Tag Archives: HDB

Your Insights

Last week, we asked if private property owners should be allowed to buy resale Housing Board flats, and if the $8,000 household income ceiling to qualify for housing subsidies should be lowered to prevent ‘buying distortions’. More than 30 readers responded. Eight said that private property owners should be banned from buying flats, while another four thought otherwise. Eight readers wanted the $8,000 ceiling raised instead of lowered.

‘The Housing Board should increase the income ceiling for Design, Build and Sell Scheme flats to cater to the ‘Sandwich Class First-Timers’ who can afford them and need a home. Now people buying these flats are first-timers in their early 20s who are paying through their nose.’

Ms Jessy Teoh in an e-mail

‘If private property owners can buy resale HDB flats, lower- and middle-income Singaporeans – especially singles – will find it difficult to do so. Under HDB rules, singles cannot buy new HDB flats, so they are the ones who suffer the most.’

Ms Toh Siew Peng in an e-mail

‘Public housing will be out of reach for future generations of citizens if it is viewed as an investment asset as all investments are expected to appreciate in value. And if we allow permanent residents to purchase public housing, future prices of public housing could become nightmarish.’

Mr Andrew Michael Teo in an e-mail

‘I asked HDB if it was possible to set income rules in a way which allows the sandwich class to buy flats of a minimum amount, so that we do not compete with the majority. But HDB has not acknowledged that it is willing to look into it. It is neglecting a pool of Singaporeans like me. If you have an income lower than $8,000, you have a chance to buy a new flat, and three to five years later sell it to make a profit from the sandwich class!’ Continue reading

HDB resale prices at record high

Up 3.6% in Q3, with 11,649 units sold; cash top-ups also soar

Cash-over-valuation amounts for resale HDB flats have quadrupled, from a median of $3,000 in the previous quarter to $12,000 in the third quarter. — ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN

PRICES of resale Housing Board homes have continued their relentless climb, rising another 3.6 per cent in the third quarter to hit a fresh record.

But despite the high prices, demand for resale flats remained hot. A total of 11,649 homes changed hands in the third quarter, reaching a level not seen in five years.

The latest figures, released by HDB yesterday, highlight another important trend. Almost 80 per cent of resale flats were sold above their bank valuations.

And this amount, known as the ‘cash-over-valuation’ (COV) – or the cash top-up payable by buyers – quadrupled from a median of $3,000 in the previous quarter to $12,000. Continue reading