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This case study examines the Tan family’s 15-year housing journey in Singapore, from their first BTO flat to upgrading to a private condominium, illustrating the complexities of credit assessment, government regulations, and financial planning in Singapore’s unique housing market.


Part 1: The Beginning (2010-2015)

Initial Profile: Marcus & Rachel Tan

Year: 2010
Ages: Marcus (28), Rachel (27)

Financial Snapshot:

  • Combined Monthly Income: S$6,500
    • Marcus: S$3,500 (Junior Engineer, Local SME)
    • Rachel: S$3,000 (Admin Executive, MNC)
  • CPF Ordinary Account: S$45,000 combined
  • Cash Savings: S$25,000
  • Debts: None
  • Credit History: Clean, but minimal (only had credit cards for 1 year)

First Property Purchase: 4-Room BTO in Punggol (2010)

Property Details:

  • Price: S$280,000
  • Location: Non-mature estate
  • Estimated Completion: 2014

Financial Analysis:

Down Payment (10% for BTO):

  • Required: S$28,000
  • Funded by: CPF OA (S$28,000)
  • Cash needed: S$0

Stamp Duty:

  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty: ~S$2,400
  • Funded by: Cash savings

Loan Application:

  • Loan Amount: S$252,000 (90% LTV allowed for BTO)
  • Loan Tenure: 25 years
  • Interest Rate: 2.6% (HDB concessionary rate, 2010)
  • Monthly Installment: ~S$1,150

Bank Assessment:

APPROVED – Strong Profile for First-Timers

Positive Factors:

  • Young couple with stable employment
  • Both in permanent positions
  • Clean credit bureau records
  • TDSR: 18% (well within limits)
  • Conservative loan amount
  • Government-backed HDB loan

Areas of Concern:

  • Relatively short employment history (Marcus: 1.5 years, Rachel: 2 years)
  • Limited cash reserves after stamp duty
  • Single income dependency risk if one loses job

Bank Decision:

  • Approved HDB loan at concessionary rate
  • No additional conditions required
  • Standard insurance requirements

Part 2: Building Equity (2014-2020)

Life Changes

2014:

  • Moved into completed BTO
  • Marcus promoted to Senior Engineer (S$5,000/month)
  • Rachel changed jobs to better-paying role (S$4,000/month)
  • Combined Income: S$9,000/month

2016:

  • First child born
  • Rachel took 4 months maternity leave
  • Household expenses increased

2018:

  • Marcus started MBA part-time (S$45,000 course fee via study loan)
  • Rachel returned to full-time work
  • Accumulated CPF OA: S$180,000 combined
  • Property value: ~S$450,000 (appreciated 61%)

2020:

  • Marcus completed MBA, promoted to Engineering Manager (S$8,500/month)
  • Rachel now Senior Executive (S$5,500/month)
  • Combined Income: S$14,000/month
  • Outstanding Study Loan: S$15,000 (S$500/month)
  • Cash Savings: S$120,000
  • Property Value: ~S$480,000

The Upgrade Decision

Family Discussion Points:

  • Son starting primary school, wanted better school district
  • Punggol still developing, desired mature estate
  • Investment perspective: Could afford upgrade
  • Concern: ABSD implications

Part 3: The First Upgrade Attempt (2020)

Target Property: Resale Condo in Bishan

Property Details:

  • Price: S$1,300,000
  • Type: 3-bedroom resale condo
  • Location: Near top primary school
  • Age: 15 years old

Financial Planning

Option 1: Buy First, Sell Later

Upfront Costs:

  • Down Payment (25%): S$325,000
  • Buyer’s Stamp Duty: ~S$38,600
  • ABSD (20% for 2nd property): S$260,000
  • Total Cash Needed: S$623,600

Challenge: Only have S$120,000 cash!

CPF Usage:

  • Existing CPF OA: S$180,000 (but tied to current flat)
  • Cannot use for 2nd property down payment while still owning 1st
  • Would need to liquidate investments or borrow

TDSR Calculation:

  • Existing HDB loan: S$800/month remaining
  • New condo loan: S$4,750/month (S$975,000 @ 2.5% over 25 years)
  • Study loan: S$500/month
  • Total Debt: S$6,050/month = 43% of income

Result:FINANCIALLY IMPOSSIBLE

  • Insufficient cash for ABSD + down payment
  • Would need additional S$500,000+ in cash

Option 2: Sell First, Buy Later

Selling HDB:

  • Expected sale price: S$480,000
  • Outstanding loan: ~S$180,000
  • CPF principal + accrued interest to return: ~S$220,000
  • Net Cash Proceeds: S$80,000

Combined with existing savings:

  • Total available: S$200,000

New Property Purchase:

  • Down Payment: S$325,000
  • BSD: S$38,600
  • Total needed: S$363,600
  • Shortfall: S$163,600

Result:STILL INSUFFICIENT


Decision: Defer Upgrade

Reasons:

  • Insufficient cash reserves
  • COVID-19 uncertainty (2020)
  • Son only Primary 1, not urgent
  • Better to accumulate more savings

Action Plan:

  • Continue saving aggressively: S$3,000/month
  • Pay off study loan by 2021
  • Target upgrade in 3-5 years
  • Monitor property market

Part 4: The Successful Upgrade (2023)

Updated Profile: Marcus & Rachel Tan (2023)

Ages: Marcus (41), Rachel (40)

Financial Snapshot:

  • Combined Monthly Income: S$18,000
    • Marcus: S$11,000 (Engineering Director)
    • Rachel: S$7,000 (Manager)
  • CPF OA Combined: S$280,000
  • Cash Savings: S$320,000 (saved aggressively for 3 years)
  • Study Loan: Fully paid
  • Credit Record: Excellent, no late payments ever
  • HDB Value: S$520,000
  • Outstanding HDB Loan: S$150,000

New Target: Executive Condo in Serangoon

Why EC Instead of Private Condo:

  • More affordable (~S$1,100,000 vs S$1,500,000+)
  • Still eligible (income below S$16,000… wait, they exceed!)
  • Actually not eligible anymore due to income ceiling

Revised Target: Resale Condo in Serangoon

Property Details:

  • Price: S$1,400,000
  • Type: 3-bedroom, 1,100 sqft
  • Age: 12 years old
  • Remaining lease: 87 years

Financial Strategy: Sell First, Then Buy

Phase 1: Selling HDB (March 2023)

Sale Process:

  • Listed for S$530,000
  • Sold in 3 weeks for S$525,000
  • Timeline: 3-month completion

Financial Settlement:

  • Sale proceeds: S$525,000
  • Outstanding loan: S$150,000
  • CPF refund (principal + interest): S$250,000
  • Net cash: S$125,000

Post-Sale Position:

  • Cash in hand: S$445,000 (S$320,000 + S$125,000)
  • CPF OA: S$280,000 (but S$250,000 must be returned, leaving S$30,000 available)
  • Temporary housing: Rented 3-room flat (S$2,800/month for 6 months)

Phase 2: Purchasing New Condo (June 2023)

Mortgage Application to DBS Bank

Loan Request:

  • Property price: S$1,400,000
  • Down payment: 25% (S$350,000)
    • From CPF OA: S$30,000
    • From Cash: S$320,000
  • Loan amount: S$1,050,000 (75% LTV)
  • Loan tenure: 25 years
  • Age consideration: Marcus 41, can borrow until age 65 (24 years max)

Interest Rate Options Offered:

  1. 3-Month SORA + 1.0% (floating)
    • Prevailing rate: ~3.8%
    • Monthly: ~S$5,200
  2. 2-Year Fixed at 3.5%, then SORA + 1.0%
    • Monthly: ~S$5,150 (first 2 years)
  3. Board Rate (legacy option)
    • Current: 4.25%
    • Monthly: ~S$5,600
    • Not recommended

Chose Option 2: 2-year fixed for budget certainty


Bank’s Credit Assessment Process

Documents Required:

  • Last 6 months payslips (both applicants)
  • Latest CPF contribution history
  • Last 2 years’ NOA (Notice of Assessment)
  • Credit Bureau report authorization
  • Bank statements (3 months)
  • Property valuation report
  • Option to Purchase
  • Employment letters

Credit Bureau Check:

  • Marcus: Clean record, no defaults, 3 credit cards (all paid on time), previous HDB loan fully settled
  • Rachel: Clean record, 2 credit cards, no other loans
  • Joint Assessment: No adverse records

Income Assessment:

  • Marcus: S$11,000 fixed + S$15,000 annual bonus (averaged)
  • Rachel: S$7,000 fixed + S$8,000 annual bonus (averaged)
  • Assessed Monthly Income: S$19,900 (including averaged bonuses)

TDSR Calculation:

  • New mortgage: S$5,150/month
  • No other loans
  • TDSR: 25.9% (well within 55% limit)

Loan-to-Value Assessment:

  • Property age: 12 years
  • Remaining lease: 87 years
  • Borrowers’ age: 41 (youngest)
  • Maximum LTV: 75% ✓ (standard)

Credit Risk Profile:

EXCELLENT BORROWER PROFILE

Strengths:

  1. High stable income from established employers
  2. Long employment history (13+ years each)
  3. Clean credit bureau records
  4. Successfully managed previous property loan
  5. Low TDSR (25.9%)
  6. Substantial cash reserves remaining (S$125,000 after purchase)
  7. Strong CPF balances
  8. Both in professional/management roles
  9. No history of late payments or defaults
  10. Conservative loan amount relative to income

Risk Factors:

  • Moderate (age 41, but not a concern)
  • Industry risk: Acceptable (engineering/corporate)

Internal Credit Score (Bank’s Proprietary Model):

  • Estimated: A+ Rating
  • Similar to US credit score of 760+

Loan Approval Decision

Approved Amount: S$1,050,000
Interest Rate: 2-year fixed at 3.5%, then SORA + 1.0%
Tenure: 24 years (to age 65)
Lock-in Period: 3 years
Legal Subsidy: S$2,500
Fire Insurance: Required (annual ~S$150)
Mortgage Insurance: Recommended (declined by borrowers)

Additional Benefits Offered:

  • Wealth management relationship privileges
  • Priority banking access
  • Free safe deposit box (1 year)
  • Preferential rates for renovation loan if needed

Conditions:

  • Maintain salary crediting to DBS
  • Annual income review
  • Property insurance must be maintained

Part 5: Post-Purchase Reality (2023-2025)

Monthly Financial Snapshot (Late 2023)

Income:

  • Combined gross: S$18,000
  • CPF contributions: S$3,240 (18%)
  • Net take-home: S$14,760

Expenses:

  • Mortgage: S$5,150 (35% of net income)
  • Maintenance fee: S$380
  • Property tax: S$200
  • Utilities: S$180
  • Insurance (life, property): S$250
  • Groceries: S$800
  • Transport: S$600
  • Son’s enrichment: S$600
  • Dining/entertainment: S$500
  • Parents’ allowance: S$800
  • Emergency savings: S$1,500
  • Investments: S$1,000
  • Miscellaneous: S$800
  • Total: S$12,760

Buffer: S$2,000/month (comfortable but less than before)


The Interest Rate Shock (2025)

September 2025: Fixed Period Ends

New Rate: 3-Month SORA + 1.0% = 4.3%
New Monthly Payment: S$5,650
Increase: S$500/month (9.7% jump)

Family Discussion:

Marcus: “Should we refinance? UOB is offering 3.8%.”

Rachel: “We’re still within the 3-year lock-in period. Early redemption penalty is 1.5% of outstanding loan… that’s about S$15,000!”

Options Analysis:

Option 1: Absorb the Increase

  • Continue with DBS
  • Reduce savings/investments temporarily
  • Wait for SORA to potentially decrease
  • Action: Monitor for 6 months

Option 2: Negotiate with DBS

  • Request rate matching (relationship pricing)
  • Threaten to refinance after lock-in
  • Possible outcome: DBS offers SORA + 0.85%

Option 3: Refinance After Lock-in (2026)

  • Wait until lock-in ends
  • Shop around for best rates
  • Potential savings: 0.3-0.5% = S$150-250/month

Decision: Option 2 – Negotiate

Result: DBS agreed to SORA + 0.85% (effective rate: 4.15%)

  • New monthly payment: S$5,550
  • Savings: S$100/month
  • Maintains banking relationship

Part 6: Lessons Learned & Future Planning

Key Insights from the Journey

1. Timing is Critical

  • Attempting upgrade in 2020 would have failed (insufficient cash)
  • Waiting 3 years allowed for proper preparation
  • ABSD considerations significantly impact timing decisions

2. Cash is King in Singapore

  • CPF alone is insufficient for upgrades
  • Stamp duties and ABSD require substantial liquid assets
  • Rule of thumb: Need 30-35% of property price in cash/CPF

3. Credit Profile Management

  • Consistent payment history over 15 years paid off
  • Banks reward long-term responsible borrowers
  • Clean CBS record = better rates and terms

4. Income Growth Matters

  • 177% income increase (S$6,500 → S$18,000) over 13 years
  • Career progression enabled upgrade possibilities
  • Dual-income households have advantages but also risks

5. TDSR is Manageable with Planning

  • Keeping TDSR low (25.9%) provided flexibility
  • Avoided overleveraging despite ability to borrow more
  • Buffer crucial for interest rate changes

Current Position (October 2025)

Property Portfolio:

  • Serangoon condo: Current value ~S$1,500,000 (7% appreciation in 2 years)
  • Outstanding loan: ~S$1,020,000
  • Net equity: ~S$480,000

Financial Position:

  • Combined income: S$18,000/month
  • CPF OA: S$150,000 (rebuilding)
  • Cash savings: S$180,000
  • Investments: S$100,000
  • Net worth: ~S$910,000

Credit Profile:

  • Excellent standing with all banks
  • Multiple bank relationships
  • Could easily qualify for investment property if desired

Future Considerations (2030 Vision)

Scenario A: Investment Property

By 2030 (Marcus 48, Rachel 47):

  • Projected income: S$25,000/month
  • Current property paid down to: S$900,000
  • Estimated property value: S$1,650,000
  • Cash accumulated: S$400,000

Could purchase:

  • 2nd property (~S$1,000,000)
  • ABSD: S$200,000 (20%)
  • Would need S$450,000 upfront
  • Feasible: Yes, but tight

TDSR Challenge:

  • First property: S$4,800/month
  • Second property: S$3,500/month
  • Total: S$8,300/month = 33% of S$25,000
  • Within limits, but significant commitment

Scenario B: Upgrade Again

Target: Larger condo or landed property (~S$2,500,000)

Strategy:

  • Sell Serangoon condo (~S$1,650,000 by 2030)
  • Outstanding loan: ~S$900,000
  • CPF refund: ~S$350,000
  • Net proceeds: ~S$400,000

Purchase Calculation:

  • Down payment: S$625,000 (25%)
  • BSD: ~S$73,600
  • Total needed: ~S$700,000
  • From sale: S$400,000
  • Additional needed: S$300,000
  • Feasible: With 5 years of aggressive saving

Scenario C: Maintain & Diversify

Conservative approach:

  • Keep current property
  • Pay down mortgage faster
  • Build investment portfolio (stocks, bonds, REITs)
  • Prepare for son’s university education (~2032)
  • Build retirement fund

Most likely choice given:

  • One child (comfortable space)
  • Good location
  • Desire for financial flexibility
  • Retirement planning (Marcus 65 in 2048)

Critical Success Factors: A Banking Perspective

What Made the Tans’ Application Strong

From a Loan Officer’s View:

Quantitative Factors (70% weight):

  1. TDSR: 25.9% (Excellent – banks love <30%)
  2. Income stability: 13+ years employment each
  3. Income growth: Demonstrated upward trajectory
  4. LTV: 75% (Standard, not over-leveraged)
  5. Age: 41 (Peak earning years, 24 years to retirement)
  6. Cash reserves: S$125,000 post-purchase (9 months of expenses)

Qualitative Factors (30% weight):

  1. Credit history: 15 years, perfect record
  2. Previous loan: HDB loan fully repaid, no issues
  3. Employer quality: Established companies
  4. Industry sector: Stable (engineering, corporate)
  5. Educational background: Marcus has MBA
  6. Property choice: Reasonable (not overleveraged)

Risk Rating: Low Risk
Probability of Default: <0.5% (internal model)
Recommended: Approve at preferential rates


Red Flags That Were Absent

Banks would have been concerned if:

  • ❌ TDSR >45% (theirs: 25.9%)
  • ❌ Job changes in last 6 months (stable employment)
  • ❌ Cash reserves <3 months expenses (they had 9 months)
  • ❌ Credit card debts >50% limit (none)
  • ❌ Recent credit inquiries >5 (normal activity)
  • ❌ Declining income trend (growing income)
  • ❌ Industry in decline (stable sectors)
  • ❌ Multiple concurrent loan applications (single property)
  • ❌ Renovation loans during application (none)
  • ❌ Erratic bank account activity (stable patterns)

Comparative Analysis: What If Scenarios

Scenario X: If They Had Poor Credit Management

Changes:

  • 3 credit card late payments in last 2 years
  • Current credit card utilization: 80%
  • One loan default in 2019 (paid off since)

Bank Assessment:

  • Credit grade: B+ (instead of A+)
  • Interest rate: SORA + 1.3% (instead of 1.0%)
  • Additional requirements: More documentation
  • Possible: Request for larger down payment (30% instead of 25%)
  • Monthly payment difference: +S$200/month over 25 years = S$60,000 extra cost

Lesson: Clean credit saves tens of thousands


Scenario Y: If Marcus Was Self-Employed

Changes:

  • Marcus runs own engineering consultancy (4 years)
  • Income: S$12,000/month average (variable S$8,000-15,000)
  • Rachel: Same (employed)

Bank Assessment:

  • Income verification: Last 2 years NOA required
  • Assessed income: Conservative 80% of stated (S$9,600)
  • Combined assessed: S$16,600 instead of S$19,900
  • TDSR: 31% (instead of 25.9%) – still acceptable
  • Interest rate: SORA + 1.15% (0.15% premium for self-employed risk)
  • Documentation: Extensive (business accounts, client contracts, tax returns)
  • Approval: Yes, but more scrutiny

Lesson: Self-employed face higher hurdles


Scenario Z: If They Rushed in 2020

What would have happened:

  • Forced to use Option 1 (buy first, sell later)
  • Needed to borrow S$500,000 from family or take bridging loan
  • ABSD: S$260,000 (non-recoverable stress)
  • Financial strain during COVID-19
  • Possible: Unable to sell HDB at expected price
  • Risk: Default on one of the mortgages
  • Credit damage: Would affect future borrowing

Lesson: Patience and timing prevent disasters


Conclusion: The Singapore Housing Finance Reality

Key Takeaways

1. Credit isn’t a score—it’s a track record

  • 15 years of responsible financial behavior
  • Every on-time payment builds invisible equity
  • One late payment can cost thousands in higher rates

2. The Singapore system rewards planning

  • ABSD creates forced discipline
  • CPF provides foundation but not sufficient alone
  • Cash accumulation is critical

3. Income stability > income level

  • Banks prefer steady S$15k over variable S$20k
  • Employment longevity matters immensely
  • Career progression shows reliability

4. The upgrade journey takes time

  • 13 years from BTO to upgrade (typical timeframe)
  • Rushing leads to financial strain
  • Market timing less important than financial readiness

5. Relationships with banks matter

  • Long-term banking history provides leverage
  • Negotiating power comes from being a quality borrower
  • Best rates aren’t advertised—they’re negotiated

Final Reflection: Marcus & Rachel’s Success Formula

Financial Discipline:

  • Lived below means (saved 15-20% of income)
  • Avoided lifestyle inflation despite income growth
  • Emergency fund always maintained

Credit Hygiene:

  • Every single payment on time for 15 years
  • Credit cards paid in full monthly
  • No unnecessary loans

Career Investment:

  • Marcus’s MBA (short-term debt for long-term gain)
  • Both progressed in careers steadily
  • Income grew 177% over 13 years

Strategic Patience:

  • Didn’t rush into upgrade
  • Waited for right financial position
  • Avoided ABSD trap

Risk Management:

  • Dual income (diversification)
  • Insurance coverage maintained
  • Never over-leveraged

The Tan family’s journey illustrates that in Singapore’s housing market, success isn’t about credit scores—it’s about building a comprehensive profile of financial responsibility, career stability, and strategic planning over many years.


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