Singapore Property Market Forecast 2H 2026: Price Outlook, Key Risks and What Buyers Should Know

Singapore Property Market Forecast 2H 2026: Price Outlook, Key Risks and What Buyers Should Know

Quick Answer: Singapore Property Market Forecast 2H 2026

  • Private residential prices rose 0.9% QoQ and 2.63% YoY in Q1 2026, with the Outside Central Region (OCR) leading at +2.2% QoQ — price growth is positive but moderating.
  • HDB resale recorded its first quarterly dip (-0.1% QoQ) since Q2 2019; index sits at 203.4. Not a crash — more of a pause after a five-year run.
  • 2H 2026 GLS launches 9 confirmed-list sites (4,745 units), adding meaningful supply to OCR and RCR. Pricing discipline from developers is expected.
  • Key risk: interest rates remain elevated at 3.0–3.5% for bank mortgages; affordability is stretched for many first-time buyers.
  • Key catalyst: any US Federal Reserve rate cut signals would unlock significant pent-up demand — watch the September and December 2026 Fed meetings.
  • For buyers: fundamentals remain sound — Singapore’s employment is near-full, rental demand supports investment yield, and supply is finite. Timing the market is less reliable than time in the market.
  • URA Q2 2026 Flash Estimates are expected in early July 2026 and will be the next major data point.

H1 2026 in Review: Where the Singapore Property Market Stands

As the calendar turns to the second half of 2026, Singapore’s property market presents a nuanced picture. Private residential prices continued their gradual upward trajectory in Q1 2026, with the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) reporting a Property Price Index (PPI) increase of 0.9% quarter-on-quarter — a modest but consistent gain that extends a trend stretching back to the post-pandemic recovery that began in mid-2020. On a year-on-year basis, the private residential index is up 2.63%, a pace that is firm but well below the double-digit growth seen during the post-pandemic surge of 2021 to 2023.

The Housing Development Board’s Resale Price Index (RPI), however, told a slightly different story. At 203.4 in Q1 2026, the HDB resale market recorded a 0.1% quarterly decline — the first such dip since Q2 2019. This is not alarming in isolation: the index had surged more than 54% since its 2019 trough, and a modest pause is consistent with natural market digestion. What it does signal is that the exceptional run of HDB resale price appreciation is transitioning into a more measured phase.

Singapore property market H1 2026 key metrics scorecard URA HDB data
Figure 1: Singapore Property Market H1 2026 Key Metrics Scorecard — URA Q1 2026 Real Estate Statistics and HDB Resale Statistics.

Private Residential Market: A Three-Speed Story

The defining characteristic of Singapore’s private residential market in 2026 is regional divergence. The three planning zones administered by URA — the Core Central Region (CCR), Rest of Central Region (RCR), and Outside Central Region (OCR) — have performed at markedly different speeds in 2026.

The OCR is the undisputed pace-setter. A 2.2% quarterly gain in Q1 2026, following similar momentum in late 2025, reflects genuine demand from HDB upgraders — a cohort whose Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) clears in waves and who target mass-market new launches in the S$1.3M–S$1.8M range. The 2H 2026 GLS programme deliberately concentrates supply here (Tampines Street 94, Bayshore Road), which should moderate any further sharp price acceleration without causing a price correction.

The RCR recorded 0.8% QoQ growth — solid mid-field performance driven by a mix of first-time private buyers, professionals, and some foreign-related buying in the city-fringe. River Valley Green Parcel C (awarded June 2026 at a top bid of approximately S$1,730 psf ppr) is the headline indicator of developer confidence in this zone.

The CCR grew just 0.3% QoQ, a subdued reading that reflects several headwinds: the 60% Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) on foreigners that has been in place since April 2023 continues to suppress international transaction volumes; and the global macro uncertainty discussed in the risk section below has weighed on ultra-high-net-worth discretionary buying. That said, CCR is not in distress — it remains a long-term beneficiary of Singapore’s family office growth and wealth inflows.

Singapore private residential price index CCR RCR OCR Q1 2026 regional trends
Figure 2: Singapore Private Residential Price Index by Region (Q1 2020–Q1 2026) and QoQ Change for Q1 2026. Source: URA Q1 2026 Real Estate Statistics.

HDB Resale Market: A Healthy Pause, Not a Reversal

Singapore’s HDB resale market has been one of the defining investment stories of the 2020s. From a low point in 2019 (RPI ≈ 132), prices surged to an index of 203.4 by Q1 2026 — a 54% cumulative increase. The Q1 2026 dip of 0.1% QoQ is, in that context, the market catching its breath after an exceptional run rather than a structural reversal.

Two counterintuitive data points reinforce this view. First, million-dollar HDB transactions reached a record quarterly high of 412 in Q1 2026 — indicating that at the premium end of the resale market (large mature-estate flats, high-floor units in sought-after towns), demand remains fierce. Second, overall HDB resale transaction volumes for Q1 2026 remained healthy, with four-room flats accounting for the largest share (approximately 2,690 transactions in Q1 2026 alone) at a median price of around S$575,000.

For 2H 2026, the HDB resale market is likely to remain range-bound rather than sharply appreciating or correcting. MOP cohorts from the 2016–2019 BTO launches are gradually clearing, releasing units back to the resale market — but supply from this channel is relatively thin compared to the 2013–2016 peak cycle. Demand remains supported by couples who cannot access BTO (due to income ceiling, citizenship mix, or urgency) and Permanent Residents who remain ineligible to buy BTO directly.

Developer Sales and the New Launch Pipeline

Developer sales activity is the indicator most directly shaped by new launch timing. The monthly data tells a story of feast and famine: January to April 2026 saw 1,120, 895, 1,348 and 1,548 units sold respectively — solid months driven by a cluster of project launches. May 2026 crashed to 447 units (-71.1% month-on-month), not because demand evaporated, but because there were few projects launching that month.

The pipeline going into 2H 2026 remains substantial. URA data shows 17,032 unsold units in the private pipeline as of Q1 2026 (total pipeline including units not yet launched: 42,561). The 2H 2026 GLS Confirmed List adds nine further sites including Lentor Gardens Parcel A and B, Bayshore Road, Tampines Street 94, and an EC site at Jurong East. These launches are phased across 2H 2026 into 2027, so the impact on completed supply will be felt primarily in 2028–2030.

Rental Market: Correction Underway, Yields Compressing

Singapore’s private residential rental market began correcting in 2024 after a record two-year surge and that correction extended into 2026. The URA rental index fell 1.2% QoQ in Q1 2026, following declines across 2024 and 2025. In absolute terms, rents remain significantly above their pre-pandemic levels — a 2BR in D15 that rented for S$2,800/month in 2019 may still command S$4,200–S$4,800/month in 2026 depending on specification — but the exceptional post-pandemic pricing has normalised.

For investors, this rental correction compresses gross yields. A S$1.5M 2BR in the RCR yielding S$4,500/month gross generates a gross yield of approximately 3.6%, which is broadly comparable to bank deposit rates in 2026. Net yield after management fees, property tax, and maintenance is lower — making the case for property investment in 2026 primarily a capital appreciation thesis rather than a pure income play.

2H 2026 Market Outlook Summary

Segment Base Case Bull Case Bear Case
Private Residential (Overall) +1%–2% for full year 2026 +3%–4% if rates ease and demand recovers Flat to -1% if global recession deepens
OCR (Mass Market) Continues outperforming; +2%–3% YoY +4%–5% with strong HDB upgrader demand Supply pressure from GLS launches moderates gains
RCR (City Fringe) Steady +1%–2% YoY +3% with new launch interest Flat if affordability ceiling is hit
CCR (Core Central) Sideways to +1%; foreign buyer ABSD drag +2%–3% if ABSD reviewed or wealth inflows surge -1%–2% if global HNW sentiment deteriorates
HDB Resale ±0.5% QoQ; range-bound in H2 +1%–2% if upgrader demand stays robust -1% if affordability stress bites flat demand
Private Rental Further -2%–4% as supply catches up Stabilises if employment influx resumes Deeper correction if expat headcount falls

Worked Example: The Chen Family — Buy in 2H 2026 or Wait?

Mr and Mrs Chen are Singapore Citizens in their early 30s. They have cleared their HDB MOP on their Bishan 4-room flat and are looking to upgrade to a 3-bedroom OCR condo. They have combined income of S$13,500 per month, CPF OA savings of S$180,000, and cash of S$120,000.

They are eyeing a 3BR at an upcoming OCR launch in Q3 2026 priced at S$1.65M. Under the ABSD SC couple remission scheme, they can purchase the new condo and claim a full refund of the 20% ABSD (S$330,000) provided they sell their HDB flat within six months of the condo purchase date.

Key numbers: BSD S$47,600 (payable from CPF); ABSD S$330,000 (cash, but refundable within six months of HDB sale); 5% cash S$82,500; legal fees ~S$5,500. Bank loan: 75% LTV = S$1,237,500 at 3.2% over 30 years → monthly repayment approximately S$5,338. TDSR = S$5,338 ÷ S$13,500 = 39.5% (PASS, under 55%). Total cash needed upfront: ~S$208,000 (cash component + ABSD float pending HDB sale).

Should they wait? If OCR prices rise another 2% by Q1 2027, the same unit would cost S$1,683,000 — an additional S$33,000. If interest rates fall 50 bps by then, monthly repayments fall by ~S$300/month. The calculus slightly favours acting when they are ready rather than trying to time the market precisely, provided the ABSD remission window can be managed. See our guide on ABSD remission for SC couples for the full rules.

What Might Come Next: Risks and Catalysts for 2H 2026

The Singapore property market operates at the intersection of domestic fundamentals (employment, wage growth, HDB upgrader cohorts) and global macro forces (US interest rates, geopolitical risk, capital flows). For the second half of 2026, both sides of that equation are in play.

Key downside risks include the persistence of elevated interest rates — if the US Federal Reserve holds rates through 2026 without cutting, Singapore bank mortgage rates (which track SORA and swap rates) will remain in the 3.0–3.5% range, keeping affordability stretched. Continued global trade disruptions from US tariff policy create a dampening effect on business investment sentiment and, indirectly, on expatriate headcounts and rental demand. China’s economic slowdown reduces the pool of Chinese-origin buyers who were historically active in the CCR.

Key upside catalysts include the prospect of Fed rate cuts in September or December 2026 — even one 25-basis-point cut would move Singapore’s forward rates and boost buyer confidence. Singapore’s own fundamentals remain strong: the unemployment rate is approximately 2.0%, wage growth is positive, and the Government’s managed-supply approach via the GLS programme means developers are not flooding the market with distressed inventory. Any relaxation of ABSD for permanent residents (which has been debated, though there is no official signal) would be an immediate CCR and RCR catalyst.

Singapore property market second half 2026 risks catalysts analysis
Figure 3: Singapore Property Market 2H 2026 — Key Risks vs Catalysts. Editorial assessment as at June 2026. Not investment advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will Singapore property prices drop in 2H 2026?

A broad price correction in 2H 2026 is not the base-case scenario for most analysts. Singapore’s property market is underpinned by limited land supply, robust employment, and the Government’s disciplined GLS programme which calibrates supply to demand. The most likely outcome for 2H 2026 is modest positive growth in the private residential segment (0%–2% for the full year in a base case) and range-bound movement in HDB resale. A sharp correction would require a confluence of events unlikely to materialise simultaneously: a major spike in unemployment, a severe global financial shock, and a government decision to release large additional land supply. None of these is the current outlook.

When will the URA Q2 2026 Flash Estimates be released?

Based on URA’s established release pattern, the Q2 2026 Flash Estimates for the private residential property price index are expected in the first week of July 2026 — likely 1 or 2 July. The full Q2 2026 real estate statistics (including detailed regional breakdowns, rental index, and developer sales data) typically follow approximately three to four weeks later. The flash estimate gives a preliminary QoQ price change figure; the full release provides granular transaction and rental data. LovelyHomes will publish a dedicated analysis article as soon as the data is available.

What does the HDB resale -0.1% dip in Q1 2026 actually mean for sellers?

A -0.1% quarterly change in the HDB Resale Price Index is, in practical terms, negligible. On a S$600,000 flat, it represents a S$600 notional price movement — far smaller than the typical negotiation buffer in any individual transaction. What it signals is a shift in market psychology: buyers are less willing to pay premiums above valuation (Cash-Over-Valuation, or COV), and the exceptional seller’s market conditions of 2021–2024 have normalised. Sellers should still expect good prices — the index is 54% above its 2019 trough — but they should set realistic expectations and price to comparable transactions rather than aspirationally. For guidance on reading HDB data, see our HDB Resale Price Index Guide.

Is this a good time to buy a private property in Singapore?

This depends entirely on your personal financial circumstances, intended holding period, and purpose. If you are buying for genuine owner-occupation (primary home or long-term family residence), timing the market precisely is less important than buying within your means — ensuring your TDSR is comfortable, that you have adequate cash reserves, and that your loan tenor is appropriate. If you are buying as an investment (rental yield or capital appreciation), you need to stress-test the numbers at current mortgage rates (3.0–3.5%) and assess whether the rental yield justifies the carrying cost. For a personalised assessment, consult a licensed financial adviser and a property professional. See also our Singapore Property Financing Guide for a full breakdown of LTV, TDSR, and MSR rules.

How does the 2H 2026 GLS supply affect new launch prices?

The 2H 2026 Government Land Sales Confirmed List adds nine sites capable of yielding approximately 4,745 private and EC units. This is a substantial supply injection, particularly into the OCR and RCR. In theory, more supply means developers compete harder for buyers, which moderates launch prices. In practice, Singapore developers rarely slash prices — they tend to phase launches to match demand and hold firm on pricing. The more likely outcome is that new launches in 2H 2026 are priced at modest premiums (5%–8%) to recent comparables rather than at exceptional premiums. Buyers interested in specific sites such as Lentor Gardens Parcels A and B, Bayshore Road, or Tampines Street 94 should monitor the URA tender awards and developer launch announcements as they are made throughout 2H 2026. Full details of all 2H GLS sites are in our 2H 2026 GLS Programme Guide.

What is the ABSD rate for Singapore Citizens buying a second property in 2026?

A Singapore Citizen purchasing a second residential property pays 20% ABSD on the purchase price or market value, whichever is higher. This is paid in cash (CPF cannot be used for ABSD). For SC couples who own an HDB flat, the 20% ABSD on their second private property can be refunded under the SC Couple ABSD Remission Scheme, provided the HDB flat is sold within six months of the completion of the private property purchase. The full rules are detailed in our ABSD Remission Guide and Complete ABSD Singapore 2026 Guide.

How do I track the Singapore property market between official URA releases?

Between URA quarterly releases, you can monitor real-time trends through several free sources. The URA REALIS portal (accessible via My SingPass) provides transaction-level data for private residential properties. The HDB Resale Flat Prices portal shows individual HDB transactions. SRX Property and EdgeProp Singapore publish weekly market commentaries based on caveats lodged. The Business Times Real Estate section and Channel NewsAsia Property cover major announcements and tender results. For a guide on how to interpret the data you find, see our HDB Resale Price Index Guide and CCR RCR OCR Property Guide.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or property advice. All property market data is sourced from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and Housing Development Board (HDB) official releases as at Q1 2026. Property prices, interest rates, and government policies can change — readers should refer to the latest official URA (ura.gov.sg), HDB (hdb.gov.sg), MAS (mas.gov.sg), and IRAS (iras.gov.sg) publications and consult a licensed financial adviser or property professional before making any property-related decision. Past price performance is not indicative of future results.

HDB Resale Prices Slip 0.1% in Q1 2026 — First Quarterly Decline in Almost Seven Years

HDB Resale Prices Slip 0.1% in Q1 2026 — First Quarterly Decline in Almost Seven Years

The Housing & Development Board released its full Q1 2026 statistics on 24 April 2026, confirming what the flash estimate had hinted at three weeks earlier: the HDB Resale Price Index slipped 0.1% quarter-on-quarter, the first quarterly contraction in almost seven years. The last time HDB resale prices fell on a QoQ basis was Q2 2019, before the post-COVID supply squeeze and the surge in million-dollar transactions reset the public-housing market.

The headline is small in absolute terms — one-tenth of one percent — but it lands as the inflection most market participants have been waiting for since price growth stalled in mid-2024. Coupled with a private residential market that rose 0.9% in the same quarter, Q1 2026 is the rarest of episodes: a clean break in the public-vs-private price trajectory.

Quick Answer — what changed in Q1 2026

  • HDB Resale Price Index: −0.1% QoQ — first quarterly fall since Q2 2019 (27 quarters ago).
  • Private Property Price Index: +0.9% QoQ — led by non-landed at +1.3%.
  • Million-dollar HDB resale share moderated after a record-setting 2025.
  • HDB pipeline: 6,900 BTO flats coming in June 2026 across Ang Mo Kio, Bishan, Bukit Merah, Sembawang, Woodlands.
  • Developer sales for private new launches: ~3,375 units, −32% QoQ after a heavy 4Q 2025 launch slate.
  • The HDB-vs-private QoQ gap (~1.0 ppt) is the widest in HDB’s-down direction since 2009.

The Number in Context

HDB Resale Price Index history makes the Q1 print feel less like a sudden drop and more like the natural end of a deceleration. Growth was 2.5% in Q3 2024 at its peak, slowed to 0.5% in Q3 2025, and ticked up modestly to 0.7% in Q4 2025 before turning negative in Q1 2026. The chart below sets the trajectory out cleanly.

HDB Resale Price Index quarter on quarter percentage change Q2 2023 to Q1 2026 first decline since Q2 2019
Figure 1. HDB Resale Price Index, quarter-on-quarter percentage change from Q2 2023 to Q1 2026. Q1 2026 is the first negative print in 27 quarters; the previous decline was Q2 2019. Growth had been decelerating for five consecutive quarters before turning negative.

Reading the bars carefully, the deceleration has been visible since Q2 2025 (+0.9%) and has been a steady step-down rather than a spike-then-fall. That tells us the Q1 2026 fall is most likely the cumulative effect of supply-side and demand-side easing rather than a single-quarter shock.

The Divergence: HDB Down, Private Up

The single most striking feature of Q1 2026 is not the HDB number on its own — it is how it sits next to the private market.

HDB resale negative 0.1 percent versus private residential positive 0.9 percent Q1 2026 Singapore housing divergence
Figure 2. HDB resale fell 0.1% QoQ while private residential rose 0.9% in Q1 2026, with non-landed private property up 1.3%. The 1.0 ppt gap in HDB’s down-direction has not been seen since 2009.

The mass-market substitution effect — private buyers priced out of the bottom end downgrading to HDB resale, supporting prices — has weakened compared with 2024-2025. Two reasons appear to be at play. First, OCR new launch projects launched in Q1 2026 priced higher than the comparable launches a year ago, which discouraged the marginal HDB-to-private trade-up buyer and, by feedback, reduced cash-over-valuation pressure on resale. Second, the private market’s gain is narrowly concentrated at the top end (188 transactions of S$5M+, the highest in two years), which does not transmit downward into mass-market public housing.

What Drove the HDB Softness

Three structural drivers, all working in the same direction:

  1. BTO supply is back. HDB has put roughly 19,600 BTO flats to ballot across the three exercises in 2025 and the May 2026 launch. The pipeline announcement of another 6,900 flats in June 2026 reinforces the message: first-time buyers can wait, and many are. Substitution from resale to BTO is now structurally easier than at any point since 2019.
  2. Post-MOP supply is approaching a 5-year peak. Flats from the 2018-2020 BTO bumper slate are clearing their five-year Minimum Occupation Period, putting more resale stock on the market exactly as demand cools. EdgeProp has tracked roughly 25,000-26,000 MOP-eligible units coming online in 2026 alone, a higher number than the 2024 cohort.
  3. Million-dollar mania has cooled. The volume of S$1m+ HDB resale transactions stabilised in late 2025 and shows the first signs of moderation in Q1 2026. This does not pull the index meaningfully on its own, but it removes one of the louder narrative supports of the previous two-year run.

Summary Statistics — Q1 2026 Market Scoreboard

Metric Q4 2025 Q1 2026 QoQ change
HDB Resale Price Index +0.7% −0.1% −0.8 ppt
URA Private Residential PPI +0.6% +0.9% +0.3 ppt
URA Non-Landed Sub-Index −0.2% +1.3% +1.5 ppt
Developer launches (uncompleted units) 2,632 1,844 −30%
Unsold pipeline (incl. ECs) ~16,800 17,032 +1.4%

What This Means for Buyers and Sellers

HDB buyers — particularly first-timers — have a cleaner case to be patient. With BTO supply rising, post-MOP resale supply rising, and price momentum reversing, the cost of waiting six to twelve months is lower than at any point in the last three years. Buyers who must transact in 2026 should benchmark against fewer comparable sales rather than panic-bid; offers at the lower end of the previous month’s transaction band are realistic.

HDB sellers need to recalibrate. Pricing aspirations anchored on Q3 2024-style runaway million-dollar headlines are now visibly out of line with the market. Buyers’ agents are reporting the first widespread instances of price reductions on listings sitting more than 30 days, which had been almost unheard of since 2020. The right pricing strategy is: list at the median of the most recent six transactions in your block-and-flat-type bracket, not the high.

Private-market buyers face the opposite signal. Top-end CCR continued to absorb in volume, mid-tier RCR new launches priced well, and the unsold pipeline has begun to rise for the first time in five quarters — a sign that absorption is lagging supply. Mass-market OCR resale comparables are softening (helped by the HDB knock-on); buyers in this segment have negotiating leverage they did not have in 2024.

What Might Come Next

The Q2 2026 numbers, to be released in late July, will tell us whether Q1 was a one-quarter wobble or the start of a flatlining/down trend. Watch:

  • The BTO June 2026 ballot uptake — if first-timer demand for the Bishan and Ang Mo Kio sites is heavily oversubscribed, that confirms the substitution-from-resale-to-BTO story.
  • Median CoV (cash-over-valuation) — if median CoV continues to drift toward zero across mature estates, sellers will follow.
  • 5-year-MOP-onset volume in 2H 2026 — we expect another 12,000-13,000 units to hit MOP in the second half, doubling the resale supply boost relative to 1H.
  • Cooling-measure response — with the public side cooling on its own, MOF/MND have one less reason to introduce new public-housing-targeted measures. ABSD-side calibration is more likely if private prices keep accelerating.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is HDB resale officially in a “downturn” now?

One quarter of −0.1% does not constitute a downturn by any conventional definition — analysts typically wait for two consecutive quarters of contraction or a cumulative drop of ≥ 1% before using that label. What Q1 2026 is, is the first credible inflection in the multi-year uptrend. The market is now in a state where flat-to-mildly-negative is the most likely path through 2026, with renewed growth contingent on demand-side surprise (faster job growth, immigration tailwinds) or supply-side disappointment (BTO delays, slower MOP releases).

How does the −0.1% break down by flat type?

HDB does not publish flat-type sub-indices in the headline release, but transaction-level analysis from third-party platforms suggests softness was concentrated in 4-room and 5-room mature-estate units — the segments that drove the 2024-25 million-dollar run-up. 3-room and Executive Apartments held up better. Non-mature-estate prices were close to flat. We expect HDB’s breakdown press release later in May to confirm this pattern.

Does this affect HDB BTO ballot demand?

Indirectly, yes — in two opposing directions. A softer resale market makes resale a more accessible alternative to BTO (lower headline asking prices, less million-dollar drama), which could reduce BTO oversubscription. But uncertainty about future resale prices also pushes risk-averse first-timers toward BTO’s known-cost path, which could increase ballot demand. The June 2026 ballot will be the cleanest read on which effect dominates.

Are the cooling measures from December 2024 finally working?

The August 2024 HDB-loan tightening (LTV cut from 80% to 75% for HDB loans) and the December 2024 cooling measures certainly removed marginal demand at the top of the price band. But the resale slowdown is at least as much a supply story (BTO ramp + MOP wave) as a demand story (cooling measures + interest rates). Officials will be cautious about declaring victory; the gap to private prices will be the metric they watch closest.

Should I delay my HDB resale purchase?

If you have a flexible 12-month buying window, the case for patience has strengthened. If you need to transact in the next 90 days (e.g. for relocation, family reasons, or a coordinated upgrade), the headline change is small enough that timing arguments are second-order — price the unit you want and negotiate hard against current comparables. The bigger risk for buyers right now is overpaying the late-cycle list price, not underpaying ahead of a rebound.

How does this compare to the 2009 episode?

2009 was the global-financial-crisis quarter when HDB resale fell 0.8% as Singapore entered a technical recession. The current episode is much smaller in scale (−0.1%) and the macro backdrop is different — no recession, employment is solid, and interest rates are easing rather than spiking. So 2009 is a useful reference for “first decline after years of growth”, but not for the magnitude or duration of what may follow.

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Disclaimer

This piece is for general information only and does not constitute investment, financial, or property advice. Statistics are drawn from the Housing & Development Board Q1 2026 release of 24 April 2026 and the Urban Redevelopment Authority Q1 2026 release of the same date. Always verify current figures with the primary sources, and consult a licensed property professional before transacting.

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