CPF Nomination vs Executor Singapore: Estate Planning Guide
In Singapore, CPF savings are not subject to a deceased member’s will or Letters of Administration — they are distributed directly to nominated beneficiaries under the CPF Act. An executor (or administrator) manages the rest of the estate but has no authority over CPF funds. CPF nominations are therefore separate and critical estate planning instruments as at 2026.
This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Table of Contents
Why CPF Bypasses Your Will and Executor in Singapore
What Is a CPF Nomination and Why It Matters
Role of the Executor vs CPF Nomination
How CPF Nomination Affects CPF LIFE and Investment Accounts
Estate Planning: Coordinating CPF Nomination with Your Will
Why CPF Bypasses Your Will and Executor in Singapore
One of the most misunderstood aspects of Singapore estate planning is that CPF savings are excluded from your estate. When a CPF member dies, their CPF savings (OA, SA, MA, and RA balances, as well as any CPF LIFE premium balance) are distributed to nominated beneficiaries — not via their will or Letters of Administration.
This means:
- Your executor has no authority over your CPF monies
- Your will cannot direct how CPF savings are distributed
- Without a valid CPF nomination, CPF savings go to the Public Trustee’s Office (not next-of-kin automatically)
This is governed by the Central Provident Fund Act (Cap. 36). The CPF Board facilitates distribution directly to nominees, bypassing the estate and avoiding probate delays.
What Is a CPF Nomination and Why It Matters
A CPF nomination is a formal legal document submitted to the CPF Board designating who receives your CPF savings upon death, and in what proportions. Key features:
- Any CPF member above age 16 can make a nomination
- Nominees can be any individual (not necessarily family) — there is no restriction on who you can nominate
- You can nominate multiple people and specify percentage shares
- Nominations can be updated at any time (a new nomination automatically revokes previous ones)
- Nomination survives marriage dissolution (unlike wills, which in some jurisdictions are revoked by marriage)
Without a nomination, your CPF savings are transferred to the Public Trustee’s Office, which distributes them under the Intestate Succession Act — a process that can take months and incur fees. Make your nomination via the CPF Board online portal or at any CPF Service Centre.
Role of the Executor vs CPF Nomination
Understanding the clear separation of authority:
| Aspect | Executor (Estate) | CPF Nomination |
|---|---|---|
| Authority over | Wills, property, bank accounts, investments | CPF OA, SA, MA, RA, LIFE balance |
| Legal instrument | Will / Letters of Administration | CPF Nomination Form |
| Probate required | Yes (for estates over SGD 5,000) | No — CPF Board pays directly |
| Timeline | Months to years | Typically 1–4 weeks after claim |
| Fees | Probate fees, lawyer fees apply | No fees |
| Can be contested | Yes (will contest possible) | Limited (CPF Act provides strong finality) |
How CPF Nomination Affects CPF LIFE and Investment Accounts
Your CPF nomination covers:
- CPF OA, SA, MA, RA balances at the time of death
- CPF LIFE premium balance (unspent premium, not future payouts — LIFE payouts cease at death)
- CPF Investment Scheme (CPFIS) holdings — shares, ETFs, unit trusts held under CPFIS are liquidated and the proceeds distributed
- MediShield Life and Integrated Shield Plan — these are insurance products and have separate nomination processes with the insurer
Notably, CPF nomination does not cover properties bought using CPF — those are part of the estate and governed by your will or intestacy rules. The CPF used for the property is refunded to CPF (accrued interest included) and then distributed to nominees. Learn more in our guide to CPF Nomination Singapore.
Estate Planning: Coordinating CPF Nomination with Your Will
Effective Singapore estate planning requires coordinating your CPF nomination with your will to avoid unintended outcomes:
- Make a CPF nomination now: even if you are young and single, nominate a parent or sibling. Without a nomination, your CPF goes to the Public Trustee (not your next-of-kin by default).
- Review nominations after major life events: marriage, divorce, birth of children, or death of a nominee all warrant an immediate review
- Draft a will for non-CPF assets: bank accounts, property, investments, and personal belongings need a will or Letters of Administration
- Consider a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA): for incapacity planning — an LPA designates someone to manage your non-CPF assets if you lose mental capacity
For comprehensive retirement and estate planning, consult a lawyer or Endowus for financial planning support alongside legal advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my will override my CPF nomination in Singapore?
Who can I nominate as a CPF beneficiary in Singapore?
Does my CPF nomination expire or need renewal?
How do I make or update a CPF nomination in Singapore?
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