By Jermaine Koh
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If you’ve only got a minute:
- Low interest rates mean lower monthly repayments, but high property prices mean affordability and long-term risk still matter more than timing the rate cycle.
- Buying now makes sense mainly for buyers with stable income, long-term plans and the ability to cope if rates rise or income falls.
- The smartest purchases are those that remain comfortable under stress, not just attractive under today’s low-rate conditions.
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It is the classic Singapore property dilemma. Interest rates are falling, buyers are returning to show flats, and optimism is quietly building again. Yet the answer to whether you should buy now is not a simple yes or no.
While lower interest rates are a powerful motivator, they are only one piece of a far more complex puzzle. Buying property in Singapore today involves significant trade-offs. On one hand, cheaper borrowing offers meaningful savings on monthly repayments. On the other, property prices remain at or near record highs, raising legitimate concerns around affordability and long-term flexibility.
Ultimately, whether it is wise to enter the market depends less on timing the rate cycle, and more on personal financial stability, long-term goals and risk appetite.

Why buying now can makes sense
Lower borrowing costs
Mortgage rates have fallen meaningfully from recent highs. By late 2025 and early 2026, home loan packages have been offered in the range of roughly 1.4% to 1.8%, compared with rates of over 3% faced by many borrowers in 2024.
For buyers, this translates into significantly lower monthly repayments and improved cash flow. Over a typical loan tenure, even a small reduction in interest rates can result in substantial savings, making ownership more manageable for households with stable incomes.
Bank loans are now cheaper than HDB loan
Many bank loans are currently prices below the HDB concessionary loan rate of 2.6% p.a., making bank financing an attractive option for eligible buyers.
Find out more: POSB HDB Loan - Smarter Rates with Flexible Options
For example, on a S$500,000 loan, a bank rate of around 1.8% could reduce monthly repayments by approximately S$200 compared with a HDB loan, offering meaningful near-term savings.
However, buyers should note that once a bank loan is chosen for a HDB flat, switching back to the HDB concessionary loan is generally not allowed. If bank rates rise above 2.6% in the future, borrowers cannot revert to the HDB loan and can only refinance within the bank system.
Choosing a bank loan therefore trades long-term rate certainty for lower costs today.

Capital appreciation still plays a role
Singapore’s property market has historically been resilient, supported by land scarcity, population growth and sustained housing demand. While rapid price growth appears unlikely, analysts project private home prices to rise modestly by around 3% to 4% in 2026.
This suggests that waiting does not necessarily improve affordability. In a market characterised by gradual price increases, delaying a purchase can mean facing a higher base price later, even if borrowing conditions remain favourable.
Strong structural demand provides a price floor
Beyond interest rates, Singapore’s property market is supported by steady domestic demand. An estimated 13,000 to 14,000 HDB flats are expected to reach their Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) in 2026, expanding the pool of potential upgraders, while ongoing household formation (20,000 new households forming annually) and local owner-occupier demand help underpin prices even when sentiment softens.

Why buying now can be risky
Record-high prices and affordability risk
Property prices remain near historical peaks. Some analysts argue prices would need to fall by 20% to 30% to become genuinely attractive again on a long-term affordability basis.
Buying an expensive asset simply because financing is cheap can be risky. Low rates reduce monthly pain, but they also encourage buyers to take on larger loan amounts. If rates rise later, or if income weakens, the financial strain can surface quickly.
TDSR limits still apply, regardless of low rates
Government cooling measures remain firmly in place, particularly the Total Debt Servicing Ratio cap of 55% of gross monthly income. This ensures borrowers remain prudent even when interest rates are low.
For example, a buyer earning S$8,000 a month may assume that falling mortgage rates allow them to afford a much more expensive home. However, under TDSR rules, total monthly debt obligations cannot exceed S$4,400. Even if a bank offers a headline mortgage rate of 1.6%, the loan is typically assessed using a higher stress-tested rate, not the promotional one.
As a result, the approved loan amount may be far lower than expected, especially if the buyer has existing car loans or other liability. In practice, low rates help reduce repayments, but they do not dramatically expand borrowing power.
Economic headwinds can test household resilience
Looking ahead, Singapore’s economic growth could moderate in 2026 amid global uncertainties. For households with variable income, this poses a risk.
Consider a dual-income household, where one partner works in a cyclical industry such as technology or finance. A bonus cut or job transition could reduce household income, making a large mortgage harder to service even if interest rates remain low.
This highlights the importance of assessing affordability not just under ideal conditions, but under less comfortable scenarios.
The risk of future rate hikes
Interest rate cycles are not permanent. Buyers should be prepared for the possibility that rates rise over the course of their loan.
For instance, a homeowner with a S$1 million mortgage at 1.8% may pay around S$3,600 a month on a 30-year tenure. If rates increase to 3% in a future tightening cycle, monthly repayments could rise by more than S$600. While this may be manageable for some, it can affect savings, lifestyle choices/discretionary spending and financial stability.

Bottom line
For Singaporeans buying for long-term owner occupation, have stable income and sufficient buffers, buying now can be a calculated move. Lower interest rates offer a genuine opportunity to secure manageable repayments in a structurally resilient market.
However, this is not a decision to rush. Acting strategically, focusing on long-term stability and accounting for potential risks matter far more than reacting to today’s low rates.
In Singapore’s property market, wisdom lies in not timing the cycle perfectly, but in choosing a purchase that still makes sense when conditions inevitably change.






