Anchor the scenario
Start with a real project rent, sale price, asking price or budget target. The tools are only useful when the inputs resemble the property you are actually considering.
Plan the numbers behind a Singapore private property decision: rent, sale price, stamp duty, cash needed, mortgage payment, affordability, yield and buy versus rent.
Most people do not wake up wanting a calculator. They want to know whether a rent, price, loan or cash timeline makes sense.
Start with project rent data, then use buy vs rent if you are deciding whether the monthly number still beats ownership.
Compare rentUse affordability to set a ceiling, then run mortgage and stamp duty to see the real monthly and upfront cost.
Set a budgetUse the purchase timeline for option money, exercise payment, stamp duty, legal fees and estimated completion cash.
Build cash timelineUse rental yield with a real rent, sale price and owner expense estimate so you are not fooled by gross yield alone.
Check yieldUse mortgage to convert a purchase price into loan amount, monthly principal and interest, and total interest.
Estimate paymentUse stamp duty to model BSD, ABSD, co-buyer profiles and FTA remission assumptions before speaking with a lawyer.
Estimate dutyRun the numbers in this order when you are comparing a real property, not just playing with assumptions.
Start with a real project rent, sale price, asking price or budget target. The tools are only useful when the inputs resemble the property you are actually considering.
Stamp duty, option money, exercise payment, lawyer fees and down payment can matter before the first mortgage payment starts.
Mortgage and affordability help you see whether the loan still feels comfortable after debts, interest rate changes and realistic cash limits.
Buy vs rent and rental yield help you compare the property against staying a tenant, buying another place or waiting for a cleaner opportunity.
The calculators are strongest when the inputs come from actual project or district data instead of a random asking price.
Turn a rent and purchase price into gross yield, net yield and estimated annual income after simple owner costs.
Estimate Singapore residential BSD and ABSD, including co-buyer profiles and FTA remission scenarios.
Map the option fee, exercise payment, stamp duty deadline, lawyer fees, bank loan and completion cash.
Work out loan size, monthly payment and total interest from rate, tenure and down payment.
Estimate a property budget from income, debts, available cash, TDSR, LTV, rate and loan tenure assumptions.
Compare a simplified buy scenario against renting over a chosen holding period.
These tools are designed for quick comparison, not financial, tax or legal advice. For a real purchase, verify stamp duty with IRAS, financing with your bank or mortgage adviser, and legal timelines with your lawyer.
Short answers about how to use the tools without treating an estimate like an approval, valuation or legal opinion.
Start with the decision in front of you. Buyers usually need stamp duty, purchase timeline, mortgage and affordability. Renters usually need buy vs rent. Investors usually need rental yield after checking real rent and sale evidence.
No. These calculators are planning tools. They use the numbers you enter and simple assumptions so you can compare scenarios quickly before checking with a bank, lawyer, tax adviser or official source.
Use a project page to find recent rent and sale anchors, then test those values in the calculators. That turns public transaction data into practical questions: fair rent, affordable price, stamp duty, cash needed and monthly payment.
They can help you pressure-test the numbers, but they cannot replace due diligence. Use them to spot obvious cash, loan, yield or rent issues before getting advice from a bank, lawyer, agent or tax professional.
Property decisions are linked. A higher price can change stamp duty, loan amount, down payment, yield and buy versus rent math at the same time. The point is to see how sensitive the decision is before you commit.
Start with active projects that have enough transaction depth to make the calculators more useful.
No close project matches yet. Try widening the inputs or open the full project directory.