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Singapore’s new launch condo market in 2026 sits at a genuine inflection point. Interest rates have eased from their 2023–2024 peaks, expatriate headcounts are recovering across financial services, tech and biomedical clusters, and a fresh wave of projects — spanning OCR, RCR and CCR — is competing for investor dollars. The central question every serious buyer is asking: should I prioritise rental yield or capital appreciation? The honest answer is that the best investments of 2026 will deliver both — but only if you buy the right unit, in the right district, at the right quantum. This guide ranks the top new launch opportunities by investment potential, using indicative yield data, district-level tenant demand and real-world expatriate preferences. All figures are indicative and subject to market conditions. No returns are guaranteed.
CEA Compliance Disclaimer: Alvin Tan is a licensed real estate salesperson registered with the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA), Singapore. All prices, PSF figures, rental yields and capital appreciation references in this article are indicative only and based on publicly available URA caveats, market research and general industry data at the time of writing. They are subject to change without notice and do not constitute a guarantee, projection or promise of returns. Property investment involves risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. You should conduct your own due diligence and seek independent financial advice before making any investment decision. TDSR and ABSD regulations apply and are subject to revision by the relevant authorities.
How to Evaluate New Launch Condo Investment Yield
Before ranking projects, it pays to understand exactly what yield means in the Singapore context — and why the gross number you see in marketing brochures rarely reflects your actual return.
Gross Yield vs Net Yield
Gross yield is simply annual rental income divided by purchase price, expressed as a percentage. A $2 million condo renting at $5,000/month produces a gross yield of 3.0%. That sounds reasonable by Singapore standards — but gross yield ignores property tax (typically 10–20% of annual value for non-owner-occupied units), maintenance fees (often $400–$700/month for larger condos), agent commissions, vacancy periods and income tax on rental income for non-residents.
Net yield, after deducting these costs, typically runs 0.5–1.0 percentage points below gross. A project advertised at 3.5% gross may deliver just 2.5–2.8% net — still competitive versus Singapore REITs or fixed deposits, but the gap matters when you are servicing a mortgage under TDSR constraints.
Capital Appreciation vs Income Play
Singapore’s CCR (Core Central Region — Districts 1, 2, 6, 9, 10, 11) has historically delivered stronger capital appreciation but lower rental yields, as ultra-premium units command very high PSF at entry. The RCR (Rest of Central Region — Districts 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15) offers a sweet spot: meaningful appreciation potential near the city fringe, with healthier rental yields driven by mid-market expatriate demand. The OCR (Outside Central Region — Districts 16–28) typically delivers the strongest gross yields but more modest capital growth, as price ceilings are constrained by HDB upgrader psychology and public transport access.
For 2026, the smartest investment thesis blends both: projects in high-connectivity RCR or near-CCR locations, priced at a quantum accessible to the broadest tenant pool (sub-$5,000/month for 1-bedders; sub-$8,000/month for 2-bedders), with genuine scarcity of new supply in the immediate vicinity. ABSD considerations remain critical — foreigners face a 60% stamp duty, making Singapore residential property predominantly a Singapore PR and citizen play at scale.
Top Districts for Rental Yield in 2026
Not all districts perform equally. Here is an indicative ranking of key districts by tenant demand, vacancy risk and indicative gross yield range for new launch condos, based on current market data:
| District | Location | Tenant Profile | Indicative Gross Yield | Vacancy Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| D15 (Katong / Siglap) | RCR | Expat families, education belt | 3.2–3.8% | Low |
| D19 (Hougang / Serangoon) | OCR | Locals, PRs, young professionals | 3.5–4.2% | Low–Medium |
| D26 (Lentor / Yishun) | OCR | HDB upgraders, young families | 3.6–4.3% | Medium |
| D9 (Orchard / River Valley) | CCR | Senior expats, corporate lets | 2.5–3.2% | Low |
| D10 (Bukit Timah) | CCR | Expat families, school proximity | 2.6–3.3% | Low |
| D5 (Pasir Panjang / West Coast) | RCR | NUS academics, one-north tech) | 3.0–3.7% | Low–Medium |
| D21 (Clementi / Buona Vista) | RCR/OCR | University cluster, professionals | 3.1–3.6% | Low |
| D1/D2 (CBD / Tanjong Pagar) | CCR | Banking, finance, short-stay | 2.8–3.4% | Low–Medium |
All yield figures are indicative and subject to market conditions. Individual unit performance will vary based on floor, facing, quantum and lease commencement timing.
2026 New Launch Projects Ranked by Investment Potential
The following table covers six major new launch projects launching or selling through 2026. PSF figures reflect indicative average transacted or guide prices; yields are indicative gross estimates based on comparable submarket rents. Ratings are the author’s independent assessment and do not constitute financial advice.
| Project | District | Region | Indicative Avg PSF | Indicative Gross Yield | Investment Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emerald of Katong | D15 | RCR | ~$2,700–$2,900 | ~3.4–3.7% | ✅ BUY |
| Chuan Grove | D19 | OCR | ~$2,200–$2,450 | ~3.6–4.0% | ✅ BUY |
| Lentor Central Residences | D26 | OCR | ~$2,000–$2,200 | ~3.7–4.2% | 👀 WATCH |
| Hudson Place | D5 | RCR | ~$2,400–$2,650 | ~3.1–3.5% | ✅ BUY |
| Newport Residences | D2 | CCR | ~$3,200–$3,600 | ~2.8–3.2% | 👀 WATCH |
| Skye Holland | D10 | CCR | ~$3,000–$3,400 | ~2.7–3.1% | ⏸ SKIP (yield) |
Indicative only. PSF and yield estimates are based on publicly available data and submarket rental comparables at time of writing. Not a solicitation to buy or sell. Subject to change without notice.
Why Emerald of Katong Leads the Rankings
D15 has one of Singapore’s most durable expatriate tenant bases — the international school corridor (Tao Nan, CHIJ Katong, Canadian International School nearby) combined with Parkway Parade’s amenities and proximity to the ECP makes it perennially attractive to expat families on corporate housing allowances. Emerald of Katong’s location and brand positioning should sustain rental demand through the typical three-to-five year holding period. The buy rating here is not about yield alone — it is the convergence of yield, capital defensiveness and liquidity at resale.
Why Skye Holland Gets a Skip Rating for Yield
Skye Holland is a fine product in a prestigious address. But for pure yield investors, D10 CCR pricing at $3,000+ PSF compresses rental returns significantly. A $3.5 million unit needs to rent at roughly $8,000–$9,000/month to hit 2.7–3.1% gross — achievable but competitive, with numerous luxury alternatives in the vicinity. If your mandate is capital preservation and appreciation for a high-net-worth portfolio, Skye Holland belongs on a different list. For yield-focused investors, the OCR and RCR entries deliver meaningfully better income returns per dollar deployed.
1-Bedroom vs 2-Bedroom: Which is Better for Yield in 2026?
This is the question every investor asks — and the answer has shifted in 2026 compared to the 2019–2022 era when 1-bedders were the near-universal yield play.
The Case for 1-Bedrooms
Lower absolute quantum means lower ABSD exposure for investors buying multiple units. A $1.2–1.5 million 1-bedder in D15 or D19 can generate a gross yield of 3.8–4.5% if rented to a single professional or couple at $3,800–$4,500/month. Entry is accessible, and liquidity at resale is strong — there is a broad buyer pool (owner-occupiers, other investors, PRs) for sub-$1.5 million units. The downside: increasing competition. Many 2026 launches have concentrated their 1-bedder allocation toward investors, resulting in higher per-unit competition for the same tenant pool in some submarkets.
The Case for 2-Bedrooms
The 2026 expatriate tenant market has shifted. Post-pandemic, multinational employers are returning staff to Singapore with family units rather than solo placements. A well-located 2-bedder (750–900 sqft) in D15, D5 or D19 priced at $1.8–2.2 million can attract a corporate let at $5,500–$7,000/month — producing a gross yield competitive with 1-bedders, but with a more stable, longer-tenancy tenant profile. Families sign 2-year leases; single professionals often move after one. For investors who prefer lower vacancy risk over maximising headline yield percentage, the 2-bedroom in 2026 is often the smarter pick.
Verdict: In high-expat districts (D15, D5, D10), favour the 2-bedroom for stability. In mass-market OCR districts (D19, D26), the 1-bedroom still delivers superior yield percentages. Match the unit type to the dominant tenant profile in your chosen submarket.
The Expatriate Tenant Playbook
Singapore’s investment condo market runs on expatriate demand. Understanding what high-quality tenants actually want — and where they want to live — is the difference between a fully tenanted property and a three-month vacancy.
What Expatriate Tenants Prioritise
- School proximity: Families on employment passes with school-age children rank proximity to international schools (AIS, SAS, Canadian, Tanglin Trust, UWCSEA) as their primary filter. D15, D10 and D21 consistently outperform for this reason.
- MRT connectivity: Senior expats often travel without a car. Walking distance to an MRT station (under 500m) commands a 10–15% rental premium versus comparable units requiring a 10-minute bus ride.
- Lifestyle amenities: Proximity to supermarkets (Cold Storage, Jason’s), gyms, Western F&B clusters and co-working spaces matters increasingly post-pandemic. Katong, Holland Village and one-north tick this box.
- Unit quality and fit-out: High-quality tenants expect fully furnished or high-specification unfurnished units. Cheap furniture packages cost you the best tenants. Budget $25,000–$40,000 for a proper furnishing package on a 2-bedder if you want corporate-let-grade tenants.
Top Tenant-Magnet Locations in 2026
D15 (Katong–Marine Parade corridor), D5 (one-north / Buona Vista), D21 (Clementi / Holland), D10 (Bukit Timah / Holland Road) and D9 (Orchard / River Valley) remain the five strongest expatriate tenant corridors. Projects within 800m of an MRT, a major supermarket and at least one international school feeder zone command premium rents and near-zero vacancy in normalised market conditions.
Red Flags: New Launch Condos to Avoid for Investment
Not every new launch deserves your investment dollars. Here are the warning signs that should prompt deeper scrutiny — or an outright pass — for yield-focused buyers.
- Too many units, too few tenants: A 1,000+ unit development in an OCR submarket that already has two or three large existing condos will face structural rental oversupply for its first three to five years post-completion. Lentor is a watch-and-wait precisely because multiple large projects are completing in close succession — individual yields may be compressed during the initial lease-up phase.
- Poor public transport access: Any development more than 800m from an MRT station, without a direct bus to an interchange, will consistently underperform on rental yield relative to otherwise comparable projects. Tenants without cars — the majority of the mid-market expat pool — will simply choose better-connected alternatives at equivalent rents.
- Saturated rental submarkets: Check URA’s rental statistics for the planning area before committing. If median rents have been flat or declining for four consecutive quarters, the submarket is signalling oversupply. This is not a reason to panic, but it is a reason to model your yield assumptions conservatively.
- No lifestyle anchor: New towns without an established F&B, retail or lifestyle cluster struggle to attract quality tenants. A condo surrounded by HDB void decks and a single coffee shop is a harder rent than one near a hawker centre, a mall and an established school.
- High-floor premium, low rent ceiling: Paying a 15–20% high-floor premium in a district where rents are not materially higher for upper floors destroys your yield arithmetic. Always run the numbers on the specific unit’s quantum, not the project average.
Speak to Alvin Tan About Your 2026 Investment Strategy
Selecting the right new launch for yield in 2026 requires more than a rankings table — it requires a strategy built around your TDSR headroom, your ABSD exposure, your holding horizon and your target tenant profile. Alvin Tan (ERA, CEA-registered) works with investors across OCR, RCR and CCR to identify projects that genuinely fit their investment brief — not just the ones with the best marketing.
See the full new launch condo Singapore listings, understand your ABSD obligations, stress-test your TDSR position, and compare the investment vs own-stay strategy for 2026 before you commit.
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CEA-registered. No obligation. All figures discussed are indicative only.