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Listing Status

Expired Properties in Singapore

1,059 active listings in Singapore updated Jun 2026.

Expired 1,059 listings
Key Takeaways

    1,059 properties in Expired

    1-Bed Condo at 10 Evelyn Road, Newton – S$1.31M
    Condo

    1-Bed Condo at 10 Evelyn Road, Newton – S$1.31M

    S$ 1,309,000

    10 Evelyn Road  ·  Condo  ·  7 min (590 m) from NS21 Newton MRT Station

    1 to buy 1 Beds 495 sqft
    Reflections at Keppel Bay: 3BR Condo, S$2.75M, Telok Blangah
    Condo

    Reflections at Keppel Bay: 3BR Condo, S$2.75M, Telok Blangah

    S$ 2,750,000

    1 Keppel Bay View  ·  Condo  ·  14 min (1.14 km) from CC28 Telok Blangah MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 1,539 sqft
    Heritage Place, Bugis: 3BR Apartment S$4.19M | 1,636 sqft
    Condo

    Heritage Place, Bugis: 3BR Apartment S$4.19M | 1,636 sqft

    S$ 4,190,000

    21 Tan Quee Lan Street  ·  Condo  ·  4 min (360 m) from EW12 Bugis MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 1,636 sqft
    Marina One Residences 1-bed Condo S$1.4M, Marina Bay MRT
    Condo

    Marina One Residences 1-bed Condo S$1.4M, Marina Bay MRT

    S$ 1,400,000

    21 Marina Way  ·  Condo  ·  2 min (140 m) from CE2 Marina Bay MRT Station

    1 to buy 1 Beds 721 sqft
    6-Bed Terraced House Springside Avenue, S$4.5M | Sembawang HOT
    Landed

    6-Bed Terraced House Springside Avenue, S$4.5M | Sembawang

    S$ 4,500,000

    Springside Avenue/ Springside Place/ Sembawang Road  ·  Landed

    1 to buy 6 Beds 4,000 sqft
    7-Bed Freehold Semi-D, Upper East Coast – S$8.9M, Bayshore MRT

    7-Bed Freehold Semi-D, Upper East Coast – S$8.9M, Bayshore MRT

    S$ 8,900,000

    ❤️WIDE 13M Frontage, Bright & Breezy❤️  ·   ·  8 min (670 m) from TE29 Bayshore MRT Station

    1 to buy 7 Beds 6,000 sqft
    Parc Centros 4-Bed Condo S$2.4M | Punggol MRT
    Condo

    Parc Centros 4-Bed Condo S$2.4M | Punggol MRT

    S$ 2,400,000

    82 Punggol Central  ·  Condo  ·  4 min (300 m) from NE17 Punggol MRT Station

    1 to buy 4 Beds 1,313 sqft
    612A Tampines North Drive 1 | 3-bed HDB $948,888 | 11 min MRT
    HDB

    612A Tampines North Drive 1 | 3-bed HDB $948,888 | 11 min MRT

    S$ 948,888

    612A Tampines North Drive 1  ·  HDB  ·  11 min (940 m) from CR6 Tampines North MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 1,216 sqft
    CanningHill Piers 2BR, S$2.435M | River Valley Road, Fort Canning
    Condo

    CanningHill Piers 2BR, S$2.435M | River Valley Road, Fort Canning

    S$ 2,435,000

    177 River Valley Road  ·  Condo  ·  1 min (100 m) from DT20 Fort Canning MRT Station

    1 to buy 2 Beds 732 sqft
    3-Bed HDB Clementi Avenue 1 | S$899k, 990 sqft, 13min MRT
    HDB

    3-Bed HDB Clementi Avenue 1 | S$899k, 990 sqft, 13min MRT

    S$ 899,000

    421 Clementi Avenue 1  ·  HDB  ·  13 min (1.04 km) from EW23 Clementi MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 990 sqft
    3-Bed HDB Flat, Woodlands Drive – S$580k, 11 min to MRT HOT
    HDB

    3-Bed HDB Flat, Woodlands Drive – S$580k, 11 min to MRT

    S$ 580,000

    525 Woodlands Drive 14  ·  HDB  ·  11 min (950 m) from TE2 Woodlands MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 1,119 sqft
    3-bed HDB flat, 1,194 sqft, S$585k, Jurong West – near MRT
    HDB

    3-bed HDB flat, 1,194 sqft, S$585k, Jurong West – near MRT

    S$ 585,000

    276D Jurong West Street 25  ·  HDB  ·  10 min (820 m) from JS6 Jurong West MRT Station

    1 to buy 3 Beds 1,194 sqft
    1 8 9 10 11 12 89

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why should I consider expired listings when shopping for property in Singapore?

    Expired listings often represent properties that were listed at unrealistic prices or lacked effective marketing, creating opportunities for savvy buyers to negotiate better deals with motivated sellers. Many of these properties have been re-listed at more competitive price points after the initial listing period, particularly in the current market where buyer sentiment has shifted toward value. Agents managing expired listings are frequently more flexible on terms and willing to facilitate quicker transactions, which can be advantageous in Singapore's fast-moving property market where opportunities can disappear rapidly.

    What does an expired listing status mean for property valuation and pricing strategy?

    An expired listing typically indicates the property failed to sell within the standard 90-day marketing period, which usually signals a pricing mismatch relative to current market conditions or property defects that deterred buyers. Sellers who re-list these properties often reduce their asking prices by 3–8% to improve competitiveness, reflecting genuine market corrections particularly evident in the condominium segment where supply remains elevated. Understanding why a property expired—whether due to overpricing, poor condition, or market timing—is crucial for assessing whether the new asking price represents genuine value or merely cosmetic adjustments.

    Is now a good time to purchase from the expired listings pool, given current Singapore market conditions?

    The current market presents a compelling opportunity for buyers exploring expired listings, as sellers have become more realistic about pricing following periods of market stagnation, particularly in the mass-market HDB and non-prime condominium segments represented in your sample listings. Interest rate stability and the absence of aggressive cooling measures mean financing conditions remain favourable for qualified buyers willing to negotiate, whereas earlier years saw speculative pricing that contributed to many listings expiring. However, expired listings in prime locations like Keppel Bay and Dunearn remain competitive despite their history, suggesting location fundamentals ultimately overcome listing status—buyers should focus on value relative to comparable active listings rather than assuming all expired stock offers superior deals.

    How do MRT proximity dynamics affect the re-listing success and valuation of expired properties?

    Properties within 5 minutes' walk of an MRT station (approximately 400 metres) demonstrate significantly higher re-listing velocity and price resilience, as evidenced by your sample's strong performance near Clementi, Rumbia LRT, and Bedok North stations where expired listings retain competitive positioning. Conversely, expired properties without listed MRT proximity face steeper discounts upon re-listing, as the absence of public transport connectivity becomes a critical barrier during active market conditions when buyers can be selective. The variance in MRT impact is most pronounced in the HDB segment, where Rivervale Crescent (4 minutes to Rumbia) and Punggol Way (1 minute to Soo Teck LRT) command premiums that often buffer against the negative implications of expired status.

    What are the rental yield expectations for expired properties compared to comparable active listings?

    Expired properties that have been repriced can often deliver superior rental yields (typically 2.5–3.5% gross yield) compared to newly listed comparable properties, particularly in the condominium segment where re-listed units may be 5–10% cheaper than comparable active stock. However, investors must investigate the cause of expiration, as properties with structural issues, management problems, or poor tenant turnover histories may face higher vacancy risk (15–20%) that undermines yield calculations. HDB flats in well-connected areas like your Punggol and Clementi samples typically maintain rental appeal regardless of listing history, with gross yields of 2–2.8%, whilst expired condominiums may carry hidden vacancy premiums that savvy investors can exploit through targeted lettings strategies.

    How should Additional Buyer's Stamp Duty (ABSD) and other transaction costs factor into expired listing purchases?

    ABSD implications remain unchanged for expired listings—foreign investors and Singapore permanent residents purchasing a second property still face 15% duty on the first $180,000 plus 10% on amounts above, with rates escalating for subsequent purchases—so the expired status provides no tax advantage. However, the lower purchase prices frequently associated with re-listed expired properties may result in absolute ABSD savings; for example, a condominium re-listed at S$2.4 million versus original S$2.7 million pricing saves approximately S$30,000 in ABSD for a foreign buyer. Stamp duty on the actual purchase price remains progressive, making the valuation correction from expired status to re-listing particularly valuable for investors, though they should factor potential capital appreciation risk given these properties may take longer to appreciate compared to active-market purchases.

    What lease tenure considerations should I evaluate for expired HDB and condominium listings?

    Expired HDB listings often represent flats with 70–85 years remaining on their 99-year lease, a critical factor that contributed to their initial expiration as buyers became increasingly lease-conscious; verification of residual tenure is absolutely essential before purchase as financing becomes restricted below 70 years remaining. For condominiums like your Riviere and Dunearn House samples, lease tenure is typically 99 years but should be explicitly confirmed, as expired status may mask underlying structural or lease-related issues that initially deterred buyers—particularly relevant for units approaching 40+ years old where major upgrading liabilities emerge. HDB properties expiring whilst approaching the 70-year lease threshold frequently re-list at steeper discounts (8–12%) than comparable flats with longer tenures, creating pricing opportunities for upgraders willing to accept shorter-term ownership horizons.

    How does the current supply pipeline affect competition and pricing for expired property categories?

    The recent completion of major condominium projects and continued HDB launches mean expired properties face intensifying competition from new supply, particularly in the Clementi, Bedok, and Punggol regions where your sample listings are concentrated and multiple new developments are completion-ready. This supply pressure supports the re-pricing thesis for expired listings, as developers' new launch pricing often establishes market benchmarks that force older expired stock to adjust downward to remain competitive. However, prime locations like Keppel Bay benefit from limited upcoming supply in their micro-markets, meaning expired listings there retain pricing resilience and may re-list at smaller discounts—suggesting location and scarcity remain more determinative than expiration status.

    What specific buyer and tenant profiles benefit most from purchasing or renting expired listings?

    Investors with strong analytical capabilities seeking value opportunities are the optimal buyer profile for expired listings, as they can identify properties where re-pricing has created yield advantages (typically 0.3–0.6% premium over comparable active stock) or where specific defects are remediable at reasonable cost. Owner-occupiers upgrading from HDB to condominium representation in the S$2.5–3.5 million range often find re-priced expired listings align with their budgets whilst offering negotiation flexibility unavailable in active-market transactions. Tenants seeking rental properties benefit indirectly when investors acquire expired listings at discounts, as these savings often translate to more competitive rental pricing; the HDB rental segment particularly shows this dynamic, with properties at Punggol and Clementi frequently offered at 2–3% below comparable newly-listed units.

    What red flags and due diligence checkpoints should I prioritise when shortlisting an expired property?

    Request explicit documentation of the property's previous marketing efforts, price trajectory, and reasons for expiration—evasive responses should trigger deeper investigation into structural defects, management disputes, or hidden title issues that may have deterred the original buyer pool. Conduct enhanced title searches and strata inspections for condominiums, as many expired listings carry latent defects (water seepage, structural cracks, or unresolved renovation disputes in the buildings) that contributed to their market failure; budget an additional S$1,500–2,500 for specialist surveys beyond standard conveyancing checks. Request rental history and tenant feedback for multi-unit buildings, as consistent vacancy in a re-listed property may indicate management deficiencies or neighbourhood factors that fundamentally undermine valuation—comparing days-on-market data with comparable active listings in the same building is a critical calibration point that separates genuine value opportunities from structural problem properties.

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