How to build a condo buyer shortlist in Singapore
Use districts for the first filter and project pages for the real decision. Use it before the offer, while you can still adjust the price without losing option money.
Published Jun 2026. Data is for research and comparison only.The practical answer
Use districts for the first filter and project pages for the real decision. Start with the closest evidence available, then widen the comparison only when the project or nearby project sample is thin. That order matters because broad averages can make a decision feel cleaner than it is. The closer the comparison is to the property, street, project, flat type or district you care about, the more useful the number becomes.
A buyer decision is strongest when total price, PSF, tenure, rent support and recent sales all support the same story.
Buying is where transaction evidence earns its keep. A listing can make a unit feel rare, but the project page shows whether buyers have recently paid similar prices. The goal is not to remove judgment. The goal is to make judgment less dependent on the listing headline.
What to make of this
This buyer read is a first filter, not a valuation report. The main anchors here are recorded sales 136,318 (Price checks) and rental records 453,593 (Demand signal). The useful question is whether total price, PSF, tenure and recent project evidence are all telling the same story.
Les Maisons Nassim in D10 / Ardmore, Bukit Timah, Holland Road, Tanglin is the first row I would open, with median sale $36,977,280 and median PSF $5,461 psf. Use that first comparison to choose the project, district, HDB or calculator page that answers the decision in front of you.
What I would check next
I would open the closest project, district or HDB page next, then compare the headline number against the transaction rows. The closer the comparable, the more useful the read.
If the page gives you a ranking, treat it as a shortlist. The decision still needs project-level or street-level evidence before the number carries much weight.
What to check first
Check recent sales in the same project first, then compare sale PSF, total price, tenure and nearby projects with similar demand.
After that, check rent support. Even owner-occupiers should care about rental evidence because it shows whether other people are willing to pay monthly for the same location and project. Rent support is not the whole value case, but it is a useful demand signal.
Private residential coverage currently runs from Jun 2021 to Jun 2026. Rentals and sales can refresh on different URA schedules, so read each side on its own timing.
Before you trust the number
A buyer number becomes useful when it connects to actual transactions. The asking price is only a claim until recent sales, PSF, tenure and nearby comparisons support it. Before trusting the number, check whether the evidence comes from the same project or a truly similar substitute.
The strongest comparison is usually boring. Same project first, nearby similar projects next, then district context. If the price only looks fair after jumping to a weaker comparison, the buyer should treat the offer range with caution.
Why people misread this
The common mistake is letting the asking price become the anchor. Once a buyer sees a listing price enough times, it starts to feel normal. Recent transactions are the cleaner anchor because they show what actually cleared.
Another mistake is comparing PSF without context. PSF changes with unit size, floor, layout, tenure, condition and project age. A higher PSF may be fair for a smaller or better-positioned unit, but it needs a reason.
Buyers can also overvalue a beautiful renovation. Renovation may save time and cash after completion, but it should not hide a weak sale-price comparison. Separate the project value from the finishing premium.
How to use the PropertySmartSG pages
Start with the project page and read the sale summary. Check median sale price, median PSF and sale depth. A deeper sale sample makes the first benchmark easier to trust.
Then compare nearby projects with similar tenure and location. Freehold, 99-year leasehold, older projects and newer projects should not be mixed lazily. If the comparison crosses tenure or age, the price gap needs to reflect that.
Use the calculators after the market read. Mortgage, stamp duty and affordability tools help with budget, but they do not prove value. The project evidence still decides whether the price is sensible.
How to read the comparison table
The table below should be treated as a starting shortlist. It pulls forward pages with enough signal to compare, but the row itself is not the full decision. A table can tell you where to click next. It cannot tell you whether one specific unit, flat or offer deserves a premium.
For buyer topics, the table usually highlights projects with sale depth. High sale price or high PSF is not the point by itself. The point is to open pages where the transaction evidence can support a better offer decision.
Open at least two or three rows before deciding what the number means. The first row may be the highest, busiest or most liquid, but the second and third rows often explain whether the leader is normal for that segment or standing out for a reason.
When to slow down
Slow down when a listing premium has no visible reason. A higher price can be fair, but the premium should be explainable.
Slow down when the sale sample is thin and the seller is using one old or unusual transaction as proof. Thin evidence does not kill a deal, but it should make the offer range more conservative.
Thin data does not mean the property is bad. It means your confidence range should be wider, and nearby comparables become more important.
A practical workflow
First, compare the asking price with the same project. If the project has enough sales, this is your strongest starting point. If it does not, write down why the sample is thin and widen carefully.
Second, compare total price and PSF against nearby projects. Keep tenure, age and location in the comparison. If the property is priced like a stronger project, it needs to behave like one.
Third, check rent support and cash comfort. Even if the price is fair, the purchase still needs to fit the buyer's financing, stamp duty profile and long-term plan.
A simple example
Say a buyer is reading this guide after seeing a listing that feels right. The first move is to separate the feeling from the evidence. Recent sales, PSF, rent support, tenure and nearby projects should all be checked before the asking price becomes the mental anchor.
That example keeps the buyer from overreacting to a polished listing. If the project evidence supports the price, the buyer can move with more confidence. If the price needs too many excuses, the buyer can either negotiate or widen the search before option money turns a loose idea into a commitment.
How to compare two options
When comparing two condos, do not pick the cheaper one automatically. Compare sale depth, rent depth, tenure, project condition, unit size and exit liquidity. Cheap can mean value, but it can also mean weaker demand.
If one project has stronger rent support and deeper sale evidence, it may deserve a premium. If another has a better layout or tenure, that may matter more for an owner-occupier. The right comparison depends on the buyer's use case.
A good comparison should make the tradeoff clear. For example: one project is cheaper but older and less liquid, while another is pricier but has stronger sales depth and rental support. Once the tradeoff is clear, the offer becomes easier.
What this does not answer
This guide does not tell a buyer to offer or walk away automatically. It gives a structured way to compare price, PSF, rent support, tenure and transaction depth before the decision becomes emotional. The final offer still depends on the exact unit and buyer circumstances.
It also does not replace a professional valuation. Transaction evidence is a strong starting point, but valuation, financing, legal checks and personal plans can all change the right move. Use the page to ask better questions before committing.
What to do next
Open the project page, compare recent sales and rent support, then run mortgage and stamp duty checks before making an offer.
If the number still feels stretched after that, widen to nearby projects before raising the offer.
Before offering, ask whether you can explain the price without using words from the listing. If the explanation comes from transactions, tenure, size and location, the decision is on firmer ground.
Projects to open next
Use these active project pages as starting points before applying the guide to a live offer, renewal or shortlist.
Quick answers
Short answers based on the current data view.
What should I check first?
Start with recent sales in the same project, then compare PSF, total price, tenure and nearby projects.
Can I use this as the final answer?
No. Treat it as a transaction-backed benchmark, then adjust for the specific unit and professional advice where needed.
What should I do next?
Open the project page, then use the mortgage and stamp duty calculators.