S-REIT · Singapore Investing Glossary
REIT Distribution vs Dividend Singapore
REIT distributions and stock dividends are both forms of investment income in Singapore, but they work differently. S-REIT distributions are paid from net property income and are legally required to distribute at least 90% of taxable income to qualify for tax transparency. Stock dividends from Singapore companies, by contrast, come from retained earnings with no mandatory distribution requirement. Understanding the difference matters for yield analysis, tax planning, and retirement income strategies.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions.
Table of Contents
What Are S-REIT Distributions?
What Are Company Dividends in Singapore?
Key Differences: REIT Distributions vs Dividends
Tax Treatment: The Critical Difference
Which Offers Better Yield: S-REITs or Dividend Stocks?
What Are S-REIT Distributions?
In Singapore, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are structured as unit trusts under the Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) framework regulated by MAS. To enjoy tax transparency status — meaning the REIT itself is not taxed at the entity level — S-REITs must distribute at least 90% of their taxable income to unitholders annually.
This distribution is expressed as Distribution Per Unit (DPU), typically paid quarterly or semi-annually. The DPU reflects net rental income collected from the REIT’s property portfolio, minus management fees, financing costs, and other operating expenses.
Popular S-REITs and their approximate annualised DPU yields as at Q1 2026: CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (CICT) ~5.3%, Mapletree Industrial Trust (MINT) ~5.8%, Frasers Centrepoint Trust (FCT) ~5.6%. These figures change with property income and interest costs — always check the latest REIT manager’s announcements via SGXNet.
What Are Company Dividends in Singapore?
Dividends paid by Singapore-listed companies (like DBS, OCBC, Singapore Airlines, or Singtel) represent a distribution of retained profits to shareholders. Unlike REITs, Singapore companies have no legal obligation to pay a specific proportion of earnings as dividends.
Key features of Singapore company dividends:
- Discretionary: The board decides whether to pay, and how much.
- One-tier tax system: Singapore dividends are tax-exempt at the shareholder level — the company pays corporate tax on profits before declaring dividends, and you receive dividends tax-free.
- Dividend yield: Expressed as annual dividend per share ÷ current share price. Blue-chip Singapore stocks typically yield 2–5%.
Key Differences: REIT Distributions vs Dividends
| Feature | S-REIT Distribution | Singapore Company Dividend |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory minimum | 90% of taxable income | None — fully discretionary |
| Tax (SG residents) | Tax-exempt at unit trust level; individual taxation depends on type | Tax-exempt (one-tier system) |
| Tax (foreign individuals) | 15% withholding tax (standard rate) | Generally tax-exempt or exempt under tax treaties |
| Payment frequency | Quarterly or semi-annual | Annual or interim + final |
| Income source | Rental income from property | Company profits (any sector) |
| Regulatory oversight | MAS CIS framework | SGX listing rules, Companies Act |
Tax Treatment: The Critical Difference
For Singapore tax residents, both S-REIT distributions and stock dividends are generally received tax-free. However, the mechanics differ:
S-REIT distributions: Under MAS’s tax transparency ruling, S-REITs do not pay corporate tax at the trust level if they distribute ≥90% of taxable income. Distributions flow to unitholders. For Singapore-resident individuals, these distributions are tax-exempt. For non-resident individuals, a 15% withholding tax applies (as at Q1 2026).
Company dividends: Under Singapore’s one-tier corporate tax system, companies pay corporate tax on profits (17% headline rate). Dividends paid from taxed profits are then exempt from tax in the hands of shareholders — no further taxation, regardless of tax residency in most cases.
This makes both S-REITs and Singapore dividend stocks tax-efficient for local investors — a significant advantage compared to markets like the US, where dividend income is taxed at the investor level.
For more on CPF-compatible dividend investing, see our CPFIS guide and DPU explainer.
Which Offers Better Yield: S-REITs or Dividend Stocks?
In Singapore’s current environment (Q1 2026), S-REITs generally offer higher headline yields (5–8%) compared to blue-chip dividend stocks (2–5%). However, yield alone does not determine which is the better investment:
- S-REITs: Higher yield, but distributions can fall when interest rates rise (higher debt costs) or occupancy drops. REIT distributions also include a capital return component, which means you may be receiving your own capital back.
- Dividend stocks: Lower yield typically, but some companies (like DBS, which raised dividends consecutively through 2022–2025) offer growing dividends that compound over time.
- Portfolio approach: Most Singapore income investors combine both — S-REITs for high current income and dividend growth stocks (DBS, OCBC, Singtel) for dividend growth. This is the core strategy discussed in our Dividend Aristocrats Singapore guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are S-REIT distributions taxable in Singapore?
How often do S-REITs pay distributions in Singapore?
What is DPU and how is it calculated?
Can I reinvest S-REIT distributions automatically?
Do Singapore company dividends count towards CPF?
Explore More on The Kopi Notes
Dive deeper into Singapore investing with our guides on S-REITs, ETFs, CPF strategies, and our full glossary of investing terms.