Best Condos for Empty nesters / downsizers in District 10 (Ardmore)

Persona Spotlight Last reviewed

This shortlist answers a narrow question: in District 10 (Ardmore), which condos best fit a buyer profile described as Owners aged 55+ whose children have moved out, right-sizing from larger homes; prioritize accessibility, low maintenance.? Our editorial team works through the URA Master Plan 2019 planning context and recent URA REALIS transaction dataset caveats to flag condos with credible fit signals, then ranks the shortlist by ShiokNest Score (a composite of transaction depth, amenity, and lease-decay risk) — producing a workable shortlist of 27 green-tagged matches in this district (as of 2026-05).

Why the (persona × district) lens matters: a "Top 10 condos" list across all of Singapore tells you nothing about local trade-offs. CCR pricing carries a 30–55% premium over comparable OCR product, so the persona-fit case must justify that gap. Use the District 10 overview page and the price heatmap to sanity-check that District 10's pricing band actually fits your budget for Empty nesters / downsizers, then run the verify your loan ceiling before shortlisting individual projects below.

Key Takeaways

Who this fits in District 10

Owners aged 55+ whose children have moved out, right-sizing from larger homes; prioritize accessibility, low maintenance.

District 10 (Ardmore, Bukit Timah, Holland Road, Tanglin) sits in the CCR market segment. The full editorial introduction, related calculators, and cross-segment fit signals for this persona are on the persona hub: /best-for/empty-nesters-downsizers.

For a wider view of every Singapore condo that fits this persona (not just this district), see Top 10 Singapore Condos for Empty nesters / downsizers.

Top 5 condos for Empty nesters / downsizers in District 10

  1. THE SIERRA · 60 units · ShiokNest Score 66 · 947 yrs lease commencing from
    Editorial fit: 'Empty-nester downsizers'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  2. TOMLINSON HEIGHTS · 70 units · ShiokNest Score 64 · Freehold
    Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from landed'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  3. THE ELEMENT @ STEVENS · 17 units · ShiokNest Score 62 · Freehold
    Editorial fit: 'GCB/landed downsizers'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  4. FOURTH AVENUE RESIDENCES · 476 units · ShiokNest Score 60 · 99 yrs lease commencing from 2
    Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from nearby GCBs or landed homes'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  5. LUSH ON HOLLAND HILL · 56 units · ShiokNest Score 59 · Freehold
    Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from GCB / landed'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.

Live editorial picks for District 10

The list below refreshes whenever editorial pills change, so it can drift from the static top-5 bake above as new matches are seeded:

Top 10 condos best for Empty nesters / downsizers in District 10

Per-project editorial commentary follows. Each note draws on the snippet attached to its Empty nesters / downsizers tag in our editorial database — calibrated against transaction history pulled from URA (as of 2026-05) — rather than developer marketing copy.

  • THE SIERRA takes the first slot (ShiokNest Score 66) — a boutique block (60 units). Editorial fit note: Editorial fit: 'Empty-nester downsizers'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  • TOMLINSON HEIGHTS takes the second slot (ShiokNest Score 64) — a boutique block (70 units), with the freehold / 999-year tenure that retirees and multi-gen households tend to value. Editorial fit note: Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from landed'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  • THE ELEMENT @ STEVENS takes the third slot (ShiokNest Score 62) — a boutique block (17 units), with the freehold / 999-year tenure that retirees and multi-gen households tend to value. Editorial fit note: Editorial fit: 'GCB/landed downsizers'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  • FOURTH AVENUE RESIDENCES takes the fourth slot (ShiokNest Score 60) — a mid-size project (476 units). Editorial fit note: Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from nearby GCBs or landed homes'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.
  • LUSH ON HOLLAND HILL takes the fifth slot (ShiokNest Score 59) — a boutique block (56 units), with the freehold / 999-year tenure that retirees and multi-gen households tend to value. Editorial fit note: Editorial fit: 'Downsizers from GCB / landed'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home.

Source: CPF housing usage rules (data as of 2026-05).

The (persona × district) framing surfaces one trade-off the headline article doesn't. For household-led personas, the trade-off is unit-mix availability, not pricing. District 10 (Ardmore) skews toward 1–2 bedroom inventory geared at investors and singles (per URA caveat data as of 2026-05) — the question is whether the persona-fit shortlist above still has the floor area you need at the price you can defend.

Before locking on any specific project from the shortlist, run two affordability checks: (1) verify your loan ceiling against your current cash and CPF balance, then (2) model the monthly mortgage using a 3.0–3.5% interest assumption (per MAS SORA bands as of 2026-Q2). The shortlist is editorial; the budget is yours.

One additional caveat worth flagging upfront for District 10 (Ardmore): the persona-fit shortlist above is calibrated against the editorial green-tag pool at the time of writing. As new transactions land in URA REALIS (as of 2026-05) and the editorial team revisits each project, the ranking can shift — particularly for CCR districts where the green-tag pool is thinner and individual project re-tags move the rank order more sharply. Treat the order as directional over a 3–6 month window rather than a permanent leaderboard.

Hidden gem of the shortlist: THE ELEMENT @ STEVENS tends to fall to the bottom-half of district leaderboards because its compact unit count (17 units) keeps it off most "biggest" filters. For this persona (Empty nesters / downsizers) it still earns its place. Editorial note: Editorial fit: 'GCB/landed downsizers'. Manageable scale and accessibility profile work for buyers right-sizing from a larger home. ShiokNest Score 62 (as of 2026-05). Validate the lease-decay assumption via project the lease-decay curve before committing.

Frequently asked questions

Why "Top 5" and not "Top 10" or "Top 20" for this district?

Editorial coverage is intentionally tight: we only surface condos with a green-tagged fit pill for this persona in this district. In District 10 (Ardmore), the green-tagged pool is the limiting factor; padding the list with amber matches would dilute the signal. As editorial coverage expands the cap can lift to 10 (as of 2026-05).

How does the ranking work?

Default sort is ShiokNest Score (composite of transaction depth, amenity, and lease-decay risk; as of 2026-05) with ties broken by investment score and project name.

Family-fit comes down to unit mix and school catchment access. The persona pill on each project rolls up both signals; the ranking above weights amenity and transaction depth alongside fit.

Is District 10 (CCR) the right place to be searching for Empty nesters / downsizers?

That depends on what else is in your shortlist. The CCR premium is real; the persona-fit case has to be strong enough to justify it. Use the price heatmap and adjacent-district comparison before locking on Ardmore.

How often is this list refreshed?

Quarterly. The editorial team revisits each (persona × district) combination once URA logs a meaningful batch of new transactions or once a project changes status (en-bloc, lease top-up, major resale spike). The current snapshot is dated 2026-05.

What if my persona is borderline (amber tag) rather than green for one of these?

Click through to the project page — amber pills usually mean the persona-fit case works only under specific conditions (smaller unit, ground-floor access, near-MRT block within the development, etc.). The shortlist here is intentionally green-only to keep editorial signal clean.

How do I cross-check the editorial fit signal against my own situation?

The shortcut is to (1) read the persona definition above, (2) walk through it against your actual constraints (budget, commute, household composition, lease horizon), and (3) only then click into individual projects. Treat the green pill as a starting filter rather than a recommendation; the right project for Empty nesters / downsizers in District 10 depends on which sub-criterion in the persona definition matters most to you, and that is not something an automated list can rank cleanly (as of 2026-05).

Methodology & Sources

This analysis covers Editorial green pills as of bake date and refreshes every month.

Transaction data sourced from URA REALIS.

  • Ranking: ShiokNest Score, then Investment Score, then alphabetical.
  • Source data: URA REALIS for transactions.
  • Persona vocabulary: 40-persona canonical list at /best-for.
  • Only green editorial fits are listed. Amber and red signals appear on the persona hub.

Median values used to minimise outlier impact. PSF = price per square foot.