Tuesday 2 April 2019

HDB Price Guide: 5 Most Expensive HDB Estates In 2019 - Dollars And Sense

Bishan, Clementi and other popular suspects make the list, but so do some surprising ones like Punggol and Sengkang.



Property prices is a topic many Singaporeans are interested in. One of the main reasons is because Singapore has one of the highest rates of home-ownership rates in the world (at above 91%).
Public housing has played a key role in our island-nation achieving such a high rate of home-ownership. Nearly 80% of people in Singapore achieve home-ownership through their HDB-flats.
On the back of recent interest in the topic of whether we actually own our HDB flats, the price of HDB flats have become an even more pertinent talking point.

HDB VS Private Property Prices

In recent years, there has been much debate over the difference in owning an HDB flat compared to a private property in Singapore. The government has even stepped in to clarify their stance on HDB properties VS private properties, as well as implement policies to upgrade HDB flats and estates via the Home Improvement Programme (HIP), HIP 2 and the Neighbourhood Renewal Programme (NRP), as well as outline a new programme, the Voluntary Early Redevelopment Scheme (VERS), to ensure HDB flats continue remain viable homes for Singaporeans.
In addition, the government has continued to implement further property cooling measures by raising the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) and tightening the Loan-to-Value (LTV) limits. To understand more: here’s a guide to how the most recent property cooling measures in mid-2018 will impact property investors.
Since 2014, prices of HDB resale flats have been ticking downwards. However, looking at the bigger picture, we should note that its prices have risen sharply since 2007. The recent decline in HDB property prices has nevertheless depressed prices to levels last seen in 2011.
Source: HDB
In this article, we look at the 5 most expensive HDB estates in Singapore to shine some light on the areas where demand continues to be robust for HDB flats.
No.Town3-Room4-Room5-RoomExecutive
1Ang Mo Kio$287,100$437,333$698,075
2Bedok$290,500$406,250$584,575
3Bishan$554,625$752,875
4Bukit Batok$262,000$378,350$521,500$611,750
5Bukit Merah$338,375$663,125$778,700
6Bukit Panjang$278,000$364,625$468,250$593,333
7Bukit Timah
8Central$404,000$860,000
9Choa Chu Kang$268,000$334,375$396,000$534,375
10Clementi$315,350$575,375$635,500
11Geylang$286,325$492,375
12Hougang$282,000$382,000$474,000$666,250
13Jurong East$279,750$411,000$537,450
14Jurong West$249,500$353,750$434,500$542,750
15Kallang/Whampoa$304,500$540,750$715,500
16Marine Parade
17Pasir Ris$406,975$477,000$617,500
18Punggol$348,125$447,875$437,625$545,000
19Queenstown$342,850$718,875$843,500
20Sembawang$336,225$385,225$473,500
21Sengkang$333,333$406,750$440,825$551,700
22Serangoon$313,500$441,500$518,625$702,500
23Tampines$330,250$427,750$533,500$676,225
24Toa Payoh$273,500$589,000$832,750
25Woodlands$263,475$327,700$404,850$562,750
26Yishun$266,000$342,750$455,825
“-” indicates there were less than 20 transactions recorded in any given quarter in 2018.
We compared the prices of 3-room, 4-room, 5-room and Executive HDB flats to find the most expensive towns. Here are the most expensive towns to buy these flat types:
3-Room Flats
No.Town3-Room
1Central$404,000
2Punggol$348,125
3Queenstown$342,850
4Bukit Merah$338,375
5Sengkang$333,333

4-Room Flats
No.Town4-Room
1Central$860,000
2Queenstown$718,875
3Bukit Merah$663,125
4Toa Payoh$589,000
5Clementi$575,375

5-Room Flats
No.Town5-Room
1Queenstown$843,500
2Toa Payoh$832,750
3Bukit Merah$778,700
4Bishan$752,875
5Kallang/Whampoa$715,500

Executive Apartments
No.Town5-Room
1Serangoon$702,500
2Tampines$676,225
3Hougang$666,250
4Pasir Ris$617,500
5Bukit Batok$611,750

We Should Not Just Take Statistics As It Is

Just looking at the outcomes, we can see that some towns, with all respect, should not have made it into the top 5 but did anyway. This could be down to several reasons:
i) Popular (and traditionally expensive) estates such as Marine Parade and Bukit Timah did contribute to the statistics in any way because there weren’t enough transactions in these towns to accumulate meaningful statistics.
ii) Certain towns, such as Geylang (5-room), Bukit Batok (Executive), Bishan (Executive) and several others did not contribute to the statistics within certain flat types as there weren’t enough quarterly transaction for those flat types in the towns.
iii) There is an increasingly limited supply for 5-room and Executive HDB flats in mature towns, as recent BTO launches have seemingly did away with these flat types.
Next, these statistics do not take into consideration qualitative aspects of the HDB flats that were being sold, such as the age, the internal decoration and condition, floor or the facing of the flats sold. These factors could introduce a certain amount of bias into the data.
Nevertheless, we shouldn’t just brush off the fact that 3-room flats in Punggol and Sengkang made the top 5 list, it shows that there is good demand for such flats in the towns. It also provides a sense of how other flat types in these towns could increasingly see better demand (even if they don’t break into the top 5 list in the other categories).

The Usual Suspects Continue To Make The List

Especially in the 4-room and 5-room categories, the usual suspects – Central, Queesntown, Bukit Merah, Toa Payoh, Bishan, Kallang/Whampoa and Clementi – all make the list. This should not come as a surprise as these are popular and mature towns that continue to see BTO launches significantly oversubscribed (if they are even launched within these towns).
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Source: Dollars And Sense (05 Mar 2019)