Understanding Singapore Real Estate… Explained for Newbies | SG Property 101

Here’s a Real Estate beginner crash course to understand how real estate works in Singapore. The basics, what you need to consider before buying a property and the ridiculous numbers behind owning them. Enjoy!

SG real estate is separated into public housing and private housing. 80% of the entire Singapore population live in public housing called HDB flats or Executive Condominiums and the other 20% live in private housing which could mean a condominium or a landed home like clustered homes, terraces, semi-detached and bungalow.

All public housing has a leasehold of 99 years while private housing has 3 leaseholds: 99-years, 999-years and freehold.

To qualify for a BTO (new construction flat from HDB)… you have to be a Singaporean citizen or your spouse has to be one and you’ll have to apply together with your fiancé. Both of your combined salary can’t exceed the income ceiling of $7000-$14000 SGD a month depending on the size of the flat you’re applying for. If you want to get an HDB flat as a single person, you have to wait until you’re 35.

How much you have to pay for real estate in Singapore are determined by 3 main factors:
1. Public housing or private housing?
2. Tenure: freehold or leasehold?
3. Location, location & location!

You’ll also have to pay closing costs also known as conveyance fees. If you’re buying a new HDB flat, you can use the HDB legal fee calculator to calculate the fees you’ll have to pay. It’s not too bad compared to what you have to pay buying private housing.

If you’re a Singaporean buying a private property, for your first property you’ll have to pay a legal service fee called stamp duty of about 1-3% if you’re buying a property below $1m and if you’re buying a property over $1m, you’ll have to pay 4% on the remaining amount exceeding $1m of your property price.

If you’re not a citizen but you are a Singapore permanent resident or PR, you have to pay an additional 5% on your first property in Singapore and an additional 15% if you’re buying your second and subsequent property.

If you’re a foreigner, you can’t purchase HDBs in Singapore but you can purchase both freehold and leasehold private condos and you just need to pay an Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) of… wait for it… 20%! – It doesn’t matter if it’s your first, 4th or 10th property, you just have to pay the extra 20% each and every time.

The main reason why the stamp duties are so high for foreigners is to deter foreign investors from buying up too much real estate in Singapore and not having enough inventory for Singaporeans which would then drive the real estate prices even higher and making them less affordable.

Despite it all, I still believe that owning real estate is one of the best wealth generators out there. It allows you to take advantage of leverage and having someone else pay your debt for you, if you take on a mortgage. And after 30 years you’ll be generating 100% passive income… even while you sleep. This is how you can retire comfortably.

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For business inquiries or one-on-one business consulting, real estate investing, or personal coaching, hit me up at moneywitheumi@gmail.com

#Singapore #SingaporeRealEstate #PropertyGuru

10 件のコメント

  • from Indonesia. Thanks for your rich-knowledge video. Even we are different countries with different rule of the game on real estate investment. But the final target is the same: passive income.

  • Hello i am from Myanmar i would like to work in Singapore as a real estate sales and marketing currently I am working in Myanmar Real Estate sales and marketing , if i want to work in Singapore what should I need to prepare.

  • Very informative video, will binge on more of your content. You just earned yourself a subscriber 🙂

  • What if 1 person was a foreigner and spouse was Singaporean, Both apply for same BTO, will foreign 20% fee still apply ?

  • Yea if 90% own their house it sounds like a horrible idea to be a landlord there. In America the population is bigger obviously, and ~66% of the people own.

  • one of my client’s billing addresses is in Sentosa and i looked up his address and it is 20M usd for a small condo. This explains a lot. Also that is is an accounting executive for a top data company lol

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