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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.



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