Condo Buyer in Singapore? 8 Things You Must Know

If you’re a first-time condo buyer in Singapore, you’ve probably done the spreadsheets, stalked PropertyGuru for months, and still feel overwhelmed. That’s completely normal.

Buying a property ,especially alone is one of the biggest financial decisions of your life.

This guide compiles real advice from Singaporeans who’ve been through it, so you don’t learn the hard way.

1. Get Your "Must-Haves" vs "Nice-to-Haves" Clear First

Before you even start viewings, write down your non-negotiables. Be brutally honest.

Common must-haves for Singapore condo buyers:

  • Maximum walk to MRT (10 mins?15 mins?)
  • Minimum floor size
  • Freehold vs leasehold
  • Budget ceiling (and stick to it)

Once you narrow by location, tenure, and budget, you’ll find you’re realistically looking at a shortlist of 5–10 developments — not hundreds. That makes decisions much easier.

Pro tip: Don’t let excitement expand your criteria. Know what you want and don’t settle.

2. Location Is Everything — But Think Beyond the MRT

Everyone says “near MRT” — and yes, MRT proximity matters enormously for both lifestyle and resale value. But location goes deeper than that.

Ask yourself:

  • Where’s the nearest supermarket? A 15-minute walk sounds fine unless you’re carrying groceries everyday in Singapore’s heat.
  • How do you get to work? A place that requires two bus transfers will drain you mentally over time.
  • Are there food options nearby? Quick test: enter the address into Grab or Deliveroo and see what’s available within 15 minutes.
  • How far are your parents? Think about your actual daily routine — not an idealised version of it.

3. Visit at Night, Not Just During Agent Hours

Most viewings happen during the day on weekday afternoons. That tells you almost nothing about what it’s like to actually live there.

Always visit the unit and surroundings at night. Check:

  • Noise levels from neighbours, roads, or nearby entertainment
  • Lighting and safety of the carpark and walking routes
  • What kind of crowd is around the development

Also check your immediate neighbours if possible. Ask the agent — or the seller directly — about the neighbours. If they hesitate or give vague answers, take note.

4 Consider the Unit’s Sun Exposure

This is something many first-time buyers don’t think about until after moving in. A west-facing unit in Singapore can receive strong afternoon sun, which may lead to higher cooling costs and a warmer indoor environment. That said, it doesn’t mean these units should be ruled out entirely—many homeowners manage just fine with thoughtful planning.

What to look for:

  • East-facing units tend to get morning sun and stay cooler in the evenings, which many find comfortable.
  • If you’re considering a west-facing unit, check whether it has features like deep balconies, external shading, or good cross-ventilation that can help reduce heat.

Use apps that let you visualise sun direction at different times of year before making a decision.

5. Should You Use a Buyer's Agent?

This is genuinely debated — here’s the honest breakdown:

Case for using a buyer’s agent:

  • A good agent handles viewings, loan coordination, legal paperwork, and price negotiation
  • Especially useful if this is your first purchase and you’re overwhelmed

Case for going without:

  • Lets you move at your own pace with no external pressure

    if you’ve done extensive research, have a trusted lawyer, or have family/friends with recent buying experience at your preferred area, you may already have the key resources an agent would provide.


Bottom line: If you go without an agent, you must do thorough due diligence yourself and engage a reputable conveyancing lawyer. Don’t try to save money on the lawyer — that’s the wrong place to cut costs.

6. Small condo developments

Small condo developments look charming but some come with real downsides:

  • Higher MCST monthly fees : fewer residents share the maintenance costs of facilities
  • Lower liquidity : smaller pools of buyers when you want to sell
  • No on-site management office : maintenance issues take longer to resolve

Unless you have a specific reason to love a boutique development, larger developments generally offer better value, better facilities maintenance, and stronger resale demand.

7. Check the Facilities - You're Paying For Them

Your monthly maintenance fee goes toward maintaining the gym, pool, BBQ pits, and tennis courts. If you’ll never use the tennis court, that’s still your money maintaining it.

Before committing, walk around the entire development. Is it well-maintained? Are the facilities clean and functional? A poorly maintained condo is a red flag about management quality — and future costs.

8. If you are on a tight budget, don't Renovate Everything at Once

New condo owners often blow their budget on renovation immediately after getting keys. Then they regret choices made in a rush.

A smarter approach:

  • Do only the essentials first: kitchen, bathrooms, electrical, plumbing
  • Live in the space for a few months before making permanent decisions
  • Buy furniture gradually — your taste will evolve once you actually live there
error: