Singapore Landlord Guide 2026 — The Deposit You Will Not Get Back
Property Management · Buyer Guides · Updated June 2026

The Deposit You Will Not Get Back — And the Three Documents That Decide Every Singapore Tenancy

James Ong · CEA R008385F · PropNex · Former Managing Agent Updated June 2026 · 12 min read

You found a good tenant. They paid on time for two years. They left last month. Now you are arguing about an air-conditioning compressor, a kitchen countertop and three months of missing servicing receipts. The dispute is not about bad intentions. It is about three documents you did not insist on at the start. This guide tells you exactly what those documents are — and why 70% of landlords who skip them lose their SCT case.

70% Tenants win SCT deposit cases with documentation
$3,000 Compressor replacement — tenant's bill without receipts
14 days Deposit return deadline after vacating
30 min Inventory list — saves every dispute
Direct Answer

Singapore landlord-tenant disputes almost never result from bad tenants. They result from three missing documents: a signed inventory list at move-in, an explicit air-conditioning servicing clause in the tenancy agreement, and written records of every maintenance request and complaint. These three documents determine the outcome of every deposit dispute at the Small Claims Tribunal. Without them, a landlord with a legitimate claim loses. With them, almost every dispute settles before it reaches the SCT.

Renting Out Your Property — Or About to Sign a New Tenancy?

James reviews tenancy agreements, advises on the clauses that prevent disputes, and manages the landlord-tenant relationship from a background most agents don't have. Before you hand over the keys, he tells you exactly what documentation to insist on — and what a generic template always misses.

  • Air-con clause review — quarterly servicing, receipt retention, repair liability split
  • Inventory list format — what to photograph, how to timestamp it, what gets missed
  • Minor repairs threshold — what the market standard is and how to word it so it holds at SCT
  • Deposit deduction framework — what is legitimate and what gets overturned

A two-year lease at $4,000/month is $96,000 in rent. A compressor dispute, reinstatement argument and one month's vacancy during re-letting can erode $15,000–$20,000 of that. The tenancy agreement takes one hour to get right. The dispute takes months.

WhatsApp James — Review My Tenancy Agreement Former Managing Agent. CEA R008385F. Same day.
The Assumption This Article Will Overturn

That finding a good tenant is the hard part. It isn't. The tenancy outcome is determined far more by what you documented at the start than by who you chose. A responsible tenant in a poorly structured tenancy still generates disputes. An average tenant in a well-documented tenancy rarely does.

The Three Documents That Decide Every Singapore Tenancy Dispute

James has sat in enough estate management meetings and heard enough SCT outcomes to know that the pattern is almost always the same. The landlord had a legitimate grievance. The tenant had a different version of events. And the adjudicator had to choose between two conflicting verbal accounts — because neither party had the documentation to settle the question objectively.

These are the three documents that prevent that situation entirely.

1
The Signed Inventory List — With Timestamped Photos

This is the document that determines who wins every deposit dispute. Not the tenancy agreement. The inventory list. A signed record of every fixture, fitting, appliance and piece of furniture — with photographs taken on handover day, emailed to the tenant within 24 hours, and signed by both parties as part of the tenancy package.

Without it, the end-of-lease argument is purely subjective. "That scratch was pre-existing." "No it wasn't." At SCT, the adjudicator cannot determine the truth. The tenant wins — because the burden of proof is on the landlord to demonstrate that the damage did not pre-exist the tenancy.

The fix: On handover day, photograph every room, every appliance, every pre-existing mark or damage. Timestamp the photos (your phone's camera does this automatically). Email the set to the tenant within 24 hours. Both parties sign the inventory list. This takes 30 minutes. It eliminates every "that was already there" dispute at lease end.
2
The Air-Conditioning Clause — Specific, Not Vague

Air-conditioning disputes generate more landlord-tenant conflict in Singapore than any other single issue. The clause in most generic templates says something like "tenant is responsible for routine air-conditioning maintenance." That is not specific enough to enforce.

When a compressor fails at month 18 and the tenant cannot produce any servicing receipts, the landlord argues negligence. The tenant argues the unit was old and would have failed regardless. Without receipts, the landlord cannot prove negligence. Without a specific clause, the landlord cannot even prove receipts were required.

The fix: Your clause must specify: quarterly servicing frequency, whether chemical washing is required and how often, that a licensed contractor must be used, that receipts must be retained for the full tenancy period, and that receipts must be produced on request or at handover. Some landlords name their preferred contractor — which removes the "I used my cousin" argument entirely.
3
Written Maintenance Records — Every Request, Every Response

A tenant who ignored a leaking tap for three months — letting the water damage spread behind the wall — has a harder defence when the repair bill is $3,000 than if they had reported it in writing on day one. A landlord who ignored a repair request for six weeks has a harder defence against a tenant's claim for uninhabitable conditions.

Written records — WhatsApp, email, anything with a timestamp — establish who knew what and when. They are the evidence that determines liability when the facts are disputed. Verbal conversations are not evidence at the SCT.

The fix: Insist on written maintenance requests from your tenant from day one. When you receive one, respond in writing — even if it is just "noted, contractor booked for Thursday." Keep the thread. This record protects both parties and eliminates the "I told you about this three months ago" arguments that dominate most end-of-lease disputes.

The Air-Con Clause — What the Market Standard Is and Why Vague Wording Always Loses

Singapore's climate means most households run air-conditioning for 8–12 hours daily. That usage accelerates wear on the fan coil unit and, over 24 months, will require at minimum four quarterly services and potentially one chemical wash. A landlord who has a $4,000 air-conditioning system at the start of a tenancy needs that system to be maintained — because the alternative is a compressor replacement claim at the end.

Clause ElementVague (Loses at SCT)Specific (Holds at SCT)
Frequency"Regular maintenance"Quarterly — once every 3 months
Chemical washNot mentionedAnnual chemical wash of fan coil units required
Contractor"Licensed contractor"Licensed contractor — preferred vendor list attached OR owner-approved contractor
Receipts"Keep records"Retain all servicing receipts for full tenancy duration. Produce on request within 7 days and at handover.
Liability on failureNot specifiedIf tenant cannot produce receipts, repair/replacement cost for failure attributed to poor maintenance is tenant's liability.
ReportingNot specifiedTenant to report aircon issues in writing within 48 hours of discovery.

Source: CEA Tenancy Agreement Reference Template 2025–2026. James's clause recommendations based on estate management experience and SCT outcome patterns.

The market standard for minor repairs is $150–$300 per incident — the tenant pays up to this cap for any single repair, the landlord covers the balance if not caused by tenant negligence. This threshold needs to be a specific dollar amount in the tenancy agreement. "Minor repairs" without a number is unenforceable.

Screening a Tenant in Singapore — The Six Checks That Actually Predict Problems

Income verification and a payslip confirm they can afford the rent today. They do not tell you whether they will service the air-con, report problems promptly, or vacate cleanly in two years. The checks that actually predict behaviour are different — and most landlords skip at least three of them.

The Six-Point Pre-Handover Checklist

💼
Employment verification at 3× rent minimum Payslips plus employment letter — both. Self-employed tenants need 3 months of bank statements. The 3× multiplier is the market standard. Below it, any unexpected expense (medical, family, job change) puts rent at risk.
📞
Previous landlord reference — call, don't just ask for the number Most landlords ask for a reference contact. Few actually call. The questions that matter: Did they report maintenance promptly? Did they service the air-con? Was the unit returned cleanly? Would you rent to them again? One no to the last question ends the conversation.
🪪
Pass type and validity (foreign tenants) For HDB rentals, tenant must hold an eligible pass type. For private property, Employment Pass must be valid for the tenancy duration — check the renewal date, not just the issue date. A tenant whose EP expires at month 14 of a 24-month lease is a structural problem, not a paperwork issue.
👥
Exact occupant count — named, in the agreement URA and HDB set occupancy limits. More importantly: a tenant who moves in as two people and gradually becomes six is a wear-and-tear problem that compounds monthly. Name every occupant in the agreement and include a clause requiring written notice of any occupancy change.
🏠
Reason for moving — and how many times in the last 3 years A tenant who has moved three times in three years has either been pushed out by landlords or consistently broken leases. Neither pattern is reassuring. Ask directly. The answer — and the comfort with which they give it — is informative.
🚫
Any mention of subletting, Airbnb or home business URA bans short-term rentals under 3 months for all residential properties. HDB rules prohibit tenant subletting entirely. If a prospective tenant raises either during the viewing — even casually — that is a red flag, not a negotiation point.

Renting out for the first time — or dealing with a difficult current tenant? James reviews your tenancy agreement and tells you exactly which clauses need tightening before any keys are handed over.

WhatsApp 91111173

Would You Rather: Tight Tenancy Agreement or the Best-Looking Applicant

James's View

Average tenant · tight agreement · full documentation

  • Air-con clause is specific and enforced
  • Signed inventory list with timestamped photos
  • Minor repairs threshold is a dollar amount
  • Every maintenance request in writing
  • Deposit return backed by documented evidence
  • SCT outcome predictable — documentation wins
Common Mistake

Ideal tenant · generic template · no inventory list

  • Air-con clause says "regular maintenance"
  • No inventory list — move-in condition undocumented
  • "Minor repairs" with no dollar threshold
  • Verbal maintenance requests — no paper trail
  • Deposit dispute at end — both parties arguing from memory
  • SCT outcome unpredictable — landlord loses more often

The honest answer: The tenancy agreement and documentation framework matter more than tenant selection. Most problem tenancies are not caused by bad people — they are caused by unclear agreements. An average tenant with clear expectations and documented obligations produces a clean exit. An excellent tenant in a vague agreement still generates ambiguity at handover. Fix the agreement first.

The HDB Upgrader Renting Out for the First Time — The Extra Rules Nobody Mentions

Singapore's most common landlord profile in 2026 is the HDB upgrader — someone who has bought a private property and is renting out their HDB flat to offset mortgage costs. Private condo median rents stand at approximately $4,300 per month as of Q1 2026 (PropNex Research, March 2026). HDB flat rents remain firm across mature estates. The financial logic is compelling. The compliance requirements are more complex than most first-time landlords expect.

For HDB landlords specifically: you need HDB's approval before any tenancy begins. The non-citizen quota applies at both the neighbourhood and block level — once the quota is reached, you cannot rent to non-citizens regardless of how good the applicant is. Minimum tenancy period for HDB flats is 6 months. Eligible tenant pass types are prescribed — not every valid Singapore pass qualifies. And you cannot rent to more occupants than HDB's prescribed maximum for your flat type. Violating any of these rules exposes you to HDB enforcement — which can include compulsory sale of the flat in severe cases.

For buyers who have recently taken the HDB-to-private asset progression path — using the proceeds from an HDB sale to fund a private entry — the rental income from a retained HDB flat is a key part of the investment thesis. Getting the tenancy structure wrong on that flat is not a minor oversight. For the full asset progression framework that connects HDB, private property and the TEL/NSC corridor thesis, the Singapore GLS guide explains how the supply pipeline affects rental demand in the corridors where most upgraders buy.

When It Goes Wrong — The Deposit Dispute Framework

Singapore's rental market ran hot through 2022–2024. Median private condo rents peaked at $5,200 per month in Q2 2023 before moderating to approximately $4,300 by Q1 2026 (PropNex Research, March 2026). As tenancies signed at peak rents roll off, deposit disputes are rising — because landlords who accepted market-rate deposits at the peak are now trying to enforce obligations from tenants who have seen their rent effectively increase 20% in real terms.

The deposit return framework is straightforward: return within 14 days of the tenant vacating, subject to documented deductions. The deductions that hold at SCT are specific, evidenced and proportionate. The ones that do not hold are vague, undocumented and retrospective.

DeductionHolds at SCT?Evidence Required
Damage beyond fair wear and tear — scratch, stain, holeYes — with evidenceInventory list photo vs handover photo + contractor quote
Air-con repair — compressor failure, no receiptsYes — if clause specifies receiptsAir-con clause + absence of receipts + repair invoice
Professional cleaning — unit returned dirtyYesMove-out photos showing condition + cleaning invoice
Unpaid rent or utilitiesYesRent ledger + utility bills
Repainting walls — normal 2-year tenancyNo — landlord's costThis is routine refurbishment, not tenant damage
Replacing aged furniture or appliancesNoAge-related deterioration is landlord's cost unless misuse proven
Damage not in move-in inventoryNoCannot deduct for damage you cannot prove tenant caused

Sources: CEA Tenancy Agreement Reference Template 2025–2026, State Courts SCT guidelines, Emerald Law LLC security deposit guide 2025.

JO
James's Note CEA R008385F · PropNex · Former Managing Agent

I once managed a mid-tier condominium in Bishan where one landlord — a retired schoolteacher who had rented out her unit for nearly a decade — came to me after her latest tenant vacated. She had discovered the air-conditioning fan coil unit was caked with two years of dust, the compressor was stuttering, and there were no servicing receipts anywhere. Her tenancy agreement said "tenant is responsible for air-con maintenance." Full stop. No frequency. No receipts clause. No contractor requirement.

She had used that same template for nine years across three tenancies. She had been lucky twice. This time, the repair bill was $2,800 and the SCT ruled against her because she could not prove the failure was caused by the tenant's negligence rather than the unit's age. The clause did not require receipts. She could not prove no servicing had occurred. She got nothing.

I spent 20 minutes with her after that rewriting the three critical clauses in her template. Quarterly servicing, named contractor, receipts retained for full tenancy and produced at handover. She has not had a dispute since. Twenty minutes to save $2,800 — and the months of stress that came with it.

If you are renting out your property right now with a generic template you downloaded or copied from a friend, WhatsApp me your agreement. I will tell you in 30 minutes which clauses are missing and exactly how to tighten them: 91111173 →

FAQ — Singapore Landlord and Tenant Guide 2026

Who is responsible for air-conditioning servicing in a Singapore rental?
In most Singapore tenancy agreements, the tenant is responsible for quarterly servicing and must retain receipts. If the tenant cannot produce receipts when a compressor fails, the repair cost — typically $800–$3,000 per unit — shifts to the tenant. If receipts are intact and the failure is mechanical, the landlord pays. The clause must specify frequency, receipt retention and contractor standard — vague wording is the source of most disputes.
How much can a Singapore landlord deduct from the security deposit?
Deductions must be specific, evidenced and proportionate. Legitimate: damage beyond fair wear and tear with contractor quotes, outstanding utilities, missing air-con receipts where clause requires them, professional cleaning if unit not returned clean. Not legitimate: repainting walls after a 2-year tenancy, replacing aged items, deductions for damage not documented in the move-in inventory. Return the balance within 14 days of the tenant vacating. Deductions without documentary evidence are regularly overturned at SCT.
What is the minor repairs threshold in Singapore tenancy agreements?
The market standard is $150–$300 per incident. Below this cap, the tenant pays for minor repairs. Above it, the landlord covers the balance if the issue is not caused by tenant negligence. The threshold must be a specific dollar amount in the tenancy agreement — "minor repairs" without a number is unenforceable. James recommends $200 as the standard threshold for most private residential tenancies.
What does fair wear and tear mean in a Singapore tenancy?
Fair wear and tear covers ordinary deterioration from normal use — minor wall scuffs, faded curtains, carpet fraying. It does not cover tenant-caused damage: stains, holes, broken fixtures, burn marks. Repainting walls after a normal 2-year tenancy is the landlord's routine refurbishment cost. A burn mark on a countertop is the tenant's liability. The inventory list signed at move-in determines what was pre-existing versus what the tenant caused — without it, every end-of-lease dispute defaults to "their word against yours."
Can a Singapore tenant sublet or use the property for Airbnb?
No. URA prohibits residential property rentals of fewer than 3 consecutive months nationally. HDB rules prohibit tenant subletting entirely — only the registered flat owner can apply to rent out. A tenant who sublets or lists on Airbnb is in breach of the tenancy agreement and potentially subject to URA enforcement fines of up to $5,000 per offence. As the registered owner, you bear the enforcement risk for your tenant's conduct — which is why the permitted use clause must explicitly prohibit subletting and short-term rental.

Get Your Tenancy Agreement Reviewed Before the Keys Are Handed Over

30 minutes · No obligation · James responds same day
📋
Tenancy Agreement ReviewAir-con clause, minor repairs threshold, reinstatement terms — the three that determine every dispute
📸
Inventory List FormatWhat to photograph, how to timestamp it, what most landlords miss at handover
🏢
HDB Compliance CheckEligible pass types, non-citizen quotas, occupancy limits — before any HDB tenancy begins
⚖️
Deposit Deduction FrameworkWhat holds at SCT and what gets overturned — applied to your specific situation

A two-year tenancy at $4,000/month is $96,000 in rent. The 30 minutes it takes to get the agreement right determines whether the last month ends cleanly or in dispute.

WhatsApp James — wa.me/6591111173 Former Managing Agent. CEA R008385F. Same day.

Sources

  1. CEA — Tenancy Agreement Reference Template and Renting Guidelines (2025–2026)
  2. PropNex Research — Singapore private condo median rent $4,300/month Q1 2026 (March 2026)
  3. State Courts Singapore — Small Claims Tribunal guidelines, $20,000 limit, filing fees (2026)
  4. Emerald Law LLC — Security deposit deductions and fair wear and tear guide (2025)
  5. URA — Short-term accommodation minimum 3-month rule, $5,000 per offence
  6. HDB — HDB flat subletting rules, eligible tenant pass types, non-citizen quotas (2025–2026)
  7. Rentify Singapore — Tenant vs landlord maintenance responsibilities (February 2026)
  8. Community Mediation Centre — Landlord-tenant dispute resolution pathway

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific tenancy disputes or contract matters, consult a qualified Singapore lawyer or approach the Community Mediation Centre. James Ong · CEA Reg No. R008385F · PropNex Realty Pte Ltd.

James Ong · CEA Reg No. R008385F · PropNex Realty Pte Ltd
WhatsApp: 91111173 · wa.me/6591111173