Far East Organization is a Singapore property developer with a documented portfolio of 1 project(s) across the URA transaction record. Evaluating a developer’s track record — on construction quality, TOP timing reliability, defect-rectification responsiveness during the Defects Liability Period (DLP), and post-TOP resale price trajectory of completed projects — is one of the most under-weighted variables when buyers select new-launch units. The developer effectively controls 3–4 years of buyer cash and reputational risk under the Progressive Payment Scheme; the wrong developer can cost a buyer materially more than the wrong unit choice in the right project.
This portfolio overview surfaces the developer’s historical positioning — segment focus (CCR / RCR / OCR), tenure mix (freehold / 99-year), unit-count profile, and the broad shape of their development pipeline. Cross-reference against URA REALIS for verified caveat history of their completed projects, then evaluate any current new-launch offering against this baseline.
The Singapore private residential development landscape is concentrated among a small number of established developers — City Developments Limited (CDL), Far East Organization, Frasers Property, GuocoLand, Hong Leong Holdings, Keppel Land, MCC Land, Sing Holdings, UOL Group, Allgreen, Bukit Sembawang, and approximately 50 mid-tier and smaller players. Far East Organization sits somewhere in this landscape; its segment positioning and track record determine the typical buyer profile for its projects.
The macro environment for Far East Organization’s pipeline: April 2023 cooling measures unchanged, foreigner ABSD at 60%, SC second-property ABSD at 20%, 3M SORA tracking the 3.0–3.4% band, GLS programme releasing 25,000+ private sites across 2025–2027 per URA. Each developer responds differently to this macro — some focus on CCR luxury (where foreign demand has shrunk), others on OCR mass-market (where HDB upgrader demand remains), still others on RCR fringe (the ‘sweet spot’ for upgraders). Far East Organization’s historical project mix indicates their strategic positioning. Use the price heatmap to see where their projects cluster.
The financing context applies uniformly to any of Far East Organization’s projects: bank loans at SORA + 0.7–0.85% spread = ~4.0% all-in via the MAS TDSR/MSR framework, BSD progressive 1–6% per the IRAS BSD rate table, ABSD by buyer profile per the IRAS ABSD rate table, CPF OA usage per the CPF housing usage rules. The URA Master Plan 2019 provides forward zoning context for plots Far East Organization may bid on in future GLS tenders.
- 19 projects across 11 districts
- Total units developed: 3,091
- Average PSF across portfolio: $1,568 psf
- Total recorded sales: 522
Developer Overview
FAR EAST ORGANIZATION has developed 19 private residential projects in Singapore, spanning 11 districts with a total of 3,091 units. The average PSF across their portfolio is $1,568 psf.
Project Portfolio
Complete list of FAR EAST ORGANIZATION's residential developments in Singapore.
| Project | District | Segment | Tenure | Units | TOP | Avg PSF | Sales |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PARKSUITES | D10 | CCR | 110 yrs lease commencing from 2017 | 119 | 2021 | $2,365 psf | 21 |
| MIRO | D11 | CCR | Freehold | 85 | 2012 | $1,586 psf | 19 |
| THE GREENWOOD | D11 | CCR | Freehold | 54 | 2011 | $1,865 psf | 28 |
| VIDA | D9 | CCR | Freehold | 137 | 2009 | $2,113 psf | 30 |
| BANYAN VILLAS | D26 | OCR | Freehold | 64 | 2005 | $1,960 psf | 7 |
| BLUE HORIZON | D5 | OCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2000 | 616 | 2005 | $1,301 psf | 101 |
| SUMMER VILLAS | D28 | OCR | Freehold | 20 | 2004 | $847 psf | 4 |
| RAFFLESIA CONDOMINIUM | D20 | RCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 1997 | 230 | 2002 | $1,399 psf | 50 |
| EAST MEADOWS | D16 | OCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 1998 | 482 | 2001 | $1,149 psf | 76 |
| THE STERLING | D21 | RCR | Freehold | 232 | 2000 | $2,052 psf | 21 |
| VILLA MARINA | D15 | OCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 1995 | 432 | 1999 | $1,235 psf | 81 |
| ASTORIA PARK | D14 | OCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 1993 | 354 | 1998 | $1,197 psf | 62 |
| LAGUNA GREEN | D16 | OCR | 99 yrs lease commencing from 1995 | 121 | 1998 | $1,315 psf | 22 |
| ORANGE REGENCY | D10 | CCR | — | 15 | 1997 | — | 0 |
| CAVENAGH LODGE | D9 | CCR | — | 41 | 1996 | — | 0 |
| THE CAIRNHILL | D9 | CCR | — | 35 | 1984 | — | 0 |
| NASSIM REGENCY | D10 | CCR | — | 31 | 1978 | — | 0 |
| LUCKY VILLAS | D16 | OCR | — | — | — | — | 0 |
| ROYAL PALM MANSIONS | D5 | RCR | — | 23 | — | — | 0 |
District Spread
Geographic distribution of FAR EAST ORGANIZATION's projects across Singapore.
| District | Projects | Total Units | Segment |
|---|---|---|---|
| D10 (Ardmore, Bukit Timah, Holland Road, Tanglin) | 3 | 165 | CCR |
| D9 (Orchard, Cairnhill, River Valley) | 3 | 213 | CCR |
| D16 (Bedok, Upper East Coast, Eastwood, Kew Drive) | 3 | 603 | OCR |
| D5 (Pasir Panjang, Hong Leong Garden, Clementi New Town) | 2 | 639 | OCR |
| D11 (Watten Estate, Novena, Thomson) | 2 | 139 | CCR |
| D15 (Joo Chiat, Amber Road, Katong) | 1 | 432 | OCR |
| D20 (Ang Mo Kio, Bishan) | 1 | 230 | RCR |
| D14 (Geylang, Eunos) | 1 | 354 | OCR |
| D28 (Seletar) | 1 | 20 | OCR |
| D26 (Upper Thomson, Springleaf) | 1 | 64 | OCR |
| D21 (Upper Bukit Timah, Ulu Pandan, Clementi Park) | 1 | 232 | RCR |
PSF Comparison
Comparing average PSF across FAR EAST ORGANIZATION's projects, ranked highest to lowest.
| Project | District | Avg PSF | Transactions |
|---|---|---|---|
| PARKSUITES | D10 | $2,365 psf | 21 |
| VIDA | D9 | $2,113 psf | 30 |
| THE STERLING | D21 | $2,052 psf | 21 |
| BANYAN VILLAS | D26 | $1,960 psf | 7 |
| THE GREENWOOD | D11 | $1,865 psf | 28 |
| MIRO | D11 | $1,586 psf | 19 |
| RAFFLESIA CONDOMINIUM | D20 | $1,399 psf | 50 |
| LAGUNA GREEN | D16 | $1,315 psf | 22 |
| BLUE HORIZON | D5 | $1,301 psf | 101 |
| VILLA MARINA | D15 | $1,235 psf | 81 |
| ASTORIA PARK | D14 | $1,197 psf | 62 |
| EAST MEADOWS | D16 | $1,149 psf | 76 |
| SUMMER VILLAS | D28 | $847 psf | 4 |
Sales Timeline
Yearly transaction volume across all FAR EAST ORGANIZATION projects.
| Year | Transactions | Avg PSF | Total Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 105 | $1,261 psf | $175,055,168 |
| 2022 | 121 | $1,356 psf | $208,361,626 |
| 2023 | 101 | $1,438 psf | $174,486,772 |
| 2024 | 78 | $1,514 psf | $161,624,052 |
| 2025 | 90 | $1,594 psf | $165,265,644 |
| 2026 | 27 | $1,635 psf | $53,465,098 |
Developer-level diligence advantage. Reviewing a developer’s portfolio before committing to one of their new launches is the single highest-leverage diligence step a buyer can take. Two outwardly-similar new launches by different developers can have materially different long-run outcomes: post-TOP rectification quality, MCST management quality (the developer’s appointee runs the management corp for the first cycle), and resale-pricing trajectory all trace back to developer track record.
Documented transaction history. URA REALIS caveats from Far East Organization’s completed projects allow direct verification of (a) launch-to-stabilised pricing trajectory, (b) capital appreciation rate during the developer’s typical 5–10 year post-TOP window, and (c) resale-clearing dynamics in the secondary market. This evidence base is more reliable than developer marketing materials or aggregator-site listings.
Concentration risk. If Far East Organization has only one or two completed projects, the sample size for track-record evaluation is small. Defect-rectification responsiveness, TOP timing reliability, and post-TOP resale trajectory require multiple project data points to evaluate fairly. Newer developers with one project carry materially more uncertainty than established developers with 10+ completed projects.
Strategic shift risk. A developer’s past portfolio doesn’t guarantee future strategy. A historically OCR-focused developer may pivot to CCR luxury (or vice versa); a freehold-only developer may bid for a 99-year GLS site. Read recent press for strategic-direction signals beyond the historical project list.
Financial standing risk. Singapore property development is capital-intensive and cycle-exposed. A developer’s ability to deliver TOP on schedule depends on cash-flow management through the build cycle; smaller developers without strong balance-sheet backing can face delivery risk in adverse macro conditions. Reference public filings (SGX for listed developers) or ACRA data for incorporation history.
[
{
"persona": "Buyer evaluating a single new launch by this developer",
"fit_color": "green",
"reason": "Reviewing the portfolio is essential diligence. Cross-reference URA caveats on completed projects to validate the developer’s track record before committing."
},
{
"persona": "Investor comparing multiple developers for new-launch entry",
"fit_color": "green",
"reason": "A side-by-side comparison of developer portfolios surfaces which developers consistently outperform on post-TOP appreciation versus which sustain quality issues."
},
{
"persona": "HDB upgrader considering one of this developer’s projects",
"fit_color": "amber",
"reason": "Track record matters more than for the developer-agnostic upgrader, because the 3–4 year PPS window aligns with HDB MOP timing. Late TOP can compress the HDB-to-condo upgrade pathway."
},
{
"persona": "Foreign buyer (60% ABSD)",
"fit_color": "amber",
"reason": "At the elevated entry cost, developer track record on construction quality and rectification matters even more. Defects on a S$5M unit with S$3M ABSD bite are materially more painful to absorb."
},
{
"persona": "Existing owner in this developer’s prior project",
"fit_color": "green",
"reason": "You have first-hand evidence of the developer’s post-TOP responsiveness and management quality. Use this directly when evaluating their current new launch."
}
]
Verdict. Developer-level evaluation should be a standard part of new-launch diligence, not an afterthought. Far East Organization’s 1-project portfolio provides the verifiable evidence base; pair it with site visits to completed projects, MCST meeting minutes (where available), and recent URA caveat trajectories. The wrong developer can cost a buyer more than the wrong unit pick in the right project — this overview is the starting point for getting that decision right. Read the first-time buyer checklist for the broader OTP-to-TOP framework.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many projects has FAR EAST ORGANIZATION developed?
What is the average PSF for FAR EAST ORGANIZATION properties?
What segments does Far East Organization typically build in?
Segment positioning (CCR / RCR / OCR) varies by developer strategy. ShiokNest aggregates the developer’s historical project districts and segments; cross-reference URA REALIS for the latest distribution. Some developers focus narrowly on one segment; others diversify across segments cyclically.
How can I evaluate Far East Organization’s construction quality?
Visit completed projects, request to meet existing residents during your viewing, review MCST management corporation meeting minutes (sometimes publicly accessible), and check recent URA caveats for any unusual price compressions that might signal post-TOP issues. The Defects Liability Period (DLP) responsiveness is the clearest signal; ask current owners about rectification handling.
What is the typical TOP-timing track record for Singapore developers?
Established developers (CDL, Far East, GuocoLand, etc.) typically deliver TOP within +3 months of stated timeline. Mid-tier and smaller developers can show +6 to +18 months variance depending on project complexity and macro conditions. Materials shortages (2022–2023) and labour constraints periodically affect industry-wide timing.
Does Far East Organization run the MCST after TOP?
The developer typically appoints the first Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST) running term, after which owners elect the council. The developer’s appointee’s management quality during the first cycle materially affects (a) sinking fund discipline, (b) common-area maintenance standards, and (c) the development’s long-run reputation. Owner-resident pushback on poor management is a recurring theme in MCST forums.
Can I sue Far East Organization for defects post-TOP?
The 12-month Defects Liability Period (DLP) under your Sale & Purchase Agreement obligates the developer to rectify defects identified during that window. Beyond DLP, structural defects fall under the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act and other statutes; latent defects can have longer claim windows. Consult a Singapore-qualified property lawyer for specific situations.
Methodology & Sources
This analysis covers All available years and refreshes as new data becomes available.
Transaction data sourced from URA REALIS.
- Transaction data from URA REALIS.
- Developer attribution based on URA project records.
Median values used to minimise outlier impact. PSF = price per square foot.