Lentor Modern
Lentor Modern is the project that opened up an entire estate, and any honest review has to start from that fact. When GuocoLand launched it in 2022, the broader Lentor cluster did not yet exist as a coherent residential precinct — there was a TEL station box, a parcel of state land, and a Government Land Sales programme that had not yet released the half-dozen sites that would follow. Three and a half years later, Lentor Modern sits at the centre of one of the most concentrated new-launch clusters in OCR history, and the secondary-market verdict on this pioneer is starting to crystallise. URA caveat records show 635 sales transactions across the project’s 605 units — meaning the development has, in aggregate, turned over more than once since 2022. We rate the underlying location 7.5/10 and the project itself 7.5/10, with a strong caveat that the pioneer-versus-follower dynamic against newer Lentor cluster launches is now the single most important factor a buyer must reason through.
Snapshot as of 2026-05 — figures above reflect publicly available URA/HDB data at the time of this editorial review (as of 2026-05).
Lentor Modern occupies a 17,279 sqm site at the corner of Lentor Central and Yio Chu Kang Link, classified OCR by URA, with a tenure of 99 years from 2021 — roughly 95 years remain as of this review, which keeps it comfortably inside CPF usage and bank-financing thresholds for the foreseeable hold horizon. GuocoLand structured the project as three 25-storey residential towers on top of a 96,000 sqft integrated retail podium connected directly to Lentor MRT on the Thomson-East Coast Line. That retail-plus-MRT-on-site configuration is materially different from anything else in the Lentor cluster — Lentor Hills Residences, Lentor Mansion, Hillock Green, Lentor Central Residences, and Lentoria all sit within walking distance of Lentor MRT but none of them have the station and a meaningful retail mass directly beneath the residential block. GuocoLand’s track record on integrated developments (Guoco Tower, Guoco Midtown, Wallich Residence) is the strongest in the Singapore market, and the construction quality at Lentor Modern is, in our walkthroughs, consistent with that brand. Unit mix runs from one-bedroom shoeboxes through four-bedroom premium, with the bulk of inventory in the two and three-bedroom bands — the practical sweet spot for both the upgrader and the investor case.
Overview & Key Facts
Lentor Modern is a 605-unit mixed-use condominium at Lentor Central in District 26, developed by GuocoLand (through Lentor Hills Pte Ltd) on a 99-year leasehold commencing October 2021. With approximately 94 years remaining on the lease (expiring 2120), the development is the anchor and defining project of the entirely new Lentor Hills private residential estate — the first large-scale private housing precinct to emerge from Upper Thomson in a generation, and the only project in the estate with direct, integrated connectivity to an MRT station.
Lentor Modern is not a conventional condominium. It is an integrated mixed-use development with three 25-storey residential towers sitting above a commercial podium of over 96,000 sqft that includes a supermarket of approximately 12,000 sqft, a childcare centre of approximately 10,000 sqft, and a curated selection of retail and food-and-beverage operators. More significantly, the development is physically integrated with Lentor MRT Station (TE5) on the Thomson–East Coast Line — direct covered access to the TEL from the residential lobby, with no outdoor exposure in any weather. In the context of the Lentor Hills estate — where subsequent launches by Hong Leong, UOL, and Intrepid Investments are all standalone condominiums without MRT integration — Lentor Modern’s structural position as the estate’s only integrated development is a durable differentiation that later entrants simply cannot replicate.
At an average transacted price of $1,945,358 and an average PSF of $2,133, Lentor Modern represents a premium-priced OCR D26 product — one that commanded a clear new-estate pioneer premium at launch, and that has maintained its pricing leadership among Lentor Hills developments since. The $2,133 PSF is materially above the historical D26 average, reflecting the MRT integration premium, the mixed-use lifestyle infrastructure embedded at the base of the towers, and GuocoLand’s positioning of the project as the estate’s quality benchmark.
The average rent of $4,961 per month implies a gross yield of approximately 3.1% — meaningfully better than the ultra-premium CCR and integrated-development yields typical of Guoco Midtown or Marina One Residences, and characteristic of the OCR value proposition where purchase prices are lower and rental demand from young families and dual-income households is structurally robust. For long-hold investors, Lentor Modern’s dual thesis of estate-pioneer capital appreciation and solid mid-3% yield creates a more balanced risk-return profile than many comparable new-launch premium products.
Location & Connectivity
Lentor Modern sits on Lentor Central in the Upper Thomson corridor of District 26, at the nucleus of what the URA Master Plan has designated as a new private residential precinct. The address is the geographic and commercial anchor of the Lentor Hills estate: the only plot with direct MRT integration, the only plot with a commercial and retail base, and the project from which all subsequent Lentor Hills launches — Lentor Hills Residences, Lentor Mansion, Hillock Green, Lentor Central Residences — derive their neighbourhood identity. To own in Lentor Modern is to own the estate’s founding address.
MRT connectivity is Lentor Modern’s single most important location asset. Lentor MRT Station (TE5) on the Thomson–East Coast Line (TEL) is physically integrated into the development — residents walk from their residential lobby, through the commercial podium, and into the station concourse without outdoor exposure. From Lentor, the TEL provides direct northbound service to Springleaf, Woodlands North, and Woodlands (interchange with the North-South Line); and southbound service to Bright Hill, Caldecott (interchange with the Circle Line), Stevens (interchange with the Downtown Line), Orchard (interchange with the North-South Line), Great World, Havelock, Outram Park (interchange with the East-West and North-East Lines), and Marine Parade. At full TEL completion, residents will have access to eight interchanges from a single line — an island-wide connectivity standard that makes the commute to any major employment node in Singapore direct or near-direct.
The immediate neighbourhood environment is the defining characteristic — and the defining risk — of the Lentor Hills address. Upper Thomson is a mature, low-rise, green corridor with established landed housing, the Thomson Nature Park and Central Catchment Nature Reserve immediately to the northwest, and the Upper Seletar Reservoir Park providing a recreational green lung nearby. The neighbourhood character is serene, low-density, and distinctly un-urban — a meaningful contrast to the Bugis and Tanjong Pagar integrated developments. For families and residents who value greenery, quiet, and distance from commercial intensity, this is a positive. For buyers seeking a dense urban lifestyle district with walkable F&B and retail, the Lentor Hills estate’s current state — still building out its neighbourhood amenity base in 2024–2026 — requires patience.
The retail and amenity base at ground level of Lentor Modern partially compensates for the estate’s current neighbourhood-in-development status. The 12,000 sqft supermarket and 10,000 sqft childcare centre, combined with F&B and retail options in the commercial podium, provide a meaningful daily-convenience base within the development itself. Residents do not need to leave the development for grocery shopping, childcare, or weekday dining. This self-contained convenience layer is a structural advantage for the early years of estate development, before the neighbourhood’s broader amenity base fully matures.
The school catchment is credible for a D26 OCR address. Anderson Primary School is within the 1km primary school registration catchment, as are Ang Mo Kio Primary School and Mayflower Primary School. Secondary institutions accessible via the TEL include Presbyterian High School, Bishan Park Secondary, and Anderson Serangoon Junior College. The Nanyang Polytechnic campus is accessible in under 30 minutes via transit. For a family buyer in the OCR upper-mid-market, the school catchment is a genuine positive and a likely driver of the development’s strong rental demand from young families.
Schools & Education
| School | Type | Distance |
|---|---|---|
| Singapore American School | international | Within 1 km |
| Mayflower Primary School | primary | ~1.3 km |
| Yio Chu Kang Primary School | primary | ~1.5 km |
| Ang Mo Kio Secondary School | secondary | ~1.5 km |
| Ang Mo Kio Primary School | primary | ~1.6 km |
| Yio Chu Kang Secondary School | secondary | ~1.6 km |
| Jing Shan Primary School | primary | ~1.6 km |
| Nanyang Polytechnic | tertiary | ~1.7 km |
Facilities
Lentor Modern’s facilities programme is conceived at a level that reflects both the development’s positioning as the Lentor Hills estate anchor and GuocoLand’s consistent track record of delivering above-average amenity across its residential portfolio. With over 58 facilities distributed across the site, residents receive a comprehensive lifestyle infrastructure that goes materially beyond the pool-and-gym baseline of comparable OCR launches.
The aquatic facilities are the centrepiece: a 50-metre lap pool anchors the ground-level recreation deck, complemented by a leisure pool, wading pool, and hydrotherapy pool. The pool complex is designed around a stream-inspired landscape concept that threads a naturalistic water feature through the recreational zones, connecting the aquatic spaces to the surrounding greenery and creating a resort-like ambiance that aligns with the neighbourhood’s green-corridor character. GuocoLand has consistently delivered high-quality pool environments across its residential portfolio; Lentor Modern continues that pattern.
The fitness and wellness facilities are extensive. A fully equipped gymnasium, an outdoor fitness area, a yoga and wellness deck, and dedicated relaxation zones provide a comprehensive health infrastructure. The wellness orientation of the facilities programme reflects the Upper Thomson neighbourhood’s resident demographic: active, nature-oriented households for whom fitness amenity is a daily-use priority rather than a sales brochure feature.
Social and entertainment facilities are well represented. Multiple BBQ pavilions and outdoor dining areas, a clubhouse with function rooms, sky terraces on the upper residential floors, and co-working and reading spaces within the development provide a range of communal uses. The sky terraces are particularly notable: elevated recreational and relaxation spaces that capture views over the Upper Thomson greenery corridor, the Thomson Nature Park canopy, and across the broader northern landscape — a view premium that is not replicated in ground-level amenity areas.
Practical amenities include covered car parking, a mail room and parcel collection facility, bicycle parking, and a dedicated drop-off zone for ride-hailing services. The development’s integrated MRT access is itself a practical amenity: residents commute without car dependency for employment nodes across the TEL network, which reduces the car-ownership imperative and the associated parking cost and traffic congestion experience that affects many OCR developments.
Unit Sizes & Layout
Lentor Modern’s 605 units are distributed across three 25-storey residential towers, offering a mix of 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-bedroom configurations designed to serve the full spectrum of the D26 upper-mid-market buyer: from singles and young couples in compact 1- and 2-bedroom units, through families in 3-bedroom configurations, to larger households in 4-bedroom layouts. The three-tower distribution of 605 units across a mixed-use site produces a lower-density residential feel than the unit count might suggest, with generous inter-tower spacing and the commercial podium below separating the residential floors from street level.
Unit sizes follow the contemporary Singapore new-launch convention: 1-bedroom units from approximately 474 sqft; 2-bedroom units from approximately 678 to 797 sqft; 3-bedroom units from approximately 958 to 1,076 sqft; and 4-bedroom units from approximately 1,302 to 1,485 sqft. The sizing is consistent with GuocoLand’s efficiency-oriented approach to unit planning — compact but well-proportioned, with careful attention to kitchen, bathroom, and storage layouts that maximise liveability within the available area.
The design specification is premium-OCR: quality engineered marble flooring in living and dining areas, engineered timber in bedrooms, branded kitchen appliances (Bosch), and quality sanitary fittings in bathrooms. The design language is contemporary and clean — a neutral palette with quality material specification that ages well and appeals to the broad family-buyer demographic that dominates the D26 upper-mid market. The finish is not ultra-luxury by Singapore CCR standards, but it is executed at a level that justifies the $2,133 PSF price point within the OCR context.
The 4-bedroom configurations merit specific attention for family buyers. At 1,302–1,485 sqft across 4 bedrooms, these units provide a generous family living environment within the tower format — not landed-equivalent in footprint, but sufficient for a multigenerational or 3-generation family with school-age children who value the TEL connectivity, the Anderson Primary catchment, and the on-site childcare. For buyers who are weighing Lentor Modern against landed options along the Upper Thomson corridor, the 4-bedroom configurations, combined with the integrated MRT access and on-site childcare, present a competitive total-living proposition.
| Bedrooms | Transactions | Avg PSF | Avg Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 BR | 148 | $2,174 | $1,334,097 |
| 2 BR | 155 | $2,228 | $1,630,973 |
| 3 BR | 267 | $2,088 | $2,190,398 |
| 4 BR | 65 | $2,038 | $3,115,618 |
Pricing & Market Position
Based on 635 recorded transactions, sale prices range from $1,072,170 to $3,500,000, averaging $1,948,974 (~$2,389 psf).
Rents range from $3,200 to $8,500 per month across 57 rental transactions. Current rental yield sits at approximately 2.7%.
Price Appreciation
From 2022 to 2026, the average PSF has appreciated by 13.2% (from $2,125 to $2,405 psf).
Neighbourhood Comparison
The most structurally relevant comparisons for Lentor Modern are the subsequent launches in the Lentor Hills estate itself: Lentor Hills Residences (Hong Leong Holdings / GuocoLand / TID Pte Ltd, 598 units, 99-year, launched 2023), Lentor Mansion (GuocoLand / Hong Leong, 533 units, 99-year, launched 2024), Hillock Green (Intrepid Investments / Chiu Teng / United Engineers, 474 units, 99-year, launched 2023), and Lentor Central Residences (TID / Hong Leong, 477 units, launched 2024). All are 99-year leasehold OCR D26 products within the same estate, all within walking distance of Lentor MRT — but none are integrated with the MRT station or carry a mixed-use commercial base.
Lentor Hills Residences and Hillock Green launched at average PSF of approximately $1,900–$2,000 — a modest discount to Lentor Modern’s $2,133 PSF, reflecting the MRT integration and mixed-use premium that Lentor Modern commands as the estate anchor. Lentor Mansion launched at approximately $2,050–$2,150 PSF, converging toward Lentor Modern’s price level as the estate matures and the TEL-connectivity premium is distributed across the wider estate. The PSF convergence of later launches with Lentor Modern is a natural outcome of a maturing estate where the MRT walk time from all projects is under 10 minutes; the integration premium is real but finite once the station is operational and the walk experience is established.
Beyond the Lentor Hills estate, the relevant comparison corridor is the broader Upper Thomson and Bishan–Thomson neighbourhood. The Tre Ver (UOL, 729 units, 99-year, Potong Pasir, 2022 TOP) and Sky Habitat (CapitaLand, 509 units, 99-year, Bishan, 2015 TOP) represent comparable OCR mid-market products in the D20–D26 corridor. Both transact at lower PSF than Lentor Modern in resale, reflecting their older vintage and the absence of the new-estate pioneer premium. The comparison supports the thesis that Lentor Modern’s $2,133 PSF carries a meaningful time-of-purchase premium that is justified by the integrated MRT position and the mixed-use commercial base — but that buyers should underwrite the investment with realistic assumptions about PSF normalisation as the estate and the broader OCR new-launch benchmark evolves.
For buyers specifically comparing Lentor Modern against the non-integrated Lentor Hills launches on a pure PSF basis, the $100–$250 PSF premium for Lentor Modern needs to be assessed against three structural advantages: (1) no outdoor walk to the MRT in any weather; (2) a supermarket, childcare centre, and commercial podium at the base of the residential towers; and (3) the pioneer-position brand premium within an estate where Lentor Modern set the benchmark. Whether that premium is worth $100–$250 PSF depends on the buyer’s personal weighting of MRT integration, daily convenience, and estate prestige against absolute capital outlay.
| Development | Tenure | TOP | Units | ~Avg PSF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LENTOR MODERN | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2021 | 2022 | 605 | $2,389 |
| SPRINGLEAF RESIDENCE | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2024 | 2025 | 941 | $2,178 |
| LENTOR HILLS RESIDENCES | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2022 | 2023 | 598 | $2,116 |
| LENTOR MANSION | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2023 | 2024 | 533 | $2,266 |
| LENTOR CENTRAL RESIDENCES | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2023 | 2025 | 477 | $2,222 |
| HILLOCK GREEN | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2022 | 2023 | 474 | $2,187 |
Lease Decay Analysis
The 99-year lease runs from 2021, meaning approximately 5 years have already been consumed. Roughly 94 years remain — still comfortably within the range where most banks will offer full financing without restrictions.
| Year | Lease remaining | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 (now) | ~94 years | Full bank financing available |
| 2051 | ~69 years | CPF usage still unrestricted for most buyers |
| 2060 | ~59 years | Approaching 60-year threshold — CPF limits begin for some |
| 2080 | ~39 years | Significant financing restrictions for next buyer |
| 2120 | Expiry | Lease reverts to state |
For a buyer purchasing today with a 10-year horizon (exit around 2036), the lease situation is essentially a non-issue — you’d be selling a property with ~84 years remaining, which is still very bankable. The risk profile changes for longer holds.
ShiokNest Scores
Our proprietary scoring system evaluates LENTOR MODERN across multiple dimensions.
What Residents Say
“The TEL integration is transformative. I’m at Orchard in under 20 minutes, at Caldecott Circle Line in a few stops. Before Lentor MRT opened, Upper Thomson was a bit out of the way — now it genuinely feels connected to the whole island. For a family with two working professionals, this is the best of both worlds: green neighbourhood, direct MRT.”
— Owner-occupier review via PropertyGuru
“We have two children at Anderson Primary and the childcare centre in the development has been invaluable. Everything we need day-to-day is in the building — supermarket, childcare, F&B — and the MRT is right there. We did not expect to love this neighbourhood as much as we do. Upper Thomson has a very different, quieter character from the typical condo environment.”
— Resident comment via 99.co
“Rented here as an expat family and we have been very happy. The neighbourhood is calm and green — quite unlike the Orchard and River Valley areas we considered. The supermarket and childcare on the ground floor make family logistics much easier. And the MRT connection means the city centre is never far.”
— Tenant review via EdgeProp
“Bought in 2022 at launch and very happy with how the project has shaped up. The facilities are genuinely well-designed — the lap pool and landscape are resort quality. The mixed-use base with the supermarket means the development feels complete even as the rest of the Lentor Hills estate is still building out. GuocoLand has delivered what was promised.”
— Investor comment via SRX
Resident feedback at Lentor Modern clusters around three consistent themes: the transformative impact of TEL direct access on the perception of D26 connectivity; the self-contained daily convenience of the commercial podium (supermarket, childcare, F&B) in the early years of estate development; and the quality of the green neighbourhood environment as a genuine lifestyle benefit rather than a consolation for being in the OCR. The family-buyer and family-renter demographic is strongly represented, consistent with the Anderson Primary catchment, the on-site childcare, and the 3- and 4-bedroom unit mix. Investors note GuocoLand’s execution quality and the pioneer-position capital appreciation thesis as the primary investment rationale.
- The integrated MRT-plus-retail configuration is genuinely unique within the Lentor cluster. Lentor MRT on the TEL sits directly beneath the development, with one-seat rides to Orchard, Marina Bay, and the Founders’ Memorial precinct — verify your specific tower’s walk time to the station box on our price heatmap.
- GuocoLand’s integrated-development pedigree is the strongest in the market. Construction quality, retail tenanting, and common-area finishing at Lentor Modern reflect the same playbook that delivered Guoco Midtown and Guoco Tower — this is not a generic OCR mid-tier launch.
- Pioneer status confers a clean precedent-setting price anchor. Because Lentor Modern launched first, every subsequent Lentor cluster project — Hills Residences, Mansion, Hillock Green, Central Residences, Lentoria — was priced relative to Modern’s benchmark; that gives Modern resale buyers a uniquely legible reference point. Compare District 26 medians on our District 26 page.
- Tenure runway is long. 99 years from 2021 leaves ~95 years remaining, well inside the comfortable financing and CPF-usage envelope; run the trajectory on our lease-decay calculator.
- Springleaf Nature Park and the Thomson green belt are on the doorstep. The TEL alignment opens up Springleaf, Lower Peirce, and the broader Central Catchment Nature Reserve — a quality-of-life amenity that genuinely cannot be replicated in denser OCR pockets.
- Thomson Plaza and Upper Thomson F&B anchor the wider lifestyle catchment. Two TEL stops away, Thomson Plaza and the Upper Thomson food belt give the precinct a mature retail-and-dining hinterland that newer Lentor parcels rely on Modern’s own podium to substitute for.
- Lentor cluster supply concentration is the defining risk. Six projects within a 600m radius of Lentor MRT — Lentor Hills Residences, Lentor Mansion, Hillock Green, Lentor Central Residences, Lentoria, and Modern itself — means the resale pool competing for the same buyer profile is structurally large; URA caveat data already shows months where multiple Lentor cluster units transact in the same quarter.
- Pioneer-versus-follower trade-off cuts both ways. Modern’s precedent-setting role means newer launches benchmarked above can drag the cluster median up, but it also means Modern resale stock has to compete against newer fittings and lower TOP risk in the follower projects.
- Primary-school catchment within 1km is thin. CHIJ St Nicholas Girls’ and Anderson Primary are nearby but not all of them sit within the 1km Primary 1 priority radius for every stack — families should verify OneMap school catchment against their specific tower coordinates.
- The TEL is a single-line dependency. While the Thomson-East Coast Line is one of the newer MRT lines, Lentor Modern’s connectivity story rests almost entirely on it — there is no interchange redundancy within walking distance.
- ABSD and TDSR compress the foreign-buyer thesis significantly. The 60% ABSD on foreign buyers and the standard TDSR framework under the latest MAS rules mean any non-SC/SPR thesis here has to clear a high bar — model the total cost carefully.
Lentor Modern is built for three buyer archetypes and meaningfully mis-fits a fourth. The strongest fit is the own-stay upgrader who values integrated convenience — the MRT-plus-retail-on-site configuration is a daily quality-of-life upgrade that most other Lentor cluster projects cannot replicate, and households who internalise that the marginal 200 metres of walking saved every day compounds over a decade will get genuine value here. The second strong fit is the OCR-yield investor with a 7-to-10-year horizon — the one and two-bedroom band rents well to professionals working along the TEL employment corridor, and the pioneer status gives the resale story a legibility advantage. The third fit is the long-cycle thesis investor betting on the broader maturation of the Lentor precinct as the cluster fills out and the wider Thomson green belt is increasingly valued. The mis-fit is the family upgrader fixated on top-tier primary-school catchment — District 26 is not Bukit Timah, and the within-1km primary-school options do not stack against what equivalent capital buys in Districts 10, 11, or 21.
We recommend Lentor Modern for own-stay upgraders who genuinely value the integrated MRT-and-retail convenience, OCR-yield investors with a 7-to-10-year hold, and long-cycle bettors on the broader Lentor precinct maturation — provided you have walked the alternatives in the cluster (Hills Residences, Mansion, Hillock Green, Central Residences, Lentoria) on a like-for-like stack-and-floor basis. We would avoid Lentor Modern if you are a family upgrader prioritising branded primary-school catchment, a flipper hunting 3-year capital gain (the cluster supply concentration actively suppresses short-cycle moves), or a buyer who is not pricing in the structural competition from the five newer cluster projects. The fair-value zone, in our analysis, sits at a modest premium to the broader District 26 OCR median, with the integrated configuration deserving most of that premium — pay above that only for high-floor stacks with unblocked green or city-fringe orientations.