REIT Manager Fee
A REIT manager fee is the annual charge levied by the management company of a Singapore REIT for managing its portfolio of properties. It typically comprises a base fee and a performance fee, both reducing the distributable income available to unitholders. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Table of Contents
What Is a REIT Manager Fee?
Base Fee vs Performance Fee
Acquisition and Divestment Fees
Fee Impact on Distribution Yield
How Singapore Compares Globally
What to Look for When Evaluating REIT Manager Fees
What Is a REIT Manager Fee?
Every Singapore REIT has an external manager — a separate entity responsible for managing the portfolio and making acquisition and divestment decisions. For this service, the manager charges fees that come directly out of the REIT’s income, reducing the Distribution Per Unit (DPU) available to unitholders. As at Q1 2026, most S-REITs are externally managed, though there have been calls for greater internalisation to reduce cost drag.
Base Fee vs Performance Fee
The two main recurring fees: the base management fee (0.25–0.50% of deposited property value p.a., charged regardless of performance) and the performance fee (2.5–5.0% of net property income). Some REITs structure the performance fee based on DPU growth rather than absolute NPI — a more unitholder-aligned approach. Both fees reduce distributable income.
Acquisition and Divestment Fees
S-REIT managers charge one-off transaction fees: acquisition fees of 0.5–1.0% of the purchase price, and divestment fees of 0.25–0.50% of the sale price. These reduce the net accretiveness of any deal to DPU. Look at the aggregate leverage impact and acquisition fee cost together when assessing a deal’s attractiveness.
Fee Impact on Distribution Yield
Example: A REIT with S$2B in deposited assets, S$100M NPI, 500M units outstanding. Base fee at 0.4% = S$8M; performance fee at 3% = S$3M; total S$11M in manager fees, reducing distributable income to S$89M. Per unit: S$0.178 vs S$0.200 without fees — approximately 1 percentage point of yield drag on a S$1.00 unit price. Use the Dividend Yield Calculator to model different fee structures.
How Singapore Compares Globally
Compared to REITs in Australia and the US (many internally managed), Singapore’s external management model results in slightly higher fee drag. However, MAS has tightened fee guidelines over the years and many S-REITs have negotiated more unitholder-friendly structures. The sector remains well-regulated under MAS’s Code on Collective Investment Schemes. For direct investment comparison, see our Best S-REITs Singapore 2026 guide.
What to Look for When Evaluating REIT Manager Fees
Check: (1) whether fees are paid in cash or units — unit payment is more unitholder-aligned; (2) the TER versus sector peers; (3) whether the performance fee is based on DPU growth (good) or absolute NPI (less ideal); (4) transaction fee levels for recent acquisitions. Use the S-REIT Gearing & ICR Calculator alongside fee analysis for a comprehensive view of REIT financial health.
Frequently Asked Questions — REIT Manager Fee
What fees does a REIT manager charge in Singapore?
Are REIT manager fees paid in cash or units?
Do REIT manager fees reduce my distribution?
What is the total expense ratio (TER) of an S-REIT?
Can unitholders vote against REIT manager fees?
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