Debt Consolidation in Singapore
Combine multiple high-interest debts into one manageable monthly repayment — and potentially pay less interest.
What is a Debt Consolidation Plan?
A Debt Consolidation Plan (DCP) is a MAS-mandated product offered by participating banks that allows you to combine all your unsecured credit facilities — credit cards, personal loans, credit lines, overdrafts — into a single structured loan at a lower interest rate. DCPs were introduced to help over-indebted consumers regain financial control.
Credit card balances
Personal loan debts
Credit lines & overdrafts
Structured repayment plan
One monthly payment
Consolidate credit cards, personal loans, and credit lines into a single structured repayment.
Lower interest rate
DCP rates are typically lower than credit card rates (25–28% p.a.), reducing your total interest cost.
Fixed tenure
Clear repayment schedule of 1–10 years gives you a definite debt-free date.
Preserves credit score
Timely DCP repayments demonstrate responsible credit behaviour and help rebuild your score.
MAS-approved banks
DCPs are offered exclusively by MAS-approved financial institutions — no unlicensed lenders.
Free assessment
Use Lendela's tool to check your DCP eligibility and compare offers from participating banks.
DCP Eligibility Criteria
MAS sets specific eligibility thresholds for the Debt Consolidation Plan to target borrowers who are genuinely over-indebted.
- Singapore Citizens, Permanent Residents, or foreigners residing in Singapore
- Annual income between S$20,000 and S$120,000
- Total outstanding unsecured debt exceeds 12× your monthly income
- Your unsecured credit facilities must be with at least 2 financial institutions
- Not currently bankrupt or under a Debt Repayment Scheme (DRS)
- Minimum age 21 years old
If your income exceeds S$120,000 or your assets exceed S$2 million, you may not be eligible for the MAS DCP product — but alternative debt restructuring options may be available.
How a DCP Works, Step by Step
- Apply to a participating bank. The bank will assess your eligibility, run a credit check, and calculate your consolidated loan amount.
- The bank pays off your existing creditors. Once approved, the DCP bank directly settles all your outstanding balances with other lenders.
- You make one monthly repayment to the DCP bank at the agreed interest rate and tenure (1–10 years).
- Your credit cards are cancelled. All unsecured credit facilities are closed, except one card capped at 1× monthly income.
- Completion. At the end of the tenure, all consolidated debts are cleared.
What Happens to Your Credit Cards?
This restriction is intentional — it prevents you from accumulating new debt while repaying the DCP. For most applicants, this is a feature, not a drawback: removing access to high-interest revolving credit is what makes the plan effective.
Your CBS credit report will show the DCP as an active instalment loan. Consistent, on-time repayments improve your credit score over time.
DCP Interest Rates & Fees
Additional costs to be aware of:
- Processing fee: typically 1–3% of the consolidated loan amount
- Early repayment penalty: some banks charge a fee if you repay the DCP before tenure ends
- Disbursement fee: charged for each repayment made to your existing creditors
When comparing DCP offers across banks, use the EIR and total repayment amount as your primary benchmarks.
Can You Refinance an Existing DCP?
Things to consider before refinancing your DCP:
- Check if your current DCP has an early repayment penalty — this may offset the interest savings
- Refinancing resets the tenure clock; you may end up paying interest for longer even if the rate is lower
- Calculate the total repayment amount (not just monthly instalment) to confirm you are genuinely saving
Lendela can run a comparison for your specific outstanding balance and remaining tenure.