Property investment in Singapore — a framework for sustainable returns
Successful property investing in Singapore starts with holding power, not just rental yield or capital appreciation. Before buying an investment property, evaluate your cash flow buffer, ABSD costs, financing structure, and exit strategy. The best investment is the one you can hold through a market downturn without forced selling.
The HOME THEORY investment framework
We evaluate every investment opportunity through these lenses:
- Holding power — can you service the mortgage for 6-12 months without a tenant?
- Rental yield — gross yield of 3-4% is typical for condos; micro-analysis matters
- Capital appreciation potential — location, upcoming infrastructure, supply constraints
- ABSD impact — additional stamp duty can significantly reduce net returns
- Exit liquidity — how quickly can you sell in a downturn?
Key metrics to evaluate
| Metric | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Gross rental yield | 3–4% for mass-market condos; lower for luxury |
| Net rental yield | 2–3% after maintenance, property tax, management fees |
| Cash-on-cash return | 3–6% depending on financing structure |
| Capital appreciation (annualised) | 2–4% historically for mass-market |
| Break-even occupancy rate | 80–85% typically needed to cover costs |
Common investment mistakes
- Over-leveraging to maximise returns — ignores the risk of vacancy or rate hikes
- Buying without ABSD calculation — S$1M property costs S$200K+ extra for second property
- Ignoring en-bloc risk — older properties may be harder to sell collectively
- Not factoring in renovation cycles — every 10-15 years, expect S$30-50K in refurbishment
- Focusing only on capital appreciation — rental yield covers carrying costs
[Photo]
Jeffrey Chan
Singapore Property Advisor — HOME THEORY
CEA Reg: R006403G | Huttons Asia Pte Ltd