Home Loans Made Clear
Compare mortgage rates, understand CPF rules, and find the right home loan before you commit.
What is a Home Loan?
A home loan (or mortgage) is a secured loan used to purchase or refinance a residential property. The property serves as collateral. In Singapore, home loans are offered by banks and — for HDB flats — the Housing & Development Board (HDB). Repayment periods range from 5 to 30 years, and the interest structure can be fixed, floating, or a combination of both.
Buying an HDB flat
Private condo or landed
Refinancing an existing loan
In-principle approval (IPA)
Fixed vs floating
We explain both structures clearly so you can choose based on your risk appetite and financial timeline.
CPF integration
Understand how CPF OA funds can be used for down payment and monthly instalments.
HDB & private property
Compare loans for HDB flats, condominiums, and landed properties side-by-side.
Refinancing analysis
Already have a home loan? See if refinancing to a new lender can reduce your monthly payments.
In-principle approval
Get an IPA before you make an offer — so you know exactly what you can afford.
TDSR & ABSD guidance
Our advisers walk you through TDSR, LTV limits, ABSD, and all the rules that affect your purchase.
Eligibility & Key Limits
Singapore home loan eligibility is governed by MAS regulations covering income, existing debt, and property type.
- Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR): all monthly debt obligations ≤ 55% of gross monthly income
- Loan-to-Value (LTV): up to 75% for first bank loan; 55% for second property
- HDB loans: up to 80% LTV for eligible buyers using HDB concessionary rate
- Minimum 5% cash down payment required; balance can be funded via CPF OA
- Minimum age 21; maximum loan tenure typically ends at age 65–75 depending on lender
- Additional Buyer Stamp Duty (ABSD) may apply for non-first-time buyers and foreigners
CPF usage for home loans is subject to CPF Board rules and Valuation Limit (VL) restrictions. Check with your CPF agent before assuming full CPF coverage.
Fixed vs Floating Rate: Which Should You Choose?
Floating rate packages are pegged to a benchmark — historically SIBOR/SOR, and now SORA (Singapore Overnight Rate Average) following MAS's transition. Floating rates move with market conditions: you benefit when rates fall, but face higher payments when they rise.
How to decide: If you value certainty and are on a tight budget, a fixed rate provides stability. If you expect rates to fall, or plan to refinance after the lock-in period, a floating rate may offer long-term savings.
Using CPF for Your Home Loan
- The down payment (after the mandatory 5% cash portion)
- Monthly mortgage instalments
- Stamp duties and legal fees
However, CPF usage is capped at the Valuation Limit (VL) — the lower of the purchase price or market valuation. Beyond the VL, you must continue repayments in cash. The Withdrawal Limit (WL) is 120% of the VL.
When you sell the property, CPF funds used (plus accrued interest at 2.5% p.a.) must be refunded to your CPF account before you pocket any proceeds.
When to Refinance Your Home Loan
- End of the lock-in period — refinancing during lock-in typically incurs a 1.5% cancellation fee
- When market rates have dropped significantly below your current rate
- When your credit profile has improved — better score = better rate
A general rule: refinancing is worth exploring if you can save at least 0.3–0.5% p.a. in interest, after accounting for legal fees (typically S$1,800–S$2,500) and valuation fees. Lendela's mortgage advisers can run the numbers for your specific loan.
Understanding ABSD
- Singapore Citizens buying their first residential property: 0% ABSD
- Singapore Citizens buying their second property: 20% ABSD
- Singapore Citizens buying their third and subsequent: 30% ABSD
- Singapore PRs buying their first property: 5% ABSD
- Foreigners buying any residential property: 60% ABSD
ABSD is calculated on the purchase price or market value, whichever is higher. It must be paid within 14 days of signing the Sale & Purchase Agreement.