The first quarter of 2026 told a story most headlines missed: volume returned, but selectively. CCR launches absorbed the cooling-measure overhang. RCR took the spotlight. OCR continued its quiet, steady climb. Here's what actually happened — and what it means for buyers entering Q2.

1. Headline numbers

Total private new sales rose roughly 18% quarter-on-quarter, with the bulk of activity concentrated in three RCR launches. Resale volumes were flatter, reflecting price stickiness rather than weak demand.

Volume tells you what happened. Mix tells you why. Q1's mix points to upgraders driving RCR, not foreign capital — a healthier signal for sustained pricing.

2. Where the buyers came from

Three buyer profiles dominated Q1 activity:

  1. HDB upgraders moving up to RCR. The bulk of demand. Triggered by maturing 5-year MOPs and lower mortgage rates relative to 2024.
  2. Right-sizers moving from larger CCR units. A quieter but consistent flow, often into well-located 2-bedders with concierge.
  3. Investors returning to leasehold OCR. Yield compression in CCR and RCR pushed yield-focused buyers further out.

3. What this means for Q2 buyers

If you're house-hunting in the next three months, three takeaways matter:

4. The Q2 watchlist

we're watching three signals: (a) the next round of GLS tender results in May, (b) any cooling-measure recalibration if RCR PSF breaks $2,500, and (c) HDB resale volumes — a leading indicator for OCR new-sale demand 6 months out.

Final word

Q1 was not a runaway market. It was a selective one — and selective markets reward buyers who know precisely what they want and what it should cost. If you'd like a personalised view on a specific launch or district, get in touch — happy to talk it through.

Have a question on this report?

WhatsApp us directly for a quick reply, or drop your email and he'll send a personal note.

Chat on WhatsApp Send Email Enquiry