Singapore Property Rental Income Tax Guide 2026: IRAS Deductions, Rates and How to File

Singapore Property Rental Income Tax Guide 2026: IRAS Deductions, Rates and How to File

Quick Answer: Singapore Rental Income Tax 2026

  • All rental income from Singapore property is taxable under the Income Tax Act (Cap 134), administered by IRAS.
  • You may deduct allowable expenses — mortgage interest, property tax, fire insurance, routine repairs, agent fees — to arrive at net taxable rental income.
  • Capital costs cannot be deducted — no claims for renovations, major upgrades, furniture depreciation, or loan principal repayments.
  • Tax is levied at personal income tax rates — Singapore tax-resident rates (0–24%) apply; non-residents pay a flat 22% on net rental income.
  • Filing deadline: 18 April annually — declare via myTax Portal; IRAS auto-includes known data where available.
  • Late filing or non-declaration attracts penalties — up to 200% of tax undercharged plus potential prosecution under s.96 Income Tax Act.
  • HDB flat rental has slightly different rules — HDB room rental income is also taxable but sub-let approval and NCQ limits still apply (see our HDB Room Rental Guide 2026).

Owning an investment property in Singapore comes with one certainty beyond market cycles: your rental income is taxable. Whether you own a one-bedroom condominium in Tiong Bahru, a shophouse unit in Tanjong Pagar, or a landed property in Upper Bukit Timah that you lease out whilst residing abroad, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) expects you to declare that rental income each year.

Yet many Singapore landlords — especially first-time investors who upgraded from an HDB flat — under-declare or over-pay because they misunderstand which deductions IRAS allows. This guide sets out the complete picture: what qualifies as rental income, which expenses are deductible, how the tax is calculated, and how to file correctly by 18 April each year.

What Counts as Rental Income in Singapore?

Under section 10(1)(f) of the Income Tax Act, rental income includes all amounts received or receivable by a person in respect of the letting of any property located in Singapore. This covers:

  • Gross rent — the monthly or annual sum paid by your tenant under the tenancy agreement.
  • Lease premiums — any upfront lump-sum payment to secure the tenancy is spread over the lease term and taxed proportionately.
  • Furniture and fittings rent — if your tenancy agreement splits the total into “base rent” and a “furniture allowance”, both components are taxable rental income.
  • Reimbursed expenses — if your tenant pays your utility bills or property tax and these are included in the rent, the gross amount is your rental income (before the deduction).
  • Compensation for early termination — amounts received from tenants for breaking a tenancy early are treated as rental income for the period the tenancy was broken.

Rental income from overseas property is generally not taxable in Singapore (as Singapore uses a territorial tax system), provided the funds are not remitted into Singapore. From 1 January 2024, certain foreign-sourced income remitted to Singapore by individuals is taxable; consult a licensed tax adviser if you hold overseas investment property.

IRAS allowable rental deductions Singapore 2026 table showing mortgage interest property tax maintenance fees as deductible and renovation loan principal as non-deductible
Figure 1: IRAS Allowable vs Non-Allowable Rental Deductions — Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS (iras.gov.sg)

Allowable Deductions: What You Can Claim Against Rental Income

IRAS allows landlords to deduct expenses that are wholly and exclusively incurred in the production of rental income and are revenue in nature (not capital). The following are the main allowable deductions in 2026:

1. Mortgage Interest

The interest portion of your monthly bank or HDB loan repayment is fully deductible. Only the interest element qualifies — loan principal repayments are capital and cannot be deducted. If you have a floating-rate loan, use the actual interest charged each year. Most banks issue an annual statement splitting principal and interest for your records.

2. Property Tax

Annual property tax paid to IRAS on the investment property is deductible. Note: you are claiming the tax as an expense against rental income — this is separate from your residential property tax obligation on your own home. The deduction is for the property tax assessed on the rented property for the year.

3. Fire Insurance Premium

Fire insurance premiums covering the property during the rental period are allowable. If your policy covers a period spanning two tax years (e.g., July 2025 to July 2026), apportion the premium to the relevant year.

4. Routine Maintenance and Repairs

Costs of maintaining the property in its existing condition — plumbing repairs, repainting, replacing faulty fixtures — are deductible. Improvements that enhance the property’s value or extend its life (a new built-in wardrobe, a replacement air-conditioning system that upgrades the previous one) are capital expenditure and not deductible.

5. Agent Commission and Advertising

Letting fees paid to a licensed property agent, including a one-time commission upon signing the tenancy agreement, are deductible. Advertising costs (online listings, print advertisements) for finding tenants are similarly allowable. These are expenses incurred in earning the rental income.

6. Legal Fees for Tenancy

Solicitor’s fees for drafting or reviewing a tenancy agreement are deductible. Legal costs for acquiring or disposing of the property are capital and not deductible.

What You Cannot Deduct

IRAS explicitly disallows: renovation costs, capital improvements, furniture and fittings depreciation (Singapore has no wear-and-tear allowance for residential property), loan principal repayments, mortgage protection insurance premiums, costs incurred during vacancy periods when no rent is being earned, and any expense that is not wholly connected to earning the rental income.

How Singapore Income Tax Applies to Rental Income

Rental income does not attract a separate tax — it is added to your other assessable income (employment income, trade income, director’s fees) and taxed at your marginal personal income tax rate under the resident progressive rate schedule, effective Year of Assessment (YA) 2024 onwards:

Chargeable Income (SGD) Rate on Band Cumulative Tax
First $20,000 0% $0
Next $10,000 ($20K–$30K) 2% $200
Next $10,000 ($30K–$40K) 3.5% $550
Next $40,000 ($40K–$80K) 7% $3,350
Next $40,000 ($80K–$120K) 11.5% $7,950
Next $40,000 ($120K–$160K) 15% $13,950
Next $40,000 ($160K–$200K) 18% $21,150
Next $40,000 ($200K–$240K) 19% $28,750
Next $40,000 ($240K–$280K) 19.5% $36,550
Next $40,000 ($280K–$320K) 20% $44,550
Above $320,000 22% – 24% progressive

Non-resident landlords pay a flat 22% on net rental income with no personal reliefs available. This applies to individuals not ordinarily resident in Singapore for 183 days or more in the relevant year. Non-residents must also file a Singapore tax return and may be required to appoint a local tax agent.

Rental income estimated annual tax at five monthly rent levels Singapore 2026 IRAS income tax
Figure 2: Gross vs Net Rental Income and Estimated Annual Income Tax at Five Monthly Rent Levels — Singapore 2026. Illustrative only; actual tax depends on your total chargeable income profile.

Worked Example: Renting Out a Private Condo in 2026

The Wong family — Singapore Citizens, joint owners of a 2-bedroom condominium in Kallang. Gross monthly rent: $3,200. Mr Wong earns $9,500/mth in employment income.

Item Amount
Gross annual rent (Jan–Dec 2025) $38,400
Less: Mortgage interest (POSB Home Loan statement) ($9,600)
Less: Annual property tax (non-owner-occupied) ($3,200)
Less: Fire insurance premium ($520)
Less: Routine maintenance / A/C servicing / plumbing ($1,100)
Less: Agent commission (1 month’s rent) ($3,200)
Net taxable rental income (YA 2026) $20,780
Mr Wong’s employment income (declared separately) $114,000
Total chargeable income (after personal reliefs ~$37,000) ~$97,780
Incremental tax on rental income at ~11.5% marginal rate ~$2,389/yr
Net rental income after tax (monthly) ~$1,516/mth

Key takeaway: after deductions and tax, Mr Wong nets approximately $1,516 per month from the $3,200 gross rent. This is not a criticism of property investment — the capital appreciation on the condo adds significantly to total returns — but it illustrates why landlords who model only gross rent make poor investment decisions.

How to File: IRAS myTax Portal Step by Step

How to declare rental income to IRAS Singapore 2026 step by step myTax Portal filing process
Figure 3: Rental Income Tax Filing Process — Seven Steps from Documents to Tax Payment, Singapore 2026. Source: IRAS

IRAS auto-populates most employment income figures via the Auto-Inclusion Scheme (AIS), but rental income is not auto-included — landlords must declare it manually. The process in practice:

  1. Gather your documents by January of the filing year: tenancy agreement, bank loan annual statement (splitting principal and interest), IRAS property tax assessment, insurance policy, receipts for maintenance and agent fees.
  2. Log in to myTax Portal at mytax.iras.gov.sg using Singpass MFA.
  3. Navigate to “File Individual Income Tax (Form B1)” (for employees with rental income) or Form B (for self-employed) — complete the rental income section under “Other Income”.
  4. Enter gross rental income and each allowable deduction separately. IRAS will compute net rental income automatically.
  5. Submit by 18 April (e-filing; paper returns are due 15 April).
  6. Receive your Notice of Assessment (NOA) by post or via myTax Portal. Review for accuracy — you have 30 days from the NOA date to object if there is an error.
  7. Pay by the due date on the NOA — via GIRO, PayNow, internet banking, or at AXS/SingPost counters.

Tip: IRAS’s Rental Relief Framework introduced during the COVID-19 period (2020–2021) has fully expired. No rental income relief is available in YA 2026 under COVID measures.

Why Rental Income Tax Matters for Singapore Property Investors

Singapore has relatively low income tax rates compared with most developed markets — the top marginal rate of 24% (above $1M) is far below the UK’s 45%, Australia’s 47%, or Hong Kong’s 17% salaries tax. Even at the 15–18% band that most mid-income investors land in, the after-tax rental yield for a well-located condo is typically positive. However, failing to account for IRAS obligations when underwriting a property purchase leads to three common errors:

  • Overestimating net yield — a $3,200/mth gross rent may look like a 3.2% yield on a $1.2M property, but after allowable deductions and tax, the true cash yield is closer to 1.8–2.2%.
  • Missing deductions — many landlords forget to claim mortgage interest (the largest deductible item) because they use CPF OA funds for repayment and assume no cash changes hands. IRAS allows the interest deduction regardless of whether the repayment comes from CPF or cash.
  • Commingling ABSD strategy with tax strategy — if you held your HDB flat and purchased a condo (20% ABSD, with remission on HDB sale within 6 months), you must still declare rental income on the condo during the period you hold both properties. The ABSD framework and the rental income tax regime are entirely separate systems administered by different IRAS divisions.

For investors holding multiple properties, maintaining a separate rental income tracker for each property and reconciling it quarterly against bank statements is strongly recommended. This significantly simplifies April filing.

What Might Come Next: Rental Income Tax Outlook

The following is forward-looking speculation based on publicly available commentary and budget signals — it does not constitute tax advice.

IRAS has signalled no changes to the rental income tax framework for YA 2026 or YA 2027. However, two areas bear watching:

  • Foreign-sourced income changes: Following the 2022 changes that brought certain foreign passive income (dividends, interest) into the Singapore tax net when remitted, there is ongoing policy debate about whether foreign rental income should similarly be taxable upon remittance. As at June 2026, rental income from overseas properties remains outside Singapore’s tax net if not remitted, but high-net-worth landlords with overseas portfolios should monitor any Budget 2027 announcements.
  • Non-owner-occupied property tax alignment: The graduated non-owner-occupied property tax rates (10–20%, increased in 2023) may be reviewed in future budgets to further discourage speculative holding. Higher property tax would paradoxically increase allowable deductions for landlords, but would also compress investment yields.
  • Platform reporting: IRAS has been expanding its data-matching capabilities via MAS and regulatory partnerships. Rental income declared through platforms like 99.co, PropertyGuru, and Airbnb may eventually be subject to third-party reporting obligations similar to the GST framework for digital services.

Rental Income Tax in Context: Singapore vs Regional Peers

Singapore’s approach to taxing rental income is broadly aligned with other developed economies, but its relatively modest rates and clear deduction framework make it more landlord-friendly than most. In Malaysia, rental income above RM70,000 is taxed at 24%; in Australia, negative gearing laws allow interest losses to offset other income but the effective capital gains tax erodes returns on sale; in Hong Kong, property tax is levied as a flat 15% on net rental income (gross rent less 20% statutory allowance) regardless of actual expenses. Singapore’s expense-based deduction regime — whilst requiring more documentation — is generally more accurate and beneficial for highly leveraged investors with large mortgage interest deductions.

Frequently Asked Questions: Rental Income Tax Singapore 2026

Can I claim mortgage interest if I use CPF OA to pay my loan?

Yes. IRAS allows the deduction of mortgage interest regardless of whether you use CPF Ordinary Account funds or cash to service your loan repayments. You can obtain the annual mortgage interest figure from your bank’s annual statement or CPF Board’s online portal. Only the interest portion is deductible — not the principal reduction.

What if my property is vacant for part of the year? Can I still claim expenses?

Only expenses incurred during periods when the property is genuinely available for rent can be claimed. If the property is vacant between tenancies whilst you are actively seeking a new tenant, IRAS generally accepts a proportionate deduction. However, if the property is vacant because you are using it personally, renovating it, or simply leaving it idle, expenses during that period are not deductible. Keep records of advertising and agent correspondence to demonstrate active letting intent during vacancy.

Is rental income taxed if I rent out a room in my HDB flat?

Yes — all rental income from HDB flats and private property is taxable. For HDB flat room rentals, you must obtain HDB’s approval to sub-let, comply with the Non-Citizen Quota (NCQ), and declare the rental income to IRAS annually. You may deduct a proportionate share of allowable expenses (interest, property tax) corresponding to the rented portion. See our Singapore HDB Room Rental Guide 2026 for the full framework including NCQ limits and approval conditions.

Can I deduct renovation costs from rental income?

No. Renovation and improvement costs are capital expenditure and are not deductible against rental income under Singapore tax law. This applies even if the renovation was undertaken specifically to attract higher-paying tenants. IRAS distinguishes between revenue expenditure (maintaining the property in its existing state) and capital expenditure (enhancing or extending the property). Routine maintenance such as repainting, replacing like-for-like fixtures, and servicing appliances qualifies as revenue expenditure and is deductible; a full kitchen overhaul or bathroom extension does not.

What penalties apply if I under-declare rental income?

Under section 94 of the Income Tax Act, omitting income from a tax return without reasonable excuse attracts a penalty of twice the tax undercharged (200% penalty). Fraudulent under-declaration under section 96 can result in up to treble the tax undercharged plus a fine of up to $10,000 and imprisonment. IRAS has access to HDB records, URA caveats, and banking data — undeclared rental income identified through these channels is aggressively pursued. The most cost-effective approach is voluntary compliance and accurate declaration.

How does IRAS treat short-term rentals (e.g., Airbnb / serviced apartments)?

Short-term accommodation of private residential property — rentals shorter than three consecutive months per tenant — is generally not permitted under the Planning Act without URA approval, and HDB flats may not be sub-let on a short-term basis at all. Where such rentals are authorised (typically in government-approved short-stay projects), the income is taxable as rental income under the Income Tax Act. Platforms that facilitate short-stay bookings may be subject to IRAS data-matching. Unauthorised short-term rentals carry planning enforcement risk in addition to tax exposure.

Do joint owners each declare their share of rental income separately?

Yes. If a property is jointly owned, rental income and deductible expenses are allocated to each owner in proportion to their beneficial interest (ordinarily 50:50 for joint tenants, or as specified in a tenancy-in-common arrangement). Each owner declares their respective share independently in their personal income tax return. There is no joint filing option for property rental in Singapore. In practice, joint owner couples often find this beneficial if one spouse is in a lower tax bracket — the aggregate tax burden may be lower than if only the higher-earner declared the full rental income.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, financial, or legal advice. Singapore tax law is subject to change; rates and rules above reflect the position as at June 2026. For specific advice on your rental income tax obligations, consult a qualified tax adviser or accredited tax practitioner (ATP) registered with IRAS. Official resources: iras.gov.sg, IRAS Rental Income and Expenses page.
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Rental Income Tax Singapore 2026: Complete IRAS Guide for Landlords

Rental Income Tax Singapore 2026: Complete IRAS Guide for Landlords

If you own a property in Singapore and rent it out — whether an HDB flat, a private condominium, or a landed house — the rental income you receive is taxable. The Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) treats rental income as part of your total chargeable income for that Year of Assessment (YA), taxed at the prevailing personal income tax rates. Knowing how the system works, which expenses you may deduct, and when to file are not merely compliance obligations — they directly affect your net return on any investment property you hold.

This guide covers every aspect of rental income tax in Singapore for YA 2026 (income earned in 2025): what counts as rental income, allowable deductions, the tax rate schedule, filing deadlines, worked examples, and the most common landlord mistakes that trigger IRAS scrutiny.

Quick Answer — Key Takeaways

  • Rental income from Singapore properties is taxable; you must declare it in your annual income tax return.
  • Net rental income = gross rent minus allowable deductions (mortgage interest, property tax, maintenance, insurance, agent fees for renewals).
  • Personal income tax rates for YA 2026 range from 0% (first S$20,000) to 22% (above S$320,000 chargeable income).
  • Capital expenditure — renovations, improvements, furniture purchases — is not deductible; only revenue expenses qualify.
  • IRAS filing deadline: 18 April 2026 (paper) / 18 April 2026 (e-filing via myTax Portal); penalties of up to 200% of unpaid tax may apply for non-declaration.
  • Mortgage principal repayments are not deductible; only the interest component qualifies.
  • Foreign rental income remitted to Singapore by tax residents is also taxable (with credit for foreign taxes paid).
  • A property rented partially for personal use requires apportionment of expenses.

What Counts as Rental Income in Singapore

IRAS defines rental income broadly. It includes all amounts received or receivable from letting out a property in Singapore: monthly or annual rent, advance rent, premiums received for granting a lease, and service or facility charges included in the rental arrangement. If your tenant pays utilities as part of a gross rental arrangement and reimburses you, that reimbursement is also rental income.

What does not count: genuine security deposits that you hold in trust and will refund are not income. However, if a deposit is forfeited (e.g., the tenant breaks the lease), the forfeited amount becomes income in the year it is forfeited.

Rental income is assessed on a received basis for individuals — meaning you declare what you actually received (or were entitled to receive) during the calendar year 2025 for YA 2026, regardless of when the tenancy period technically falls.

Singapore personal income tax rates 2026 chargeable income brackets for rental income IRAS
Figure 1: Singapore personal income tax rate schedule for YA 2026. Rental profits are added to all other income sources to determine which bracket applies. Source: IRAS.

The tax rates above are progressive and cumulative. A landlord whose only income is rental income of S$60,000 net does not pay 7% on the full S$60,000. Instead, the first S$20,000 attracts 0%, the next S$10,000 attracts 2% (S$200), the next S$10,000 attracts 3.5% (S$350), and the remaining S$20,000 attracts 7% (S$1,400) — a total tax of S$1,950, an effective rate of 3.25%.

Allowable Deductions: What You Can Claim Against Rental Income

IRAS applies the revenue versus capital test to every expense. Revenue expenses — those incurred to earn rental income on an ongoing basis — are deductible. Capital expenses — those that create or improve a long-term asset — are not. The distinction sometimes requires careful analysis, especially for renovation and repair costs.

Expense Category Deductible? Notes
Mortgage interest ✓ Yes Interest portion only; not principal repayment. Proportionate if property partly owner-occupied.
Property tax (annual) ✓ Yes The property tax bill from IRAS itself is deductible as a landlord expense.
Fire / home insurance premium ✓ Yes Premiums for insurance on the rented property are allowable.
Maintenance and repairs ✓ Yes Restoring to original condition (e.g., repainting, plumbing repairs) — revenue in nature.
Agent commission (renewal) ✓ Yes Renewal commissions are revenue expenses. First-time lease commissions may be disallowed.
Advertising costs ✓ Yes Costs of finding a tenant (online listings, print ads).
Furniture rental ✓ Yes Monthly rental of furniture provided to tenant is deductible; purchase of furniture is not.
Renovation and improvements ✗ No Capital in nature — creates new value. Not deductible regardless of amount.
Mortgage principal repayment ✗ No Capital repayment only reduces liability; does not generate income.
Furniture purchase ✗ No Capital expenditure; no depreciation allowance available to individuals.
Initial agent commission (new lease) ✗ No IRAS typically treats this as capital to secure the tenancy; not ongoing revenue.
Personal expenses ✗ No Any expenses not wholly and exclusively incurred to produce rental income.

rental expenses deductible vs non-deductible IRAS Singapore 2026 landlord guide
Figure 2: Deductible versus non-deductible rental expenses for Singapore landlords (YA 2026). Source: IRAS e-Tax Guide on Taxation of Property Owners.

Repairs vs Improvements — The Critical Distinction

The boundary between a deductible repair and a disallowed improvement is one of the most contested areas in rental tax practice. IRAS looks at whether the work restores an asset to its original working condition (deductible) or improves it beyond its original state (capital, not deductible). Replacing a broken tile with an identical tile: deductible. Replacing worn carpet with hardwood flooring: capital. Repainting walls in the same colour: deductible. Knocking down a wall to open plan the kitchen: capital. When in doubt, document the original condition and the work scope, and retain quotes and invoices.

Mortgage Interest — Most Valuable Deduction for Leveraged Landlords

For landlords who financed their investment property with a bank loan, the interest component of each monthly mortgage instalment is deductible. You must obtain a mortgage statement from your bank showing the split between principal and interest for the year — this is typically included in your annual statement or available via the bank’s portal.

If you live in the property for part of the year and rent it out for the remainder, you must apportion the interest on a time basis. For example, if you rented the property for nine out of twelve months, only 9/12ths of the annual interest is deductible.

How Net Rental Income Is Calculated: Three Scenarios

annual rental income breakdown gross deductions net chargeable income Singapore 2026 scenarios
Figure 3: Annual rental income breakdown — gross rent, total deductions, and net chargeable income — across three common Singapore landlord scenarios (YA 2026). Figures are illustrative.

The three scenarios above reflect a spectrum of Singapore rental situations. A modest HDB 4-room flat in a mature estate rented at S$2,500 per month (S$30,000 gross per year) might yield deductions of approximately S$9,500 (mortgage interest S$6,500, property tax S$1,800, fire insurance S$400, maintenance S$800), leaving net chargeable rental income of roughly S$20,500. A city-fringe condo 2-bedroom at S$4,200 per month carries higher deductions (larger mortgage, higher property tax) and nets approximately S$32,200. A 3-bedroom at S$6,500 per month nets roughly S$49,500 after all allowable deductions.

Worked Example: Mr Tan’s Investment Condo, YA 2026

Property: 2-bedroom condominium in Tampines, purchased March 2023 for S$1.2 million. Bank loan of S$840,000 at 3.0% p.a. fixed (2-year lock-in, now on floating SORA+0.9% ≈ 3.25% p.a.). Rented at S$3,800 per month for the full 12 months of 2025.

Step 1 — Gross Rental Income: S$3,800 × 12 = S$45,600

Step 2 — Allowable Deductions:

  • Mortgage interest (from bank statement): S$26,000
  • Annual property tax (owner-letting rate at AV S$26,400): approx. S$3,696
  • Fire insurance premium: S$480
  • Maintenance and service charge (tenant-occupied): S$0 (tenant pays MCST; landlord pays S$200/qtr sinking fund) = S$800
  • Agent commission for renewal (year 2 renewal, half-month): S$1,900
  • Total Deductions: S$32,876

Step 3 — Net Rental Income: S$45,600 − S$32,876 = S$12,724

Step 4 — Tax on Rental Income: Mr Tan also earns an employment income of S$120,000. His total chargeable income is S$120,000 + S$12,724 = S$132,724 (assuming standard personal reliefs of, say, S$20,000 apply, reducing to S$112,724 chargeable). Applying the YA 2026 brackets, his incremental tax on the S$12,724 rental profit (falling in the 11.5–15% marginal bands) is approximately S$1,850.

Key insight: Mortgage interest is the single largest deduction — without it, net rental income would have been S$38,724, and the incremental tax nearly four times higher. Landlords with high-interest-rate loans in 2025 (SORA-linked packages averaging 3.0–3.5%) benefit the most from the interest deduction.

Filing Obligations: How and When to Declare Rental Income

Rental income is declared in your annual income tax return via myTax Portal (IRAS). The filing deadline is 18 April each year for both paper and e-filing; for YA 2026 (income earned in calendar year 2025), you should have filed by 18 April 2026. If you missed the deadline, file immediately to minimise late penalties.

On your return, you will see a section titled Rental Income where you enter: the address of each rented property, gross rent received, and itemised deductions. IRAS may request supporting documents — keep mortgage statements, tenancy agreements, property tax bills, invoices for maintenance, and insurance schedules for at least five years.

Obligation Detail Consequence of Non-Compliance
Declare rental income Gross rent from all Singapore and foreign rental properties Penalty up to 200% of unpaid tax; prosecution for wilful non-declaration
e-File via myTax Portal Deadline: 18 April each YA Late filing penalty; estimated assessment by IRAS if returns not filed
Retain records 5 years from relevant YA IRAS may disallow deductions if supporting documents unavailable
Notify IRAS of change in rental status If property was previously owner-occupied Incorrect owner-occupier property tax rates may trigger recovery

Property Tax on Rented Properties — A Related but Separate Obligation

Property tax (administered by IRAS separately from income tax) applies to all Singapore properties. Owner-occupiers receive a concessionary progressive rate; landlords renting out their properties pay the higher non-owner-occupier rate on the Annual Value (AV) of the property. The non-owner-occupier residential property tax rates for 2026 range from 12% (first S$30,000 AV) to 36% (AV above S$90,000), reflecting the government’s ongoing property cooling stance.

Critically, the property tax bill itself is a deductible expense against your rental income for income tax purposes — effectively giving you a partial recovery of the property tax cost at your marginal income tax rate. For a landlord in the 15% income tax bracket, a S$5,000 property tax bill reduces rental income tax by S$750.

HDB Flat Rental — Additional Considerations

HDB flat owners who sublet their flat (or individual rooms) must first obtain HDB approval before renting. Once approval is granted, all rental income rules above apply equally — declare gross rent, claim allowable deductions, pay income tax on the net profit. The mortgage interest deduction is particularly significant for HDB owners who carry an outstanding HDB concessionary loan (2.60% p.a. as at May 2026), as the interest on that loan is deductible.

Note that HDB owner-occupier property tax rates apply to HDB flats irrespective of whether you sublet individual rooms (as opposed to the whole flat). If you rent out the entire flat, HDB requires you to rent a replacement home, and the non-owner property tax rate applies.

Foreign Rental Income for Singapore Tax Residents

If you are a Singapore tax resident and receive rental income from overseas properties (Malaysia, Thailand, Australia, the United Kingdom, and so on), that income is generally taxable in Singapore when it is remitted or deemed remitted to Singapore. Singapore does not tax foreign income that is kept offshore. However, once transferred to a Singapore bank account — even briefly — it is treated as remitted. You may claim a credit for foreign taxes paid on that income, subject to the double tax agreements Singapore maintains with over 80 countries.

What This Means for Singapore Landlords in 2026

Singapore’s rental income tax framework is moderate by global standards — the progressive rate structure, generous mortgage interest deduction, and property tax deductibility all reduce the effective tax burden for most landlords. However, three factors are squeezing margins in 2026: elevated mortgage rates (SORA-linked packages remain near 3.0–3.5%), higher non-owner-occupier property tax rates following the 2024–2025 AV revision cycle, and increased ABSD costs that raise the entry price for new investment purchases.

Net rental yields across Singapore private residential properties averaged 3.0–3.6% in Q1 2026 (industry data), down from the 4.0–4.5% range prevalent in 2022. For a leveraged landlord on a 75% LTV mortgage at 3.25% interest, the after-tax net yield may narrow to 1.5–2.5% depending on location and property type — compelling careful cash-flow modelling before any new acquisition.

What Might Come Next: Rental Tax Policy Outlook

This section is speculative and should not be relied upon for financial decisions. Singapore’s tax authorities have signalled no imminent changes to the personal income tax treatment of rental income. However, three developments are worth monitoring: (1) further property tax AV revisions for 2026–2027, which IRAS reviews annually and which directly affect the size of the deductible property tax bill; (2) any shifts in SORA-linked benchmark rates as the global monetary cycle evolves, affecting deductible mortgage interest; and (3) potential tightening of the regime for short-term rental platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com), which IRAS may subject to different rules if legislative changes follow proposed government reviews.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to declare rental income if I only rent out one room?

Yes. IRAS requires you to declare all rental income, including income from subletting a single bedroom in your HDB flat or private property. The gross rent received for the room, less allowable deductions (apportioned based on the rented room’s floor area as a proportion of total floor area), must be reported in your annual income tax return. The apportionment approach applies to expenses like mortgage interest, property tax, and maintenance that cover the whole property.

Can I deduct renovation costs incurred before the tenant moved in?

Generally, no. IRAS treats renovation expenditure as capital expenditure, even if done to attract a tenant. The only exception is expenditure that constitutes genuine repair — restoring the property to its existing condition — rather than improvement. A fresh coat of paint before a new tenancy commences is typically allowable; a full kitchen overhaul or new bathroom suite is not. Retain full documentation of the pre- and post-renovation condition and all invoices.

My property was vacant for three months — can I still deduct mortgage interest for those months?

IRAS’s position is that you may deduct mortgage interest for vacant periods only if the vacancy arises because you are actively seeking a tenant (for example, the existing tenant has moved out and you are marketing the unit). If the property is vacant because you are occupying it for personal use or have no intention of renting during that period, the interest for those months is not deductible. Keep records of your rental marketing efforts (listing screenshots, agent correspondence) during any vacancy period.

How does IRAS know I have rental income if I do not declare it?

IRAS has multiple data-matching sources: HDB approval records for flat subletting, URA rental contract submissions (required for private properties since 2021), tenancy agreements registered with SLA, and property transaction data. IRAS also receives bank interest income information and can cross-reference rental deposits with landlord declarations. Undeclared rental income has led to IRAS audits resulting in penalties of up to 200% of underpaid tax. The risk of non-declaration significantly outweighs any short-term saving.

Can joint owners of an investment property both claim deductions?

Yes. Where a property is jointly owned, both owners must declare their respective share of the rental income and may each claim their proportionate share of the allowable deductions. If the property is held as tenants-in-common with unequal shares (for example, 60/40), each owner declares income and deductions in those proportions. Joint tenants (equal shares by default) split 50/50. Each owner files a separate income tax return.

Is rental income from Airbnb and short-term lets treated the same way?

For income tax purposes, yes — all rental income, whether from long-term tenancies or short-term platform bookings, is taxable. However, short-term rentals of private residential properties (less than three consecutive months per guest) are illegal in Singapore under URA regulations unless the property has a specific hotel or serviced apartment licence. HDB flats require a minimum rental period of six months per tenant. Accordingly, most Airbnb-style activity in Singapore private homes is legally prohibited. IRAS’s income tax rules would apply to any such income, but the underlying activity also exposes the owner to URA enforcement.

What if my rental income creates a loss (deductions exceed rent received)?

If your allowable deductions exceed your gross rental income for a year (producing a rental loss), IRAS generally does not allow that loss to be offset against other income sources such as employment income. Rental losses may in some circumstances be carried forward to offset future rental income from the same property. The rules on loss relief are complex and depend on whether the rental activity constitutes a trade — for most individual landlords, losses are quarantined within the rental income category. Consult a registered tax professional if you anticipate a rental loss position.

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Disclaimer

This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules are subject to change; always verify current rates, thresholds, and filing requirements directly with the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) at iras.gov.sg and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). Readers with specific tax questions regarding their rental properties should consult a qualified Singapore tax professional or a licensed financial adviser. Figures and examples used are illustrative and may not reflect your individual circumstances.

Rental Income Tax in Singapore 2026: A Landlord’s Guide to Declaring, Deducting and Saving

Rental Income Tax in Singapore 2026: A Landlord’s Guide to Declaring, Deducting and Saving

Renting out your Singapore condo or HDB flat sounds simple — sign a tenancy agreement, collect a monthly transfer, repeat. Then April rolls around, and the IRAS e-filing portal asks you to declare your net rental income. Suddenly you are wrestling with deductible mortgage interest, the 15% deemed-expense option, what counts as “repairs” versus “improvements”, and whether your S$420 monthly MCST bill is a write-off (it is). Get it wrong by a thousand dollars in either direction, and the result is either a real cash tax overpayment, or an IRAS query letter you do not want to receive.

This guide walks you through how rental income is taxed in Singapore in 2026, what the IRAS rules actually say, the two paths you can choose between for expense deductions, and a fully-worked example using realistic 2026 numbers for a typical leveraged condo investor. By the end you should be able to fire up your IRAS Income Tax e-Filing screen, key in Total Annual Rent, Allowable Expenses and Net Rental Income, and be confident the numbers reconcile to your actual cashflow.

Quick Answer — how Singapore taxes your rental income in 2026

  • Rental income is not a separate tax — net rental is added to your other income and taxed at your marginal personal income tax rate (0% to 24% for residents in YA 2026).
  • You can claim actual qualifying expenses (with receipts) OR a flat 15% deemed-expense deduction. Pick whichever is higher.
  • Mortgage loan interest is always deductible on top of the 15% deemed deduction — do not forget this; it is the single largest line for most leveraged landlords.
  • Property tax for a tenanted unit is at the higher non-owner-occupier rate (12-36% of AV in YA 2026). It is fully deductible from rental income.
  • Furniture, renovations and capital upgrades are not deductible — they are capital items.
  • Foreign-property rents owned by a Singapore tax resident are taxable only if remitted to Singapore (with conditions).
  • Filing deadline: 15 April (paper) or 18 April (e-Filing) for individuals, every year of assessment.

What “Rental Income” Means for IRAS Purposes

Under section 10(1)(f) of the Income Tax Act 1947, “rents” derived from any property in Singapore are chargeable to tax. The Comptroller of Income Tax interprets this broadly: it covers the basic monthly rent, anything else the tenant pays you under the tenancy agreement, and certain non-cash benefits.

What goes into your gross rent figure on your tax return:

  • Monthly rent — the headline figure on the tenancy agreement.
  • Furniture and fittings rent — if your tenant pays a separate fee for furnishings, it is rent.
  • Maintenance fees billed to the tenant if they pass through you (uncommon but valid).
  • Compensation for early termination of the lease (if not specifically structured as damages).
  • Any non-refundable lease premium received.

What is not rental income: the tenant’s security deposit while you still hold it (you owe it back), and any reimbursement of utility bills paid by the tenant directly to SP Group, M1, etc. Forfeited security deposits, however, do count as rental income at the time of forfeiture.

How Rental Income Is Taxed: The Marginal-Rate Mechanic

Singapore does not have a separate “rental tax” or a flat rate on rental income. Instead, your net rental income — gross rent less allowable expenses — is added to all your other taxable income (employment income, trade or self-employment profits, interest, royalties) and taxed at the resident progressive rates.

Singapore resident progressive income tax rates YA 2026 used to tax net rental income — 13-band structure from 0 to 24 percent
Figure 1. The 13-band Singapore resident personal income tax structure for YA 2026. The point at which your additional rental income is taxed depends on where the slice falls on the ladder — for someone earning S$120,000 from employment, an extra dollar of rental income is taxed at 11.5%; for someone earning S$250,000, the same dollar is taxed at 19%.
Existing income before rent Marginal rate on next S$1 of rental income Tax on +S$10,000 net rent
S$30,000 (e.g. retiree) 3.5% / 7% ~S$525
S$80,000 (mid-career employee) 11.5% S$1,150
S$120,000 11.5% / 15% ~S$1,250
S$200,000 (senior professional) 18% / 19% ~S$1,850
S$500,000 (top tier) 22% / 23% ~S$2,250

The same rental property therefore generates very different tax outcomes for two landlords. A retired SC with no employment income may pay almost no tax on a S$60,000 gross rent year, while a senior professional earning S$250,000 from employment can lose 19-22% of every dollar of net rent to the marginal-rate stack. This is why high-income Singaporean landlords often plan property purchases under the lower-earning spouse’s name — a perfectly legitimate (though ABSD-sensitive) way to lower household tax.

What You Can Deduct: The Two Paths

Once you have your gross rent, IRAS lets you choose between two paths to compute net rental income. The choice is made property by property on each year’s filing — there is no lock-in.

Singapore rental income deductible versus non-deductible expenses 2026 IRAS actual expenses path versus 15 percent deemed deduction shortcut
Figure 2. Allowable vs disallowable rental-income deductions in Singapore 2026, with the 15% deemed-expense shortcut highlighted. Mortgage interest is uniquely allowable on top of the deemed expense — do not double-count it under Path A.

Path A: Actual qualifying expenses

You add up every expense incurred wholly and exclusively in earning the rent during the year and deduct it from gross rent. Required to keep receipts and supporting documentation for 5 years (IRAS Income Tax Records Keeping Requirement). The full list of typical deductible items:

  • Property tax on the tenanted unit (non-owner-occupier rate, 12-36% of AV in 2026).
  • Mortgage loan interest — the interest portion of every monthly instalment. The principal repayment portion is not deductible.
  • Fire / building insurance premiums.
  • MCST monthly fees (maintenance + sinking-fund contributions) for the period of letting.
  • Repairs and maintenance — like-for-like fixes only. Replacing a broken aircon compressor is repair; replacing the entire aircon system with a higher-end model is partly improvement (not deductible).
  • Agent commission on lease procurement (typically 0.5-1 month of rent + GST). The first-tenancy commission may be partly disallowable; subsequent commissions are fully deductible.
  • Stamp duty on the tenancy agreement — if landlord has agreed to bear it (rare; usually tenant pays).
  • Vacancy-period utilities and SP Services when paid directly by the landlord.
  • Routine cleaning, pest control, gardening attributable to the unit during letting.

Path B: 15% deemed expense + mortgage interest

From YA 2017 onwards, IRAS allows residential-property landlords to claim a flat 15% deemed deduction on gross rent in lieu of itemising actual expenses, plus their actual mortgage interest. No receipts are needed for the 15% portion.

This is a real shortcut for low-cost landlords. If you own a HDB flat free-and-clear (no mortgage interest), with low MCST and minimal repairs, your actual qualifying expenses might be 8-12% of rent — the 15% path delivers a higher deduction, with no admin. For leveraged condo landlords, by contrast, mortgage interest alone often runs 50-70% of rent; the actual-expense path almost always wins.

Important: the 15% deemed-expense path is only available for residential property let to a tenant who occupies the unit. Commercial property landlords, AirBnB-style serviced-apartment hosts, and corporate-structured property trusts cannot use it.

Worked Example: A S$1.5M Condo Let at S$5,000/Month

Numbers make this concrete. Consider a Singapore Citizen owner-occupier of a 1,000-sqft 3-bedroom OCR condo bought at S$1.5M with a S$1.05M loan (LTV 70%) at 3.5% all-in. The unit is rented at S$5,000/month from January to December. The owner has S$120,000 of employment income.

Worked rental income tax example S$1.5M Singapore condo S$5000 monthly rent YA 2026 — actual expense path versus 15 percent deemed deduction
Figure 3. Side-by-side comparison of the two computational paths for the same property. With S$36,750 of mortgage interest in the picture, the actual-expense path produces near-zero net rental income; the 15% deemed path gives a worse outcome and saddles the landlord with ~S$1,557 of avoidable tax for the year.

Three lessons from this example:

  1. For any landlord with a meaningful mortgage, Path A almost always wins. Mortgage interest is the single biggest deductible.
  2. If you remortgage and your interest expense changes mid-year, your tax position changes mid-year — track it monthly.
  3. The marginal rate matters as much as the deduction. A landlord at the 22% bracket saves ~S$340 more on the same S$1,557 deduction than the same landlord at the 15% bracket.

Property Tax for Tenanted Units

The instant your property is rented out, IRAS automatically reclassifies it from owner-occupied to non-owner-occupied (NOO). The tax rate ladder differs sharply:

  • Owner-occupier rates: 0% on the first S$8,000 of AV, rising progressively to 32% on AV above S$100,000.
  • Non-owner-occupier rates: 12% on the first S$30,000 of AV, rising to 36% above S$60,000 AV in 2026.

For a typical S$1.5M OCR condo with an AV of around S$60,000, the owner-occupier annual property tax would be about S$8,400; the same unit as a NOO investment is taxed at S$8,400 (owing to the band structure crossing 12%/24%/36%) — in this band, NOO is significantly higher. You must notify IRAS within 15 days of the unit becoming tenanted (or vacated) so the rate is correctly applied. This NOO property tax is then a fully deductible expense against your rental income on the income-tax side.

Joint Owners and Couples

For jointly-held properties, IRAS apportions rental income and deductions equally by default among co-owners, regardless of who actually pays the mortgage or collects the rent. If you want a different split (e.g. 70/30 to reflect actual capital contributions or beneficial ownership), you must file a declaration of beneficial interest and IRAS may ask for evidence.

This is the heart of the Singapore tax-planning playbook for couples: where one spouse earns in the top marginal bracket and the other earns less, splitting the rental income via a 50/50 joint-tenancy or a deliberately-skewed tenancy-in-common can lower household tax materially. The trade-off — ABSD — is covered in our Joint Tenancy vs Tenancy in Common guide.

Vacancy, Mid-Year Letting, and Voids

When you let your property only for part of the year, only the rent received is taxable, and only the expenses attributable to the letting period are deductible (pro-rated). Common scenarios:

  • Owner moves overseas mid-year and rents out from August. Pro-rate the property tax (NOO rate from 1 August), MCST fees, and insurance from August onwards. Mortgage interest is fully deductible against rent because the loan continues throughout, but only the August-December portion is matched against the August-December rent.
  • Tenant moves out, unit vacant for 2 months, new tenant moves in. Vacancy-period expenses (utilities, MCST, mortgage interest) are still deductible if the property was actively marketed for re-letting during the void.
  • Property partly let, partly self-occupied. Only the let portion’s expenses are deductible; the personal-occupation portion is not. Apportion strictly by floor area and time.

What Might Come Next: Rental Tax Watchpoints

The basic IRAS framework has been stable since the 15% deemed-expense option was introduced in YA 2017. Two areas to watch in 2026:

  • Short-term let crackdown. URA’s 3-month minimum residential let rule is now policed more aggressively. AirBnB-style sub-3-month lets are not legal residential lettings and may also be reclassified as a trade by IRAS, attracting higher tax and disqualifying the 15% deemed path.
  • NOO property-tax escalation. The NOO rate ladder has steepened in each Budget since 2022 (peak rate raised from 27% to 36% over three years). Investors should model continuing escalation when underwriting yield.

None of the above is a tax-rate change yet. We will update this guide when Budget 2027 announcements land in February 2027.

Frequently Asked Questions

I let out a single room in my owner-occupied flat. Is that rental income?

Yes. The rent received from a sub-let or room-let is taxable on the same basis as a whole-unit let. You can deduct a fair-share portion of expenses — typically based on the floor area of the let room versus total floor area, multiplied by the days let. The 15% deemed-expense path is also available. You do not have to convert the entire property’s tax status to NOO — that conversion only applies if the whole unit is let out and you no longer occupy it.

Can I deduct the cost of a new sofa I bought when I started renting out the unit?

Not under Path A — the initial fit-out of furnishings is a capital cost, not a maintenance cost. However, if you choose Path B (15% deemed deduction), the deemed-expense covers wear-and-tear and replacement furnishings implicitly. If you replace a broken sofa with a like-for-like sofa later, that is deductible as a repair under Path A.

I am a Singapore tax resident with an apartment in London that I rent out. Is the UK rent taxable in Singapore?

Foreign-source rental income earned by a Singapore tax-resident individual is taxable only when remitted to Singapore (and even then, certain remittances are tax-exempt under section 13(7A) of the Income Tax Act). If the UK rental income stays in a UK bank account and you do not bring it back, it is generally not taxable in Singapore. UK tax on the rent (HMRC Self Assessment) is a separate matter — you should keep that compliance current to avoid double-tax issues. Singapore has a Double Taxation Agreement with the UK that provides relief.

Can my parent (who has no employment income) be the named landlord to lower household tax?

The beneficial owner of the property is the person taxed on the rental income, not necessarily the legal title-holder. If your parent merely holds the title but you funded the deposit, paid the mortgage, and collect the rent, IRAS will still tax you. Genuine transfers to a parent (with proper SDL stamping, ABSD implications, and a real change in beneficial ownership) can shift the tax base, but the costs and ABSD trigger usually outweigh the income-tax savings unless the property has a long runway. Always model the all-in cost across BSD, ABSD, conveyancing, and 5+ years of expected tax savings before transferring.

What happens if I file the wrong figure?

If IRAS detects a discrepancy via its automated checks against your bank records, agent-reported tenancy stampings, and property-tax NOO classification, you will receive an enquiry letter (typically 1-2 years after filing) asking you to reconcile. Genuine errors made in good faith can be self-corrected via an Objection or Amendment within 4 years. Deliberate under-declaration can attract a penalty of up to 200% of the tax undercharged plus interest, plus criminal prosecution in serious cases. The honest path is materially cheaper than the alternative.

Is there any way to claim depreciation on the building structure?

No. Singapore tax law does not allow capital allowances (depreciation) on residential buildings or land. This is one of the structural differences from the US, UK and Australian regimes, where depreciation can shelter meaningful rental cashflow. The only “depreciation-equivalent” reliefs available to Singapore landlords are repairs (Path A) and the 15% deemed expense (Path B).

Do I need to register for GST as a residential landlord?

No. Residential lettings are exempt supplies under the Goods and Services Tax Act — you do not charge GST on rent, and you cannot register for GST on the basis of residential rental income alone. Commercial-property landlords are different: they charge 9% GST (in 2024 onwards) on rent, and must register if their taxable turnover exceeds S$1 million per year.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Singapore income tax law — including the rates, deductibility rules, and remission frameworks discussed above — is subject to change at the discretion of the Minister for Finance and the Comptroller of Income Tax. Always verify the current position on the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore rental-income page, the relevant individual income tax rate schedules, and the latest annual Ministry of Finance Budget statement — and consult a licensed tax adviser before acting on any specific position. Worked examples are illustrative only; your actual tax outcome will depend on your full facts.

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