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Singapore Fund Tax Incentives

Section 13O, 13U, 13D & 13OA: The 2026 Guide to Singapore Fund Tax Incentives

What each scheme exempts, the real AUM, headcount and spending numbers, which one you qualify for — and how the rules changed for 2025.

KLReviewed by Katrin Lindqvist, Tax & Incentives Editor · Updated June 2026

Singapore exempts qualifying fund income from tax under a family of schemes administered with the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). The three that matter for most managers and family offices are Section 13O (the onshore/resident fund scheme), Section 13U (the enhanced-tier scheme for larger funds), and Section 13D (the offshore fund exemption) — plus the newer Section 13OA, which extends 13O treatment to Singapore limited partnerships. All of them sit on top of a fund vehicle such as a Variable Capital Company (VCC).

Reviewed June 2026 against MAS, IRAS and ACRA guidance. Figures changed materially on 1 January 2025 — older guides (and most AI answers) still quote the pre-2025 rules. Always confirm current thresholds with MAS before applying.
Common error: Many guides still list the 13O minimum AUM as S$20 million. That is the pre-2025 figure. Since 1 January 2025 it is S$5 million in designated investments, tested at each financial year-end. (The S$50 million figure belongs to 13U, not 13O — another point sources routinely confuse.)
S$5M13O minimum AUM (designated investments, end of each FY)
S$50M13U minimum AUM at application & each FY
2 / 3Investment professionals: 13O = 2, 13U = 3 (≥1 non-family)
S$200k+Local business spending, tiered up to S$500k

13O vs 13U vs 13D vs 13OA — at a glance

Sources disagree on the AUM and headcount figures because they conflate the general fund rules with the family-office route and pre- vs post-2025 changes. Here is the current position:

FeatureSection 13O (Onshore)Section 13U (Enhanced Tier)Section 13D (Offshore)Section 13OA (LPs)
Best forSmaller onshore funds, single-family officesLarger funds, multi-family offices, institutionalOffshore-structured funds with a SG managerSingapore limited partnerships
Minimum AUMS$5M designated investments (end of each FY)S$50M at application and each FYNo minimumSame as 13O
Investment professionals≥2 (≥1 non-family)≥3 (≥1 non-family)≥1 (from FY-end 2027)≥2 (at LP level)
Local business spendingTiered: <S$250M → S$200k · S$250M–2B → S$300k · >S$2B → S$500kNoneSame as 13O
MAS applicationYesYesNoYes
Fund domicileOnshore (Singapore)Onshore & offshoreOffshore vehicleSingapore LP

Which scheme do I qualify for?

The short version: if your fund is a Singapore company or VCC with around S$5M+ in designated investments and two investment professionals, you are in 13O territory. Cross S$50M with a third investment professional and 13U becomes available (and is usually preferred by institutional investors). A Singapore limited partnership uses 13OA. A purely offshore vehicle managed from Singapore looks at 13D. Use the eligibility checker below to map your specifics — it captures your structure, AUM and headcount and returns the scheme you fit plus the exact numbers you need to hit.

A worked example: what does the exemption actually save?

Numbers make the incentive concrete. Take a Singapore-incorporated VCC running a S$50 million credit and equities book that generates S$4 million of qualifying income in a year — interest, dividends and gains on designated investments. Here is the same fund taxed as an ordinary company versus exempted under 13O or 13U:

LineNo incentive (ordinary 17% rate)13O / 13U exempt
Qualifying income from designated investmentsS$4,000,000S$4,000,000
Singapore tax on that incomeS$680,000 (17%)S$0
Income retained for investorsS$3,320,000S$4,000,000
Annual tax savedS$680,000

The S$680,000 saving comfortably outweighs the cost of meeting the conditions — the tiered S$200k–S$500k local business spending and a two-to-three person investment team are the price of admission, and most of that spending (admin, audit, tax, management fees) you would incur anyway. This is illustrative arithmetic at the headline 17% corporate rate, not a tax computation; partial exemptions, the income type and your actual cost base will move the real figure. Run your own numbers in the eligibility checker below.

Not sure which scheme fits?

Run the 13O/13U eligibility checker, then we'll connect you with a vetted Singapore fund-setup partner to file it.

Check my eligibility →

What changed on 1 January 2025

MAS tightened the economic-substance conditions across 13O and 13U. The headline changes: 13O picked up a minimum-AUM test (S$5M in designated investments) and a two-investment-professional requirement where previously it had neither; local business spending moved from a flat S$200k to the tiered bands above; and the AUM test for both schemes must now be met at the end of every financial year, not just at application. Existing pre-2025 awards generally have until their financial year ending 2027 to comply. The separate VCC Grant Scheme (which co-funded incorporation costs) expired on 15 January 2025 — many competitor pages still list it as live; it is not.

How the schemes connect to the VCC

A tax incentive is not a structure — you still need a fund vehicle and a Singapore-regulated manager. Most managers pair these incentives with a VCC (often as an umbrella with ring-fenced sub-funds), managed either under their own licence or under an existing MAS-licensed fund manager. Family offices typically run the same playbook — see family office structures.

Frequently asked questions

Is VCC income really tax-free?

Qualifying income from designated investments is exempt from Singapore tax when the fund meets the conditions of 13O, 13U or 13D — not automatically. You must apply (for 13O/13U) and maintain the AUM, investment-professional and local-spending conditions each year.

What counts as "local business spending"?

Expenses paid to Singapore-based providers — fund administration, audit, tax, legal, management fees, and similar — count toward the tiered local-business-spending requirement (S$200k / S$300k / S$500k depending on AUM).

Do I need to hire investment professionals in Singapore?

Yes. 13O requires at least two and 13U at least three investment professionals who are Singapore tax-resident and earning above the MAS salary floor; at least one must be a non-family member.

Is the VCC Grant Scheme still available?

No. The VCC Grant Scheme, which co-funded up to 70% of incorporation costs (capped at S$150k) originally, then 30% (capped at S$30k) under its final 2023–2025 extension, and closed to new applications on 15 January 2025.

VCC Singapore is an independent informational resource and is not a regulator, law firm or tax adviser. Tax thresholds and conditions are set by MAS/IRAS and change periodically — confirm the current figures before acting. This page is general information, not legal, tax or financial advice.