rules governing how you can use it to buy a home are among the most misunderstood in Singapore’s property landscape. Buyers regularly assume they can use CPF for everything from their Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) to their renovation bills — and are caught short at completion. Others sell a flat and are alarmed to see how much accrued interest has accumulated in their CPF ledger. This guide explains every rule, limit, and quirk in plain English.

Quick Answer — CPF for property at a glance

  • CPF OA can be used for downpayment, monthly loan instalments, Buyer’s Stamp Duty, and legal fees.
  • CPF OA cannot be used for ABSD (cash only), Cash Over Valuation, option fee, agent commission, or renovation.
  • Valuation Limit (VL): You may use CPF up to the purchase price or market value, whichever is lower.
  • Beyond VL: CPF can be used up to 120% of VL — but only if you have set aside the Full Retirement Sum (FRS).
  • Accrued interest rate: 2.5% p.a. compounded on all CPF withdrawn for property. On sale, principal + accrued interest is refunded to your CPF OA — it does not vanish.
  • Lease rule: Property must have at least 30 years’ remaining lease for CPF to be used; graduated limits apply between 30 and 60 years.
  • For the latest rules, check CPF Board’s official housing page.

What Is the CPF Ordinary Account and Why Is It Used for Property?

The CPF is Singapore’s mandatory social security savings scheme. Every employed Singapore Citizen and Permanent Resident contributes a percentage of their monthly wages into three accounts: the Ordinary Account (OA), Special Account (SA), and MediSave Account (MA). For most working-age Singaporeans, the OA accumulates the largest balance over time — and it earns a minimum guaranteed interest of 2.5% per annum, with an additional 1% on the first S$60,000 of combined CPF balances (with a cap of S$20,000 for OA).

The Government allows the OA to be used for housing because property ownership is a central pillar of Singapore’s social compact. By permitting CPF OA usage, the scheme effectively unlocks decades of compulsory savings for the single largest purchase most households will ever make. The trade-off is that money withdrawn from CPF for property must eventually be returned — with interest — to the account so it remains available for retirement.

CPF OA property usage table 2026 — can vs cannot pay: downpayment, BSD, ABSD cash only
Figure 1: CPF OA Usage for Property — What You Can and Cannot Pay (Source: CPF Board, IRAS 2026)

What Can You Use CPF OA For?

Your CPF OA balance can be applied to the following property-related expenses in 2026:

Downpayment: For an HDB flat purchased using an HDB loan, the minimum cash downpayment is 10% of the purchase price; the remaining 10% of the required 20% downpayment can come from CPF OA. For bank-financed purchases (HDB or private), the minimum cash downpayment is 5% of the purchase price (for loans up to 75% LTV), with the remaining 20% payable from CPF OA or cash.

Monthly loan repayments: Both HDB housing loan instalments and bank mortgage instalments can be paid from your CPF OA. HDB loans deduct directly via GIRO from your CPF OA. For bank loans, you must submit a CPF housing withdrawal application.

Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD): BSD can be paid from CPF OA — this is often overlooked by first-time buyers. At current rates, BSD on a S$600,000 HDB flat is approximately S$11,400, all of which can come from OA.

Legal and conveyancing fees: Solicitor fees for the purchase transaction are claimable from CPF OA, subject to the Valuation Limit rule.

What Cannot Be Paid with CPF OA?

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) is the most significant item. Regardless of how large your CPF OA balance is, 100% of your ABSD liability must be paid in cash. At 20% for a Singapore Citizen purchasing a second residential property, this means a cash outlay of S$320,000 on a S$1.6M condo — before any other costs. Buyers who have not ring-fenced this amount routinely find themselves in difficulty at the 14-day ABSD payment deadline.

Cash Over Valuation (COV) in the HDB resale market is another cash-only item. Where a buyer agrees to pay above the HDB assessed value, the excess (COV) cannot be financed by either HDB loan or CPF.

Option fees, booking fees, good faith deposits — the initial 1% OTP fee and any booking deposit for new launches must be paid in cash. CPF cannot be applied until the formal sales process is completed.

The Valuation Limit: How Much CPF Can You Use?

The Valuation Limit (VL) is the core rule governing total CPF usage on any single property. It is defined as the purchase price or the market value at the time of purchase, whichever is lower. You may use your CPF OA (and that of any co-owner or joint purchaser) to pay for the property purchase up to this limit.

Once cumulative CPF withdrawals (principal) reach the VL, no further CPF can be withdrawn for that property — unless you qualify for the 120% Valuation Limit extension.

To use CPF beyond the VL (up to 120% VL), the following conditions must be met:

  • The property must have a remaining lease of at least 60 years.
  • The property must have sufficient remaining lease to cover the youngest buyer to age 95.
  • The buyer must have set aside or be setting aside the Full Retirement Sum (FRS) in their CPF SA and OA combined (S$213,000 as at 1 January 2026).
CPF valuation limit and remaining lease eligibility rules 2026 — HDB and private property
Figure 2: CPF Valuation Limit & Lease Eligibility Rules — Singapore 2026 (Source: CPF Board, HDB)

The Lease Rule: Remaining Lease and Age

CPF usage for property is not just limited by the VL — it is also constrained by the remaining lease of the property, particularly relevant for resale HDB flats with shorter tenures.

The general framework is: the property’s remaining lease, at the time of purchase, must be sufficient to cover the youngest buyer to age 95. Where the remaining lease falls short of 60 years, a pro-rated withdrawal limit applies. The formula used is: (Remaining Lease / 65 years) × Valuation Limit. Below 30 years of remaining lease, CPF cannot be used at all.

In practical terms, most buyers of resale HDB flats in mature estates should verify remaining lease carefully. A 50-year-old flat with 49 years remaining means the youngest buyer must be under 46 to receive full CPF access. This has become increasingly relevant as older HDB estates approach their tipping points.

CPF Accrued Interest: The Most Misunderstood Rule

When you use CPF OA to buy a property, CPF Board tracks how much you have withdrawn. It then charges accrued interest on that amount at 2.5% per annum, compounded annually — the same rate your OA would have earned had the money remained in your account. The accrued interest accumulates throughout your period of ownership.

When you sell the property, the net sale proceeds must first be used to refund CPF the principal withdrawn plus all accrued interest. This refund goes back into your CPF OA — it is not a tax, fine, or fee. You are simply returning money to your own retirement savings with the interest it would have earned. The cash you receive after CPF refund, outstanding loan repayment, and transaction costs is your actual cash profit.

Many sellers are surprised by how large the CPF accrued interest sum is after 10–15 years of ownership. A S$150,000 CPF withdrawal grows to approximately S$191,000 after 10 years and S$244,000 after 20 years at 2.5% p.a. — meaning S$94,000 in accrued interest over 20 years returns to your CPF OA on sale.

CPF accrued interest chart 2026 — S$150,000 at 2.5% per annum over 0 to 25 years
Figure 3: CPF Accrued Interest Growth — S$150,000 OA Withdrawal at 2.5% p.a. Compounded (Source: CPF Board formula)

Summary: CPF Rules at a Glance

Rule / Limit What It Means Key Number (2026) Source
Minimum Cash Downpayment (HDB Loan) 10% of purchase price must be in cash; balance of 10% from CPF OA 10% cash HDB
Minimum Cash Downpayment (Bank Loan) 5% cash; next 20% from CPF OA or cash 5% cash MAS / CPF Board
Valuation Limit (VL) Total CPF withdrawable capped at lower of purchase price or market value 100% VL CPF Board
Beyond VL (120% cap) Additional CPF use if FRS met and lease ≥ 60 years 120% VL CPF Board
Minimum Remaining Lease Below 30 years: no CPF use; 30–59 years: pro-rated 30 years CPF Board
Accrued Interest Rate 2.5% p.a. compounded on all OA withdrawals for housing 2.5% p.a. CPF Board
ABSD Not payable via CPF — 100% cash Cash only IRAS
CPF Refund on Sale Principal + accrued interest refunded to CPF OA from sale proceeds Mandatory CPF Board

Worked Example: CPF in Action for a Resale HDB Purchase

The Tans — SC couple, combined income S$8,500/month, buying a 4-room resale flat in Tampines

Purchase price: S$640,000 | HDB valuation: S$625,000 | COV: S$15,000

Financing: HDB housing loan (LTV 80%) = S$500,000 loan; 20% downpayment = S$128,000

  • Minimum cash downpayment (10%): S$64,000 in cash
  • Remaining downpayment (10%): S$64,000 from CPF OA ✓
  • COV S$15,000: Cash only (cannot use CPF) ✓
  • BSD on S$640,000: S$12,600 — payable from CPF OA ✓
  • Legal fees (est.): S$2,800 — payable from CPF OA ✓
  • Total CPF used at purchase: S$64,000 + S$12,600 + S$2,800 = S$79,400
  • Monthly instalment at HDB loan 2.60% over 25 years: S$2,275/month (MSR 26.8% ✓ under 30%)

After 8 years (selling):

  • CPF principal withdrawn (downpayment + instalment contributions): S$218,000 (estimated)
  • Accrued interest at 2.5% p.a. over 8 years: approx. S$24,500
  • CPF refund required: S$242,500 (back into CPF OA — not a loss)
  • Outstanding HDB loan at sale: ~S$384,000
  • If sale price = S$780,000: Net cash after CPF refund + loan repayment: ~S$153,500

Why CPF Accrued Interest Is Not a Penalty

A common misconception is that CPF accrued interest represents a hidden cost of home ownership. It does not. The 2.5% p.a. accrued interest is precisely the return your OA would have earned had you not withdrawn the funds. When you sell and refund CPF, the money returns to your retirement account — meaning you have effectively used the property as an alternative vehicle for your CPF savings during the period of ownership.

The practical implication is that sellers should model their net cash position including the CPF refund, rather than treating the refund as pure cost. In a rising market, property appreciation typically far outstrips the accrued interest — the effective “cost” of using CPF is simply the opportunity cost of not having that money in your OA earning 2.5%. For most Singaporeans buying in a rising market, this is an excellent trade.

Where accrued interest does matter more acutely is for sellers in a flat or declining market, or for sellers who have held for a very long time at low appreciation. A 20-year hold with heavy CPF usage and modest appreciation can result in a smaller-than-expected cash payout — with the “profit” largely returned to CPF. This is not a loss, but it shapes the seller’s immediate liquidity position.

What Might Come Next for CPF and Property

CPF housing rules have been periodically tightened since the 2016 Enhanced Retirement Sum (ERS) framework was introduced. The Government’s stated trajectory is to gradually raise the retirement sums (BRS, FRS, ERS) each year by approximately 3.5%, which in turn raises the bar for the 120% VL extension. By 2030, the FRS is projected to exceed S$250,000, meaning buyers relying on the 120% rule will need substantially more CPF savings set aside.

There is ongoing policy discussion about the tension between property as a retirement asset and CPF as a retirement savings vehicle. The Retirement and Re-employment Act framework and the silver housing bonus schemes suggest the Government is nudging older Singaporeans to unlock property equity for retirement rather than relying on CPF alone. Buyers today should factor in that CPF usage rules may tighten further for properties with shorter remaining leases as the HDB lease decay issue becomes more pronounced in the 2030s and 2040s.

Frequently Asked Questions About CPF and Property

Can I use CPF to pay my ABSD?

No. The Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) must be paid entirely in cash, regardless of how large your CPF OA balance is. IRAS has never permitted CPF to be used for ABSD since the duty was introduced in 2011. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood rules in Singapore property finance. If you are a Singapore Citizen buying a second property, you must have the full ABSD amount (currently 20% of purchase price) available in cash at the 14-day payment deadline after signing the Option to Purchase.

What happens to my CPF if I sell at a loss?

Even if you sell at a loss, you are still required to refund your CPF the principal withdrawn plus accrued interest — up to the available sale proceeds. If the net sale proceeds after repaying the outstanding loan are insufficient to cover the full CPF refund, you refund whatever is available. Any shortfall in the CPF refund does not need to be made up from your other savings — it is simply not refunded. However, this scenario (selling for less than you owe CPF + loan) is a genuine financial risk that buyers should model before purchasing.

Can I use my spouse’s CPF OA to buy property if they are not a co-owner?

No. Only registered co-owners of the property may use their CPF OA for that property. However, you can add a family member as a co-owner to allow their CPF to be used, subject to HDB and MAS eligibility rules. For private property, there is no prohibition on adding a spouse or family member as a co-owner, though stamp duty and legal implications should be reviewed with a solicitor. You cannot use someone else’s CPF even with their written consent unless they are a co-owner on the title.

Does buying a property with CPF affect my CPF LIFE annuity payout?

Indirectly, yes. Because CPF OA withdrawn for property (plus accrued interest) is refunded to CPF on sale, the funds that return to your account can then be transferred to the Retirement Account (RA) when you turn 55, boosting your CPF LIFE payout. However, if your property has not been sold by retirement age and you have drawn down heavily from OA, your CPF LIFE baseline payout may be lower if you have not independently met the Full Retirement Sum. The key planning point is to not assume that housing CPF withdrawals have no retirement impact — model your retirement savings position including expected CPF refund on eventual sale.

I bought an HDB flat and later upgraded to a private condo. Can I transfer remaining CPF usage from the HDB to the condo?

No. Your CPF housing withdrawals are tracked per property. When you sell the HDB flat, the CPF principal and accrued interest are refunded to your OA. Those funds are then available as fresh OA balance to be applied to the purchase of your next property. However, you do not “carry over” any unused CPF limit from the HDB flat — you start fresh with the new property’s own Valuation Limit. The refunded CPF balance effectively becomes available capital you can redeploy toward the condo’s downpayment and loan repayments.

Is there a limit on how much CPF I can use each month for loan repayments?

There is no separate monthly CPF withdrawal cap beyond the overall Valuation Limit rule. As long as your cumulative withdrawals (downpayment + BSD + legal fees + cumulative monthly instalments) have not reached the VL (or 120% VL if applicable), you may continue to pay monthly instalments from CPF OA. Once you hit the VL, all subsequent instalments must be paid in cash. For most buyers with moderate remaining OA balances or mid-priced properties, VL exhaustion typically occurs somewhere between 10 and 20 years of ownership — and only then does the monthly cash commitment escalate.

Can foreigners or PRs use CPF for property in Singapore?

Singapore Permanent Residents (PRs) contribute to CPF and may use their CPF OA to purchase HDB resale flats and private property, subject to the same VL, lease, and ABSD rules as Singapore Citizens. PRs face a 5% ABSD on their first residential property purchase (versus 0% for SC first property), which must be paid in cash. Foreigners are not CPF contributors and therefore have no CPF OA to access. All property acquisition costs for foreigners — downpayment, BSD, ABSD at 60%, legal fees — must be funded from cash or offshore financing.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only. CPF housing rules, valuation limits, and retirement sum thresholds are updated periodically by the CPF Board and may change after the publication date of this article. All figures reflect the framework as at 3 July 2026. Readers should verify current rules at cpf.gov.sg and consult a licensed financial adviser or HDB-appointed solicitor before making any property purchase or CPF withdrawal decision. LovelyHomes does not provide financial or legal advice.

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

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

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

Quick Answer — Key Numbers

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

The Q2 2026 Flash Estimate in Context

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

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

Segment-by-Segment Analysis

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

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

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

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

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

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

Transaction Volume: Stable Demand

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

Supply Pipeline: Government Accelerating Delivery

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

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

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

What This Means for Buyers, Sellers, and Investors

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

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

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

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

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

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

Frequently Asked Questions

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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