Blue Chip Stocks Singapore
Blue chip stocks in Singapore are shares of large, financially stable, and well-established companies listed on the SGX with a long track record of consistent earnings and often dividends.
In Singapore investing circles, “blue chip” is shorthand for the crème de la crème of SGX-listed companies — think DBS Group, Singapore Airlines, Singtel, or CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust. These are businesses with decades of operating history, strong balance sheets, and the kind of earnings stability that lets long-term investors sleep well at night. This guide covers what makes a stock qualify as blue chip, how to invest in them in Singapore, and the risks you should still be aware of. This is not financial advice.
What Makes a Stock “Blue Chip” in Singapore?
There is no single official definition, but Singapore blue chips are generally companies that: are components of the Straits Times Index (STI) — the benchmark index tracking the top 30 SGX-listed companies by market capitalisation; have a market capitalisation exceeding S$1 billion; have operated profitably through multiple market cycles; pay consistent dividends or have a clear dividend policy; and are covered by multiple sell-side analysts. The STI components are reviewed quarterly by Singapore Exchange (SGX) and FTSE. As at Q1 2026, the STI included heavyweights like DBS, OCBC, UOB, Keppel, and Singapore Telecommunications.
Top Blue Chip Stocks on SGX (2026)
The 30 STI components represent Singapore’s blue chip universe. Key sectors include: Banking — DBS Group (D05), OCBC (O39), UOB (U11), collectively yielding 5–7%; REITs — CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (C38U), Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (N2IU); Telecoms — Singapore Telecommunications (Z74); Transport — Singapore Airlines (C6L), SATS (S58); and Property — CapitaLand Investment (9CI). Banking stocks dominate by weight. See our guide to the best S-REITs in 2026 for the REIT subset of blue chips.
How to Invest in Blue Chip Stocks in Singapore
You can access blue chip stocks via: Direct SGX purchase through a brokerage like POEMS, moomoo, or Tiger Brokers — buy in board lots of 100 shares; Regular Savings Plans (RSP) — POSB Invest-Saver, OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan, and similar schemes let you invest as little as $100/month into STI ETFs or specific stocks automatically; STI ETF — the Nikko AM STI ETF (G3B) or SPDR STI ETF (ES3) gives you all 30 blue chips in one product with TER around 0.25–0.30%; or Robo advisors like Endowus or Syfe that build diversified portfolios including SGX-listed equities.
Dividends from Blue Chip Stocks
A key attraction of Singapore blue chips is their dividend payouts. Singapore does not tax dividends at the investor level (one-tier tax system), so all dividends you receive are tax-free. DBS, OCBC, and UOB have delivered dividend yields of 5–7% in 2025–2026, making them among the highest-yielding bank stocks globally. REITs within the blue chip universe (as trusts) must distribute at least 90% of taxable income to unitholders. This makes blue chip dividend investing popular for retirement planning — see our retirement planning guide for how to model this income.
Risks of Blue Chip Investing
Despite their stability, blue chips carry real risks: Concentration risk — the STI is heavily weighted towards banks (~40%), meaning a banking sector downturn hits hard; Dividend cuts — DBS suspended its special dividend in 2020 due to MAS guidance; Currency risk — Singapore’s export-oriented blue chips (SIA, Singtel) earn in multiple currencies; Index reconstitution — companies can be removed from the STI if they underperform (e.g., SPH was delisted). Blue chips are generally lower-risk than small caps but are not risk-free.