Singapore New Launch Condo Buying Guide 2026: Showflat, Balloting, Progressive Payments and Everything to Know Before You Buy

Singapore New Launch Condo Buying Guide 2026: Showflat, Balloting, Progressive Payments and Everything to Know Before You Buy

Quick Answer: Key Takeaways

  • Buying a new launch condo in Singapore means purchasing directly from the developer before or shortly after the project receives Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP).
  • You pay via the Progressive Payment Scheme (PPS): 5% booking fee at OTP, 15% on exercising the Sales & Purchase (S&P) Agreement, then staged payments tied to construction milestones.
  • ABSD applies upfront and is due within 2 weeks of the OTP exercise. For Singapore Citizens buying their second property: 20%. Foreigners: 60%. Plan for this before you commit.
  • New launches carry a 5-year Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) lock-in — you cannot sell without a significant penalty within 5 years of purchase.
  • Unlike resale, you receive the flat in its bare shell at TOP. Renovation costs (typically S$50,000–S$120,000 for a standard 2-bedroom) must be budgeted separately.
  • The ballot system — especially for highly anticipated launches — means you may not get the unit or floor you want even after registering interest.
  • New launch condos in Singapore have historically outperformed resale on price quantum appreciation from launch to TOP, but this is not guaranteed and varies by project and location.

What Is a New Launch Condo?

A new launch condo (or new launch private residential property) is a condominium development released for sale by the developer before or shortly after it receives TOP. In Singapore’s context, most new launches happen via a showflat sales exercise during the construction phase — you view show units and buy off-plan, before the actual building is complete. The developer holds a licence from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) to sell, and the transaction is governed by the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act.

New launches are distinct from resale condos (completed units bought on the secondary market) and from executive condominiums (ECs) (hybrid developments with HDB-like eligibility restrictions for the first five years). This guide focuses exclusively on private new launch condos.

Step 1: Registering Interest and the Showflat Preview

Before a formal launch, developers typically invite potential buyers to register their interest (EOI). Registering is non-binding — it gives you priority access to a showflat preview before the public, and ensures you receive the developer’s price list and floor plan release in advance. At the preview, you view the show units (which may be furnished or bare-shell mock-ups) and indicate interest in specific units and stacks.

For highly subscribed projects, the developer may hold a ballot: if more buyers are interested in a particular unit type than units available, a computerised draw selects the order of purchase. Being balloted does not guarantee you receive your preferred unit — you may be offered an alternative or invited to return if units remain after the first round.

Under URA rules, developers must release at least 35% of available units in the first sale tranche. Price lists must be published at least 24 hours before the launch, and developers may not collect more than 5% as a booking fee (OTP fee) before exercising the Sale & Purchase Agreement.

New launch condo purchase timeline Singapore 2026 — EOI, showflat, OTP, S&P, progressive payments, TOP, CSC
Figure 3: New launch condo purchase timeline from EOI to CSC — Singapore 2026. Source: URA, HDB (indicative milestones).

Step 2: The Option to Purchase (OTP) and Booking Fee

When you decide to proceed, you sign an Option to Purchase (OTP) and pay the booking fee — typically 5% of the purchase price. In Singapore, developer OTPs for new launches have a standard form prescribed by the Controller of Housing. You then have a fixed period — typically 3 weeks — to exercise the OTP by signing the Sales & Purchase Agreement (S&P) and paying the next instalment.

The booking fee is non-refundable if you decide not to exercise. However, if you exercise the OTP and subsequently fail to complete (e.g., cannot obtain financing), the forfeiture is typically 25% of the purchase price — an extremely significant sum. This underscores why financing pre-approval matters before you sign any OTP.

Step 3: Stamp Duties — BSD and ABSD

Singapore imposes Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) on all property purchases, calculated on the higher of the purchase price or market value:

  • 1% on the first S$180,000
  • 2% on the next S$180,000
  • 3% on the next S$640,000
  • 4% on the next S$500,000
  • 5% on the next S$1,500,000
  • 6% on any excess above S$3,000,000

For most new launch condos — commonly priced between S$1.5M and S$3M in 2026 — BSD is typically S$39,600 to S$69,600.

Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) applies on top of BSD for buyers beyond their first property, PRs, and all foreigners:

ABSD rates for new launch condo purchases Singapore 2026 — bar chart showing 0% to 60% by buyer profile
Figure 2: ABSD rates applicable to new launch condo purchases by buyer profile — Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS.
ABSD is due within 2 weeks of the OTP date — not after TOP, not at completion. For a S$2M condo, a Singapore Citizen buying a second property owes ABSD of S$400,000 within a fortnight. Ensure your liquidity is in place before signing the OTP.

Married couples where one spouse is an SC and the other is a PR buying their first property together are eligible for ABSD remission — the ABSD paid is refunded after holding the property for 5 years, provided they sell the other property (if any) within 6 months of TOP or purchase, and the purchased property remains their primary residence.

Step 4: Financing — LTV, TDSR and MSR (if applicable)

Private condo financing in Singapore is governed by the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework: total monthly debt obligations (all loans) must not exceed 55% of gross monthly income. The Loan-to-Value (LTV) limit for private properties depends on your loan count:

Loan Count Max LTV (bank loan) Min Cash Down Min CPF/Cash Down
1st housing loan 75% 5% cash 20% cash/CPF
2nd housing loan 45% 25% cash 30% cash/CPF
3rd and beyond 35% 25% cash 40% cash/CPF

Note: these are the LTV limits for standard bank loans. HDB loans are not available for private properties. There is no MSR cap for private condos — only TDSR applies.

Step 5: The Progressive Payment Scheme (PPS)

Unlike resale purchases (where you pay the full price in one transaction), new launch condos use the Progressive Payment Scheme. You pay in stages as the building reaches construction milestones. Each payment is called a “progress payment” and corresponds to a defined stage of construction certified by an architect.

New launch condo progressive payment schedule Singapore 2026 — bar chart showing % at each construction milestone
Figure 1: Progressive Payment Scheme stages — typical new launch condo in Singapore 2026. Source: Housing Developers Rules.

Each progress payment triggers a corresponding drawdown of your bank loan. This is why you need a bank’s Letter of Offer (LO) before or shortly after exercising the S&P — the bank needs to be ready to disburse as each stage is reached. You pay interest on the disbursed loan amount as construction progresses, typically at the bank’s prevailing rate (SORA-based in 2026).

Step 6: Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) — Is It Still Available?

The Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) allows buyers to defer up to 80% of the purchase price until TOP or CSC, rather than paying progressively. However, since 2007, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has effectively restricted DPS on standard residential properties. Most developers no longer offer DPS as a standard option; where it appears, it is typically for high-end projects (luxury segment) under specific conditions. The PPS is the default for virtually all new launch condos launched from 2026 onwards.

Step 7: TOP, Possession and Renovation

When the building receives its Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) from the Building and Construction Authority (BCA), you can take vacant possession of your unit. At this stage, you pay the remaining progress payments: typically 25% on TOP (vacant possession) and a final 5% on CSC (Certificate of Statutory Completion).

A new launch unit at TOP is delivered as a bare shell — bare concrete floors, unpainted walls, basic sanitary fittings (unless the developer has included a renovation package). You will need to engage contractors for flooring, painting, kitchen and bathroom fittings, carpentry, air-conditioning, and more. Budget conservatively: renovation for a 2-bedroom (around 700–850 sqft) typically ranges from S$50,000 to S$100,000 in Singapore’s 2026 market; for larger units, S$120,000 or more is common. Include this in your total acquisition cost model.

Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD): The 5-Year Lock-In

Singapore’s SSD was introduced in 2011 to curb short-term speculation. For residential properties purchased on or after 11 March 2017, SSD applies if you sell within 3 years of purchase:

  • Sold within 1st year: 12%
  • Sold within 2nd year: 8%
  • Sold within 3rd year: 4%
  • Sold after 3rd year: 0%

SSD is calculated on the higher of the sale price or market value. For new launch condos, this effectively means you cannot profitably flip a unit until at least 3 years after OTP. Since most new launches take 3–5 years to reach TOP, many buyers hold well past the SSD window regardless.

New Launch vs Resale: Quick Comparison

Factor New Launch Resale Condo
Payment structure Progressive (PPS) Full payment on completion
Condition at handover Bare shell Existing fittings
Waiting time 3–5 years to TOP Immediate
Price Usually at or above market premium Negotiated market price
HDB grant eligibility Not applicable (private) Not applicable (private)
CPF usage Yes (Ordinary Account) Yes
Renovation budget needed Yes (significant) Usually lower (existing fit-out)
ABSD Same rates as resale Same rates as new launch

Worked Example: The Teo Family

Mr and Mrs Teo are Singapore Citizens, both aged 34. They own a 4-room HDB flat in Bishan (fully paid). They wish to buy a new launch 2-bedroom condo in Jurong East at S$1,600,000. This will be their second property.

BSD: 1%×S$180K + 2%×S$180K + 3%×S$640K + 4%×S$600K = S$1,800 + S$3,600 + S$19,200 + S$24,000 = S$48,600

ABSD: 20% on second property (SC) = S$320,000 — due within 2 weeks of OTP.

Booking fee (5%): S$80,000 cash.

S&P exercise (15%): S$240,000 (cash/CPF). Total upfront = S$320,000 cash + S$368,600 stamp duties.

Bank loan (75% LTV on first loan — but this is their 2nd property): LTV = 45%, so bank loan max = S$720,000. Total cash + CPF must cover S$880,000 (55%) — plus S$368,600 stamp duties already paid. Renovation budget: S$70,000.

Total funds required: approximately S$1,320,000 in cash and CPF before loan proceeds. The Teos should model whether their HDB flat sale proceeds (if they plan to sell) are sufficient, or whether they can service a bridging gap.

Planning note: Many buyers purchase a new launch before selling their existing property, intending to sell after TOP. Be aware that (a) if TOP is delayed, you may hold both properties for longer than expected, (b) carrying two mortgages or a mortgage plus HDB loan simultaneously can stress TDSR, and (c) the ABSD for the second property is paid now and is not refunded unless you meet the strict ABSD remission criteria (married SC/SPR couple, first home only).

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Not stress-testing TDSR at higher SORA: SORA-based mortgage rates have fluctuated. Ensure you can service your loan even if rates rise 1–2 percentage points above today’s levels.
  • Underestimating renovation costs: Get a proper quote before committing; budget overruns on renovation are extremely common in Singapore.
  • Assuming your preferred unit is available: Popular stacks (high floor, pool-facing, corner units) are typically balloted first. Be prepared to accept alternatives.
  • Overlooking maintenance fees: New launch condos with extensive facilities (pool, gym, concierge) can carry maintenance fees of S$400–S$800/mth or more for larger units.
  • Not checking the developer’s track record: Review the developer’s past completions — quality, adherence to timeline, and handover defects. Singapore’s REDAS and the Controller of Housing maintain records of licensed developers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use CPF to pay for a new launch condo?

Yes. You may use your CPF Ordinary Account (OA) balance to pay for the S&P downpayment and progressive payments (except the booking fee — the initial 5% OTP fee must be in cash). You can also use CPF OA for BSD and legal fees. However, you cannot use CPF for ABSD payments — ABSD must be paid in cash. CPF usage on private property is subject to the valuation limit and the withdrawal limit (typically capped at the assessed value of the property); once the OA balance used for the property reaches the assessed valuation, you must pay subsequent instalments from your bank loan or cash.

What happens if the developer delays TOP?

Developers in Singapore are legally required to obtain TOP by the Delivery Possession Date (DPD) stated in the S&P Agreement. If they fail to do so, they must pay Liquidated Damages (LD) to buyers — typically calculated at 8% per annum on the progressive payments already made, pro-rated for each day of delay. LD is automatically due; you do not need to take legal action to claim it. For extended delays (beyond 6 months), the Controller of Housing may also take action against the developer’s licence.

Can I back out after signing the S&P Agreement?

You can withdraw after exercising the S&P, but the consequences are severe. Under the standard Housing Developers (Show Units) Rules, the developer can forfeit up to 25% of the purchase price as liquidated damages. You also lose your 5% booking fee. In practice, most buyers do not withdraw after exercising — the financial penalty makes it uneconomical except in extreme circumstances (e.g., inability to obtain financing).

What is the difference between TOP and CSC?

TOP (Temporary Occupation Permit) is issued by BCA when the building meets minimum safety, fire safety, and occupancy standards. You can move in and begin renovation after TOP. CSC (Certificate of Statutory Completion) is issued when the development fully meets all planning and statutory requirements — typically 1–3 years after TOP. The final 5% payment is due on CSC. Legal completion (transfer of title) typically happens at or shortly after CSC. Until CSC, the developer retains the final 5% and your strata title has not yet been issued.

Do I need a lawyer for a new launch condo purchase?

Yes. All property transactions in Singapore require a licensed Singapore solicitor to act for you on conveyancing. For new launches, the developer typically has a panel of law firms; you may use one of these or appoint your own solicitor. Your solicitor will review the S&P Agreement, verify that the developer’s housing licence is valid, liaise with CPF Board (if you are using CPF), liaise with your bank (if you have a mortgage), and register the transfer of title at the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). Legal fees for a new launch typically range from S$2,500 to S$5,000 for standard condos.

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Disclaimer

This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Stamp duty rates, LTV limits, TDSR rules, and grant schemes are subject to change by the Singapore government. Always verify current rules with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), and Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) before making any purchase decision. Consult a licensed conveyancing solicitor and a licensed financial adviser for advice specific to your circumstances.

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Singapore HDB CPF Housing Grants Guide 2026: EHG, Family Grant, PHG and Every Dollar You Can Claim

Singapore HDB CPF Housing Grants Guide 2026: EHG, Family Grant, PHG and Every Dollar You Can Claim

Quick Answer: Key Takeaways

  • Singapore first-time HDB buyers can receive up to S$230,000 in combined CPF housing grants (resale) or up to S$120,000 for a BTO flat.
  • The Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) is the cornerstone — up to S$80,000 for couples, tapering with income. It applies to both BTO and resale flats.
  • The CPF Housing Grant (Family Grant) for resale adds up to S$80,000 on top of EHG; the Proximity Housing Grant (PHG) can add another S$30,000.
  • Income ceilings vary: EHG caps at S$9,000/mth (couples); Family Grant and PHG cap at S$14,000/mth.
  • All grants are disbursed into your CPF Ordinary Account and used for the flat purchase — they do not arrive as cash.
  • Second-timer families buying BTO flats can access the Step-Up CPF Housing Grant (S$15,000) if upgrading from a 2-room Flexi.
  • Apply for grants during the HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) Letter application process — grants are assessed and confirmed before you book a flat or submit an OTP.

What Are HDB CPF Housing Grants?

Singapore’s CPF housing grant system is one of the most comprehensive homeownership subsidy programmes in the world. Administered jointly by the Housing & Development Board (HDB) and the Central Provident Fund (CPF) Board, these grants reduce the effective purchase price of an HDB flat by transferring funds directly into your CPF Ordinary Account. You then draw on that CPF balance to pay your flat’s downpayment and monthly instalments — effectively cutting your out-of-pocket cash requirements.

Grants apply to Singapore Citizens (SCs) buying HDB flats, whether new BTO or resale. Permanent Residents purchasing resale flats together with an SC spouse are eligible for reduced grant amounts on certain schemes. Grants do not reduce your BSD liability — stamp duty is levied on the full purchase price — but they substantially lower the cash you need to bridge.

As at 1 July 2026, the four active grant schemes are: the Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG), the CPF Housing Grant for resale (sometimes called the Family Grant), the Proximity Housing Grant (PHG), and the Step-Up CPF Housing Grant for eligible second-timers.

Singapore HDB CPF Housing Grants by buyer profile 2026 — stacked bar chart showing EHG, Family Grant and Proximity Grant maximums
Figure 1: Maximum CPF housing grants stacked by type and buyer profile — Singapore 2026. Source: HDB.

Grant 1: Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG)

The EHG is the flagship grant available to first-timer families and singles buying their first subsidised home — applicable to both BTO and resale HDB flats. It was introduced in September 2019, replacing the earlier Additional CPF Housing Grant (AHG) and Special CPF Housing Grant (SHG), and is designed to taper sharply with household income so that the lowest-income buyers receive the most support.

EHG eligibility

  • At least one applicant must be a Singapore Citizen.
  • All applicants and occupiers must not own or have disposed of any private property (locally or overseas) in the 30 months before the flat application.
  • All applicants and essential occupiers must have been in continuous employment for at least 12 months before the application, or be self-employed for 12 months with CPF contributions.
  • Gross monthly household income must not exceed S$9,000 for families (or S$4,500 for singles aged 35 and above).
  • Buying a flat with a remaining lease of at least 20 years that covers the youngest buyer to age 95.

EHG amounts

The EHG is income-progressive. The lower your household income, the higher your grant. For a couple or family, the maximum is S$80,000 (for households earning S$1,500 per month or less), tapering in roughly S$5,000 increments as income rises, to a minimum of S$5,000 for households earning S$8,501–S$9,000 per month. For singles aged 35 and above, the amounts are halved: maximum S$40,000 at income ≤ S$1,500, down to S$2,500 at ≤ S$4,500. Note that the EHG applies for every flat type — a couple buying a 2-room BTO in Tengah receives the same EHG as one buying a 5-room resale flat in Bishan, as long as income and other criteria are met.

EHG Enhanced CPF Housing Grant tapering by income level Singapore 2026 — line chart couples vs singles
Figure 3: EHG tapering schedule — grant amount falls as household income rises. Source: HDB (indicative bands, 2026).

Grant 2: CPF Housing Grant — Family Grant (Resale Flats)

The CPF Housing Grant for resale flats — commonly called the Family Grant — applies exclusively when you buy a resale HDB flat from the open market. It is layered on top of the EHG and brings the total potential subsidy to well over S$100,000 for eligible buyers.

Family Grant amounts

Buyer Profile 2-room / 3-room flat 4-room flat and above
SC couple or family (both SC) S$50,000 S$80,000
SC + SPR couple (one SC, one PR) S$40,000 S$60,000
SC singles (35 and above) S$25,000 S$40,000

Family Grant eligibility

  • At least one applicant must be an SC.
  • For couples: at least one must have been working and making CPF contributions continuously (or self-employed) for at least 12 months immediately before the OTP date.
  • Gross monthly household income must not exceed S$14,000 (couples/families) or S$7,000 (singles).
  • First-timer families only (you must not have previously received any CPF housing grant).
Key takeaway: The Family Grant and the EHG are stackable. A SC couple earning S$6,000/month buying a 4-room resale flat could receive EHG S$35,000 + Family Grant S$80,000 = S$115,000 in combined grants — potentially eliminating any cash downpayment requirement.

Grant 3: Proximity Housing Grant (PHG)

Singapore’s Proximity Housing Grant incentivises multigenerational living — or at least living close to family. Administered by HDB, it applies when you buy a resale flat to live near or with your parents, children, or in-laws. The PHG recognises that family proximity reduces social isolation and supports informal caregiving, and it is stacked on top of EHG and the Family Grant.

PHG amounts

Living arrangement Grant
Living WITH parents / child (in the same flat, at time of application) S$30,000
Living NEAR parents / child (within 4 km, different flat) S$15,000

PHG eligibility

  • The applicant and the relevant family member (parent/child) must both be SCs or PRs.
  • The family member being lived near/with must be in a qualifying flat (HDB, EC, or private).
  • Income ceiling: S$14,000/month (couples/families).
  • Applies to resale flats only — not BTO.
  • The applicant’s flat and the parent’s/child’s flat must each be in Singapore, and the 4 km radius is measured door-to-door (straight line) by HDB.

Grant 4: Step-Up CPF Housing Grant

The Step-Up CPF Housing Grant was introduced to help Singapore Citizens who are second-timers but from lower-income backgrounds make the jump from a 2-room Flexi BTO flat to a larger subsidised flat. It is specifically designed for households that may have missed the first-timer grant window or have more modest means.

Step-Up Grant criteria

  • Both applicants must be SCs, and at least one must be currently living in a 2-room Flexi BTO flat (built by HDB after 2017).
  • Household income must not exceed S$7,000/month.
  • Buying a 3-room BTO flat or larger from HDB.
  • Grant amount: S$15,000.

Singapore HDB housing grant income ceilings comparison chart 2026 — couples vs singles across EHG, Family Grant, PHG, Step-Up
Figure 2: Income ceiling comparison across all four HDB CPF housing grant schemes — 2026. Source: HDB.

How the Grants Stack: A Summary Table

Grant BTO / Resale Max Amount (SC Couple) Income Ceiling Stackable With
EHG Both S$80,000 S$9,000/mth Family Grant, PHG
Family Grant Resale only S$80,000 S$14,000/mth EHG, PHG
Proximity HG (PHG) Resale only S$30,000 S$14,000/mth EHG, Family Grant
Step-Up CPF HG BTO only (3-room+) S$15,000 S$7,000/mth EHG (limited)
Maximum (Resale, SC Couple) Resale S$190,000 S$9,000/mth (EHG) + S$14,000/mth (others) All stacked
Maximum (BTO, SC Couple) BTO S$80,000 S$9,000/mth EHG only (+ Step-Up if 2nd-timer)

Worked Example: The Lim Family

Mr and Mrs Lim are a Singapore Citizen couple, both aged 29, with a combined gross monthly income of S$5,500. They have been continuously employed for over 12 months. Their CPF OA balance is S$28,000 combined. They are buying a 4-room resale HDB flat in Tampines for S$620,000. Mrs Lim’s parents live in Tampines, approximately 1.8 km away.

Step 1 — Determine EHG. Income S$5,500, SC couple, first-timers. EHG taper table: at S$5,001–S$5,500, the grant is approximately S$45,000.

Step 2 — Determine Family Grant. 4-room resale flat, SC couple, income below S$14,000 → Family Grant = S$80,000.

Step 3 — Determine PHG. Mrs Lim’s parents are within 4 km but not in the same flat → Near-parents PHG = S$15,000.

Total grants: S$140,000.

Step 4 — Work out the purchase.
Purchase price: S$620,000
BSD: S$620,000 × (1% × S$180K + 2% × S$180K + 3% × S$260K) = S$15,000 (paid from CPF OA)
HDB loan (80% LTV): S$496,000 (assuming they take HDB loan)
CPF contribution: S$620,000 − S$496,000 = S$124,000 needed (grants S$140,000 disbursed into CPF OA — covers this entirely)
Cash outlay: approximately S$0 for downpayment (CPF + grants cover it); cash needed for legal fees ~S$2,000.
Monthly instalment: S$496,000 at 2.6% over 25 years ≈ S$2,255/mth, within HDB’s 30% MSR rule on S$5,500 income (MSR = 41% — slightly over; they may consider a bank loan at lower rate or extend tenure to reduce instalment).

Planning note: The EHG and Family Grant together can eliminate the cash component of an HDB purchase. However, CPF accrued interest (at 2.5% p.a.) still accrues on all CPF withdrawn for the flat and must be refunded upon sale. Always model your net sale proceeds with the CPF refund factored in.

Why Singapore’s Grant System Is Designed This Way

The tiered grant structure reflects HDB’s policy objective: to ensure that housing affordability scales with means. Lower-income households receive proportionally larger subsidies, while higher-income households approaching the ceiling still receive meaningful support. The separation between BTO and resale grants — with resale grants being substantially higher — is deliberate: it reflects the higher market price of resale flats and provides a counterweight to the price premium that resale commands over BTO. Singapore’s model is unusual globally in that subsidies are not means-tested as one-time eligibility checks; rather, the progressive tapering of EHG mirrors the progression of income in a household’s early career.

What Might Come Next

The grant framework has been broadly stable since the 2019 EHG introduction and the 2023 cooling-measure adjustments. Looking forward, analysts expect the income ceiling for the Family Grant (S$14,000) to remain unchanged through 2026–2027 given that median household incomes in Singapore are still well below this level. There is some speculation — given rising resale prices, particularly in mature estates — that the EHG maximum for resale buyers could be revised upward before the next major budget cycle. Any revision would likely be announced in the Singapore Budget (typically February) or as a standalone HDB policy announcement.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I receive both EHG and Family Grant for the same resale purchase?

Yes — the EHG and the Family Grant are stackable for resale purchases. For a first-timer SC couple buying a 4-room or larger resale flat, you can receive up to S$80,000 EHG (subject to income) + S$80,000 Family Grant = up to S$160,000 in combined grants, before the PHG. This is the “full stack” for resale purchasers and represents the most generous scenario in the HDB grant system.

Can a SC buying with a foreigner (non-PR) spouse receive any grants?

No. The CPF housing grants require that the co-applicant be at least a Singapore Permanent Resident. A SC buying with a foreign national (non-PR) does not qualify for the EHG, Family Grant, or PHG. The SC buyer would also be subject to ABSD at 60% on the non-citizen co-buyer’s share. In this situation, the SC typically purchases the flat in their own name, without the foreign spouse as a co-applicant — which means only one income is assessed for the MSR/TDSR, and the flat may not be co-owned by the foreigner.

Are BTO buyers eligible for the Proximity Housing Grant?

No. The PHG applies to resale flats only. When you buy a BTO flat, there is no equivalent proximity grant. This is one of the reasons why resale buyers in proximity to their parents can receive substantially more total grants than BTO buyers — resale buyers can access EHG + Family Grant + PHG simultaneously, while BTO buyers only receive the EHG (plus Step-Up Grant for eligible second-timers).

How are the grants disbursed — do I receive cash?

Grants are not paid in cash. HDB disburses the approved grant amount into your CPF Ordinary Account (OA). Once in your OA, the funds can be used to pay the flat’s downpayment, BSD, and monthly loan instalments — but they remain in the CPF ecosystem until the flat is sold or the CPF balance reaches a withdrawal limit. This means grants directly reduce your cash outlay (by building up your CPF OA balance), but they do not arrive in your bank account.

Does receiving grants affect my CPF accrued interest obligation when I sell?

Yes, indirectly. The more CPF you draw on for the flat (including grant monies credited to your OA and subsequently withdrawn for the flat), the larger the CPF refund — principal plus 2.5% p.a. accrued interest — due upon sale. The grants increase your CPF OA balance, which you then draw down. Upon sale, the full CPF drawn amount plus accrued interest is refunded to your CPF accounts first. This can significantly reduce your net cash proceeds, particularly if you hold the flat for 15–20 years and have drawn heavily on CPF. Always model this in your net-proceeds calculation before deciding whether to maximise CPF usage.

Can I use my grants to pay Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD)?

Indirectly, yes. The grants are credited to your CPF OA, and you may use your CPF OA balance to pay BSD on the flat. So while the grants themselves do not directly pay BSD, they boost your OA balance from which BSD can be paid, reducing the cash you need to set aside. BSD is capped at the amount the CPF Board allows you to use based on the flat’s valuation, so very low-valuation flats may require some cash top-up for BSD regardless.

What is the HDB Flat Eligibility (HFE) Letter and how does it relate to grants?

The HFE Letter is the entry point to both the HDB loan and the grants system. Introduced in 2023, it replaced the HDB Loan Eligibility (HLE) letter and the older grant assessment process. You apply for the HFE letter on the HDB Flat Portal before booking a flat or submitting an OTP for a resale purchase. HDB assesses your eligibility for an HDB loan AND all applicable grants simultaneously, so you know upfront exactly what financial support you qualify for. The HFE letter is valid for 6 months, after which you must reapply if you have not completed the purchase.

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Disclaimer

This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal, or property advice. Grant amounts, income ceilings, and eligibility conditions are subject to change; always verify current rules with the Housing & Development Board (HDB) and the Central Provident Fund (CPF) Board before making any purchase decision. Stamp duty figures are indicative only. Please consult a licensed financial adviser or HDB-registered solicitor for advice tailored to your circumstances.

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Singapore Property Seller Complete Guide 2026: OTP, Valuation, SSD, Agent Fees and Net Proceeds

Singapore Property Seller Complete Guide 2026: OTP, Valuation, SSD, Agent Fees and Net Proceeds

Quick Answer: Selling Property in Singapore 2026

  • Minimum occupation period: 5 years for HDB flats before you can sell on the open market; no MOP for private property.
  • Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD): 12% / 8% / 4% / NIL for private property sold within Year 1 / 2 / 3 / 4+ of purchase. HDB flats are exempt from SSD.
  • Agent commission: typically 1–2% of sale price for the seller’s agent; 0% for the buyer’s agent (paid by buyer).
  • CPF refund: every dollar of CPF used (plus 2.5% p.a. accrued interest) must be returned to CPF at completion — this reduces your cash proceeds.
  • OTP process: Seller grants a 14-day Option to Purchase; buyer pays 1% option fee; upon exercise buyer pays another 4–9%.
  • Completion timeline: typically 10–16 weeks from OTP grant to key handover; HDB resale takes 8–16 weeks.
  • Net proceeds formula: Sale Price − Outstanding Loan − CPF Refund (principal + accrued interest) − SSD − Agent Fee − Legal Fees = Cash in Hand.
  • Valuation: Banks and HDB commission independent valuations; if you sell above valuation on an HDB flat the buyer must pay the difference (“Cash Over Valuation”) in cash.

What Does It Mean to Sell Property in Singapore?

Selling a property in Singapore is a structured, legally regulated process administered by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), the Housing and Development Board (HDB), the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), and the Central Provident Fund Board (CPF). Whether you are selling a Housing and Development Board flat or a private condominium, the transaction follows a defined sequence — Option to Purchase, valuation, loan redemption, stamp duty, CPF refund, legal completion — and each step carries financial consequences that sellers must understand before listing.

In 2026, Singapore’s resale property market is active but more deliberate than the pandemic-era surge. HDB resale transaction volumes have moderated, private resale prices have risen a measured 2–3% year-on-year, and the government’s Seller’s Stamp Duty framework remains in full force. This guide explains the complete selling process from the first decision to sell to the final cash deposit — and equips you to compute your actual net proceeds before you sign anything.

Singapore property selling process 8-step timeline infographic 2026
Figure 1: The 8-step property selling timeline in Singapore — from engaging an agent to receiving your keys-handover proceeds. Most HDB resales complete in 10–14 weeks; private resales in 12–16 weeks.

Step 1: Deciding to Sell — Eligibility and Timing

Before listing your property, confirm that you are legally entitled to sell. For HDB flat owners, the critical gate is the Minimum Occupation Period (MOP), which is five years from the date of key collection for most flats. Prime and Plus-classification flats (under the 2023 HDB flat classification framework) carry a ten-year MOP. During the MOP, you may not sell on the open market, rent out the entire flat, or purchase a private residential property in Singapore. Selling before the MOP ends is a serious breach of HDB regulations and can result in compulsory acquisition of the flat.

For private residential properties — condominiums, landed houses, executive condominiums after the five-year privatisation period — there is no MOP. However, the Seller’s Stamp Duty framework imposes a financial penalty for selling within three years of purchase, which effectively discourages short-term flipping.

Once eligibility is confirmed, consider the market context. Check URA’s Private Residential Property Price Index (PPI) and HDB’s Resale Price Index (RPI) for trend data. In Q1 2026, the URA PPI rose 0.9% quarter-on-quarter (+2.63% year-on-year) while the HDB RPI dipped a marginal 0.1% — the first dip since Q2 2019, though volume remains high. Timing your sale to a period of stable or rising prices, and avoiding major political or economic events, is prudent.

Step 2: Valuation — Setting the Right Price

Property valuation in Singapore has two purposes: establishing a credible asking price and satisfying bank loan requirements for the buyer. For HDB flats, HDB commissions valuations through its panel of approved valuers. For private property, banks engage their own valuers (from their panel of approved valuation firms) as a condition of the mortgage loan offer.

As a seller, you may commission your own valuation — at approximately S$300–S$700 depending on property type — to anchor your asking price. This is not compulsory but is advisable for unique properties (high-floor penthouses, large freehold units, unusual configurations) where comparable transaction data is sparse.

For HDB resale, if your agreed transacted price exceeds the HDB-commissioned valuation, the difference — known as Cash Over Valuation (COV) — must be paid entirely in cash by the buyer. COV is non-fundable from CPF or HDB loan proceeds. In the current market, COV for popular estates (Queenstown, Bishan, Buona Vista) can reach S$30,000–S$80,000, while non-mature towns typically transact at or below valuation. As a seller, setting an aspirational price above valuation is legitimate but risks a longer time-on-market.

Step 3: Engaging an Agent — What You Pay and What You Get

Under the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA) guidelines, property agents must be licensed and registered. CEA introduced major reforms in 2024 requiring co-broking arrangements to be disclosed and prohibiting dual representation without written consent from both parties. As a seller, you typically engage one agent (the “seller’s agent”) and pay that agent a commission of 1–2% of the transaction price, negotiated upfront in a written agreement.

The buyer’s agent commission is typically paid by the buyer, though in practice some co-broking arrangements share the seller’s commission. Always confirm in writing who pays what before signing any engagement letter.

Singapore property seller net proceeds waterfall and agent commission rates 2026
Figure 2: Left — Net proceeds breakdown for a typical HDB 4-room (S$850K sale) and an OCR condo 3-bedroom (S$1.8M sale), both held more than three years. Right — Typical agent commission rates by sale price band in 2026.

Step 4: Marketing and the Option to Purchase

Once you have signed an exclusive agreement with your agent (usually for 3 months, though non-exclusive arrangements are permissible), your property will be listed on PropertyGuru, 99.co, and SRX. ViewThat, Carousell Property, and direct developer channels are secondary platforms.

When a buyer makes an offer you wish to accept, the transaction proceeds via an Option to Purchase (OTP). The OTP is a standardised legal document — HDB provides its own form; private property uses the CEA-prescribed format or a solicitor-drafted version. Key OTP terms:

OTP Term HDB Resale Private Resale
Option fee (on grant) S$1 (symbolic) to S$5,000 max 1% of agreed price
Option exercise period 21 calendar days 14 calendar days (customary)
Exercise fee (on exercise) S$5,000 − option fee (HDB loan) or up to 9% (bank loan) 4% of agreed price
OTP validity 21 days, non-extendable 14 days; extendable by agreement
If buyer does not exercise Option fee forfeited to seller Option fee forfeited to seller
Administering body HDB Resale Portal Law Society / solicitors

Once the buyer exercises the OTP, the transaction is binding. Both parties must engage solicitors to proceed to legal completion.

Step 5: Seller’s Stamp Duty — Know Your Exit Cost

The Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD), administered by IRAS, applies to private residential property sold within three years of acquisition. It is calculated on the higher of the sale price or market value:

Holding Period SSD Rate Example: S$1.5M Sale Price
Year 1 (within 12 months) 12% S$180,000
Year 2 (12–24 months) 8% S$120,000
Year 3 (24–36 months) 4% S$60,000
Year 4 and beyond NIL S$0

SSD does not apply to HDB flats. For private property sellers, SSD must be paid within 14 days of the option exercise date. It cannot be funded from CPF and is payable in cash. Failing to pay SSD on time incurs a penalty of up to four times the duty owed.

Exemptions exist for inherited property (where the holding period restarts from the date of inheritance), court-ordered sale, and transfers pursuant to divorce proceedings. Check IRAS’s e-Stamping portal for the precise holding period calculation — the clock starts from the date of OTP exercise, not the date of completion.

Step 6: CPF Refund — The Cost That Surprises Most Sellers

If you used CPF Ordinary Account (OA) savings to fund your property purchase — whether for the down payment, monthly mortgage instalments, or BSD — you are required by the CPF Act to return the full amount withdrawn, plus accrued interest at the CPF OA rate of 2.5% per annum compounded annually. This refund is deducted from your sale proceeds at completion and credited back to your CPF OA. It does not go to you in cash.

The accrued interest calculation compounds monthly over the period you held the property. On a S$300,000 CPF withdrawal held for ten years, accrued interest amounts to approximately S$83,000 — meaning S$383,000 is refunded to CPF, not the original S$300,000. Many sellers underestimate this figure and are surprised to find their cash proceeds are far lower than expected.

CPF Board’s online CPF Property Withdrawal Statement is the authoritative source for your specific CPF amount to be refunded. Request this before accepting an offer so you can compute net proceeds accurately.

CPF accrued interest compounding and seller stamp duty SSD impact Singapore 2026
Figure 3: Left — CPF accrued interest compounding on S$300K used over different holding periods at 2.5% p.a. Right — How SSD reduces (or eliminates) the net gain on a S$1.5M property bought for S$1.35M (S$150K gross gain), depending on when you sell.

Step 7: Computing Your Net Proceeds

Your actual cash payout at completion is not your sale price. The correct formula is:

Item Example: HDB 4-Room S$850K Sale Example: Condo OCR 3BR S$1.8M Sale
Sale Price S$850,000 S$1,800,000
Less: Outstanding HDB/Bank Loan −S$0 (paid off) −S$560,000
Less: CPF Refund (principal + accrued) −S$420,000 −S$630,000
Less: Agent Commission (1%) −S$8,500 −S$18,000
Less: Legal Fees (seller’s solicitor) −S$3,000 −S$5,500
Less: Seller’s Stamp Duty (if applicable) NIL (HDB exempt) NIL (held >3 yrs)
Net Cash Proceeds S$418,500 S$586,500

Note that the CPF refund goes back into your CPF OA, not your bank account. If you plan to use CPF again for your next property purchase, this is neutral — but if you need cash liquidity (for retirement or other purposes), plan around this constraint.

Worked Example: The Lim Family Sell Their Tampines 5-Room HDB

Scenario

Mr and Mrs Lim, both Singapore Citizens in their early 50s, purchased their Tampines 5-room HDB flat in July 2019 for S$530,000. They took an HDB loan of S$477,000 at 2.6% per annum over 25 years. They have made regular monthly CPF contributions to service the mortgage. They are now upgrading to an OCR condominium and wish to sell the flat in July 2026 (exactly 7 years’ hold, MOP fully satisfied).

Sale agreed: S$785,000 (a COV of approximately S$18,000 above the HDB-commissioned valuation of S$767,000)

Outstanding HDB loan at completion: approximately S$362,000 (after 7 years of repayments)

CPF OA used (principal withdrawn): S$148,600

CPF accrued interest @ 2.5% over 7 years: approximately S$27,400

Total CPF refund to CPF OA: S$176,000

Agent commission (1%): S$7,850

Seller’s legal fees: S$2,800

SSD: NIL (HDB exempt)

Net cash proceeds: S$785,000 − S$362,000 − S$176,000 − S$7,850 − S$2,800 = S$236,350 cash in hand

Additionally, S$176,000 is credited to their CPF OA — available for the next property purchase.

Total equity released: S$236,350 cash + S$176,000 CPF = S$412,350 — significantly less than the S$785,000 sale price, illustrating why understanding the net proceeds formula is essential before committing to an upgrade.

What This Means for You: Key Considerations Before Selling

Singapore’s property market has historically rewarded patient long-term ownership. The government’s SSD framework, CPF accrued interest rules, and agent commission structure all work in the same direction: discouraging short-term transactions and encouraging owners to hold property for meaningful periods. Before deciding to sell, ask yourself:

  • Have you satisfied MOP? (HDB sellers only — non-negotiable)
  • Is SSD payable? (Private sellers within 3 years of purchase — calculate the cost against your expected gain)
  • What is your actual CPF refund? (Get the exact figure from CPF Board before accepting any offer)
  • Do you have a replacement housing plan? (If selling HDB and upgrading to private, the 15-month wait-out period applies if you buy first)
  • Is the market timing favourable? (Track URA PPI and HDB RPI quarterly; selling in a rising quarter often justifies a short delay)

What Might Come Next: Singapore Property Market and Seller Policy Outlook

As at mid-2026, there are no credible signals of an SSD rate change or new seller-specific cooling measures. The government has consistently stated that the existing ABSD-SSD-TDSR framework is sufficient to manage speculative demand. The more likely policy development affecting sellers is the ongoing refinement of the HDB flat classification system (Standard / Plus / Prime), which introduces a subsidy clawback on resale if the flat is sold within the enhanced MOP.

For the second half of 2026, the primary variable affecting seller proceeds is interest rate direction. If the US Federal Reserve continues its easing cycle (as widely anticipated), Singapore mortgage rates — priced off SORA — should trend modestly lower, improving buyer affordability and potentially supporting seller-side pricing power in Q3 and Q4 2026. The URA Q2 2026 Flash Estimates, expected in the first week of July 2026, will provide the next definitive data point on private residential price momentum.

Summary: Seller’s At-a-Glance Table

Item HDB Flat Private Property
Minimum Occupation Period 5 years (standard); 10 years (Plus/Prime) None
Seller’s Stamp Duty Exempt 12% / 8% / 4% / NIL (Yrs 1–4+)
Agent commission (seller pays) 1–2% negotiable 1–2% negotiable
Legal fees (seller) ~S$2,500–S$4,000 ~S$3,500–S$8,000
CPF accrued interest 2.5% p.a. compounded on all CPF used 2.5% p.a. compounded on all CPF used
OTP option period 21 days 14 days (customary)
Completion timeline 8–14 weeks from OTP exercise 10–16 weeks
Key regulator HDB (flat) + IRAS (stamp duty) + CPF Board URA + IRAS + CPF Board
Administering portal HDB Resale Portal SLA e-lodgement + IRAS e-Stamping

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell my HDB flat if I still have an outstanding HDB loan?

Yes. At completion, your solicitors will arrange for the outstanding HDB loan to be repaid from your sale proceeds. HDB provides a “Loan Balance Statement” that gives the exact redemption figure as at the completion date. You do not need to clear the loan before listing — the redemption is handled at the point of legal completion. However, if the outstanding loan and CPF refund together exceed your sale price, you may have a “negative sale” — meaning you would owe money at completion. This is rare but possible if you purchased at a high price and have not held long enough for equity to build. Always compute your net proceeds before committing.

What happens if I sell my property at a loss — do I still pay CPF accrued interest?

Yes, with an important exception. If your sale proceeds are insufficient to cover the full CPF refund (principal + accrued interest), CPF Board will only recover what is available from the proceeds. The shortfall is waived — you are not personally liable to make up the difference from other savings. However, if you took a bank loan and the bank’s outstanding loan is redeemed first (which is typical), the CPF amount recovered may be further reduced. This scenario arises in cases of significant negative equity, usually only following a sharp market correction or after a very short holding period with SSD also payable. For most long-term sellers, selling at a nominal loss after holding for many years is uncommon in the Singapore market, but not impossible in specialised segments like commercial shophouses or declining lease leasehold properties.

Do I need a lawyer to sell my property in Singapore?

Yes. Unlike some jurisdictions where private sales without solicitors are possible, Singapore requires conveyancing solicitors for all property transactions. As a seller, you must engage a Singapore-qualified solicitor (or a law firm with a licensed conveyancing practice) to handle the title transfer, prepare the completion documents, redeem your outstanding mortgage, arrange the CPF refund, and liaise with the buyer’s solicitors. Solicitor fees for a seller typically range from S$2,500 to S$8,000 depending on property type, transaction complexity, and whether a mortgage is involved. Always obtain a fee quote from at least two firms before engaging. The Law Society of Singapore maintains a directory of licensed conveyancing lawyers at lawsociety.org.sg.

What is the 15-month wait-out period and how does it affect HDB sellers who want to buy private?

The 15-month wait-out period, introduced in September 2022, requires that Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents who own an HDB flat — or who have sold an HDB flat — must wait 15 months from the date of the HDB flat sale before purchasing a private residential property. The measure was designed to prevent HDB sellers from immediately using sale proceeds to compete in the private market, which was driving up private prices. If you sell your HDB flat in July 2026, you cannot exercise an OTP for a private property until October 2027 at the earliest. Note that the wait-out period applies from the date of HDB sale completion, not the date of OTP grant. Buying under a spouse’s name alone does not avoid the restriction if the spouse also owns or has owned an HDB flat. Check with your solicitor for any exemptions applicable to your specific circumstances (e.g., purchase of a completed private property where the OTP was granted before the HDB sale was completed, subject to specific conditions).

Can I grant an OTP while my flat is still within the MOP?

No. HDB does not allow you to grant an OTP, list on the open market, or accept any purchase deposit while the MOP is still running. Any such agreement would be void and could expose both buyer and seller to HDB enforcement action. For HDB resale, the HDB Resale Portal is the official platform for registering the OTP — it will reject submissions where the MOP has not been satisfied. The MOP clock starts from the date of flat purchase (key collection), not from the date of legal completion. For PLH (Prime Location Public Housing) and Plus flats launched from 2023 onwards, the enhanced MOP is ten years.

What is Cash Over Valuation (COV) and is it normal to pay it?

COV is the amount by which the agreed transaction price of an HDB resale flat exceeds HDB’s commissioned valuation. It must be paid entirely in cash by the buyer — it cannot be funded from CPF or HDB loan proceeds. COV is legal and common in desirable estates (mature towns, near MRT, high floors) but can range from zero to over S$100,000 depending on market conditions and unit specifics. As a seller, setting a price that implies COV is your right, but it narrows your buyer pool to those with sufficient cash reserves. In 2026, COV is present in popular estates but has moderated from the elevated levels seen during the 2021–2023 market peak. HDB publishes quarterly resale transaction data which allows you to benchmark transacted prices by block and floor range before setting your asking price.

When is the best time of year to sell property in Singapore?

Historically, the Singapore property market sees higher transaction volumes in Q2 (April–June) and Q3 (July–September), with Q4 (October–December) being softer as the year-end holiday period approaches and buyers delay decisions. The Chinese New Year period (January–February) is typically the quietest. However, market-wide price trends matter far more than seasonal patterns — selling in a rising market at any time of year will generally yield better proceeds than selling in a falling market during the “peak” season. If you have flexibility, tracking URA PPI and HDB RPI quarterly and listing when momentum is positive is more impactful than calendar timing. In 2026, the private market is in a modest uptrend with URA PPI at +0.9% QoQ in Q1; the Q2 flash estimates (expected July 2026) will indicate whether momentum is sustained.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Property transactions in Singapore are subject to specific rules and regulations that may have changed since publication. Always verify stamp duty rates, CPF rules, and HDB eligibility with the official authorities: IRAS (iras.gov.sg), CPF Board (cpf.gov.sg), HDB (hdb.gov.sg), and URA (ura.gov.sg). Engage a licensed solicitor and, where appropriate, a licensed financial adviser before making any property transaction decisions. Agency commission rates and transaction costs used in this article are indicative only and may vary.

Singapore Property Selling Guide 2026: How to Sell Your HDB, Condo or Landed Property — Step by Step

Singapore Property Selling Guide 2026: How to Sell Your HDB, Condo or Landed Property — Step by Step

Singapore property selling guide 2026 — complete step-by-step guide for HDB flat, condo and landed property sellers
Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

  • There is no capital gains tax in Singapore — profit from a property sale is not taxed unless IRAS deems you a property trader.
  • Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) applies if you sell within 3 years of purchase: 12% (under 1 year), 8% (1–2 years), 4% (2–3 years), 0% thereafter.
  • HDB flat sellers effectively never pay SSD because the 5-year Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) exceeds the 3-year SSD window.
  • All CPF Ordinary Account (OA) monies used for the property must be refunded upon sale — principal plus accrued interest at 2.5% per annum.
  • Agent commission is typically 2% for HDB resale and 1–2% for private property (negotiable; no government-mandated rate).
  • SC married couples who buy a new private property before selling their HDB flat pay ABSD 20% upfront but may claim a remission if the HDB is sold within 6 months.
  • The HDB resale process takes approximately 8–12 weeks; private property completion typically runs 10–16 weeks after OTP exercise.
  • Sellers must file the Resale Checklist (HDB) or grant an Option to Purchase (private) as the formal first step — verbal agreements are not binding.

What This Guide Covers

Selling a property in Singapore is a structured, multi-step process governed by the Housing and Development Board (HDB), the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), and the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). Whether you are selling an HDB flat, a private condominium or landed home, understanding your obligations — and your costs — before you sign anything will protect both your timeline and your net proceeds.

This guide walks through every stage of the selling process: from registering your intent to sell through to collecting your sale proceeds. We cover Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD), CPF Ordinary Account refunds, agent commission, legal fees, the ABSD remission for upgraders, and what the numbers actually look like at three common price points.

Step 1: Confirm Your Eligibility to Sell

HDB Flat Sellers

Before listing your HDB flat, confirm that you have fulfilled the Minimum Occupation Period (MOP). Under HDB rules, the MOP is generally five years from the date of flat collection (key collection) for BTO and resale flats, and 10 years for Prime Location Public Housing (PLH) flats in areas such as Rochor, Central, and River Peaks. Flats under the Plus category (introduced from the October 2024 BTO exercise onwards) also carry a 10-year MOP.

Once your MOP is satisfied, register your Intent to Sell on the HDB Resale Portal at least seven days before granting any Option to Purchase (OTP). HDB uses this window to flag eligibility issues — for example, outstanding upgrading contributions or HDB loan arrears — before any buyer is committed.

Private Property Sellers

There is no waiting period for selling private residential property, but you must check whether SSD applies (see Section 3 below). If you purchased the property as an investment under a corporate entity, the Additional Conveyance Duties (ACD) regime administered by IRAS may also be relevant. Most owner-occupier sellers are unaffected by ACD, which primarily targets equity interest transfers.

Step 2: Appoint an Agent and Set a Price

In Singapore, sellers of private property engage their own agent and pay their own commission. For HDB resale transactions, the seller’s agent is also typically paid by the seller. The Council for Estate Agencies (CEA) licences all property agents in Singapore; you may verify any agent’s registration at the CEA Public Register.

Commission is negotiable — there is no statutory rate. Market practice is approximately 2% of the sale price for HDB flats and 1–2% for private property. For very high-value or difficult-to-move properties, the rate may be negotiated higher. Some sellers opt for a fixed fee arrangement. Always confirm the agreed commission in writing before signing any appointment letter.

Setting the right asking price requires reviewing recent comparable transactions (available free via URA’s REALIS portal and HDB’s public resale flat transaction data). Overpricing slows your sale; underpricing erodes your equity position.

Step 3: Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) — Know Your Exposure Before You List

SSD is administered by IRAS under the Stamp Duties Act (Cap 312). It was reimposed in January 2011 and refined in March 2017, when the current three-year, three-tier structure took effect. SSD applies to all residential properties — HDB flats, condominiums, and landed homes alike — sold within three years of purchase.

Seller's Stamp Duty SSD rates by holding period Singapore 2026 — bar chart showing 12% under 1 year, 8% 1 to 2 years, 4% 2 to 3 years, NIL after 3 years
Figure 1: SSD Rates by Holding Period — Singapore 2026. Holding period is measured from the date of purchase to the date of the sale contract (OTP date for private; HDB Resale Application date for HDB). Source: IRAS.
Holding Period SSD Rate Example: Property Sold at S$1,200,000 Who This Affects Most
Less than 1 year 12% S$144,000 Short-term flippers; forced sellers
1 year to 2 years 8% S$96,000 Sellers whose circumstances changed
2 years to 3 years 4% S$48,000 Early investors; job relocation sellers
3 years or more NIL S$0 Most owner-occupiers and long-term investors

SSD is calculated on the higher of the sale price or the market value assessed by IRAS at the time of sale. It is payable by the seller within 14 days of the sale contract date (OTP exercise date for private property, or HDB Resale Application date for HDB transactions). Late payment attracts a penalty of up to four times the unpaid duty.

Practical note for HDB sellers: Because the HDB MOP is five years and SSD applies only within three years, HDB flat sellers who complete their MOP will never be subject to SSD. The SSD window closes at the three-year mark; the MOP does not open until the five-year mark.

Hardship exemptions exist but are rarely granted. IRAS considers genuine financial distress, medical incapacity, or divorce — the applicant must demonstrate that the sale was necessitated by a circumstance beyond their control.

Step 4: CPF Ordinary Account Refund — How Accrued Interest Works

When you use CPF savings to purchase a property, you are borrowing from your own retirement account. To prevent erosion of retirement savings, the CPF Board requires that upon sale, all CPF monies withdrawn for the property are refunded to your CPF OA — including the interest those monies would have earned had they remained in the OA. This “accrued interest” accrues at the prevailing CPF OA interest rate, currently 2.5% per annum (guaranteed floor rate as of 2026).

The refund sequence is: (1) principal CPF withdrawn, (2) accrued interest. Only after this refund do you receive your net cash proceeds. For sellers who purchased many years ago with large CPF drawdowns, the accrued interest component can be substantial.

Illustration: If you drew S$200,000 from CPF OA to purchase a property in January 2019 and sell it in June 2026 (7.4 years), the accrued interest is approximately S$200,000 × 2.5% × 7.4 = S$37,000. Your CPF refund is therefore S$237,000, not S$200,000. This money goes back into your CPF OA and will be available for your next property purchase or for retirement withdrawal at age 55+.

The accrued interest is not a penalty; it is simply the return of the compounded interest your CPF savings would have earned in the OA. Sellers sometimes mistake this for a “profit tax” — it is not. It does, however, reduce your net cash-in-hand on sale, which matters if you need cash for your next purchase’s downpayment.

Summary of Key Seller Obligations

Obligation Administered by When Due Penalty for Default
Register Intent to Sell (HDB) HDB ≥ 7 days before OTP Cannot proceed with sale
Pay SSD (if applicable) IRAS Within 14 days of contract Up to 4× unpaid duty
Repay outstanding HDB loan HDB At legal completion Completion delayed
Refund CPF OA principal + accrued interest CPF Board At legal completion Sale proceeds withheld
Discharge caveat (if private property) SLA At legal completion Title cannot pass
Pay agent commission CEA-licenced agent At legal completion Civil action by agent
Pay conveyancing legal fees Seller’s solicitor At legal completion Files withheld

Step 5: Understanding Your Net Proceeds

Your net cash proceeds from a property sale are what remains after repaying all outstanding obligations. Most sellers are surprised to find that the headline sale price bears little resemblance to the cash they actually receive, particularly if the property was heavily financed and CPF funds were used extensively.

Seller net proceeds breakdown by property price point HDB 4-Room condo OCR D10 stacked bar chart Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Where Does the Sale Price Go? — Seller’s Proceeds Breakdown at Three Price Points (Illustrative, 2026). Assumes 0% SSD (held ≥ 3 years), 2% agent commission, and ~S$3k legal fees. Actual figures vary by loan balance, CPF drawdown history, and tenure.

The chart above shows three illustrative scenarios for a seller who has held the property for more than three years (SSD = nil). In every case, the outstanding loan repayment is the single largest deduction. The CPF refund (principal plus accrued interest) is the second largest. Net cash to the seller ranges from S$77,000 on an HDB flat to S$786,000 on a prime district condominium — which underscores why understanding your equity position before listing is critical.

Step 6: Selling Costs — Agent, Legal, and Sundry Fees

Selling costs breakdown agent commission legal SSD by property price point Singapore 2026 horizontal stacked bar chart
Figure 3: Typical Selling Costs by Property Price Point (0% SSD Scenario, 2026). The largest variable cost is agent commission, which is fully negotiable. SSD = nil for properties held ≥ 3 years.

Selling costs in Singapore are modest by regional standards, but they still add up:

  • Agent commission: The dominant selling cost. Typically 2% of the sale price for HDB (both seller and buyer each pay their own agent). For private property, 1–2% is standard. On a S$3 million condominium at 2%, commission is S$60,000.
  • Conveyancing legal fees: S$2,000–S$4,500 for most standard transactions. Solicitors in Singapore generally follow the Law Society scale but are free to quote fixed fees. Complex transactions (e.g., partial CPF pledging, foreign seller, multiple mortgagees) may cost more.
  • HDB administrative fees: For HDB resale, an administrative fee of S$80 is charged at the Resale Completion Appointment.
  • SLA caveat withdrawal: If you lodged a caveat as buyer (common for private property), the caveat must be withdrawn at sale. Fee: S$64.45 via the SLA e-filing portal.
  • SSD (if applicable): As described above — 0% if held ≥ 3 years, up to 12% for sub-one-year sales.

Worked Example: Mr & Mrs Goh — Selling HDB, Upgrading to Private

Mr and Mrs Goh are Singapore Citizens, married, with a combined monthly income of S$15,000. They purchased a 5-room Bishan HDB flat in January 2019 at S$600,000 via an HDB concessionary loan (80% LTV). They have fulfilled their MOP (January 2024) and wish to sell in June 2026 and purchase an Outside Central Region (OCR) condominium unit.

HDB Sale Proceeds Breakdown (Sale price S$920,000):

Item Amount Notes
Sale price S$920,000 Agreed transacted price
Less: Outstanding HDB loan (S$376,000) Approx balance after 7.5 years at 2.6% p.a.
Less: CPF OA principal refund (S$120,000) Total CPF drawn for downpayment + instalments
Less: CPF accrued interest (S$22,200) ~2.5% p.a. on S$120k × 7.4 years
Less: Agent commission (2%) (S$18,400) Seller pays own agent
Less: Legal / conveyancing fees (S$2,800) Seller’s solicitor
Less: SSD NIL Held > 3 years; MOP confirmed cleared
Net cash to Mr & Mrs Goh S$380,600 Available for next purchase + cash savings

Next Step — OCR Condo Purchase (S$1,350,000): After selling the HDB first, Mr and Mrs Goh own zero residential properties. As Singapore Citizens purchasing their first private property, ABSD is nil. BSD on S$1.35M is S$37,200 (progressive rates up to 4% above S$1M). Bank loan at 75% LTV = S$1,012,500 at 3.0% p.a. over 25 years = S$4,800/month. TDSR: S$4,800 ÷ S$15,000 = 32% — comfortably within the 55% threshold. Cash upfront: S$337,500 (downpayment) + S$37,200 (BSD) = S$374,700 — funded from the S$380,600 net HDB sale proceeds. The transaction is feasible without additional savings.

ABSD Remission for SC Married Couples — The “Buy First, Sell Later” Option

Some upgraders prefer to secure their new private property before selling the HDB to avoid a gap period where they are without a home. Under the current rules (effective April 2023), a Singapore Citizen married couple buying a second residential property must pay ABSD at 20%. However, they may apply to IRAS for an ABSD remission if the HDB flat is sold within six months of the purchase of the private property (for a completed unit) or within six months of the private property’s Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) date (for an uncompleted unit).

This is a powerful option but carries risk: if the HDB sale falls through or is delayed beyond the six-month window, the ABSD is forfeited. On a S$1.35 million purchase, ABSD at 20% is S$270,000. Couples considering this route must maintain sufficient liquidity to fund the ABSD upfront while awaiting the refund.

What This Means for Property Sellers in 2026

Singapore’s property market in Q1 2026 recorded private residential price growth of 0.9% (URA), with the Outside Central Region leading at 2.2% gains. HDB resale prices remain elevated, with a five-room flat at Henderson Road transacting at S$1.728 million in April 2026 — the highest-ever HDB resale price. In this environment, sellers generally hold the advantage, but the SSD and ABSD frameworks mean that timing your sale matters enormously. Selling within the three-year SSD window destroys value fast; holding beyond three years and structuring your purchase correctly (sell first or use remission carefully) preserves it.

What Might Come Next

The MAS Financial Stability Review (November 2025) flagged property market resilience but noted that elevated interest rates and slowing transaction volumes in the CCR warranted monitoring. Industry analysts suggest that the government is unlikely to ease cooling measures in 2026 absent a material correction in prices — meaning the SSD and ABSD frameworks should be treated as fixed parameters for planning purposes at least through 2027. Any revision to the ABSD remission window (currently six months) would require a formal policy announcement from the Ministry of Finance and IRAS.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use CPF to pay agent commission or legal fees when selling?

No. CPF savings cannot be used directly to pay agent commission or legal fees for a property sale. These costs must be paid in cash. CPF can only be used for property-related purposes at the point of purchase — specifically downpayment, monthly instalments, and BSD/ABSD (subject to timing rules). Upon sale, your CPF OA receives the principal refund plus accrued interest, which then becomes available for future property purchases or CPF-approved uses.

Is there any tax on the profit I make from selling my property?

Singapore does not levy a capital gains tax. Profit from the sale of a private residential property or HDB flat is generally not taxable. However, IRAS retains the discretion to treat gains as income if you are deemed to be carrying on a business of property trading — characterised by a pattern of frequent, short-hold purchases and sales with profit intent. Owner-occupiers and genuine long-term investors are almost never subject to this treatment. SSD is the government’s primary disincentive against short-term speculation and is entirely separate from income tax.

What happens to my CPF accrued interest when I sell? Is it lost?

The accrued interest is not lost — it goes back into your CPF OA, where it continues to earn the 2.5% guaranteed rate (with the additional 1% on the first S$60,000 of combined CPF balances). If you are below 55, you can use the CPF OA funds for your next property purchase. If you are 55 or above, the refund first tops up your Retirement Account to the Full Retirement Sum (S$213,000 in 2026), and any excess in the OA can be used for property or withdrawn. The accrued interest does reduce your cash-in-hand at sale, which is why planning your equity position before listing is important.

If I sell my HDB flat, can I buy a private property immediately?

Yes. Once your HDB flat is sold and the legal completion has taken place, you no longer own an HDB flat and your residential property count drops accordingly. Singapore Citizens purchasing their first private property pay no ABSD. Singapore Permanent Residents purchasing their first private property pay 5% ABSD. However, note that CPF proceeds from the HDB sale are returned to your CPF OA and are not accessible as cash on the day of completion — they typically post to your OA within a few working days. Ensure your cash flow for the new property’s downpayment is sourced accordingly.

What is the difference between the Option to Purchase (OTP) and the Sale & Purchase Agreement (S&P)?

The OTP is a contractual right granted by the seller to the buyer, giving the buyer a period (typically 14 days for private property) to decide whether to exercise the option. The option fee (typically 1% of the purchase price) is paid when the OTP is granted. If the buyer exercises the OTP, they pay the exercise fee (typically 4%), bringing the total deposit to 5%. The Sale & Purchase Agreement (S&P) is the binding contract executed upon exercise of the OTP, setting out all terms of the transaction including the completion date (usually 8–12 weeks). For HDB resale, the equivalent process uses a standardised OTP issued by HDB and submitted through the HDB Resale Portal — there is no separate S&P document.

How does SSD apply if I inherited the property?

SSD is based on the original purchase date of the property, not the date of inheritance. If the deceased purchased the property in March 2024 and you inherited it and sell it in May 2026 (approximately 2 years), SSD at 8% would apply. This catches many beneficiaries off guard. The SSD holding period is not reset by the change in ownership via inheritance. Beneficiaries who inherit property that is within the SSD window should factor this into their estate planning and timing decisions. There is no automatic exemption for inherited properties.

Do I need to pay property tax up to the day of completion?

Yes. Property tax is levied on an annual basis by IRAS and is the seller’s liability up to the date of legal completion. Your solicitor will apportion the property tax between seller and buyer in the completion account — the buyer reimburses the seller for property tax from the completion date to the end of the calendar year (or whatever period the annual tax covers). This apportionment is standard practice and will appear in your completion account prepared by your conveyancing lawyer. Owner-occupier rates (0% on the first S$8,000 AV, 4% on the next S$47,000 AV) typically mean property tax is modest for residential sellers.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or property advice. Property transactions in Singapore are governed by a complex and evolving framework of legislation and regulations administered by HDB, URA, IRAS, CPF, MAS, CEA, and SLA, among others. All figures, rates, and timelines cited are accurate as at 1 June 2026 based on publicly available sources, but may change. Always consult a licensed property agent, conveyancing solicitor, and financial adviser before proceeding with any property transaction. For official guidance, refer to: hdb.gov.sg, iras.gov.sg, cpf.gov.sg, ura.gov.sg.

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