This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
When comparing dividend yield between ETFs and REITs in Singapore, REITs typically offer higher headline yields of 5–8% through mandatory 90% distribution requirements, while Singapore-listed dividend ETFs yield 2–5% with broader diversification and lower single-stock risk.
S-REIT vs ETF Dividend Yield: Key Differences
Singapore REITs must distribute at least 90% of taxable income to qualify for tax transparency — making them high-yield vehicles by design. Most S-REITs yield 4–8% per annum as at Q1 2026. Singapore-listed dividend ETFs typically yield 2–5%. Global ETFs like IWDA or CSPX yield only 1–2%.
Yield Comparison Table (Q1 2026)
| Instrument | Typical Yield | Tax (SG) |
|---|---|---|
| S-REIT (CLAR, MLT) | 5–8% | No withholding tax |
| SGX Dividend ETF | 3–5% | No withholding tax |
| Ireland ETF (IWDA, CSPX) | 1–2% | 15% WHT at fund level |
| US ETF (VT, VOO) | 1–2% | 30% WHT for SG investors |
Why This Comparison Matters
Singapore investors building passive income portfolios often debate S-REITs vs ETFs. S-REITs offer higher cash yields and quarterly distributions but are sensitive to interest rate movements. ETFs offer lower yields but broader diversification. A blended approach is popular — S-REITs for income, global ETFs for growth. Platforms like Endowus and Syfe support mixed REIT + ETF portfolios with CPF/SRS funds.
How to Compare Yields Properly
Consider after-tax effective yield (not just headline). Check total return (yield + capital growth). Verify dividend payout reliability over 5–10 years. Compare DPU histories using SGX FileSmart or FSMOne. See our REIT ETF guide for in-depth analysis.
2026 Market Context
With rates easing from 2023 peaks, S-REIT yields have compressed to 5–7%. Most still represent attractive spreads over 10-year SGS bonds (~3.1%). Global equity ETFs delivered strong total returns in 2024–2025 on AI-driven earnings growth.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Chasing headline yield without checking sustainability — a 9% yielder distributing capital is not sustainable. Mistake 2: Ignoring WHT on foreign ETFs. Mistake 3: Over-allocating to yield instruments in early accumulation — total return compounding matters more over a 20+ year horizon.
Do Singapore REITs or ETFs give better dividend yield?
Is REIT income taxable in Singapore?
Which Singapore ETFs have the highest dividend yield?
Can I hold both REITs and ETFs in my CPF/SRS?
What is the difference between REIT distributions and ETF dividends?
Use our Retirement Planning Calculator, explore the best S-REITs for 2026, or sign up via Endowus or Syfe to invest your CPF/SRS funds.