
Daniel and Mei thought the numbers looked good.
They had bought their condo years ago, held it through several market cycles, and were now looking at a possible sale price that was much higher than what they first paid. On paper, the profit looked like a breakthrough. It felt like the kind of gain that could open the door to a larger home, a better location, or even a more comfortable retirement plan.
Then they started pricing the next move.
The unit they wanted had also become more expensive. Their CPF refund was larger than expected, which meant more had to be set aside before they could use it for the next purchase. The loan tenure was shorter than before. Renovation costs had to be budgeted again, even though what they had already spent on their current home could not be recovered. Suddenly, the profit did not feel as large as it looked.
This is the part many condo owners only realise after they begin shopping for the next property.
Selling a condo for a handsome gain is one thing. Turning that gain into a better home, lower debt, stronger retirement security, or a cleaner investment plan is another.
In Singapore, this distinction matters because many owners are sitting on paper gains accumulated over long holding periods, while replacement costs remain high. URA's final 1Q2026 figures showed that non-landed private residential rose by 1.3% quarter-on-quarter, led by growth in the OCR. Meanwhile, PropNex's Resale Condo Market Watch in May 2026 showed that 15% of resale condo transactions, or 118 deals, made more than $1 million in profit.
Those numbers are encouraging.

Source: PropNex Research, URA Realis
But there was another figure worth noticing. Loss-making deals accounted for 7.2% of resale condo transactions in May, up from 5.8% in April.
So while some owners are walking away with sizeable gains, not every sale ends the same way. And even for those who do make a profit, one question remains.
How much of that profit can actually survive the next purchase?
The resale condo market still shows pockets of strong profitability, especially for owners who bought years ago and held through multiple market cycles.
But the same market also reminds us that profit is not automatic. Location, entry price, holding period, unit size, age of project, current buyer demand and replacement options all matter.
This is why a profitable sale should not be judged by the headline gain alone.
The more useful question is this: after all costs are accounted for, what does the sale actually allow the household to do next?
The first mistake is treating the sale price minus the original purchase price as spendable profit.
For example, an owner who bought a condo for $1.1 million and sells it today for $1.8 million may feel like they have made $700,000.
But that figure does not tell the full story.
Before deciding what the profit can do, owners need to account for the outstanding loan, CPF principal and accrued interest to be refunded, seller's stamp duty if applicable, legal fees, agent fees if any, renovation costs for the next home, moving costs, and the cash buffer needed after completion.
Only then does the real question begin.
After selling, what can you buy next without weakening your household position?
That is where many owners get surprised. Their current home may have appreciated, but the next home may have moved up too. The market may have rewarded them, but it may also have raised the price of what they want next.
This is the replacement-cost problem.
Your profit may look impressive on paper, but if the next property requires a much larger loan, a thinner cash buffer, or a longer financial commitment, the gain may not be as powerful as it first appears.
Most owners with a profitable condo sale are not simply asking, "Should I sell?"
They are really asking which next move makes the most sense.
Each path can make sense.
Each path can also go wrong if the numbers are not tested properly.
For many owners, the upgrade decision starts with a simple belief.
"Our condo has appreciated, so we can move up."
Sometimes, that is true. But the next rung may have moved faster.
A family selling a two-bedroom condo to buy a three-bedroom unit in the same broad area may discover that the price gap has widened. If they want a newer project, stronger MRT connectivity, better school access, a larger layout, or a more convenient location, the gain from the current home may only cover part of the jump.
This is especially relevant for owners who bought before the recent market run-up. They may have built up strong equity, but equity alone does not settle the next mortgage.
The next loan still has to be assessed against current income, age, loan tenure, interest-rate assumptions and household commitments.
A 45-year-old upgrader does not have the same loan runway as a 32-year-old buyer. A household with young children, ageing parents, or a single income stream may also have less cash-flow room than the maximum loan amount suggests.
That is why the upgrade gap should be measured before the sale, not after accepting an offer.
The right question is not only, "How much profit can I make?"
It is, "After I sell, can I still buy the next home comfortably?"
Some owners may consider keeping the existing condo and buying another property.
The logic is easy to understand. Keep the current condo as a rental asset, buy the next home for own stay, and build long-term property wealth.
For households with strong liquidity and a clear plan, this can work.
But it should not be treated casually.
Owning two properties can change the entire risk profile of the household. Cooling measures, such as Additional Buyer's Stamp Duty, higher cash requirements, loan limits, property tax, MCST fees, maintenance costs, vacancy risk and repair expenses can quickly affect the overall equation.
Rental income may help, but it should not be treated as guaranteed income.
Tenants may move out. Rental rates may soften. Air-conditioners may break down. Appliances may need replacing. Maintenance fees continue even when the unit is vacant. Property tax still applies whether the unit is rented out or not.
The danger is not ambition. The danger is assuming that everything will go according to plan.
Before keeping the existing condo, owners should stress-test the household position under less comfortable conditions.
Can the household survive six to twelve months of weaker rental income?
Can it handle higher interest costs?
Can it pay for unexpected repairs without raiding emergency savings?
Can it carry both properties if the rental unit takes longer to lease out?
If the answer is no, selling before buying may feel less exciting, but it may be the more sensible move.
A second property should strengthen the household. It should not make the household dependent on perfect conditions.
Not every profitable sale has to lead to a bigger home.
For some owners, the better move may be right-sizing.
This applies to older owners whose children have moved out, couples nearing retirement, families who no longer need to live near a particular school or workplace, or homeowners who want to reduce debt and release cash for the next stage of life.
The emotional difficulty is real.
In Singapore, moving to a smaller home can sometimes feel like taking a step backwards on the property ladder. But that may be the wrong way to look at it.
A home that releases cash, reduces monthly stress, and fits the next decade better may be a stronger asset than a larger home that quietly drains the household.
Right-sizing is not about giving up. It is about deciding what the property is supposed to do for you now.
Is the goal more space? Lower debt? Retirement income? Being closer to children or parents? A simpler home to maintain? A cleaner estate plan?
Each objective leads to a different next purchase. That is why owners should define the purpose of the sale before they fall in love with the next property.
Before putting the condo on the market, owners should build a simple exit worksheet.
Start with the likely sale price.
Then subtract:
After that, price three realistic replacement options.
The first is the ideal option. This is the home you want.
The second is the acceptable option. This is the home that still meets your main needs without overstretching.
The third is the defensive option. This is the fallback plan if the numbers, market conditions or loan assessment do not work out as expected.
This exercise may show that upgrading is still possible.
It may show that right-sizing is smarter.
It may show that holding the current home longer is the better decision.
All three outcomes can be valid.
What matters is that the decision is led by planning, not emotion.
For homeowners who are unsure how to work through the numbers, it may be useful to speak with a trusted real estate salesperson who can help map out the sale proceeds, replacement options and likely financing considerations before any commitment is made.
A profitable sale can create confidence.
Too much confidence can become dangerous.
When owners see a large paper gain, it is natural to feel that they have more
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