Section 01
Why shophouses continue to capture investor attention
In a city that keeps reinventing itself, Singapore's shophouses stand apart as something rare and immovable. These low-rise heritage buildings, known for their five-foot ways, narrow frontages, colourful facades, and layered histories, remain one of the most coveted niches in the local property market.
The market cooled after the 2021 peak, but the tone has improved. PropNex Research reported 27 caveated shophouse transactions in Q3 2025, up 50% quarter-on-quarter, with total value of about S$210 million. ERA also expects a rebound to about 70 to 80 landed shophouse transactions in 2026, worth roughly S$550 million to S$650 million.
Section 02
A scarce asset class with strong long-term appeal
The fundamental attraction is supply. URA describes shophouses as two- to three-storey buildings, often built in contiguous blocks with common party walls and sheltered five-foot ways. Once conserved, they cannot simply be demolished and rebuilt as a higher-density modern block.
This fixed supply sits against broad demand from family offices, private investors, boutique funds, owner-occupiers, restaurants, wellness operators, clinics, education groups, lifestyle retailers, co-living operators, and hospitality concepts.
ABSD applies to residential property. Pure commercial shophouses are generally not subject to ABSD, but BSD still applies. Mixed-use shophouses or properties with a residential component must be reviewed carefully because IRAS looks at permitted use, zoning, and the nature of the property for stamp duty purposes.
Section 03
The East Coast, Joo Chiat and Katong story
Among Singapore's shophouse precincts, District 15 has one of the clearest growth narratives. East Coast Road, Joo Chiat, Katong, and Marine Parade combine heritage identity, lifestyle footfall, new MRT access, and a larger future residential catchment.
Thomson-East Coast Line effect
TEL Stage 4 opened for passenger service on 23 June 2024, adding stations such as Tanjong Katong, Marine Parade, Marine Terrace, Siglap, and Bayshore. LTA stated the line can deliver meaningful travel-time savings for East Coast residents.
Historic East Identity Corridor
URA's Historic East corridor covers areas around Geylang Road, East Coast Road, Joo Chiat Road, Siglap, Marine Parade, and Bayshore, with plans to strengthen identity, public spaces, walking, and cycling infrastructure.
Bayshore population pipeline
URA describes Bayshore as a 60-hectare future waterfront urban village planned for about 12,500 public and private dwelling units, supporting a larger East Coast catchment over time.
Joo Chiat's global lifestyle signal
Time Out ranked Joo Chiat Road 14th on its 2025 list of the world's coolest streets, highlighting its independent shops, cafes, heritage food, and conserved shophouse character.
Section 04
Recent transactions show renewed confidence
Shophouse activity moderated sharply after the 2021 peak, when ERA recorded 245 landed shophouse transactions worth about S$1.8 billion. Full-year 2024 transaction volume fell to 67 landed shophouses worth S$594.5 million, the lowest number since 1998 according to ERA's 2024 commentary.
The recovery signal appeared in Q3 2025. EdgeProp, citing PropNex Research, reported that shophouse transaction volume rose 50% quarter-on-quarter to 27 caveated deals, while District 15 recorded eight transactions worth S$47.9 million, the highest among all districts that quarter.
| Asset / Area | Date | Reported price | Market note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 207 East Coast Road, D15 | Dec 2024 | S$10.0M | EdgeProp reported the former family medical practice was sold and later leased to Bfit. |
| East Coast Road corner shophouse, D15 | Jan 2026 | S$16.0M | PropNex Research and EdgeProp reported the three-storey freehold conservation corner unit at about S$8,911 psf on land area, based on an estimated 1,796 sq ft site. |
| District 15, Katong-Joo Chiat | Q3 2025 | S$47.9M total | PropNex reported eight shophouse transactions, the highest district count that quarter. |
| 203-207 Jalan Besar, D8 | Sep 2025 | S$36.5M | Reported as one of the year's largest caveated shophouse deals. |
| 65 Club Street, D1 | 2H 2025 | S$21.0M | ERA reported this 999-year leasehold transaction among the top 2H 2025 deals. |
| Stanley Street portfolio, D1 | Q3 2025 | Over S$82M | Reported portfolio transaction; some large deals may not be reflected in caveats. |
Data note: Transaction figures above are based on public market reports and caveated transactions where available. Some shophouse deals are completed through SPVs, share sales, or without lodged caveats, so reported market totals may understate true activity.
Section 05
Rental demand remains resilient, but yields must be read carefully
Shophouses are usually acquired for long-term capital preservation and appreciation. Gross yields can help offset holding costs, but they are often lower than many conventional residential rental assets, especially in premium freehold precincts.
In District 15, tenant demand is diverse: heritage eateries, concept cafes, beverage chains, sports physiotherapy and rehab clinics, TCM and aesthetic clinics, pet services, paediatric clinics, enrichment operators, lifestyle retailers, and co-living or serviced accommodation operators.
| Location | Indicative rent range | Typical demand | Gross yield guide |
|---|---|---|---|
| East Coast Road / Katong | S$10,000-S$24,000 monthly | F&B, wellness, premium lifestyle brands | About 2.0%-2.6% |
| Joo Chiat Road | S$6,000-S$15,000 monthly | Clinics, pet services, cafes, retail, family services | About 2.2%-2.7% |
| Marine Parade / Parkway area | S$6,000-S$14,000 monthly | Retail, tuition, co-working, clinics, F&B | About 1.9%-2.5% |
| CBD / Telok Ayer / Club Street | S$14,000-S$28,000 monthly | Premium F&B, hospitality, family offices, creative firms | About 1.4%-1.8% |
These are broad market guides, not valuation advice. Gross yields exclude property tax, maintenance, vacancy, agent fees, financing costs, conservation works, and tenant incentives. Net yields can be meaningfully lower.
Section 06
Why family offices and private investors continue to like shophouses
- Scarcity premium deepens over time because conservation shophouses cannot be recreated at scale.
- Pure commercial shophouses do not carry the same ABSD burden as residential property, although BSD still applies.
- TEL Stage 4 gives East Coast and Marine Parade a rail-connectivity uplift that was absent historically.
- URA's Historic East Identity Corridor supports placemaking, pedestrian movement, and precinct identity.
- Tenant uses are broad, covering F&B, wellness, clinics, lifestyle retail, co-living, education, and pet services.
- Shophouses are hard assets with heritage value, income potential, and long-hold capital preservation appeal.
Section 07
Key risks and how to manage them
| Risk | Context | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| High capital outlay | Quality shophouses often require multi-million-dollar equity commitments. | Plan portfolio sizing, SPV structure, and financing before signing an OTP. |
| Lower headline yields | Prime freehold shophouses often trade on capital preservation, not high income yield. | Assess total return: rental yield, capital appreciation, financing cost, and exit liquidity. |
| Conservation constraints | Facade, five-foot way, structural works, and additions and alterations can be restricted. | Engage conservation-trained architects and budget for A&A works early. |
| Change-of-use approval | Not every desired use is permitted, and F&B approvals can be sensitive in heritage streets. | Conduct planning due diligence and verify existing approvals before acquisition. |
| Financing constraints | Commercial and mixed-use shophouses can be assessed more conservatively than residential homes. | Compare lenders early and understand how banks treat residential, commercial, and mixed-use portions. |
| Maintenance cost | Older heritage buildings may need roof, facade, structural, waterproofing, and M&E works. | Commission a building survey and model a maintenance reserve. |
Section 08
Outlook: why the market remains attractive
The market story is nuanced. Transaction volumes fell hard in 2024 and remained low in 2025, but the better assets did not collapse in value. ERA described the market as affected by price standoffs and low activity, while still noting demand from institutional investors and family offices for scarce freehold or long-leasehold assets.
For District 15 specifically, several catalysts are no longer theoretical: TEL4 has opened, Bayshore is being planned as a new residential precinct, Historic East is recognised in URA's identity planning, and Joo Chiat has become a globally recognised lifestyle street. That combination supports both tenant depth and long-term capital interest.
The question is therefore less about whether shophouses are interesting, and more about entry discipline: location, tenancy quality, conservation condition, permitted use, financing structure, and whether the price leaves enough room for a long holding period.
Consult with MortgageLogic Advisory
Review your shophouse financing and investment position
If you are evaluating a conservation shophouse, we can help you structure the financing discussion before you approach banks, private lenders, or investors.
| Review area | How MortgageLogic Advisory can help |
|---|---|
| Loan feasibility | Estimate likely commercial property loan quantum, tenure, pricing, and cash equity required. |
| Income and rental support | Review indicative rent, tenancy profile, lease structure, and how banks may assess repayment ability. |
| Property-backed business financing | Explore whether equity, secured business loans, or director-backed structures may fit the objective. |
| Bank comparison | Match the profile against suitable banks and financiers instead of approaching the market blindly. |
| Pre-offer checklist | Highlight common due diligence items such as valuation, zoning, tenure, use approval, and lease documents. |
Important note
General information only
This blog post is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, financial, legal, tax, valuation, or property advice. Transaction, rental, and yield figures are indicative estimates based on public market data and should not be relied upon without independent professional verification.
References
References
- URA: The Shophouse
- URA: Understanding the Shophouse
- LTA: TEL4 to welcome commuters from 23 June 2024
- URA: Identity Corridors
- URA: Bayshore future neighbourhood
- IRAS: Additional Buyer's Stamp Duty
- IRAS: Stamp Duty rates
- ERA: 2H 2025 Landed Shophouse Report
- ERA: 2025 shophouse press release and 2026 outlook
- EdgeProp / PropNex: Q3 2025 shophouse market report
- EdgeProp / PropNex: Q1 2026 shophouse market report
- 99.co: Q3 2025 shophouse market rebound
- Time Out: World's coolest streets 2025
- Wikimedia Commons: Joo Chiat shophouse image
- Wikimedia Commons: Singapore shophouse image