Landed Property Market in District 25 (Kranji, Woodgrove)

Landed District Profile Dernière révision

The District 25 (Kranji / Woodlands) landed property market is characterised as suburban landed stock. Singapore landed property — terraces, semi-detached, detached, conservation shophouses, and Good Class Bungalows (GCBs) — is governed by fundamentally different rules from non-landed (condos). Foreigners cannot buy landed property without case-by-case approval from the Singapore Land Authority (LDAU), granted in only a handful of cases per year. The effective buyer pool is Singapore Citizens (with a small share of LDAU-approved PRs and foreigners), making landed a structurally constrained asset class with finite supply (~73,000 units across Singapore).

For District 25 specifically, the landed segment profile depends on (a) historical residential planning — some districts have substantial landed stock from earlier era development, others are predominantly HDB or commercial, (b) tenure mix — freehold landed dominates the prime D9/D10/D11/D15 belt, with 99-year leasehold landed more common in fringe districts, and (c) absolute price levels — GCB transactions in D10/D11 routinely clear S$20M–S$200M+; suburban terraces in D14/D19/D20 typically transact in the S$2M–S$5M range.

The structural constraint on landed property — foreigner LDAU approval requirement — means landed transactions are predominantly Singapore Citizen flows. PR participation is limited to specific cases. This is unlike the condo market where the full SC / PR / foreigner (with differential ABSD) demand stack is active. Use the landed prices map to visualise district-level concentration and the landed stamp duty calculator for upfront tax computation.

The stamp-duty environment for District 25 landed: progressive BSD per the IRAS BSD rate table (1%–6% across price bands), ABSD by buyer profile per the IRAS ABSD rate table (SC 0% / 20% / 30% on 1st / 2nd / 3rd; PR 5% / 30% / 35%; foreigner 60% — though foreigner landed requires LDAU). On a S$5M landed purchase, BSD alone is approximately S$219,600. Stack ABSD for a SC second-property purchase and the upfront tax bill exceeds S$1.2M. Use the landed-vs-condo calculator to size the cost differential against a comparable-budget condo in the same district.

Financing landed property is materially different from condo: bank LTV typically caps at 60–70% (vs 75% for non-landed first loans), absolute loan sizes are larger, TDSR enforcement is correspondingly tighter under the MAS TDSR/MSR framework. CPF Ordinary Account usage applies per the CPF housing usage rules, subject to the Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit. Verify TDSR headroom at the higher landed loan quantum via the TDSR / MSR affordability calculator. Forward zoning for District 25 plots is documented in the URA Master Plan 2019.

Key Takeaways
  • Average PSF: $985 psf
  • Median deal: $3,021,148
  • Volume: 131 transactions (12mo)
  • OCR · D25 (Kranji, Woodgrove)

Landed Market in District 25

District 25 (Kranji, Woodgrove) sits in Singapore's OCR and has recorded 131 landed-property transactions over the past 12 months at an average of $985 psf. This profile tracks pricing, volume, type mix and multi-year momentum, drawing on transaction-level URA REALIS data so buyers, sellers and investors can benchmark the district against its CCR/RCR/OCR peers. Landed property in Singapore is limited in supply — fewer than 75,000 units islandwide — which is why district-level pricing often diverges sharply from condo psf in the same postcode.

$985 psf
Avg PSF (12mo)
$3,021,148
Avg Price
131
12-mo Volume
OCR
Market Segment

By Property Type

Landed type breakdown — D25
TypeVolumeAvg PSFAvg Price
Terrace70$1,115 psf$2,269,236
Detached27$644 psf$4,263,774
Semi-detached26$1,022 psf$3,779,308
Strata Terrace8$876 psf$2,942,500

The most active landed sub-segment in District 25 is Terrace, accounting for 70 of the past 12 months' trades at an average of $1,115 psf. Buyers comparing districts should note that type mix drives a large share of the average — heavier terrace activity pulls the district PSF down, while detached and GCB trades lift it.

Historical Price Trend

Yearly landed trend — D25
YearVolumeAvg PSFAvg Price
202142$903 psf$2,387,590
202223$964 psf$3,036,120
202318$1,033 psf$2,946,111
202425$1,005 psf$3,472,640
202519$1,129 psf$3,601,310
20264$930 psf$4,347,500
⚠ Market Momentum

Landed PSF in District 25 is currently 11.9% below its prior 3-year average of $1,056 psf. ↓ 11.9% The latest recorded year printed $930 psf across 4 transactions. Momentum of this magnitude is typically tied to tenure mix shifts, en-bloc land releases or cooling-measure repricing — watch the URA PPI quarterly release for confirmation.

At $1,207 psf, this is 31% below the OCR average ($1,751 psf) — a deep discount worth investigating. At #12 of 12 OCR districts, it sits in the most affordable tier.

Land-component value. Unlike non-landed where the strata title gives an undivided share in the common land, landed ownership conveys direct title to the underlying plot. Singapore land is finite — the structural premium of landed over non-landed reflects this scarcity. In District 25, the freehold premium over 99-year leasehold landed typically runs 30–50% for comparable units.

Private outdoor space. Terraces, semi-detached, detached, and GCBs offer private gardens, driveways, and (often) pools without the shared-MCST-cost structure of condos. For owner-occupiers with multi-generational households or children, the lifestyle differential is substantial. The trade-off is owner-borne maintenance versus condo MCST aggregation.

Singapore Citizen-protected segment. The LDAU foreigner restriction means landed pricing is structurally insulated from the speculative foreign-investor flows that have periodically reshaped condo markets. Singapore Citizen wealth accumulation through HDB upgrading recycles into landed at the wealth-pyramid apex, supporting long-run prices.

Resale liquidity. The buyer pool is structurally narrower than condo (SC only with rare exceptions), making landed sales slower. Typical days-on-market for terraces and semi-detached in suburban districts run 3–9 months; GCB sales can take 6–18 months and are typically tendered.

Lease-decay on 99-year landed. 99-year leasehold landed faces the same lease-decay path as 99-year condos: bank financing requires ≥30 years remaining; CPF caps at 60 years remaining. The freehold-vs-99-year premium (~30–50%) reflects this market discount.

Maintenance burden. Owner-borne maintenance — gardener, security, painting, drainage, structural repairs — typically runs higher in monthly expense than MCST fees for a comparable condo. The discretionary spend ceiling on a private home is materially higher.

[
    {
        "persona": "SC first-time landed buyer",
        "fit_color": "green",
        "reason": "You face only BSD plus a manageable bank LTV (60–70%). District 25 terrace and semi-detached units typically price in the S$2M–S$5M range — accessible for high-income households."
    },
    {
        "persona": "SC upgrading from condo to landed",
        "fit_color": "green",
        "reason": "The 6-month ABSD remission window applies if landed is your second residential property. Sequence the condo sale before the landed OTP; landed financing caps at 60–70% LTV."
    },
    {
        "persona": "SC GCB buyer (D10 / D11 / D21)",
        "fit_color": "green",
        "reason": "11 designated GCB areas, ~2,700 plots total. Transactions typically S$20M–S$200M+, often tendered or off-market. Engage a specialised broker; expect 6–18 month search windows."
    },
    {
        "persona": "Permanent Resident",
        "fit_color": "red",
        "reason": "PR landed purchase requires LDAU case-by-case approval. Granted only on demonstration of significant economic contribution. Most PRs hold non-landed instead."
    },
    {
        "persona": "Foreign buyer",
        "fit_color": "red",
        "reason": "Foreigners cannot buy landed without LDAU approval. Sentosa Cove (D4) is the one exception. Conservation shophouses (non-residential classification) offer a sideways entry."
    },
    {
        "persona": "Investor (yield focus)",
        "fit_color": "amber",
        "reason": "Landed gross rental yields (1.5%–2.5%) are materially lower than condo (2.5%–3.5%). The investment case is principally capital appreciation and land-component value retention, not income."
    }
]

Verdict for District 25 landed. Singapore landed is a long-horizon, structurally-constrained asset class best suited to Singapore Citizens with high cash and equity, prioritising owner-occupier lifestyle and multi-generational wealth storage over near-term yield. District 25’s landed market — classified as suburban landed — sits at a specific point on this spectrum. For most buyers the practical landed entry is via terrace or semi-detached in the S$2M–S$5M range; GCB-level entry (S$20M+) is a narrower, specialised market. Cross-reference URA REALIS for transacted-price history and the LTA MRT system map for surrounding MRT accessibility before committing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does District 25 compare to the rest of Singapore for landed property?

District 25 (Kranji, Woodgrove) sits in the OCR with an average PSF of $985 psf over the past 12 months across 131 transactions. Compare it against the islandwide landed median and neighbouring districts to gauge premium or discount.

Is landed property in this district freehold or leasehold?

Tenure varies street by street. Core prime districts (9, 10, 11) are predominantly freehold; newer estates in 17, 18 and 28 include 99-year leasehold enclaves. Always verify tenure on the exact title via SLA INLIS before committing.

How many landed homes trade in this district each year?

Most Singapore districts see between 20 and 200 landed transactions annually, depending on stock size and market cycle. Thin volume means a single GCB or bungalow sale can move the average PSF meaningfully — always cross-check with multi-year trends.

Can foreigners buy landed in District 25?

No, except via case-by-case LDAU approval under the Singapore Land Authority (LDAU). LDAU approvals are rare. Sentosa Cove (D4) is the one open exception for foreign landed purchase.

What is the typical landed price range in District 25?

Pricing varies by landed type. Terraces typically S$2M–S$5M; semi-detached S$3M–S$8M; detached / bungalow S$8M–S$30M; GCBs (D10/D11/D21) S$20M–S$200M+. Pull verified caveats from URA REALIS for District 25 specifically.

What is the landed mortgage LTV cap?

Singapore banks typically cap landed mortgage LTV at 60–70% (vs 75% for non-landed first-loan). The reduced LTV reflects larger absolute loan sizes and thinner resale liquidity. TDSR at 55% of gross income remains the binding constraint.

Can I use CPF for a landed purchase in District 25?

Yes, subject to standard CPF Valuation Limit and Withdrawal Limit rules. CPF OA can be used for down-payment, monthly instalments, and stamp duty — same as condo. Accrued-interest mechanics apply.

Where can I track District 25 landed transactions?

URA REALIS publishes landed caveats with full transaction-level detail (price, transacted area, lease type, classification). ShiokNest aggregates this for per-district landed-market analysis.

Methodology & Sources

This analysis covers Last 12 months (rolling) and refreshes as new data becomes available.

Transaction data sourced from URA REALIS.

  • Transaction data pulled from URA REALIS and refreshed weekly.
  • Stamp duty estimates follow the current IRAS BSD schedule.
  • Mortgage stress-test assumptions follow MAS Notice 645 TDSR guidance.
  • Volume-weighted PSF used where segment mix distorts simple averages; single-outlier trades retained but highlighted in momentum callouts.

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