Singapore Condo Sinking Fund and Maintenance Fee Guide 2026: What Every Owner Needs to Know

Singapore Condo Sinking Fund and Maintenance Fee Guide 2026: What Every Owner Needs to Know

When Singaporeans talk about the monthly cost of owning a condominium, they usually quote the mortgage repayment. What often gets overlooked — until the first few months after moving in — are the maintenance fee and sinking fund levy: two mandatory monthly contributions that every strata-titled condo owner must pay to the Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST). Together, these can add S$300 to S$1,200 per month to the cost of condo ownership, and failing to pay them has real legal consequences. This guide explains exactly what these charges are, how they are set, what they pay for, and how to plan for them when buying a condo in Singapore.

Quick Answer — Condo Fees at a Glance

  • Maintenance fee: monthly contribution for day-to-day estate running costs (security, cleaning, utilities, landscaping).
  • Sinking fund levy: monthly contribution to a reserve for major capital expenditure (lift replacement, roof waterproofing, facade repainting).
  • Both are collected by the MCST, the legal body representing all owners in a strata development.
  • Contributions are set at the Annual General Meeting (AGM) based on unit share value — larger units pay more.
  • Typical total condo fee (maintenance + sinking fund): S$300–S$1,200/month, depending on development size, age, and facilities.
  • The sinking fund must be maintained at a minimum of 10% of the preceding year’s management fund under the BMSMA.
  • Non-payment can result in MCST filing a court order against the owner. There is no grace period in law.
  • Governed by the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA), administered by the Commissioner of Buildings (COB) under HDB.

What Is the MCST and Who Sets the Fees?

Every strata-titled development in Singapore — from a two-unit walk-up to a 1,000-unit mega-project — is governed by a Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST). The MCST is a body corporate constituted automatically when the strata title plan is registered with the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). It has its own legal personality: it can sue, be sued, hold property, and enter contracts.

The MCST is governed by a Management Council, elected by subsidiary proprietors (owners) at the AGM. The Council sets annual budgets for two distinct funds: the Management Fund (covering day-to-day operations) and the Sinking Fund (covering capital expenditure). Individual owner contributions to each fund are proportional to their unit’s share value — an integer assigned to each lot at the time of development based on floor area and usage. A 1,500 sqft unit might have a share value of 10; a 600 sqft studio might have a share value of 5. Your monthly levy is therefore your unit’s share value divided by the total share values of all units in the development, multiplied by the total annual budget for that fund, divided by 12.

The legal framework governing all of this is the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA), Cap. 30C. Key rules include: the sinking fund must hold at least 10% of the management fund budget; the MCST must prepare audited accounts annually; and owners who are in arrears can have their contribution recovered as a civil debt.

Feature Management Fund Sinking Fund
Purpose Day-to-day operations Long-term capital expenditure reserve
Examples of use Security, cleaning, gardening, utilities Lift replacement, waterproofing, facade repainting
BMSMA minimum No statutory minimum set Must equal at least 10% of management fund budget
Planning horizon Annual (reset each year) Cumulative — builds over time; does not reset
Typical monthly levy S$200–S$1,200 (varies by unit size) S$30–S$200 (10–15% of management fee)
Recoverable on sale? No — stays with MCST No — stays with MCST

Maintenance Fee — What It Covers

The maintenance fee (sometimes called the management fee or conservancy charge) finances the Management Fund, which covers the development’s recurring, day-to-day operating costs. These typically include:

Security services (24-hour guardpost, patrols, CCTV monitoring), cleaning and housekeeping of common areas, landscaping and horticultural maintenance, utility bills for common area lighting and lifts, pool and gymnasium upkeep (water treatment, equipment servicing), insurance for the building fabric and common property, property management agent fees, and routine maintenance and minor repairs. For luxury developments with concierge services, valet parking, or hotel-grade amenities, the management fund also covers these premium services — which is why fees in such projects can reach S$900+ per month for a large unit.

Monthly condo maintenance fee range by flat size Singapore 2026
Figure 1: Indicative monthly maintenance fee range by unit size — Singapore private condominium 2026. Actual amounts vary by development age, facilities, and MCST budget.
Unit Size Typical Monthly Maintenance Fee Key Variables
Studio / 1-bed (<500–700 sqft) S$150–S$380 Older projects, fewer facilities: lower end
2-bedroom (700–1,000 sqft) S$300–S$520 Most common resale condo bracket
3-bedroom (1,000–1,400 sqft) S$420–S$700 City-fringe projects with full facilities
4-bed / large unit (>1,400 sqft) S$580–S$950 CCR luxury projects at high end
Penthouse / duplex (>2,000 sqft) S$900–S$1,500+ Top-tier city projects, concierge, valet

Sinking Fund — What It Covers and Why It Matters

The sinking fund is a long-term capital reserve. Where the management fund covers ongoing operating costs, the sinking fund accumulates money for expenditure that is infrequent but extremely expensive — the kind of expenditure that cannot be funded from a single year’s management budget without creating a financial crisis for the MCST. Examples include: full lift replacement (typically every 20–25 years, S$200,000–S$500,000 per lift), external facade repainting (every 5–7 years for projects with extensive external surfaces), roof waterproofing membrane replacement, major mechanical and electrical (M&E) infrastructure overhaul, and swimming pool resurfacing.

Singapore condo MCST sinking fund expenditure breakdown pie chart 2026
Figure 2: Typical sinking fund expenditure allocation by category — Singapore MCST 2026. Proportions vary significantly by development age and building system profile.

The BMSMA requires the sinking fund to be maintained at a minimum of 10% of the preceding year’s management fund amount. In practice, well-managed MCSTs maintain a sinking fund that is a multiple of this minimum — particularly for older developments approaching major capital expenditure cycles. A prudent MCST will commission a 5-year capital expenditure plan and set sinking fund contributions accordingly. Buyers of older condos (15+ years old) should always ask for the current sinking fund balance and the 5-year capex plan before purchasing, as a depleted sinking fund may result in a special levy — a one-time extraordinary contribution demanded of all owners to fund urgent repairs.

Worked Example — Monthly Fees for a 3-Bedroom Condo in Clementi

Mr and Mrs Tan are purchasing a 1,100 sqft 3-bedroom resale condominium in Clementi (District 5) for S$1,580,000. The development has 320 units, was built in 2008, and has a shared value allocation of 8 for their unit. Total share values across all units sum to 2,240. The MCST’s annual budgets are: Management Fund S$1,680,000; Sinking Fund S$210,000.

Item Calculation Monthly Amount
Management Fund contribution (8 ÷ 2,240) × S$1,680,000 ÷ 12 S$500
Sinking Fund contribution (8 ÷ 2,240) × S$210,000 ÷ 12 S$62.50
Total monthly MCST levy S$562.50

On top of this, the Tans’ estimated monthly mortgage repayment on a bank loan of S$1,185,000 (75% LTV) at 3.5% over 25 years is approximately S$5,926. Their total monthly ownership cost is therefore approximately S$6,488. When running TDSR calculations, the bank will factor in the maintenance fee as a financial commitment — check with your mortgage adviser on how this is treated.

Total Monthly Ownership Cost — Mortgage, Maintenance and Sinking Fund

Total monthly condo ownership cost Singapore 2026 — mortgage plus maintenance fee plus sinking fund
Figure 3: Estimated total monthly cost of owning a condo at three market segments — Singapore 2026. Mortgage assumes 75% LTV, 3.5% p.a., 25-year tenure.

What Happens If You Don’t Pay?

MCST contributions are not optional. Under Section 40 of the BMSMA, unpaid contributions (whether management fund or sinking fund) are a debt recoverable by the MCST in the same way as any civil debt. The MCST can file a Magistrate’s Court claim for outstanding amounts and, if judgment is obtained, apply for enforcement including attachment of the owner’s bank accounts or garnishment of rental income. The MCST also has the right to charge interest on late contributions at a rate fixed in its by-laws (commonly 10–12% per annum).

For landlords renting out their unit, unpaid MCST contributions remain the owner’s liability — not the tenant’s. If a seller has outstanding arrears at the point of property transfer, the arrears must be settled before the strata certificate of title is transferred. In practice, the conveyancing lawyers for both sides will conduct an MCST search to confirm that no arrears exist before completion.

Checking Sinking Fund Health Before You Buy

Before committing to a resale condo purchase, particularly in an older development, always request the following from the seller’s lawyers or directly from the MCST:

The current sinking fund balance (a healthy reserve is generally more than 3× the annual sinking fund budget); the 5-year capital expenditure plan (if available — well-run MCSTs have one); any pending special levies that have been voted on at an AGM but not yet collected; and the MCST financial statements for the past two years. A development with a healthy sinking fund and a documented capital plan is significantly lower risk than one that is underfunded and approaching major lift or roof works. In the latter case, you may be buying into an imminent S$10,000–S$50,000 special levy per unit.

What This Means for Condo Buyers in 2026

Condo maintenance fees have risen materially over the past three years, driven by higher labour costs for security and cleaning personnel, increased utility tariffs, and the generally higher cost of building materials for maintenance works. Industry data suggests average maintenance fees in mass-market condos have increased by 10–20% since 2022. For buyers underwriting their total monthly cost of ownership, this trend means that the maintenance fee is no longer a rounding error — it is a genuine budget line item that deserves the same scrutiny as the mortgage rate.

For investment buyers, maintenance fees directly affect net rental yield. A S$4,500/month rental on a unit with S$600/month in MCST fees represents a net operating yield (before mortgage) of about 3.2% on a S$1.5 million purchase — meaningful compression compared to the gross yield of 3.6%. Understanding and modelling the net yield after maintenance and sinking fund is essential for any investment analysis.

What Might Come Next

The COB has been increasingly attentive to poorly managed MCSTs. In 2024, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) and COB jointly issued updated guidance on sinking fund adequacy, pushing MCSTs toward more rigorous 5-year planning. There is also ongoing discussion in the property management industry about whether the statutory minimum sinking fund (10% of management fund) is adequate for older developments — some practitioners argue it should be raised to 15–20% for projects over 20 years old. If such a change were legislated, monthly sinking fund levies would rise accordingly. Buyers of properties approaching their 15–20 year mark should factor in this regulatory risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the management fee change from year to year?

Yes. The MCST Council proposes the annual budget at each AGM, and subsidiary proprietors vote on it. If costs have risen — for example, because security guard wages have increased or a landscaping contract was renewed at a higher rate — the management fee will be adjusted upward. Conversely, if the MCST finds cost savings, fees can decrease. In practice, fees rarely decrease; they tend to rise gradually with inflation. Buyers should ask for the last three years of AGM minutes to understand the fee trajectory of any development they are considering purchasing.

What is a special levy and when can the MCST charge one?

A special levy is an extraordinary, one-time contribution that the MCST can demand from all owners to fund urgent capital expenditure that cannot be covered by the existing sinking fund balance. Special levies require approval by a resolution at a general meeting (either an AGM or an Extraordinary General Meeting). They are most common in older developments where the sinking fund is under-provisioned and a major repair (such as lift replacement or waterproofing) is overdue. Special levies can range from S$5,000 to S$50,000 per unit depending on the size of the development and the scope of work. For this reason, checking the sinking fund balance before purchasing is critical.

Do maintenance fees apply to Executive Condominiums (ECs)?

Yes. Executive Condominiums are privately managed after the 10-year mark and are subject to the same BMSMA rules as private condominiums. During the initial period when HDB retains certain oversight, the management corporation is still constituted and maintenance fees apply from the date of key collection. EC buyers should budget for maintenance fees in the same way as any private condo buyer. EC maintenance fees are often somewhat lower than comparable private condos because ECs are typically built without the premium facilities found in luxury private developments, but the difference is not dramatic for mass-market comparisons.

Can landlords pass maintenance fees on to tenants?

In Singapore’s private residential tenancy market, there is no legal prohibition on a landlord including maintenance fees in the rent (i.e., charging a gross rent inclusive of the condo fee). In practice, however, most residential leases are structured on a net basis — the landlord pays the MCST contributions from the rental income and quotes the rent as an all-in figure. Some tenancy agreements explicitly state that maintenance fees are the landlord’s responsibility. Whatever the arrangement, the legal obligation to pay the MCST remains with the owner — the MCST cannot pursue the tenant for arrears.

How does share value affect my monthly levy?

Share value is a fixed integer assigned to each lot in the strata title plan at the time of development. It is broadly proportional to floor area but is also influenced by unit type and usage. A larger unit will have a higher share value and therefore pay a proportionally higher monthly levy. Share value cannot be changed by the MCST — it is set in the strata plan lodged with SLA and can only be altered by a unanimous resolution of all subsidiary proprietors followed by an amendment to the strata plan. Before buying, you can find out a unit’s share value by requesting the strata title plan from the developer, property agent, or MCST.

Is the sinking fund transferable when I sell?

No. The sinking fund belongs to the MCST, not to any individual owner. When you sell your unit, the accumulated sinking fund contributions you have made over the years remain with the MCST for the benefit of the development as a whole. You do not receive a refund of your share of the sinking fund balance on completion of sale. This is one reason why buying into a development with a healthy, well-funded sinking fund is in your interest even if you plan to sell within a few years — the sinking fund supports the quality of the common property, which in turn supports property values.

Where can I find out the exact maintenance fee before I buy?

For new launch condominiums, the developer is required to provide an estimated monthly maintenance fee in the sales documentation. For resale condos, the actual fee is best confirmed by requesting a copy of the latest MCST notice of contribution (which sets out the monthly levy per share value) or by asking the seller’s lawyer to conduct an MCST search. The MCST search will confirm the contribution rate, any arrears on the specific unit, and the sinking fund balance. This search is a standard step in any Singapore property conveyancing and costs approximately S$150–S$200.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or property management advice. MCST contribution rates, sinking fund balances, and BMSMA requirements are subject to change and vary by development. Always verify actual maintenance fees with the relevant MCST, confirm current statutory requirements with the Commissioner of Buildings (HDB Strata Management portal), and obtain independent legal and financial advice before purchasing any property. LovelyHomes is not a licensed property management, legal, or financial advisory firm.

Strata Living in Singapore 2026: MCST, Sinking Fund & Condo Management — Complete Guide

Strata Living in Singapore 2026: MCST, Sinking Fund & Condo Management — Complete Guide

Quick Answer: Strata Living Key Facts

  • Every private residential condominium and flat development in Singapore with 3 or more units is governed by the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA), administered by the Building and Construction Authority (BCA).
  • A Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST) is the legal body comprising all subsidiary proprietors (unit owners) that manages the common property.
  • All owners pay monthly contributions to two mandatory funds: the Management Fund (day-to-day operations) and the Sinking Fund (long-term capital work), proportional to their share value.
  • The Sinking Fund contribution must be at least 10% of the Management Fund contribution — BCA may require higher percentages for ageing developments.
  • A Management Council of 3–14 elected members runs the MCST between Annual General Meetings (AGMs). Owners are entitled to attend all AGMs and vote on motions.
  • Disputes between unit owners or between owners and the MCST are heard by the Strata Titles Board (STB) — a specialist tribunal under the Ministry of Law.
  • Singapore’s building stock is ageing: the BCA’s Building Condition Rating system and upcoming BMSMA amendments are expected to raise maintenance standards and minimum sinking fund requirements.

Introduction: What Is Strata Living?

When you purchase a private condominium unit or a strata-titled flat in Singapore, you own two things simultaneously: your individual unit (your strata lot), and a proportionate share in the development’s common property — the swimming pool, gymnasium, lobbies, lifts, car park, security systems, and landscaping that all residents share. This shared ownership model is called strata title, and it comes with both rights and obligations that every condo owner must understand.

The governance framework for strata living in Singapore is prescribed by the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA), first enacted in 2004 and significantly amended in 2017. The BMSMA creates a corporation — the MCST — the moment a strata development is registered. From that point, the MCST is the legal owner of the common property and has the power to levy charges, enter into contracts, and enforce by-laws.

With over 4,000 registered MCSTs in Singapore as of 2026 (BCA data), and tens of thousands of condo owners paying monthly contributions, understanding how strata management works is no longer optional knowledge — it is essential for anyone who owns, buys, or rents in a private residential development.

MCST fees management fund sinking fund strata Singapore 2026
Figure 1: MCST Fee Structure — Management Fund, Sinking Fund and Special Levy. Source: BMSMA; BCA guidelines.

The MCST: How It Is Formed and How It Works

A Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST) is automatically constituted when a strata development is registered at the Singapore Land Authority (SLA). The MCST number (e.g., MCST 1234) is assigned at registration. The MCST is a legal entity — it can sue, be sued, enter contracts, and own the common property in its own name.

The Management Council

The day-to-day governance of the MCST is delegated to a Management Council comprising between 3 and 14 subsidiary proprietors elected at the Annual General Meeting. The council must meet at least quarterly and is responsible for:

  • Approving budgets and setting the annual contribution schedule.
  • Engaging a licensed Managing Agent (MA) to handle day-to-day management (optional but near-universal in Singapore developments).
  • Enforcing by-laws relating to use of units and common property.
  • Commissioning periodic building condition inspections and major maintenance works.
  • Maintaining proper financial records (audited annually).

The council elects a Chairperson, Secretary and Treasurer from among its members. These office-holders have specific statutory duties — for example, the Secretary must convene the AGM within 15 months of the previous AGM and circulate financial statements at least 14 days before the meeting.

The Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM is the supreme decision-making body for the MCST. All subsidiary proprietors are entitled to attend and vote. Key decisions at the AGM include:

  • Adoption of annual financial statements.
  • Election of the Management Council.
  • Approval of the annual budget and contribution rates.
  • Passing special resolutions (e.g., amending by-laws; requires 90% majority by share value at a properly convened meeting).
  • Engaging or dismissing the Managing Agent.

Every subsidiary proprietor has voting power proportional to their share value — a number assigned at the development’s inception that reflects the relative size and value of each unit. Owners of larger, more valuable units typically have higher share values and thus greater voting weight.

Management Fund and Sinking Fund: How Much Do You Pay?

Every subsidiary proprietor must pay monthly contributions to two mandatory funds under the BMSMA:

Management Fund

The Management Fund covers the development’s recurring operational costs: security staff, cleaning, lift maintenance, utilities for common areas, insurance for common property, landscaping, and the Managing Agent’s fees. Monthly contributions are calculated proportionally based on each unit’s share value relative to the total share value of the development.

Sinking Fund

The Sinking Fund is a long-term capital reserve mandated by law. It must be used exclusively for capital expenditure — major items such as repainting the external facade, replacing lift systems, repairing waterproofing, or upgrading fire safety systems. Importantly, the Sinking Fund cannot be used for routine operational expenses.

The BMSMA requires the Sinking Fund contribution to be at least 10% of the Management Fund contribution. For older developments or those undergoing major upgrades, the BCA may direct a higher percentage. A well-funded sinking fund is a hallmark of a well-managed development — buyers should always request the latest sinking fund balance before purchasing a resale unit.

Contribution Rates: What to Expect

Development Type Typical Management Fund ($/mth) Typical Sinking Fund ($/mth) Notes
Walk-up / small condo (<20 units) $80–$150 $20–$40 Lower amenities; higher per-unit cost for shared items
Mid-size condo (50–150 units) $180–$280 $45–$80 Typical mass-market or OCR condo; pool, gym, BBQ pits
Large condo (150–500 units) $150–$250 $40–$70 Economies of scale; facilities-to-unit ratio diluted
Mega development (>500 units) $120–$200 $30–$55 Large-scale facilities; strong economies of scale
Luxury CCR condo $350–$600+ $90–$150+ Concierge services, premium finishes, higher utilities

Note: Contribution rates vary widely. Figures above are indicative only. Always check the actual budget prepared by your development’s MCST before purchase.

Indicative MCST management fund and sinking fund contributions by development size Singapore 2026
Figure 2: Indicative MCST Monthly Contributions by Development Size — Singapore 2026. Actual contributions depend on each development’s budget and approved rates. Figures are illustrative.

By-Laws: Rules Every Condo Resident Must Follow

Every MCST has a set of by-laws governing the use of units and common property. Singapore’s MCSTs operate under a two-tier by-law framework:

  • Prescribed by-laws — default rules set out in the Second Schedule to the BMSMA. These cover noise, pets, renovation works, use of common facilities, and prohibited conduct in common areas. They apply automatically to every MCST unless specifically modified.
  • Additional by-laws — rules adopted by the MCST at a general meeting (by special resolution) to supplement or modify the prescribed by-laws. Common additions include rules on airbnb-style short-term lettings, bicycle storage, deliveries, and smoking.

All by-laws are lodged with the SLA and are legally binding on all subsidiary proprietors, lessees (tenants), and occupants of the development. Breach of a by-law can result in a fine of up to $1,000 per offence, imposed after a Strata Titles Board order.

Renovation: MCST Approval Required

Renovation work that affects the common property, external facade, or structural elements requires MCST approval — in addition to any HDB or BCA permits where applicable. Even seemingly minor works — installing an additional air-conditioning unit, changing the main door design, or adding a glass panel to the balcony — may require written MCST consent. Always check with the Managing Agent before commencing any renovation.

Worked Example: Buying into a 200-Unit Condo — The True Monthly Cost

Mei Lin purchases a 2-bedroom, 800 sq ft unit in a 200-unit condominium in Bishan for $1.4M. The development was completed in 2012 and is 14 years old at the time of purchase.

Item Amount Notes
Mortgage (25 yr, 3.2% p.a. bank loan) ~$4,800/mth Assuming 75% LTV ($1.05M loan); illustrative rate
MCST Management Fund contribution ~$220/mth Based on unit share value; includes security, cleaning, utilities
MCST Sinking Fund contribution ~$55/mth Minimum 10% of Management Fund; may be higher given building age
Property tax (owner-occupied) ~$1,200/yr (~$100/mth) At 2026 progressive owner-occupier rates (IRAS)
Home contents insurance (est.) ~$25/mth General contents coverage for a mid-range condo unit
Total monthly housing cost ~$5,200/mth Excluding ad hoc special levies; excluding utilities

Note that for a 14-year-old building, the MCST may have already accumulated significant sinking fund reserves — or, conversely, may be facing a major capital cycle (external repainting, lift replacement, roof waterproofing) within the next 5–10 years. A well-managed MCST will present a 5-year capital expenditure plan at AGMs. Mei Lin should request the latest sinking fund balance, financial statements and AGM minutes before committing to purchase.

MCST governance structure management council subsidiary proprietors Singapore 2026
Figure 3: MCST Governance Structure — from the General Meeting (all owners) down through the elected Management Council. BCA provides statutory oversight.

Resolving Strata Disputes: The Strata Titles Board

When disputes arise — between subsidiary proprietors, between an owner and the MCST, or between owners and the managing agent — the first port of call is mediation through the Singapore Mediation Centre or the Community Disputes Resolution Tribunal. If mediation fails, the Strata Titles Board (STB) provides a specialist adjudicative forum.

Common STB applications in Singapore include:

  • Orders compelling the MCST to carry out repairs to common property.
  • Applications challenging invalid AGM proceedings or improperly passed resolutions.
  • Orders for recovery of unpaid contributions.
  • Applications to invalidate by-laws or compel the MCST to enforce by-laws against a neighbour.
  • Collective sale (en-bloc) consent orders (under the Land Titles (Strata) Act).

The STB has jurisdiction over disputes with a value up to $250,000. More complex or higher-value disputes are referred to the High Court. Legal fees in STB proceedings are generally lower than in court litigation, and many matters are resolved at the mediation stage without a full hearing.

Why Strata Management Standards Matter for Your Investment

Singapore’s private condo stock is maturing rapidly. The BCA’s Building Condition Rating (BCR) system — which evaluates developments on a 1–5 scale — shows that a significant proportion of condominiums completed in the 1990s and early 2000s are reaching critical maintenance thresholds. A poorly managed MCST with depleted sinking funds, deferred maintenance and acrimonious AGMs can materially reduce the market value and rental attractiveness of units within the development.

Conversely, a development with transparent governance, well-funded reserves, regular maintenance programmes and competent professional management commands a premium in both the resale and rental markets. Industry figures show that buyers increasingly request MCST financial statements and building condition reports as part of their due diligence — a trend that experienced conveyancing solicitors confirm has intensified since 2022.

The BCA’s Building Maintenance Masterplan, released in 2020 and updated in 2023, signals a regulatory direction towards mandatory 5-year building condition assessments and minimum sinking fund adequacy ratios for developments older than 20 years. These changes — if enacted — would directly affect contribution levels in older condominiums across Singapore.

What Might Change: BMSMA Amendments Expected

The Ministry of National Development (MND) and BCA have signalled further amendments to the BMSMA. Possible changes include: mandatory minimum sinking fund adequacy ratios (not just a 10% floor); reformed proxy voting rules to prevent vote concentration by a small number of owners; clearer rules on professional managing agent licensing; and improved transparency requirements for MCST financial reporting. These are under consultation as of June 2026 and have not yet been tabled in Parliament.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I refuse to pay MCST contributions if I am unhappy with the management?

No. MCST contributions are a statutory obligation under the BMSMA — they are not discretionary. An unhappy owner’s recourse is to attend the AGM, vote against the incumbent council, stand for election to the Management Council, or apply to the STB if contributions have been improperly levied. Withholding contributions exposes the owner to legal action by the MCST, which can recover arrears (including interest and legal costs) through the courts or, ultimately, through enforcement against the unit.

How do I check the sinking fund balance before buying a resale condo?

Ask your conveyancing solicitor to request an estoppel certificate from the MCST as part of the purchase process. The estoppel certificate confirms (among other things) the outstanding contribution arrears attributable to the unit and the current state of the sinking fund. You may also request the most recent audited financial statements from the MCST or the managing agent — these are public documents that any subsidiary proprietor (and prospective buyer through their solicitor) is entitled to inspect.

What is a “special levy” and when can the MCST charge one?

A special levy is a one-off (or short-term) additional contribution levied on all subsidiary proprietors to fund an urgent or unplanned capital expense — for example, emergency structural repairs after an inspection reveals a defect, or to top up a depleted sinking fund ahead of a major cyclical maintenance programme. Special levies must be approved by a general meeting resolution. Like regular contributions, they are legally enforceable and pro-rated by share value.

Do I need MCST approval to renovate my condo unit?

For works confined entirely within your unit that do not affect the common property, structural elements or external appearance, MCST approval is generally not required — though you should notify the MCST and comply with renovation hours. However, any works that involve hacking structural walls, changing external finishes, altering air-conditioning condensers on external ledges, or modifying plumbing that serves common risers typically require written MCST approval. Always check with the managing agent before engaging any contractor, as unauthorised works can result in a reinstatement order at your cost.

Can my MCST ban short-term rentals (e.g., Airbnb) in my development?

Yes. An MCST may pass a by-law at a general meeting (by special resolution — 90% majority by share value) prohibiting short-term residential letting within the development. Many Singapore condominiums have passed such by-laws since the URA’s 2017 crackdown on unlicensed short-term accommodation. Even without a specific MCST by-law, letting a private residential property for fewer than 3 consecutive months requires URA approval (which is rarely granted for residential properties). Owners found subletting without URA approval face fines of up to $200,000 under the Planning Act.

What happens to the MCST and my contributions if the development goes en-bloc?

When a collective sale (en-bloc) is approved by the STB and completed, the MCST is dissolved. Sinking fund balances are distributed to subsidiary proprietors pro-rata by share value at the point of dissolution, after settling outstanding liabilities. This is a significant financial benefit of a successful en-bloc — the sinking fund distribution is in addition to the sale proceeds. Management fund balances are also distributed in the same way. All contributions stop on the date the sale is completed.

How do share values work and who sets them?

Share values are assigned by the developer at the point of the strata development’s registration, based on a prescribed formula in the Land Titles (Strata) Act. The formula takes into account each unit’s floor area, its floor level, and its entitlement to car park lots and other exclusive facilities. Once assigned, share values cannot be changed except through a court order. They determine each owner’s contribution quantum, voting weight at general meetings, and entitlement to sinking fund distributions on dissolution.

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Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. MCST governance, contribution rates and by-laws vary between developments. Readers should obtain the specific MCST financial statements and by-laws for any development they are considering purchasing or already own a unit in. Official resources: Building and Construction Authority (BCA), Ministry of Law (STB), Singapore Land Authority (SLA). Information accurate as of 10 June 2026.

Strata Title and MCST in Singapore 2026: How Your Condo Is Actually Run

Strata Title and MCST in Singapore 2026: How Your Condo Is Actually Run

If you own a condominium, executive condo, or strata-titled landed home in Singapore, you do not really own a building — you own a slice of one, a “strata lot“. Everything outside that slice (the lift you ride to work, the pool you swim in, the lobby that smells faintly of Diptyque) is common property, and it is run by a body corporate called the Management Corporation Strata Title — the MCST.

Most owners pay their monthly maintenance fee, attend an AGM once in a blue moon, and never think about it again. Then a leak appears in the carpark, the lifts hit 25 years and need a S$2 million modernisation, or someone wants to put a new awning on their balcony — and suddenly the structure that runs your home becomes very real, very fast. This guide walks you through how strata title actually works in Singapore, what your MCST does, where your money goes, and the rights and obligations you signed up for the moment your conveyancing lawyer registered your title at the Singapore Land Authority.

Quick Answer — strata title and MCST in 30 seconds

  • You own a strata lot (your unit + accessory areas) plus a share value in common property.
  • The MCST manages common property under the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act (BMSMA 2004).
  • Your monthly bill funds two ring-fenced pots: a Management Fund (~75%) for day-to-day running and a Sinking Fund (~25%) for major capital works.
  • Decisions are made at AGMs by share-value vote — ordinary majority for routine matters, ≥75% special resolution for capital expenditure above S$200,000.
  • Indicative monthly fees: S$280-450 OCR mass-market, S$420-680 mid-tier RCR, S$780-1,400 luxury CCR, S$1,500+ ultra-luxury.
  • Renovations affecting common property require written MCST approval before BCA submission (BMSMA s.37).
  • Disputes above the council level go to the Strata Titles Boards — not the civil courts in the first instance.

What Is Strata Title and Why Does Singapore Use It?

Strata title is the legal mechanism that makes vertical, multi-owner property possible. When a developer builds a condominium, the Singapore Land Authority registers a strata plan dividing the building into individual lots (the units, plus accessory lots like balconies, planter boxes and air-con ledges) and common property (everything else). Each lot is a separate parcel of land in law, with its own title deed, its own share value, and its own set of rights to the common property.

Without strata title, only the developer or a single co-owner group could hold the title to a multi-storey building — you would be buying a long lease from them, not freehold ownership of a defined unit. Strata title gives you genuine real-estate ownership, the right to mortgage your lot independently, and the right to participate in governance of the building. The trade-off is that you must accept a co-ownership regime: a council elected by other owners, by-laws that bind you, and a duty to contribute to communal expenses whether you use the facilities or not.

Singapore’s strata regime sits inside the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act 2004 (BMSMA), supplemented by the Land Titles (Strata) Act 1967. Together they cover roughly 12,000 strata-titled developments and over 750,000 strata lots across the island as at the start of 2026. If you own anywhere in Singapore that is not landed-on-its-own-plot, you are almost certainly subject to BMSMA.

The Core Concept: Strata Lot, Common Property, Share Value

Three pieces of paper are issued when your conveyancing completes: the certificate of title for your strata lot, the strata plan for the development, and the schedule of share values. They define everything that follows.

Strata lot

Your physical unit, defined by the centre line of internal walls, the upper surface of the floor, and the under-side of the ceiling slab. Accessory lots include balconies, private enclosed spaces (PES), aircon ledges, and any car-park or storage spaces specifically allocated to your unit on the strata plan. You can renovate inside your strata lot largely as you wish — subject to BCA rules, MCST house rules, and structural integrity.

Common property

Everything outside your strata lot that is not somebody else’s lot. Lifts, lobbies, pools, gyms, gardens, common corridors, the external façade, the roof, the basement carpark, M&E plant rooms, and the structural slabs themselves. Common property is owned collectively by all subsidiary proprietors as tenants-in-common in the proportion of their share values, and managed by the MCST.

Share value

A whole number assigned to each lot in the strata plan that determines (a) your voting weight at general meetings and (b) your contribution to the common funds. Larger units get higher share values. A typical 1,000 sqft 3-bedroom unit might carry 10 share values; a 600 sqft 2-bedroom might carry 6. If your unit’s share value is 10 out of a building total of 5,000, you pay 0.2% of every common-fund expense and cast 10 votes (out of 5,000) on every resolution.

Indicative MCST Fees by Condo Segment (2026)

Before you commit to a unit, look at the monthly maintenance bill. It is the single biggest variable holding cost of ownership and varies enormously by segment. The figure below sets out what most owners actually pay across five common segments of the Singapore market in 2026.

Singapore MCST monthly maintenance fees by condo segment 2026 — OCR mid-tier RCR luxury CCR ultra-luxury mixed-use comparison
Figure 1. Typical monthly MCST fees by condo segment, 2026. Mid-tier RCR developments cluster around S$550/month; CCR luxury and integrated mixed-use developments routinely exceed S$1,000/month due to higher staffing, premium finishes and shared retail-component costs.
Segment Typical monthly fee (per unit) Sinking fund share Drivers of cost
Mass-market OCR S$280-450 ~25% Basic facilities, lower headcount, fewer lifts, surface carparks
Mid-tier RCR S$420-680 ~25% Full facilities suite, multi-deck basement carpark, larger landscape
Luxury CCR S$780-1,400 ~25-30% 24-hr concierge, valet, branded F&M for plant, smaller lot count to share costs
Strata landed / GCB enclave S$1,500-3,500 ~30% Few lots, large land area, perimeter security, private roads
Mixed-use integrated S$620-1,100 ~25% Shared cost-allocation with retail/commercial component, dual-MCST structures

One important nuance: integrated developments often have two MCSTs — one for the residential strata, one for the entire development. Your monthly bill is therefore the sum of both layers. Always ask the marketing agent for the dual-MCST cost breakdown before signing.

The Two Funds Inside Every MCST Bill

Your monthly maintenance fee is not a single pot of money. By law it splits into two ring-fenced trust accounts — the Management Fund (general operations) and the Sinking Fund (capital reserves) — and the council cannot move money freely between them.

Singapore MCST management fund vs sinking fund 75-25 split with AGM voting structure under BMSMA 2026
Figure 2. Where your MCST contribution actually goes. The 75/25 management/sinking split is convention, not law — specific developments may sit anywhere between 70/30 and 80/20 depending on age, plant complexity, and council appetite.

Management Fund

Pays for everything that recurs: cleaning contracts, security guarding, lift maintenance, pool chemistry, gym servicing, common-area utilities, landscaping, MCST insurance premiums, property tax on common property (yes — the building itself is taxed on the rental value of its common areas), council members’ honoraria, AGM venue, audit and legal fees, and the salary of the appointed managing agent. If the toilet roll runs out in the lobby, the management fund replaces it.

Sinking Fund

Funds large, infrequent capital works that would otherwise hit owners with sudden special levies. Lift modernisation (typically required at 25-30 years and costing S$120k-180k per lift), exterior repainting, re-roofing, façade re-cladding, pool retiling, M&E plant replacement, and statutory upgrades (e.g. lift safety upgrades mandated by BCA, fire-system retrofits required by SCDF). A well-run building should hold roughly 2-3 years of operating expenditure in the sinking fund at any time.

Why the wall between them matters

Section 38 of the BMSMA prohibits using management-fund money to pay for sinking-fund items, and vice versa. This protects future owners: if the council were free to spend the sinking fund on day-to-day items, you would arrive at the 25-year mark with no money for the lift modernisation, and the council would have to issue a one-off levy of, say, S$15,000 per unit to make up the gap. Always read the audited accounts before bidding on a resale unit — a depleted sinking fund is a hidden liability the buyer inherits.

Governance: Council, AGMs, Voting

The MCST is the body corporate; the council is its elected board. Owners (subsidiary proprietors) elect a council of 3 to 14 members at the AGM, each serving one-year terms. The council appoints office-bearers (chair, secretary, treasurer) and engages a managing agent — a licensed property-management firm that runs the day-to-day operation.

Annual General Meeting (AGM)

Must be held within 15 months of the previous one. Owners receive at least 14 days’ written notice with the agenda, audited accounts, the proposed annual budget, and any resolutions for vote. Standard agenda items: receive the audited accounts, fix the next year’s budget and contribution rates, elect the council, appoint the auditor, transact special resolutions.

Resolution thresholds

  • Ordinary resolution — simple majority of the share values voted. Used for routine business: budget approval, council elections, day-to-day spending decisions within budget.
  • Special resolution — ≥75% of share values voted in favour, with ≤25% against. Required for capital expenditure exceeding S$200,000 (s.40 BMSMA), variation of by-laws, and certain by-law-affecting matters.
  • 90% resolution — required to vary common property boundaries or transfer common property.
  • Unanimous resolution — required for any change that affects an individual lot owner’s title or rights.

Extraordinary General Meetings (EGM)

Called between AGMs for urgent matters — usually a special-resolution capital project (e.g. lift modernisation), an unplanned major repair, or to vote on a collective sale resolution. Owners holding ≥20% of share values can requisition an EGM directly.

Worked Example: What a S$1.5M OCR Condo Owner Pays in a Year

Numbers ground the abstract. Here is what a typical Singapore Citizen owner-occupier of a 1,000-sqft, 3-bedroom unit in a mid-tier OCR development worth S$1.5 million actually pays the MCST and IRAS over a year, assuming no leasehold-related issues and no rental income.

Worked example annual ownership cost S$1.5M Singapore OCR condo 2026 — MCST sinking property tax insurance special levy stack
Figure 3. Annual ownership cost stack for a S$1.5M OCR 3-bedroom condo unit, 2026. Maintenance and sinking-fund contributions dominate; property tax is comparatively small at this AV tier. A one-off lift modernisation special levy of S$600 is included to show how capital works can spike a single year’s bill.

Three observations stand out. First, the recurring carry on a S$1.5M unit is a real number — about S$5,000-7,000 per year, or 0.4-0.5% of unit value, before any one-off special levies. Second, the property-tax line at this AV tier is genuinely small; most of your tax burden was paid up front as BSD when you bought. Third, special levies are not in the monthly bill — they are voted at AGM/EGM and sit on top, often with 3-6 months’ notice. Plan a 1-2% capital reserve of unit value over a 10-year horizon if you want to avoid surprises.

Your Rights and Obligations as a Subsidiary Proprietor

Buying a strata lot binds you to a contract you may never have read — the by-laws of the development, set out in the First Schedule of the BMSMA (the prescribed by-laws) and in any additional by-laws passed by special resolution at the AGM. Key obligations every owner has:

  • Pay contributions on time — arrears attract interest (often 10% p.a.) and the MCST may register a charge on your title under s.34 BMSMA after 30 days, blocking refinancing or sale until paid.
  • Get written approval before altering common property — even private balcony tinting or aircon-ledge enclosures usually need MCST consent under s.37.
  • Comply with the by-laws on noise hours, pet keeping, short-let restrictions (typically minimum 3 months for residential), commercial use limitations, and exterior-facade alterations.
  • Allow access for the MCST or its contractors to perform repairs to common property running through your lot, on reasonable notice.

Conversely, the rights you can enforce:

  • Inspect the records — minutes, accounts, contracts. Owners are entitled to see anything in the corporate register on reasonable notice (a small fee may apply).
  • Stand for council, attend and vote at general meetings, and propose resolutions.
  • Requisition an EGM if you can muster 20% of share values.
  • Apply to the Strata Titles Boards if the council acts unreasonably, refuses by-law-approved alterations, or makes invalid decisions.

Disputes: The Strata Titles Boards

The Strata Titles Boards (STB) — constituted under the BMSMA and the Building Maintenance Act — are the specialised tribunal that hears strata disputes. Most owner-vs-MCST or owner-vs-owner strata disputes cannot go to the High Court in the first instance; they must come through the STB. Common applications:

  • Section 92 applications to compel the MCST to take a specific action (e.g. carry out a long-overdue repair).
  • Section 31 applications to vary or invalidate a by-law that is unreasonable or oppressive.
  • Collective-sale applications under the Land Titles (Strata) Act — the 80%/90% en-bloc consent threshold mechanic is litigated here.
  • Disputes over share values, accessory-lot rights, and exclusive-use grants over common property.

STB filing fees are modest (S$500-1,000 typically) and the process is faster and lighter than the High Court — expect 6-9 months from filing to determination on most matters.

What to Watch When Buying Resale

If you are buying a strata-titled resale, the MCST is going to be your landlord-of-sorts. A few things to inspect before exercising the OTP:

  1. Last 3 years of audited accounts. Look for a healthy sinking fund, no qualified audit opinions, and no pattern of outsized recurring deficits.
  2. Latest AGM minutes. Check for upcoming capital works that may trigger a special levy. Lift modernisation, repainting, and façade works in the pipeline will hit your wallet.
  3. Outstanding maintenance arrears on the lot. Ask your conveyancer to obtain a section 50 certificate from the MCST — arrears transfer with the lot.
  4. By-laws. Read the additional by-laws — some buildings restrict pet weight, prohibit short-lets entirely, ban exterior changes, or impose dress codes in common areas.
  5. Legal disputes. Ask whether the MCST is currently in any STB or High Court proceedings — ongoing disputes can mean a deteriorating building or financial drain.

How Strata Title Differs From Other Tenure Forms

Singapore’s strata regime is similar in principle to Hong Kong’s multi-storey buildings regime, the Australian strata title system (from which the term originates), and US condominium ownership — but the BMSMA framework is more prescriptive than most. By comparison:

  • vs HDB ownership — HDB flat owners are not subsidiary proprietors of an MCST. The HDB itself manages the estate. Town councils handle the day-to-day common-property functions, funded by service-and-conservancy charges (S&CC).
  • vs landed property — A standalone landed home on a freehold or 99-year leasehold parcel has no MCST and no shared common property. You bear all costs and decisions yourself, but you also have full autonomy.
  • vs strata-landed — Cluster housing and strata-landed enclaves do have an MCST, but with a much smaller lot count (often 30-100). Their fees are correspondingly higher per unit because fixed costs are spread thin.

What Might Come Next: Strata Reform Watch

BCA and the Ministry of National Development have been quietly consulting on a third tranche of BMSMA amendments since 2024. The most-talked-about proposals as at April 2026:

  • Mandatory minimum sinking-fund balance tied to building age (e.g. 18 months of opex once the building is over 10 years old). Aimed at preventing under-funded sinking funds.
  • Compulsory professional MCST chairs for buildings of over 500 lots, in response to dispute volumes from large integrated developments.
  • Streamlined STB process for routine repairs — a fast-track procedure to compel obvious common-property maintenance.
  • Stricter rules on short-term lets — aligning the BMSMA with URA’s 3-month minimum-let regime to give MCSTs cleaner enforcement teeth.

None of the above is yet law. We will update this guide when the next round of amendments is gazetted.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the MCST force me to renovate or repair my own unit?

Generally no — renovations inside your strata lot are your decision, subject to BCA structural rules and any by-law restrictions (e.g. flooring requirements above the second storey). The MCST can however require you to remedy a condition inside your lot that is causing damage to common property or to neighbouring lots — a leaking bathroom waterproofing membrane, for example, where moisture is reaching the unit below. If you fail to act, the MCST can perform the works and charge them back to your lot under s.41 BMSMA.

What happens if the council goes broke?

If the management fund runs out, the MCST cannot pay contractors or salaries. The council must call an EGM to pass a special levy (a one-off contribution from all owners pro-rata to share value) to recapitalise. Repeated insolvency is a sign of either chronic under-budgeting or council misconduct — in extreme cases the STB can appoint an interim manager to run the MCST under s.85.

Can I rent out my parking space to non-residents?

It depends on whether your parking lot is an accessory lot, an exclusive-use common-property right, or a transient-use right. Accessory lots can typically be sublet to anyone in some buildings but most modern by-laws restrict carpark sub-letting to residents of the development only for security reasons. Always check the additional by-laws and house rules — sub-letting to non-residents in breach of by-laws is enforceable by the STB.

How are votes weighted — one-lot-one-vote or by share value?

Share-value votes apply by default. So a penthouse with a share value of 24 has roughly 4 times the voting weight of a 1-bedroom unit with a share value of 6. This is intentional: larger units pay more to the common funds and bear more of the financial impact of decisions, so they vote in proportion. Some routine matters (e.g. council elections) may also be conducted on a one-vote-per-lot basis under the BMSMA’s voting rules.

If I am buying a brand-new condo, when does the MCST actually come into existence?

The MCST is constituted automatically on the date the strata-title plan is registered with the SLA. In practice, the developer manages the building from TOP onwards under an “interim period” with an interim management committee (often staffed by the developer and a few early-mover owners). The first AGM — where the permanent council is elected — must be held within 13 months of the first lot being conveyed (s.27 BMSMA). Until then, your monthly fee is charged at developer-set rates, which may be re-budgeted up or down at the first AGM.

Do I need MCST consent for a kitchen renovation?

If the renovation is purely cosmetic and stays within your lot — new countertops, replacement appliances, repainting — you usually only need to notify the managing agent and pay any renovation deposit / debris fee under house rules. If you are touching any wet area, structural element, exterior, or anything that could affect a neighbouring lot or common property, you need written MCST approval before submitting plans to BCA. Most buildings require approved-contractor lists, work-hour windows (typically 9am-6pm Monday-Saturday, no Sundays/public holidays), and a renovation deposit of S$1,000-3,000.

How do collective sales fit into the strata regime?

Collective sale (en-bloc) is the process by which the MCST as a whole sells the entire development to a redeveloper, with proceeds distributed among lot owners. Under the Land Titles (Strata) Act, an 80% share-value-and-floor-area consent threshold applies to developments over 10 years old (90% for younger ones). The STB hears applications and may approve, vary, or reject the sale. Successful collective sales effectively dissolve the MCST on completion. We cover the process in detail in our En-Bloc Sale Process Guide.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. The Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act, the Land Titles (Strata) Act, and associated subsidiary legislation are the authoritative sources of strata-title law in Singapore and have been amended several times since 2004. Always verify the current position with the Building and Construction Authority, the Singapore Land Authority, the Ministry of Law, and the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore — and consult a licensed conveyancing or strata-management lawyer before acting on any specific matter.

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