Private Property Rental Income Tax Guide for Singapore

Guide Updated

Rental Income and Tax: What Every Singapore Landlord Needs to Know

Collecting rent from a private condominium is one of the most common ways Singapore property owners generate passive income — but many landlords are surprised to discover how much of that income ends up as a tax obligation. Unlike dividends from Singapore companies (which are tax-exempt) or capital gains on property sales (not taxed in Singapore), rental income is fully assessable and taxed at your personal marginal rate. Miss the filing deadline, claim a disallowed deduction, or misunderstand what counts as "gross rent" and you may face an IRAS audit, penalties, or an unexpected tax bill.

This guide covers every aspect of Singapore's rental income tax rules for private property owners: what is taxable, which expenses you can deduct, how to work through the numbers with a realistic example, how to file correctly, and the most common mistakes landlords make. All figures reflect Year of Assessment (YA) 2026 rules.

If you are trying to decide whether renting out your condo makes financial sense before tax, start with our Cash Flow Calculator. For a landlord's operational checklist, see our Landlord Guide: Renting Out Your Singapore Condo. For a breakdown of annual property tax obligations, see Property Tax for Condo Owners.

What Counts as Taxable Rental Income

Under the Income Tax Act, rental income from property situated in Singapore is taxed in the hands of the owner. "Rental income" is interpreted broadly by IRAS — it is not limited to the monthly rent stated in the tenancy agreement. All of the following are included in gross rental income:

  • Monthly rent — the contractual sum your tenant pays for occupation of the unit.
  • Advance rent — any lump-sum payment received upfront is assessable in the year it is received, not spread over the tenancy period unless it is clearly a security deposit.
  • Security deposit — generally not taxable when received, because it is refundable. However, if you forfeit the deposit (e.g., tenant breaks the lease), the forfeited amount becomes assessable income in the year of forfeiture.
  • Furniture and fittings rental — if you charge separately for the use of furnishings, that sum forms part of gross rent.
  • Utilities or maintenance reimbursements — amounts reimbursed by the tenant for utilities, conservancy charges, or maintenance fees that you pay on their behalf are assessable income (though you can then deduct those same expenses — see the deductions section).
  • Premiums for granting a tenancy — one-off premiums paid by a tenant for the right to occupy the property are taxable rental income.

Deemed Rental Income: Vacant Properties Available for Rent

IRAS can impute rental income even if a property is not actively rented — specifically where a property stands vacant but is held available for letting. In practice, IRAS uses this provision selectively when evidence suggests a property is being marketed for rent or was recently rented. If your unit is genuinely vacant while you undertake renovations or between tenancies, keep documentation (renovation contracts, advertising receipts, tenancy agreements with gap dates) to substantiate the non-income period.

Partial-Year Rental

If you only rented out your property for part of the year — for example, you moved out in July and found a tenant in October — you declare only the rent actually received during the tenancy period. However, allowable expenses must also be prorated to reflect the rental period. You cannot claim a full year of mortgage interest or maintenance fees against two months of rental income. IRAS expects deductions to be proportionate to the period the property was income-producing.

Resident vs non-resident tax rates: Singapore tax residents pay income tax at progressive marginal rates of 0% to 24% on chargeable income (YA 2026). Non-residents are taxed at a flat rate of 22% on rental income (effective from YA 2024, up from 20%). Your residency status is determined by IRAS based on your physical presence in Singapore — generally 183 days or more in the calendar year preceding the YA.

Allowable Deductions: What You Can and Cannot Claim

Singapore's rental income tax system is a net income system: you are taxed on gross rent minus allowable expenses actually incurred to earn that rent. IRAS does not permit a standard deduction — every expense claimed must be supported by receipts or invoices and must be "wholly and exclusively" incurred in producing the rental income.

Expense Deductible? Notes
Property taxYesThe annual property tax bill on the rented unit is fully deductible.
Mortgage interestYes — interest onlyOnly the interest component of your loan repayment is deductible. The principal repayment is not.
Maintenance and conservancy feesYesMonthly MCST fees for the condominium are deductible against rental income.
Fire insurance premiumYesInsurance covering the building structure against fire. Contents/household insurance may be partially deductible if specifically for rented contents.
Advertising and marketing costsYesProperty portal listings, agent marketing fees, photography — all deductible.
Agent commission (letting fee)YesTypically one to two months' rent paid to a property agent for securing a tenant.
Repairs and maintenanceYes — repairs onlyFixing a leaking tap, repainting between tenancies, replacing a broken appliance — deductible. Upgrading or adding new fixtures (capital improvements) is not.
Furniture and fittings depreciationYes — wear and tearIRAS allows a deemed wear-and-tear deduction of 25% of the gross annual rent in lieu of tracking actual furniture depreciation, or actual cost of furniture written off over its useful life. The 25% deemed deduction is simpler and commonly used.
Loan principal repaymentNoReducing your mortgage balance is a capital repayment, not an income-earning expense.
Renovation and capital improvementsNoReplacing an entire kitchen, adding an en-suite bathroom, or installing built-in wardrobes not originally there — these enhance the capital value and are not deductible.
Owner's personal expensesNoIf you use the property personally for any part of the year, expenses must be apportioned; the personal-use portion is disallowed.
Legal fees for tenancy agreementYesStamp duty and legal fees for preparing the tenancy agreement are deductible.
Property management feesYesIf you engage a property manager to handle the rental, their fees are deductible.
Mortgage interest vs principal — a critical distinction: Your bank's monthly statement shows a combined instalment. To claim only the interest component, obtain a loan amortisation schedule from your bank that separates principal and interest for each payment. IRAS has the right to request this breakdown, and a claim for the full instalment amount will be disallowed.

Worked Example: S$4,000/Month Rent, Full Year

Consider Wei Ling, a Singapore tax resident who rents out her condominium unit in Toa Payoh for S$4,000 per month on a 12-month tenancy. She has a bank loan on the property and holds it fully furnished. Her marginal income tax rate on the rental income is 15% (consistent with a total chargeable income of around S$120,000 for YA 2026). Here is how her rental income assessment works:

Step 1: Gross Rental Income

ItemAnnual Amount (S$)
Monthly rent × 12 monthsS$48,000
Total gross rental incomeS$48,000

Step 2: Allowable Deductions

Deductible Expense Annual Amount (S$) Basis
Property tax (owner-occupier rate does not apply — rented out)S$2,400IRAS property tax notice
Mortgage interest (from bank amortisation schedule)S$9,600Interest portion only — principal excluded
Maintenance / conservancy fees (MCST)S$3,600S$300/month × 12
Fire insurance premiumS$300Annual policy premium
Agent commission (1 month's rent)S$4,000Letting fee for new tenancy
Repairs and maintenance (touch-up painting, tap replacement)S$800Receipts from contractors
Furniture and fittings — deemed wear and tear (25% of gross rent)S$12,00025% × S$48,000 — elected in lieu of actual depreciation
Total allowable deductionsS$32,700

Step 3: Net Taxable Rental Income

ItemAmount (S$)
Gross rental incomeS$48,000
Less: total allowable deductions(S$32,700)
Net assessable rental incomeS$15,300

Step 4: Income Tax on Rental Income

Wei Ling's rental income of S$15,300 is added to her other chargeable income for YA 2026. At her marginal rate of 15%, the income tax attributable to her rental income is approximately:

S$15,300 × 15% = S$2,295

Her effective rental yield after tax: (S$48,000 − S$32,700 − S$2,295) ÷ (assumed property value of S$900,000) ≈ 1.45% net after-tax yield. To model your own scenario including financing costs and net yield, use our Cash Flow Calculator.

Tip on the 25% deemed wear-and-tear election: Wei Ling elects the 25% deemed deduction (S$12,000) instead of tracking actual furniture depreciation. This is generally advantageous for fully-furnished units where the cost of furnishings over a tenancy period may be lower than 25% of gross rent. If your unit is unfurnished or minimally furnished, claiming actual depreciation may be more accurate — but requires documentation of individual item costs and useful lives.

How to File: Form B / B1 and Key Deadlines

Rental income from property in Singapore is reported under the "Rent from property" category in your annual income tax return. Singapore tax residents file:

  • Form B1 — if you have only employment income plus other simple sources (including rental income). This is the most common form for salaried landlords.
  • Form B — if you have income from a trade, business, profession, or vocation in addition to employment and rental income.

Filing Deadlines

Filing Method Deadline
Paper filing (Form B1 / B)15 April of the YA year
e-Filing via myTax Portal18 April of the YA year

For YA 2026, this means declaring rental income earned in calendar year 2025 (1 January – 31 December 2025). IRAS sends out tax return notifications in February/March each year.

What to Declare

On your Form B1 or B, under "Rent from property in Singapore", enter:

  1. The gross rent received for the year (include all sources listed above).
  2. The total allowable deductions — you do not list each expense separately on the form, but you must retain all receipts and supporting documents for five years in case IRAS requests them.
  3. The net assessable rental income (gross rent minus deductions), which flows into your total chargeable income for the year.
Auto-Inclusion does not cover rental income. IRAS's Auto-Inclusion Scheme (AIS) pre-fills employment income from employers. Your rental income is not pre-filled — you must declare it yourself each year, even if you believe IRAS already knows about it from stamp duty records. Failure to declare is treated as understating income and attracts penalties of up to 200% of tax undercharged plus potential prosecution.

Common Mistakes Singapore Landlords Make

Mistake 1 — Deducting loan principal repayments. The single most common error. Your monthly mortgage instalment contains both principal and interest — only the interest is deductible. Always obtain a breakdown from your bank and claim only the interest line.
Mistake 2 — Claiming renovation costs as deductible "repairs". Replacing laminate flooring with marble, installing a new air-conditioning system where none existed, or adding a new bathroom are capital improvements — not repairs. IRAS distinguishes between maintaining the existing condition of an asset (deductible) and enhancing or extending its useful life (not deductible). When in doubt, seek advice before claiming.
Mistake 3 — Forgetting to prorate deductions for partial-year rental. If you rented out the unit for only 8 of 12 months, you must prorate your annual expenses accordingly. Claiming a full year of mortgage interest, maintenance fees, and property tax against 8 months of rental income is a red flag for IRAS and will be disallowed on the balance.
Mistake 4 — Not declaring rental income at all. IRAS has access to stamp duty records and HDB/URA data. An unregistered tenancy or an undeclared rental income is not invisible. IRAS conducts regular compliance checks on property owners and cross-references tenancy registrations. Voluntary disclosure attracts lower penalties than being caught.
Mistake 5 — Assuming rental losses can be offset against other income. If your allowable deductions exceed your gross rental income (a rental loss), IRAS does not allow you to offset this loss against your employment income in the same year. Rental losses can only be carried forward to offset future rental income from the same property. They cannot be used to reduce your total chargeable income in the current year.

Tips to Minimise Your Rental Tax Legally

Within Singapore's tax framework, there are legitimate ways to manage your rental tax exposure:

  • Elect the 25% deemed wear-and-tear deduction if your property is well-furnished — this is a generous allowance that often exceeds actual depreciation on standard condo furnishing packages and requires no individual tracking.
  • Timing major repairs strategically: A repair expense in the year of highest rental income reduces your net assessable income most effectively. Bunching allowable repairs in a high-income year can reduce the marginal tax impact.
  • Keep meticulous records from day one: Bank statements showing interest payments, MCST quarterly invoices, agent commission receipts, repair invoices — all filed by tenancy period. IRAS has a five-year lookback for records.
  • Review your tenancy structure: If you have two properties, each generating rental income at different deductible-expense ratios, review which property generates the higher net taxable figure and target repairs or renovations at that unit to reduce your overall rental tax exposure.
  • Obtain a bank amortisation schedule annually: Mortgage interest declines as you repay the loan. The deductible interest in year 5 of a mortgage is lower than year 1. Update your schedule each year — do not use the same interest figure across multiple YAs.
  • Use a property manager if your rental portfolio grows: Management fees are fully deductible and can reduce your effective rate of tax while freeing up time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is rental income from a HDB flat taxed the same way as private property rental income?

Yes. Rental income from HDB flats is subject to the same income tax rules as private property. The allowable deductions are identical: mortgage interest, property tax, maintenance, agent fees, repairs, and the 25% deemed wear-and-tear election are all available. One practical difference is that HDB flat owners must comply with HDB's owner-occupier subletting rules and must be physically residing in the flat — which affects whether expenses can be claimed for the portions occupied by the owner versus sublet to tenants.

Can I deduct the interest on a renovation loan taken to furnish the rental unit?

Generally no, unless the loan was used exclusively for repairs (restoring existing fittings) rather than capital improvements (adding or upgrading fixtures). Renovation loans for new furnishings or improvements are capital in nature. The interest on a renovation loan used for capital improvements is not deductible. If you can clearly segregate the loan into a repair portion and a capital portion, only the interest attributable to the repair portion may be deductible — but this requires careful documentation.

What if my property is rented to a family member at below-market rent?

IRAS has the authority to assess rental income at the market rent if the arrangement is not at arm's length and the below-market rent is seen as a tax-avoidance device. In practice, IRAS focuses its resources on egregious cases. However, if you rent to a family member at a nominal or zero rent while still claiming deductions (mortgage interest, property tax, etc.) against that rental income, this is a red flag. If no genuine rental income is received, no deductions can be claimed against zero income.

My tenant pays the utility bills directly. Does that affect my gross rental income?

If your tenancy agreement has the tenant paying utilities directly to the service provider (SP Group, PUB) — not reimbursing you — those utility costs do not flow through your income statement and you neither declare them as income nor claim them as a deduction. This is the cleanest arrangement from a tax perspective. If you collect rent that includes utilities and pay the bills yourself, the full amount received is gross rent and the utility bills you pay are a deductible expense.

Can I claim the property tax deduction in a year when the property is vacant?

Only to the extent the property was available for rent during the vacancy. IRAS permits deductions for expenses incurred during periods when the property was genuinely being marketed for rental but was temporarily vacant between tenancies. You should retain evidence of marketing efforts (portal listings, agent correspondence) to support the deduction. Property held idle with no intent to rent is not in the rental business, and no deductions are available.

I own the property jointly with my spouse. How is the rental income split for tax purposes?

For jointly owned properties, rental income is generally assessed in proportion to each owner's legal share in the property. If you and your spouse are equal co-owners (50/50), each declares 50% of the net rental income in their respective tax returns. The allowable deductions are also split proportionately. If the ownership shares differ (e.g., 99%/1% for ABSD planning purposes), the income and expenses are allocated accordingly. You cannot voluntarily shift more income to the lower-earning spouse to minimise combined tax — the split must follow the legal ownership interest.