S-REIT Gearing Ratio & ICR Calculator Singapore
Instantly check any Singapore REIT’s gearing ratio, interest coverage ratio, and MAS regulatory headroom — the two most critical financial health metrics for S-REIT investors.
Gearing Ratio & ICR Calculator
Understanding Gearing Ratio in Singapore REITs
The gearing ratio is the single most important financial metric for Singapore REIT investors. It measures what percentage of a REIT’s total assets are funded by debt — and it directly determines how much financial risk the trust is taking on. A higher gearing ratio means more debt relative to assets, which amplifies returns in good times but increases vulnerability during rising interest rate environments or property value downturns.
In Singapore, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) regulates S-REIT leverage through the Property Fund Guidelines. As of 2026, the standard aggregate leverage limit for REITs listed on the SGX is 50%. REITs that maintain an interest coverage ratio (ICR) of at least 2.5 times may leverage up to 60%. This tiered system was introduced to reward financially disciplined REITs while protecting investors from excessive debt risk.
For retail investors analysing S-REITs, monitoring both the gearing ratio and the net gearing trend across reporting periods — combined with the ICR — gives a clear picture of a REIT’s ability to service debt and sustain distributions.
Gearing Ratio vs Net Gearing
The standard gearing ratio (total debt ÷ total assets) is the figure MAS uses for its regulatory limits. Net gearing deducts cash holdings from total debt before dividing by assets, giving a slightly lower number that REITs sometimes cite in investor presentations. Always compare like for like when benchmarking across REITs.
What Is a Good Gearing Ratio for a Singapore REIT?
Most institutional analysts consider a gearing ratio below 40% to be conservative and comfortable. Between 40–45% is seen as the normal operating range for actively managed REITs. Anything above 45% begins attracting scrutiny, particularly in a high interest rate environment, and above 50% breaches the MAS standard limit (unless the REIT qualifies for the 60% extended limit).
| Gearing Range | Risk Assessment | MAS Status |
|---|---|---|
| Below 35% | Conservative — high debt headroom | Well within limits |
| 35% – 45% | Moderate — typical S-REIT range | Within standard 50% limit |
| 45% – 50% | Elevated — limited headroom | Approaching standard limit |
| 50% – 60% | High — requires ICR ≥ 2.5x to comply | Above standard; extended limit only |
| Above 60% | Critical — regulatory breach | Exceeds MAS hard cap |
Source: MAS Property Fund Guidelines (2022 revision). For informational purposes only — not financial advice.
How to Use This Gearing Ratio Calculator
- Enter Total Debt: Find this in the REIT’s balance sheet under “Total Borrowings” or “Total Debt.” Use the most recent quarterly report (available on SGXNet).
- Enter Total Assets: Also from the balance sheet — the “Total Assets” line. This forms the denominator for the gearing ratio formula.
- Enter Annual NPI or EBIT: Net Property Income (NPI) is the equivalent of EBIT for REITs — operating income before interest and taxes. Use the trailing twelve-month figure from the latest financial statements.
- Enter Annual Interest Expense: Found in the income statement under “Finance Costs” or “Interest Expense.” The calculator uses this to compute the ICR.
The tool instantly outputs: Gearing Ratio (with MAS compliance status), Interest Coverage Ratio (with qualitative rating), headroom to the 50% standard limit, and a visual bar chart against MAS thresholds.
Pro tip: Compare your results against the sector average using our S-REIT Yield vs Bond Spread Calculator and dive deeper into REIT fundamentals with our Best S-REITs 2026 guide.
Contents — Click to Expand
- Gearing Ratio & ICR Calculator
- Understanding Gearing Ratio in Singapore REITs
- How to Use This Gearing Ratio Calculator
- What Is Gearing Ratio?
- How the Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR) Works
- MAS Gearing Limits for Singapore REITs
- S-REIT Gearing Benchmarks 2026
- Advanced: Using Gearing & ICR Together
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Is Gearing Ratio?
The gearing ratio is a financial leverage metric that expresses a company’s total debt as a proportion of its total assets. For Singapore REITs, the gearing ratio formula is:
Gearing Ratio = Total Debt ÷ Total Assets × 100
Unlike a general corporation where gearing might refer to debt-to-equity, Singapore REITs follow the MAS definition of debt-to-assets because it provides a more conservative and comparable metric across the sector. A REIT with S$3.5 billion in borrowings against S$7 billion in total assets has a gearing ratio of exactly 50% — right at the MAS standard regulatory ceiling.
Gearing matters for three key reasons. First, it determines how much additional debt a REIT can take on to fund acquisitions. Second, it signals how sensitive the REIT’s distributions are to rising interest costs — higher gearing means a larger share of NPI goes to servicing debt rather than paying out dividends. Third, it affects a REIT’s credit rating and ability to refinance borrowings at competitive rates.
During the 2018–2019 rising rate environment and again in 2022–2024 when the US Federal Reserve aggressively hiked rates, S-REITs with gearing above 40% saw meaningful distribution per unit (DPU) compression as their interest expenses rose on variable-rate debt. This is why tracking the gearing ratio alongside the average cost of debt gives investors a more complete picture than net gearing or yield alone.
How the Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR) Works
The interest coverage ratio (ICR) — sometimes called the times interest earned ratio — measures how easily a REIT can service its debt from operating income. For REITs, the formula is:
ICR = Net Property Income (NPI) ÷ Annual Interest Expense
An ICR of 3.0x means the REIT’s NPI is three times its annual interest bill — leaving substantial buffer for property vacancies, rent reductions, or interest rate spikes without threatening the trust’s ability to meet its obligations. A weak ICR below 2x is a significant red flag: it suggests that a sustained rise in interest rates or a decline in rental income could quickly make debt servicing challenging.
The ICR became even more important after MAS’s 2022 leverage framework revision, which tied the higher 60% aggregate leverage limit to maintaining an ICR of at least 2.5 times. REITs that fall below the 2.5x ICR threshold while carrying leverage above 50% are required to reduce their gearing back to the 50% standard limit within a remediation period.
Historically, most investment-grade S-REITs have maintained ICRs between 3x and 5x during low-rate periods. During the 2022–2024 rate cycle, many saw ICRs compress toward the 2–3x range as floating-rate debt repriced. As of 2026, with rates gradually normalising, ICRs are recovering for REITs with strong net property income growth or those who locked in fixed-rate borrowings.
MAS Gearing Limits for Singapore REITs
The Monetary Authority of Singapore sets binding leverage limits for all property funds listed in Singapore under the Property Fund Guidelines (PFG). These are not voluntary targets — they are regulatory requirements with serious consequences for non-compliance, including being required to divest assets or issue equity to bring gearing back within limits.
The current MAS gearing framework (effective from 16 April 2020 and confirmed under the 2022 PFG revision) has two tiers:
- Standard Limit: 50% — applies to all Singapore REITs by default. REITs must not allow their aggregate leverage to exceed 50% of their deposited property value at any point.
- Extended Limit: 60% — available only to REITs that maintain a minimum ICR of 2.5 times on a rolling basis. This allows financially disciplined REITs to pursue larger acquisitions while keeping risk in check.
Before the 2020 revision, the standard limit was 45%. The increase to 50% was initially introduced as a COVID-19 relief measure, and was subsequently made permanent as MAS concluded the higher limit was appropriate given the ICR safeguard. Note: The 45% figure you still see cited by some analysts refers to this historical limit — always use 50% (or 60% with ICR qualification) for current analysis.
Beyond MAS limits, individual REIT managers typically set their own internal comfort thresholds — usually 5–10 percentage points below the regulatory ceiling — to preserve flexibility for opportunistic acquisitions without needing to raise equity at inopportune times.
S-REIT Gearing Benchmarks 2026
To give your gearing ratio calculation context, here are approximate gearing ranges by S-REIT sub-sector as at early 2026. These figures are derived from public financial statements and are provided for indicative comparison only.
| REIT Sub-Sector | Typical Gearing Range | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial / Logistics REITs | 30% – 42% | Generally conservative; strong NPI from long leases |
| Retail REITs | 32% – 40% | Anchor-tenant leases provide stable ICR |
| Office REITs | 35% – 44% | Sensitive to occupancy; watch ICR closely |
| Diversified REITs (Pan-Asia) | 36% – 46% | Currency risk adds complexity to debt analysis |
| Hospitality REITs | 32% – 42% | Revenue volatility warrants lower gearing preference |
Approximate ranges based on SGXNet filings as at Q1 2026. For informational purposes only — not financial advice.
For a deeper dive into individual S-REIT yields and distribution performance, visit our Best S-REITs 2026 guide which covers the top S-REITs by yield, gearing, and DPU track record.
Advanced: Using Gearing & ICR Together for REIT Analysis
Experienced S-REIT investors don’t look at gearing and ICR in isolation — they analyse both together to spot the most and least resilient REITs. The optimal combination is low gearing (below 40%) with a high ICR (above 3.5x): these REITs have substantial debt headroom to pursue yield-accretive acquisitions, low vulnerability to interest rate rises, and strong distribution sustainability.
The danger combination is high gearing (above 45%) with a weak ICR (below 2.5x). These REITs face a double squeeze: limited capacity to add debt for growth, and distributions vulnerable to any increase in financing costs. If property valuations also decline — reducing total assets and mechanically increasing the gearing ratio — they risk approaching or breaching MAS limits, potentially forcing equity raisings that dilute unitholders.
When using this calculator, always complement your output with a review of: the REIT’s debt maturity profile (are large refinancings due in the next 12–24 months?), proportion of fixed vs floating rate debt (higher fixed-rate mix protects ICR), and net asset value (NAV) per unit trend (declining NAV increases gearing mechanically even without new borrowings). For CPF investors using OA funds to invest in REITs via CPFIS, our CPF Investment Strategy guide shows how to evaluate REITs within a retirement portfolio context.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the gearing ratio limit for Singapore REITs?
How do I calculate the gearing ratio for a Singapore REIT?
What is a good gearing ratio for a REIT in Singapore?
What is the interest coverage ratio and why does it matter for REITs?
What happens if a REIT’s gearing ratio exceeds the MAS limit?
How does the gearing ratio change when property values fall?
Where do I find a REIT’s gearing ratio and interest coverage ratio?
Can I use this gearing ratio calculator for non-REIT companies?
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