CPF accrued interest is the interest that the CPF Board calculates you would have earned had you not used your CPF Ordinary Account (OA) savings to pay for your HDB flat. When you sell the property, you must refund both the principal amount withdrawn and the accrued interest back to your CPF OA. This is not a penalty — it is your own retirement money being returned to you. This page is for general information only and does not constitute financial advice.
What Is CPF Accrued Interest?
When you withdraw CPF OA funds to purchase a home, the CPF Board tracks how much interest those withdrawn funds would have earned at the prevailing OA interest rate (currently 2.5% per annum, with a floor guarantee of 3.5% on the first S$20,000). This notional interest is called accrued interest. As at Q1 2026, the OA rate remains 2.5% p.a., meaning every S$100,000 withdrawn accumulates roughly S$2,500 in accrued interest annually.
The accrued interest compounds over time. If you bought your flat 20 years ago using S$200,000 in CPF OA funds, the total refund on sale could easily exceed S$330,000 — significantly more than the original withdrawal.
CPF Cash Top-Up vs Refunding Accrued Interest
A CPF Cash Top-Up (under the Retirement Sum Topping-Up Scheme, or RSTU) is a voluntary contribution you make in cash to your own or a loved one’s CPF Special Account (SA) or Retirement Account (RA). It is completely separate from accrued interest on property withdrawals. A cash top-up:
- Earns SA/RA interest (currently 4.0% p.a.)
- Qualifies for tax relief of up to S$8,000 per year for self top-ups, and a further S$8,000 for top-ups to family members
- Is irreversible — cash topped up cannot be withdrawn except for approved purposes (retirement, housing, healthcare)
Why the Confusion?
Both concepts involve putting money into CPF, but they serve entirely different purposes. Accrued interest is a mandatory refund obligation when you sell a property; cash top-ups are a voluntary retirement savings strategy. Many Singaporeans confuse the two because both show up in CPF account balances.
How to Calculate CPF Accrued Interest
You can check your exact accrued interest amount on the CPF website under “My CPF Digital Services” → “My Statement” → “Property”. The formula compounds monthly:
Accrued Interest = Principal Withdrawn × ((1 + Monthly Rate)^Months − 1)
For a S$200,000 withdrawal held for 10 years at 2.5% p.a.: accrued interest ≈ S$55,810, meaning total refund = S$255,810.
Impact on Your CPF OA After Refund
When you sell your flat, the refund (principal + accrued interest) goes back into your CPF OA. If you plan to buy another property, you can use these funds again. However, accrued interest on the new purchase starts accumulating from day one. If you are close to retirement, consider whether using CPF for another property makes sense versus leaving funds in OA to earn guaranteed interest.
Cash Top-Up Strategy for Retirement
For Singaporeans focused on retirement planning, cash top-ups to the SA or RA at 4% p.a. are a powerful strategy, especially after age 55. The CPF investment strategy guide covers how to optimise your CPF accounts. The CPF Cash Top-Up Tax Relief Calculator helps you estimate your annual tax savings. Use the CPF Retirement Sum Calculator to see if you are on track.
Key Differences at a Glance
| Feature | CPF Accrued Interest | CPF Cash Top-Up |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Mandatory refund on property sale | Voluntary retirement contribution |
| Account | Refunded to OA | Credited to SA/RA |
| Tax relief | None | Up to S$8,000 p.a. |
| Interest rate | OA rate: 2.5% p.a. | SA/RA rate: 4.0% p.a. |