Written Reply to Parliamentary Question on Household Liabilities and Assets
Summary
MAS addresses Parliament on household liabilities and assets
What changed
MAS responded to parliamentary questions on household liabilities and assets, confirming that while household liabilities rose in Q4 2025 due to increased mortgages and personal loans, overall household assets grew faster than liabilities for the full year 2025. Household net worth continues to expand with assets about nine times liabilities, and liquid assets exceed total liabilities. MAS highlighted existing safeguards including the Total Debt Servicing Ratio with an interest rate floor, minimum income requirements, borrowing limits, and credit suspension for persistent debt. Public financial education through MoneySense complements these measures.
Affected parties including banks and consumers should note that no new regulatory actions were announced. Banks lending to households are subject to existing MAS safeguards. Consumers borrowing for mortgages or personal loans are subject to TDSR requirements and unsecured credit limits. The parliamentary response confirms MAS will continue monitoring developments and review policies as appropriate, signaling ongoing supervisory attention to household indebtedness without immediate new obligations.
What to do next
- Monitor for updates
Archived snapshot
Apr 8, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Decrease font size Increase font size Print this page Parliamentary Replies Published Date: 08 April 2026
Written reply to Parliamentary Question on Household Liabilities and Household Assets
Date: For Parliament Sitting on 8 April 2026
Name and Constituency of Member of Parliament
Mr Fadli Fawzi, Aljunied GRC Question
Mr Fadli Fawzi: To ask the Prime Minister and Minister for Finance (a) whether the Government is concerned that household liabilities outpaced asset growth in the fourth quarter of 2025 for the first time since 2019, especially if interest rates are not reduced in an inflationary environment; and (b) whether the Monetary Authority of Singapore will take any action to further encourage prudence among borrowers, and if not, why not.
Answer by Mr Gan Kim Yong, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Trade and Industry, and Chairman of MAS:
Over the full year of 2025, Household Assets grew faster than Household Liabilities. The main reason for the increase in Household Liabilities was the rise in mortgages, alongside the pickup in property transactions for owner occupation in the latter half of 2025. Most of the rest of the increase in liabilities was due to personal loans, including those collateralised by assets, mainly for investments and business purposes.
Singapore's household balance sheets remain fundamentally strong, with Household Net Worth continuing to expand. Household Assets are about nine times the size of liabilities, providing substantial buffers against shocks. Liquid assets such as cash and deposits also continue to exceed total Household Liabilities.
MAS has also put in place safeguards to pre-empt over-borrowing. For example, the Total Debt Servicing Ratio incorporates an interest rate floor to determine loan affordability and guard against excessive leverage taken when interest rates are low. For unsecured consumer credit, MAS imposes minimum income requirements, borrowing limits, and credit suspension for borrowers with persistent debt.
MAS complements these safeguards through public financial education efforts under MoneySense, which promotes prudent money management and discourages over-borrowing. We will monitor developments and review our policies as appropriate. ***
Named provisions
Related changes
Get daily alerts for MAS Singapore News
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from MAS.
The plain-English summary, classification, and "what to do next" steps are AI-generated from the original text. Cite the source document, not the AI analysis.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when MAS Singapore News publishes new changes.