Singapore REIT Weighted Average Lease Expiry (WALE)

This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

Weighted Average Lease Expiry (WALE) is a metric that measures the average remaining lease duration across all properties in a REIT portfolio, weighted by gross rental income or net lettable area. A higher WALE signals more stable, locked-in rental income for Singapore REIT investors.

This guide covers everything Singapore retail investors need to know about Singapore REIT Weighted Average Lease Expiry (WALE) — how it works, why it matters, and how to use it in your 2026 investment strategy.

What Is WALE in Singapore REITs?

WALE measures the average remaining lease term across a portfolio, weighted by gross rental income (GRI) or net lettable area (NLA). A WALE of 4.5 years means leases representing the bulk of rental income will not expire for another 4.5 years — giving investors clear DPU stability visibility.

WALE Benchmarks by Sector

Sector Typical WALE
Industrial/Logistics 3–7 years
Office 2–5 years
Retail Malls 1–3 years
Healthcare 15–30 years
Hospitality 10–20 years

Why WALE Matters for S-REIT Investors

WALE is a direct indicator of near-term DPU stability. A high WALE means rental income is locked in. A low WALE introduces re-leasing risk — especially in downturns when tenants may vacate or demand rent cuts. Always compare WALE within the same sector, not across different property types.

For more context, see our guide to the best S-REITs for 2026 and our Singapore REIT ETF guide.

How to Evaluate WALE When Choosing S-REITs

Step 1: Download the REIT’s latest investor presentation from SGX FileSmart. Step 2: Find the lease expiry schedule — a bar chart showing % GRI or % NLA expiring per year. Step 3: Cross-reference with anchor tenant lease expiries. Step 4: Compare the WALE trend over 3–5 years to assess proactive management.

WALE Outlook: 2026

As at Q1 2026, industrial REITs maintain the highest WALEs (4–7 years). Office REITs face a more challenging environment — watch for WALEs below 2.5 years as a risk flag.

Common Mistakes When Using WALE

Mistake 1: Comparing WALE across sectors. Mistake 2: Ignoring anchor tenant concentration — a 5-year portfolio WALE means little if the top tenant (30% of GRI) expires in Year 1. Mistake 3: Assuming high WALE equals no risk — a single master tenant with 10-year lease is a high-concentration bet.

What is a good WALE for a Singapore REIT?
A good WALE depends on sector. For industrial/logistics REITs, 4–7 years is healthy. For retail REITs, 2–4 years is typical. Healthcare and hospitality REITs under master leases often have WALEs of 15–30 years. Always compare within the same sector.
How is WALE calculated?
WALE is calculated by multiplying the remaining lease term of each lease by its weight (% of total GRI or NLA), then summing all weighted values. Most S-REITs disclose both GRI-weighted and NLA-weighted WALE in quarterly presentations.
Is a higher WALE always better?
Generally yes for income stability, but very long WALEs under master leases may limit rental reversion upside if rents only adjust by CPI annually.
Which Singapore REITs have the longest WALEs?
Healthcare and hospitality REITs typically have the longest WALEs — Parkway Life REIT (master leases 20+ years), CDL Hospitality Trust. Industrial REITs like Mapletree Logistics Trust average 4–5 years.
Does WALE affect S-REIT dividend safety?
Yes. A higher WALE means rental income is more locked in, reducing the risk of sudden DPU cuts from unexpected vacancies or re-leasing delays.

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.