ETF vs REIT Income Comparison Singapore
Singapore Investor Guide 2026 · Not financial advice
For Singapore investors seeking passive income, ETFs and S-REITs differ in yield, asset backing, tax efficiency, and diversification. This is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
ETF vs REIT: Key Differences
| Feature | Singapore ETF | S-REIT |
|---|---|---|
| Underlying assets | Basket of equities/bonds | Physical real estate |
| Income yield | 2–4% | 5–7% |
| Distribution requirement | None (board decides) | ≥90% of taxable income (MAS rule) |
| Gearing | None (most ETFs) | Up to 50% (MAS cap) |
| CPF/SRS eligible | Yes | Yes |
Income Yield Comparison (Q1 2026)
SPDR STI ETF (ES3): ~3.5% yield. Nikko AM STI ETF (G3B): ~3.3% yield. Lion-Phillip S-REIT ETF (CLR): ~6.0% yield. Individual S-REITs: 5–7.5% (AIMS APAC ~6.9%, ParkwayLife ~5.8%, MIT ~6.5%). S-REITs offer materially higher current income than broad equity ETFs.
Tax Efficiency
Both Singapore ETF dividends and qualifying S-REIT distributions are tax-exempt for individual investors. Exception: US-domiciled ETFs attract 30% US withholding tax — use Ireland-domiciled equivalents (CSPX, VWRA) for 15% WHT on US equity exposure.
Diversification and Risk
ETFs offer broader sector/geographic diversification — STI ETF spans banks, telcos, property, industrials. S-REITs are sector-concentrated (all real estate) and highly interest-rate sensitive. When rates rose in 2022–2023, most S-REITs fell 20–30% while broad ETFs were more resilient. Complement S-REITs with equity ETFs for balanced portfolios.
Which Is Right for You?
Choose S-REITs for: maximum current income yield (5–7%), CPF CPFIS investment, real estate exposure. Choose ETFs for: broad diversification, lower single-sector risk, global equity access. Many Singapore investors use both — S-REITs for income, global ETFs (CSPX, VWRA) for long-term wealth accumulation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do ETFs or REITs pay higher income in Singapore?
S-REITs pay higher income yields (5–7%) versus Singapore equity ETFs (3–4%). The Lion-Phillip S-REIT ETF (CLR) offers ~6% yield with ETF-level diversification across S-REITs.
Can I use CPF to buy both ETFs and REITs?
Yes — SGX-listed ETFs and S-REITs are both eligible for CPFIS-OA investment (above S$20,000 minimum). SRS funds can also buy both ETFs and S-REITs on SGX.
Are Singapore ETF dividends taxable?
No. Dividends from Singapore-incorporated ETFs are generally tax-exempt for individuals. US-domiciled ETF dividends attract 30% US WHT — use Ireland-domiciled alternatives for efficiency.
What is the Lion-Phillip S-REIT ETF (CLR)?
SGX-listed ETF launched Oct 2017 tracking the Morningstar Singapore REIT Yield Focus Index. Holds diversified S-REIT basket. Management fee ~0.5% p.a. Distributes income semi-annually.
Which has lower fees — ETFs or individual REITs?
Individual S-REITs pay management/acquisition/performance fees from the REIT before distribution. ETFs charge an expense ratio (~0.07–0.5% p.a.). S-REIT ETFs have a double layer. Buying individual S-REITs directly typically results in lower total fee drag.