Infographics SG-financial advice (Cover) (9)

Singapore Budget 2026 vs 2025: The Real Changes That Matter to Households, Families and Seniors

Every year, Singapore’s Budget signals more than financial adjustments — it reflects priorities.

Budget 2025 was shaped around SG60 celebrations and broad-based support.Budget 2026, in contrast, sharpens its focus: targeted cost-of-living relief, structural retirement support, AI capability building, and calibrated policy shifts.

Let’s break down what’s truly different — and what it means for Singaporeans.

1. Cost-of-Living Support: Returning in 2026 — But Structured

Budget 2025: SG60 Vouchers Instead of COL Special Payment

In 2025, Singaporeans did not receive a Cost-of-Living (COL) Special Payment. Instead, households received SG60 Vouchers:

  • $600 for Singaporeans aged 21 and above

     

  • $800 for seniors

     

  • Usable at hawkers, supermarkets and participating merchants

     

It was broad, celebratory and consumption-based.

Budget 2026: COL Special Payment Returns (Up to $400)

In 2026, the government reinstates the Cost-of-Living Special Payment — structured similarly to the 2024 format.

Who qualifies?

  • Singaporeans aged 21 and above

     

  • Assessable income up to $100,000

     

  • Must not own more than one property

     

How much?

  • Between $200 and $400, depending on income and property ownership

     

When?

  • September 2026

     

  • About 2.4 million eligible adults will receive it

     

Unlike the 2025 SG60 Vouchers, this is a cash payout, not vouchers.

Key difference:
2025 focused on celebratory, broad vouchers.
2026 returns to targeted cash relief tied to income and property criteria.

2. U-Save Rebates: Significantly Enhanced in 2026

Utility bills remain a concern for many households.

Budget 2025

U-Save rebates continued at regular levels.

Budget 2026: 1.5x Enhancement

Eligible HDB households will receive up to $570 in U-Save rebates for FY2026 — 1.5 times the usual amount.

Impact:

  • Covers about 5 months of utility bills for 1- and 2-room flats

     

  • Covers about 2 months for 3- and 4-room flats

     

  • Benefits over 1 million HDB households

     

Disbursement:

  • April 2026

     

  • July 2026
    (Alongside regular GSTV-U-Save payments)

     

This is one of the most substantial enhancements in Budget 2026 for households.

3. CDC Vouchers: Reduced from 2025

CDC vouchers remain a staple form of support — but the amount changes.

Budget 2025

Households received:

  • $500 in May 2025

     

  • $300 in January 2026
    Total: $800

     

Budget 2026

Only $500 announced (to be issued January 2027).

Structure:

  • $250 for supermarkets

     

  • $250 for participating hawkers and merchants

     

There has been no mid-year CDC tranche announced for 2026.

Key takeaway:
CDC support continues, but total voucher value is lower than the previous cycle.

4. CPF: A Major New Investment Scheme (Launching 2028)

This is one of the most forward-looking moves in Budget 2026.

The CPF Board will launch a new life-cycle investment scheme in 2028.

What makes it different?

  • Designed for long-term investing (e.g. 20 years)

     

  • Automatic age-based rebalancing

     

    • More growth-oriented when younger

       

    • More conservative near retirement

       

  • Only 2–3 selected providers

     

  • Low, capped all-in fees

     

This is ideal for CPF members who:

  • Want long-term growth

     

  • Prefer a hands-off approach

     

  • Do not want to actively manage portfolios

     

Returns are market-dependent, and CPF members can still keep savings in regular accounts if they prefer zero risk.

The Government may provide temporary support to kick-start adoption.

Difference vs 2025:
Budget 2025 focused on CPF adjustments and support.
Budget 2026 introduces structural investment innovation.

5. AI Push: Free Access to Premium Tools

Budget 2026 makes a strong statement about AI readiness.

Singaporeans enrolling in selected SkillsFuture AI courses will receive:

  • 6 months of free access to premium AI tools

     

  • Redesigned SkillsFuture portal for clearer AI learning pathways

     

This isn’t just training — it’s applied access.

Instead of learning theory alone, Singaporeans can practise using real AI software.

This signals a strong national direction:
AI literacy is no longer optional.

6. Car Owners: PARF Rebate Cap Reduced

This is a major policy shift affecting vehicle owners.

From February 2026:

  • PARF rebate cap reduced from $60,000 to $30,000

     

  • For cars deregistered between 9–10 years:

     

    • Rebate drops from 50% of ARF to 5%

       

Why?

With more electric vehicles (EVs) on the road and cleaner emissions, early deregistration incentives are less necessary.

This means:

  • Smaller rebates upon deregistration

     

  • Important considerations for those planning car purchases

     

Budget 2025 did not include such a sharp adjustment.

7. Tobacco Duty Increased by 20%

Effective 12 February 2026:

  • All tobacco excise duties increase by 20%

     

The aim:

  • Discourage tobacco consumption

     

  • Support public health

     

Tobacco taxes already contribute over $1 billion annually.

This is both a fiscal and health-driven measure.

8. Families: Continued and Expanded Support

Child LifeSG Credits Renewed

Each Singaporean child aged 12 and below will receive:

  • $500 in 2026

     

Second consecutive year of such support.

Disbursement:

  • July 2026 (children born 2014–2025)

     

  • April 2027 (children born 2026)

     

Usable via LifeSG app for groceries, utilities, transport and essentials.

Preschool & Student Care Subsidies Expanded (From 2027)

Preschool:

  • Income ceiling raised from $12,000 to $15,000

     

  • Over 60,000 families expected to benefit

     

Student Care:

  • Income ceiling raised from $4,500 to $6,500

     

  • Around 13,000 students benefit

     

Budget 2025 also included education account top-ups.
Budget 2026 does not introduce new top-ups this year.

9. Lower-Income Families: Enhanced ComLink+

ComLink+ receives significant upgrades.

New Quarterly Payout

  • $500 every quarter

     

  • Must actively work with family coaches

     

Enhanced Progress Packages

  • Larger cash payouts

     

  • Higher CPF top-ups

     

  • Greater portion paid in cash

     

A family with 2 children could receive around $10,000 per year during preschool years.

Effective from Q3 2026.

This marks a major structural strengthening compared to 2025.

10. Seniors: Direct CPF Top-Ups

Eligible Singaporeans aged 50 and above may receive up to $1,500 CPF top-up in December 2026.

Eligibility:

  • Born 1976 or earlier

     

  • CPF retirement savings below Basic Retirement Sum ($110,200)

     

  • Do not own more than one property

     

  • Live in property with annual value ≤ $31,000

     

Tiered support ensures:

  • Those with lowest savings receive most help

     

Additionally:

  • Planned CPF contribution rate increases for senior workers proceed in 2027

     

  • CPF Transition Offset helps employers manage higher contributions

     

This continues the retirement adequacy focus.

Conclusion

Young couple browsing on a laptop while sitting comfortably on a sofa at home.

Area

Budget 2025

Budget 2026

Broad Household Support

SG60 vouchers

COL cash payment returns

CDC Vouchers

$800 total

$500 announced

U-Save

Regular

1.5x enhanced

CPF

Adjustments & support

New lifecycle investment scheme

AI & Skills

Ongoing training

Free AI tool access

Car Policy

Stable

PARF rebate cap halved

Tobacco

No major change

20% duty hike

Families

Credits & education top-ups

Credits + subsidy expansion

Lower-Income Families

Existing ComLink+

Quarterly payouts + higher support

Seniors

Ongoing CPF changes

Up to $1,500 top-up

The Bigger Picture

Budget 2025 leaned toward broad-based, celebratory and consumption-focused support.

Budget 2026 is more calibrated.

It delivers:

  • Targeted cash relief

  • Stronger retirement structure

  • Workforce AI readiness

  • Adjusted car and tobacco policies

  • Deepened support for lower-income families

It balances immediate relief with long-term positioning.

For Singaporeans, the message is clear:

Support continues —
But increasingly, it is structured, targeted, and tied to long-term resilience.

And that signals where Singapore is heading next.



Infographics SG-financial advice (Cover) (9)

Investing in Stocks: A Beginner’s Guide to Building Wealth the Smart Way

There are two types of people in this world.

Those who let money sit quietly in a savings account…
And those who make their money work for them.

If you’re reading this, you probably belong to the second group — or at least you want to.

Investing in stocks isn’t just for finance experts, Wall Street traders, or people in suits watching charts all day. Today, anyone with a smartphone and internet connection can start building wealth through investing.

But here’s the truth: investing without understanding what you’re doing is not investing — it’s gambling.

So let’s break it down properly.

What Is Stock Investing?

When you buy a stock, you’re buying a small piece of ownership in a company.

If you buy shares of Apple, Tesla, or a local company listed in your country’s stock exchange, you’re becoming a part-owner of that business — even if it’s just a tiny fraction.

As a shareholder, you benefit in two main ways:

  1. Capital Appreciation – The stock price increases over time.

     

  2. Dividends – The company shares part of its profits with you.

     

Simple concept. Powerful impact.

Over the long term, stock markets have historically grown because businesses grow. And as businesses expand, innovate, and generate profits, shareholders benefit.

Why Investing Matters More Than Ever

Saving money is important. But saving alone may not be enough.

Inflation quietly reduces the value of your money over time. What $10,000 can buy today may not buy the same things 10 years from now.

Investing helps your money grow faster than inflation.

Let’s say you keep $10,000 in a bank account earning 0.5% annually.
Now compare that to investing in a diversified stock portfolio averaging 7–10% annually over the long term.

That difference, compounded over 20 or 30 years, becomes massive.

This is why investing isn’t optional anymore — it’s necessary for long-term financial security.

Types of Stocks You Can Invest In

Not all stocks are the same. Understanding the difference helps you build a smarter strategy.

1. Growth Stocks

These are companies expected to grow faster than the overall market. They reinvest profits back into expansion instead of paying dividends.

Examples: technology companies, innovative startups, high-growth brands.

Pros: High potential returns
Cons: More volatile

2. Dividend Stocks

These companies regularly distribute profits to shareholders.

They’re often established, stable businesses in industries like utilities, banking, or consumer goods.

Pros: Steady income
Cons: Slower growth

3. Blue-Chip Stocks

Large, financially stable, well-known companies with long track records.

They are often market leaders.

Pros: Stability and reliability
Cons: Moderate growth compared to smaller companies

4. Index Funds & ETFs

If picking individual stocks feels overwhelming, you can invest in funds that track an entire market index.

Instead of betting on one company, you own hundreds.

Pros: Diversification, lower risk
Cons: You won’t “beat” the market dramatically

For beginners, index investing is often the safest starting point.

How to Start Investing in Stocks

Let’s make this practical.

Step 1: Build Your Financial Foundation

Before investing, make sure you:

  • Have an emergency fund (3–6 months of expenses)

     

  • Pay off high-interest debt

     

  • Understand your risk tolerance

     

Investing should never replace financial stability.

Step 2: Choose a Brokerage Platform

You’ll need an account to buy stocks. Look for:

  • Low fees

     

  • Easy-to-use interface

     

  • Access to markets you’re interested in

     

  • Strong security and regulation

     

Do your research before choosing.

Step 3: Start Small but Start Now

You don’t need thousands to begin. Many platforms allow fractional shares.

The biggest mistake beginners make is waiting for the “perfect time.”

Time in the market beats timing the market.

Step 4: Think Long Term

Stock investing is not a get-rich-quick scheme.

The market will go up.
The market will go down.
Corrections and crashes are normal.

The investors who succeed are those who stay invested through volatility.

Understanding Risk in Stock Investing

Every investment carries risk. The key is managing it.

Here are the main types of risk:

  • Market Risk – The entire market declines.

     

  • Company Risk – A specific company performs poorly.

     

  • Emotional Risk – Panic selling during downturns.

     

Risk cannot be eliminated — but it can be reduced through diversification.

Don’t put all your money in one stock. Spread it across industries and sectors.

Common Mistakes New Investors Make

Let’s save you from expensive lessons.

1. Chasing Hot Stocks

Just because everyone is talking about a stock doesn’t mean it’s a good investment.

Hype is not strategy.

2. Trying to Time the Market

Even professional fund managers struggle to predict short-term movements.

Focus on consistency instead.

3. Letting Emotions Take Control

Fear and greed are powerful forces.

When markets fall, beginners panic.
When markets rise quickly, they become overconfident.

Successful investing requires discipline.

4. Not Doing Research

Before buying a stock, ask:

  • How does the company make money?

     

  • Is revenue growing?

     

  • Does it have competitive advantages?

     

  • Is debt manageable?

     

If you don’t understand the business, you probably shouldn’t invest in it.

The Power of Compounding

Albert Einstein allegedly called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world.

Whether he said it or not, the concept is life-changing.

If you invest $500 monthly at an average 8% annual return:

  • After 10 years: ~ $91,000

     

  • After 20 years: ~ $295,000

     

  • After 30 years: ~ $745,000

     

That’s the power of consistency plus time.

The earlier you start, the less you need to invest later.

Active vs Passive Investing

There are two main approaches.

Active Investing

You research, select, and manage individual stocks.

Goal: outperform the market.

Requires time, skill, and emotional discipline.

Passive Investing

You invest in index funds or ETFs and let the market do the work.

Goal: match market performance over time.

Lower stress. Lower fees. Historically effective.

Most beginners do better with passive investing.

Should You Invest During a Market Crash?

This question comes up every time markets drop.

Here’s a mindset shift:

Market downturns are not disasters — they are discounts.

When quality companies are temporarily undervalued, long-term investors see opportunity.

Of course, this only applies if:

  • You’re investing money you don’t need immediately

     

  • You have an emergency fund

     

  • You maintain long-term discipline

     

Stocks vs Other Investments

You might wonder: why stocks and not something else?

Here’s a quick comparison:

Real Estate

  • Tangible asset

     

  • Requires larger capital

     

  • Less liquid

     

Bonds

  • Lower risk

     

  • Lower returns

     

Gold

  • Hedge against uncertainty

     

  • No income generation

     

Stocks

  • High long-term growth potential

     

  • Liquidity

     

  • Dividend income (for some)

     

The best strategy often isn’t choosing one — it’s building a diversified portfolio.

How Much Should You Invest?

There is no universal number.

A common guideline is:

  • Invest 10–20% of your income

     

  • Increase as your income grows

     

But remember: consistency matters more than amount.

Even small amounts invested regularly can grow significantly.

The Mindset of a Successful Investor

Investing is less about intelligence and more about temperament.

Successful investors:

  • Stay patient

     

  • Ignore short-term noise

     

  • Avoid emotional decisions

     

  • Focus on long-term goals

     

  • Continue learning

     

Wealth building is not dramatic. It’s disciplined.

Conclusion

You don’t need to be a financial genius.

You need:

  • A plan

  • Consistency

  • Patience

  • Risk awareness

  • Long-term perspective

Investing in stocks can be one of the most powerful tools for financial freedom — if done wisely.

Start small.
Learn continuously.
Stay disciplined.

Your future self will thank you.