Singapore Career & Business Calculators 2026
30 free calculators for Singapore professionals and business owners: MOM salary benchmarks vs your actual pay, SkillsFuture Credit tracking ($4,000 mid-career top-up for workers aged 40+), ACRA business registration cost estimator, Enterprise Development Grant subsidy calculator, Progressive Wage Model compliance checker, retrenchment benefit entitlements, and ESOP income tax calculator.
Singapore Salary Benchmark Calculators 2026
MOM’s 2025 Graduate Employment Survey shows median starting salaries range from $3,000 (diploma holders) to $4,600 (bachelor’s graduates) to $7,000+ (professional degrees). The Local Qualifying Salary (LQS) for 2026 is $1,800/month for full-time workers. Our tools benchmark your salary against MOM occupation data and calculate your true take-home after CPF, tax and statutory deductions.
ACRA Singapore Business Setup Cost Calculators
Starting a business in Singapore is among Asia’s fastest: Private Limited (Pte Ltd) registration via BizFile+ takes 1–3 days at $315 ACRA fee. Sole proprietorships cost $115/year. Singapore has the world’s most favourable tax regime for SMEs: 75% tax exemption on first $100k of profits for Startup companies, 8.5% effective tax on first $10k profit for established companies. Our tools model the real setup and first-year operating costs.
EDG, PSG & Enterprise Grant Calculators Singapore
Singapore’s enterprise grant ecosystem is among Asia’s most generous: the Enterprise Development Grant (EDG) covers up to 70% of qualifying costs for SMEs (50% for large enterprises). The Productivity Solutions Grant (PSG) supports pre-approved IT solutions and equipment at up to 50% funding. SkillsFuture Enterprise Credit provides $10,000 to employers for staff upskilling. Our calculators quantify your exact subsidy entitlement.
Notice Period, Retrenchment & Employment Act Calculators
The Employment Act covers all employees in Singapore with salary up to $4,500/month (for non-PMET non-manual workers) and all workmen with salary up to $2,600/month. For employees earning above these thresholds, common law applies to benefits beyond statutory minimums. The retrenchment “norm” in Singapore is 2 weeks to 1 month’s salary per year of service — our calculators compute your exact entitlement.
SkillsFuture & Career Transition Calculators 2026
Singapore’s SkillsFuture Credit gives every Singapore Citizen aged 25+ an initial $500 credit. Mid-Career Enhanced Subsidy (MCES) provides workers aged 40+ with up to 90% course fee subsidies at SSG-funded institutions. The Mid-Career Pathways programme tops up SkillsFuture Credit by $4,000 for eligible workers aged 40–60. Our tools calculate your total SkillsFuture entitlement and the ROI of career switches.
Salary, Grants & Business Setup in Singapore
Understanding Singapore’s Salary Landscape in 2026
Singapore’s median gross monthly salary for full-time employed residents reached $5,197/month in 2025 (MOM June 2025 data), up from $4,563 in 2022. This masks enormous variation: financial services professionals in private banking earn $15,000–$50,000+/month, while workers in lower-skilled sectors earn $2,000–$3,000/month under Progressive Wage Model requirements. The critical metric most employees ignore is their real after-CPF take-home salary — at $8,000 gross, an employee takes home approximately $6,400/month (after 20% employee CPF deduction), while total employer cost is $9,360 (employer CPF 17% = $1,360 added to $8,000 gross).
The Singapore Business Setup Ecosystem: Tax Advantages
Singapore consistently ranks #1 or #2 globally for business friendliness (World Bank Doing Business rankings). The private limited (Pte Ltd) structure is overwhelmingly chosen for its liability protection and tax advantages: the Startup Tax Exemption Scheme grants 75% exemption on first $100k of chargeable income and 50% on the next $100k — producing an effective tax rate of just 4.25% on the first $100k of profit. Combined with the YA2026 Corporate Tax Rebate (40%, capped at $40k), a startup earning $200k profit in year 1 might pay as little as $8,500 in corporate tax.
| Sector / Occupation | 25th Percentile | Median | 75th Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial Services (PMET) | $6,000 | $9,500 | $16,000+ |
| Information & Communications Tech | $4,800 | $7,200 | $11,500 |
| Healthcare (Nursing/Allied Health) | $3,200 | $4,800 | $7,000 |
| Engineering & Manufacturing | $3,500 | $5,200 | $8,500 |
| Education (MOE Teachers) | $3,800 | $5,500 | $8,200 |
| F&B / Service / Cleaning (PWM) | $1,800 | $2,300 | $3,200 |
Three Real Singapore Career Finance Calculations
Current salary: $7,200/month. New offer: $9,000/month. Difference: $1,800/month gross. After CPF: +$1,440 cash per month. Over 5 years, extra take-home: $86,400 cash + $54,000 CPF OA/SA. But new job requires: 3-month notice period ($21,600 salary buyout needed or 3 months gap). Break-even: Month 12 after joining — every month after that is pure gain. SkillsFuture $4,000 credit available for any bridging tech certification if needed.
SME with $500k revenue hires consultant for digital transformation: $80,000 project cost. EDG eligible at 70% = $56,000 reimbursed by Enterprise Singapore. Net consultant cost: $24,000 (deducted as business expense). Corporate tax on $500k profit: $85,000 × 17% = $14,450 (after partial exemption). YA2026 rebate: 40% of $14,450 = $5,780 rebated (or $2,000 minimum cash payout). Effective net tax + consulting cost: $30,670 on $500k revenue.
Marketing manager ($6,500/month, 20 years) switching to data science. Course fees: $18,000 (NUS part-time programme). MCES 90% subsidy = $16,200 paid by SSG. SkillsFuture Credit $4,500 (base $500 + $4,000 top-up) covers remaining $1,800. Net course cost: $0. Pay cut during transition: $6,500 → $4,000 for 12 months. Recovery at data science median $7,500 takes 18 months post-qualification. 5-year net benefit vs staying in marketing: +$78,000.
Three Expert Tips for Career Finance in Singapore
When negotiating salary, compute your total employer cost, not just your gross. A $8,000/month salary costs the employer $9,360/month (17% CPF = $1,360 employer contribution). When asking for a raise, framing it as “an increase from $9,360 to $10,000 total employer cost” (equating to $8,547 gross) positions you in business terms and is psychologically more palatable than “I want $548 more a month.”
Singapore SME owners routinely leave government money unclaimed. The optimal grant stack: (1) Use EDG for business consulting/digital strategy projects at 70%, (2) Use PSG for pre-approved software at 50%, (3) Use SFEC $10,000 for staff training, (4) Claim STES or Partial Tax Exemption on profits, then (5) Apply the YA2026 40% rebate. A $2M revenue company deploying all five grants can capture $50,000–$80,000 in annual government support.
Self-employed persons have no mandatory CPF (except MediSave at 8–10.5% of net trade income). However, voluntary contributions to your CPF OA/SA earn 2.5–4%/year tax-free, and contributions up to the CPF Annual Limit ($37,740 for 2026) are eligible for income tax relief. A sole proprietor earning $15,000/month can reduce taxable income by up to $37,740, saving $8,280 in tax (at 22% bracket) — while building retirement assets at guaranteed government-backed rates.
Salary SG 2025
Enterprise Singapore
Mid-Career Top-Up
Calculators
Singapore Career & Business FAQs 2026
Based on MOM’s 2025 Occupational Wage Statistics (most recent available), the median gross monthly salary for full-time employed residents is approximately $5,197/month. However, this varies enormously by sector — from $9,500+ in financial services to $2,300 in F&B/service roles. Use our Salary Benchmark Calculator to compare against your specific occupation, sector and years of experience using the exact MOM percentile data.
Every Singapore Citizen aged 25+ has a base $500 SkillsFuture Credit. Workers aged 40–60 receive an additional $4,000 Mid-Career Enhanced Top-Up, bringing total credit to $4,500. This is on top of the Mid-Career Enhanced Subsidy (MCES) which provides up to 90% course fee subsidies for workers aged 40+ at SSG-funded institutions. Check your balance at MySkillsFuture.gov.sg.
There is no statutory minimum retrenchment benefit for most Singapore employees (only for specific sectors like security/cleaning). The MOM Tripartite Guidelines recommend 2 weeks to 1 month’s salary per year of service. In practice, unionised companies and MNCs tend to pay 1 month per year; SMEs often pay 2 weeks per year. Additionally, you are entitled to: outstanding salary, notice period payment (or worked notice), and unused annual leave encashment.
Registering a Singapore Private Limited company (Pte Ltd) via ACRA BizFile+ costs: $26 for name reservation + $315 for registration = $341 in government fees. However, you also need a corporate secretary ($500–$1,500/year), a registered local address ($500–$1,200/year if using a virtual office), and at least one local director (or nominee director if you’re a foreigner). Total first-year setup typically runs $1,500–$3,500.
The EDG is administered by Enterprise Singapore and supports SMEs in business development projects across three pillars: Core Capabilities (business strategy, HR), Innovation & Productivity (process improvement, automation), and Internationalisation (overseas expansion). SMEs can claim up to 70% of qualifying project costs, including consultancy fees, equipment, software and certification costs. Large enterprises are capped at 50%. There is no fixed cap per application — the grant quantum depends on project scope and is assessed case-by-case.
The Local Qualifying Salary (LQS) for 2026 is $1,800/month for full-time workers and $9/hour for part-time workers. The LQS is the minimum salary that counts towards your company’s local workforce quota (for purposes of hiring foreign workers under S Pass and Work Permit quotas). Employees earning below $1,800/month do not count towards the Fair Consideration Framework (FCF) local employee headcount.
It depends on your profit level. For profits below approximately $70,000–$80,000/year: Sole Proprietorship is usually better (0–7% personal income tax with earned income relief). Above this threshold, a Pte Ltd becomes more tax-efficient: the Startup Tax Exemption gives 4.25% effective tax on the first $100k of profit, vs 7–11.5% personal income tax rate at equivalent income. The key non-tax advantage of Pte Ltd is liability protection — personal assets are shielded from business debts.
The YA2026 Corporate Income Tax Rebate is 40% of corporate tax payable, capped at $40,000. Additionally, companies with at least one local employee on CPF receive a minimum cash payout of $2,000 (even if they have no tax payable). Example: A company with chargeable income of $500,000 pays $85,000 in tax (after partial exemption). Rebate = 40% × $85,000 = $34,000. Net tax payable: $51,000. This rebate is automatically applied by IRAS — no application required.
In Singapore, ESOP and RSU gains are taxable as employment income under Section 10 of the Income Tax Act when the options are exercised (ESOP) or when the shares vest (RSU). The taxable amount is: Market Value at exercise/vest minus Exercise Price (for ESOP), or the full market value at vest for RSUs. This is taxed at your marginal personal income tax rate (0–24%). If your employment spans multiple years, you may elect for tax deferral using the 5-year spread formula — check with IRAS or your tax agent.
The PSG provides 50% funding for IMDA pre-approved IT solutions, equipment and consultancy services. Qualifying categories include: Accounting/Finance software (Xero, QuickBooks, SAP Business One), HR/Payroll (GreatDay, Employment Hero), POS systems, e-commerce platforms, CRM, inventory management and cybersecurity. You must use a pre-approved vendor from IMDA’s list. Applications are via Business Grants Portal (BGP) and reimbursed after project completion.
Yes. Self-employed Singaporeans and PRs can make Medisave contributions (mandatory: 8–10.5% of net trade income) and additionally contribute voluntarily to their CPF OA, SA and MA accounts up to the Annual CPF Limit of $37,740 for 2026. Cash contributions to SA and MA under the Retirement Sum Topping-Up scheme qualify for income tax relief of up to $8,000 (own account) + $8,000 (for family members).
The PWM mandates minimum wage requirements and career ladder wage increments for specific lower-wage sectors: Cleaning, Security, Landscape, Retail, Food Services, Waste Management, Admin & HR as of 2026. From September 2025, a broader Progressive Wage Credit Scheme co-funds wage increases for all local workers earning up to $3,000/month. Businesses that do not comply with PWM cannot hire foreign workers under the relevant sector quotas.
For an employee on $5,000/month gross salary, the employer’s true total cost is approximately $6,650–$7,200/month: employer CPF $850 (17%), SDL $12.50, work injury insurance ~$40, estimated medical/dental benefits ($100–$200), office space cost ($200–$500), HR admin overhead (~5% of salary). This means every $5,000 of salary costs the business ~$6,900 — employers should use this figure, not the gross salary, for P&L and pricing decisions.
Under the Employment Act, minimum notice periods are: Less than 26 weeks service: 1 day; 26 weeks to less than 2 years: 1 week; 2–5 years: 2 weeks; 5+ years: 4 weeks. However, most employment contracts set longer notice periods (1–3 months for PMET roles) — and the contract governs. Either party can pay salary in lieu of notice (notice pay = daily rate × notice days). Note: The Employment Act covers employees earning ≤$4,500/month for non-PMET roles and workmen ≤$2,600/month.
Career switch break-even = (Training cost net of subsidies + Income lost during training) ÷ (Monthly salary gain post-switch). Example: A $4,500/month marketing executive switches to data science. Net training cost (MCES 90% subsidy): $1,800. Income loss during 12-month part-time study: $0 (studying part-time while working). Starting data science salary: $6,000/month. Monthly gain: $1,500. Break-even: 1.2 months after landing the new role. Every month after is financial gain.
The Enterprise Innovation Scheme (EIS) from YA2024 provides enhanced tax deductions of 400% on qualifying R&D, IP licensing, registration, training and innovation expenditures, capped at $400,000 total per YA. Alternatively, companies with little or no tax liability can opt for a non-taxable 20% cash payout on qualifying expenditure. This makes innovation effectively subsidised — a company spending $100k on qualifying R&D claims $400k deduction, saving $68k in tax (at 17%) on the deduction. Apply via IRAS Form C/C-S.
More Singapore Finance Tools
Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency
The career and business calculators on SGFinanceCalculators.com are built using publicly available data from MOM’s Occupational Wage Statistics 2025, IRAS YA2026 tax guidelines, Enterprise Singapore grant guidelines, SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG) programme information and ACRA BizFile+ fee schedules. The YA2026 Corporate Tax Rebate (40%, $40k cap) and SkillsFuture Mid-Career Top-Up ($4,000) are verified against MOF Budget 2024 announcements and SSG policy documents.
All calculations are indicative estimates based on stated inputs and publicly available frameworks. Employment Act entitlements apply to employees within its coverage thresholds — workers above these thresholds should refer to their specific employment contracts and seek HR or legal advice. Grant eligibility (EDG, PSG, SFEC) depends on IRAS and Enterprise Singapore assessment and may differ from estimates. This tool does not substitute for professional HR, legal or tax advice.
Editorial Policy: Content is reviewed quarterly and updated when government grant guidelines, tax rates or MOM wage data are revised. Last updated: January 2026. For authoritative guidance, consult MOM.gov.sg, IRAS.gov.sg and EnterpriseSG.gov.sg.