Singapore is home to some of Asia’s most trusted blue-chip companies like DBS, Singtel, and CapitaLand, offering the kind of stability and steady payouts that long-term investors value worldwide.
What makes the Singapore market unique is its dividend-driven structure.
Many companies maintain regular payouts, and the country has built Asia’s largest REIT ecosystem, i.e., listed real estate investment trusts that own income-generating assets like offices, malls, and data centres. These REITs, such as CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust, Mapletree Logistics Trust, and Keppel DC REIT, typically distribute over 90% of their rental income, resulting in average yields of 4–6%.
For Indian investors looking beyond the usual U.S. and European markets, Singapore offers a rare balance - Asian growth, developed-market discipline, and a strong dividend culture.
This guide breaks down how to invest in the Singapore stock market from India.
Table of Content
- Can Indians invest in Singapore directly?
- Directly buy Singapore listed stocks & S-REITs
- US-listed Singapore ETFs & ADRs
- UCITS ETFs with Singapore exposure (LSE / Xetra / Euronext)
- India-domiciled funds & ETFs with Singapore exposure
- Taxation: How Your Returns Are Treated in India
- Why consider investing in Singapore?
- Platforms that help Indians invest in Singapore
- Conclusion
- FAQs
Can Indians invest in Singapore directly?
Yes. Indians can invest directly in Singapore-listed stocks, ETFs, and REITs through the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), which allows up to USD 250,000 per person per year to be invested abroad.
The simplest route is to use a global brokerage platform that supports trading on the Singapore Exchange (SGX), such as Paasa or Interactive Brokers (IBKR). These platforms handle all required compliance under LRS and let you invest directly in companies like DBS Bank, Singtel, or SGX-listed REITs.
This means an Indian investor can open an account with a global broker platform such as Paasa, remit funds abroad using the correct purpose code for equity investment, and legally purchase Singapore-listed equities, REITs, or ETFs.
The four practical routes to gain exposure to Singapore are:
- Direct Singapore shares on the Singapore Exchange (SGX)
- US-listed Singapore ETFs & ADRs
- UCITS ETFs with Singapore exposure
- India-domiciled funds & ETFs with Singapore exposure
Important to know:
- The annual LRS limit is USD 250,000 per individual.
- Remittances above ₹10 lakh in a financial year attract TCS (Tax Collected at Source). This is tracked PAN-wise but collected by your bank when you remit.
- All foreign assets must be disclosed in your Indian Income Tax Return (ITR).
Directly buy Singapore listed stocks & S-REITs
The Singapore Exchange (SGX) is Singapore’s primary stock market, home to blue-chip companies like DBS Group, OCBC, and Singtel, as well as a robust ecosystem of REITs and ETFs. Through global brokers like Paasa and Interactive Brokers (IBKR), Indian investors can remit funds abroad under the RBI’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) and purchase these shares directly in Singapore dollars (SGD).
For Indians, this is the cleanest way to hold Singapore-listed equities and REITs in their original market.
Key points:
- Dividends: Singapore does not levy withholding tax on dividends from resident companies. REIT distributions are also tax-exempt locally for individual investors. Taxes apply only in India based on the investor’s income slab.
- Capital gains: Singapore has no capital gains tax. Gains are taxable only in India under the appropriate short-term or long-term rules.
- Currency: Shares are priced in Singapore dollars (SGD).
- Estate tax: Singapore has no estate or inheritance tax on listed securities.
- Compliance: Remittances must be made under LRS (USD 250,000 annual cap per person) using the correct purpose code for “equity investment abroad.”
Pros:
- Direct ownership of Singapore blue chips and REITs.
- No capital gains or dividend withholding tax in Singapore.
- Transparent settlement and regulation under the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the country’s financial regulator.
- Recognised and fully legal under FEMA LRS.
Cons:
- Liquidity is strong in major Singapore stocks and REITs, though smaller-cap counters can have lower trading volumes compared to the US or Europe.
US-listed Singapore ETFs & ADRs
Another practical way for Indians to gain exposure to Singapore equities is through ETFs and ADRs listed in the United States.
US-listed ETFs are funds that track Singapore’s equity market while trading on American exchanges like the NYSE. The most popular example is the iShares MSCI Singapore ETF (EWS), which provides exposure to large and mid-cap Singapore companies across banking, real estate, and industrial sectors.
ADRs (American Depositary Receipts) represent shares of Singapore-based companies traded in the US. These instruments give investors indirect access to Singapore’s leading corporates without using the Singapore Exchange (SGX) or converting INR to SGD.
For Indian investors, US-listed ETFs and ADRs provide a simple, liquid, and familiar way to invest in Singapore’s market through USD-denominated instruments.
Popular Examples Include:
- ETFs: iShares MSCI Singapore ETF (EWS), Global X FTSE Southeast Asia ETF (ASEA)
- ADRs: DBS Group (DBSDY), OCBC (OVCHY), Singtel (SGAPY) (OTC listings)
Key points:
- US-domiciled ETFs and ADRs are regulated by the SEC and trade in USD on major US exchanges.
- Accessible via most global brokers like Paasa, INDMoney, or Vested, no need for SGD accounts or SGX access.
- Dividends are subject to 30% US withholding tax, which reduces net yield for Indian investors to 25% as per DTAA treaty.
- Capital gains on US-listed instruments are not taxed in the US but are taxable in India under local capital gains rules.
Pros:
- High liquidity: US ETFs like EWS, AIA, and GMF are actively traded.
- Simplified access through brokers already offering the US markets.
Cons:
- 25% dividend withholding tax applies to distributions.
- ETF expenses marginally lower net returns.
- Indirect exposure: ETFs may not fully capture Singapore’s REIT ecosystem.
UCITS ETFs with Singapore exposure (Europe-listed)
Another practical way for Indians to gain exposure to Singapore is through UCITS (Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities) ETFs domiciled in Ireland or Luxembourg.
UCITS ETFs are Europe-domiciled funds that let investors access international equities while being regulated under the UCITS framework. They trade on exchanges such as the London Stock Exchange (LSE), Xetra (Germany), and Euronext, and are built for international investors.
For Indians, UCITS ETFs are often the cleanest and most tax-efficient way to invest in Singapore. They sidestep US estate tax, handle any underlying withholding inside the fund, and provide diversified access to Singapore through single-country funds or broader Asia portfolios.
Popular examples include:
- iShares MSCI Singapore UCITS ETF (available on LSE/Xetra)
- Xtrackers MSCI Singapore UCITS ETF 1C (Luxembourg-domiciled)
- iShares Asia Property Yield UCITS ETF (includes Singapore REITs)
If you want a deeper dive on why UCITS are often better suited for Indian investors, see our detailed guide: Why UCITS Funds Work for Indian Investors.
Key points:
- Ireland/Luxembourg domicile, regulated under UCITS. Listed on LSE/Xetra/Euronext in USD, GBP, or EUR.
- Available on Paasa: Indians can buy UCITS ETFs on LSE/Xetra via Paasa under RBI’s LRS with streamlined onboarding and consolidated statements.
- Underlying Singapore dividends: Singapore resident companies’ dividends are paid without any withholding tax to shareholders under the one-tier system. For REIT distributions, Singapore imposes a 10% final withholding on non-resident non-individual unit-holders (e.g., foreign funds or corporations). However, distributions to individual investors are generally made gross (no withholding), unless received via a partnership or derived from trade/business in REIT units.
- In India, dividends are taxed at your slab rate, and capital gains are taxed per Indian rules on sale of units.
No US estate-tax exposure since these are EU-domiciled, not US-situs.
Pros:
- Tax efficiency: Lower withholding taxes compared to US ETFs.
- Wide availability: Large providers (iShares, Vanguard, Lyxor) offer UCITS ETFs with Asian or Singapore exposure.
- Regulatory credibility: UCITS funds are tightly regulated under EU law.
Cons:
- Accessibility: Not all brokers available to Indians offer European market access.
- Accessibility: UCITS ETFs trade on European exchanges, and platforms like INDmoney or Vested do not provide access to these UCITS for Indian investors.
- Lower liquidity compared to US ETFs.
- Fewer single-country Singapore ETFs: many are regional funds where Singapore is one part of the basket.
India-domiciled funds & ETFs with Singapore exposure
Indian mutual funds and ETFs offer a simple way to gain exposure to Singapore’s markets without sending money under LRS. These are SEBI-regulated, INR-denominated products that you can invest in through any regular Indian broker or mutual fund platform.
Funds that track Singapore indices (such as the MSCI Singapore or broader Asia-Pacific benchmarks) or operate as feeder funds, where the Indian AMC collects INR and invests into a global “master fund” abroad, offer exposure to Singaporean and regional equities. For investors, it works just like buying any other mutual fund in India.
Examples:
- Edelweiss Greater Asia Offshore Fund – feeder fund investing in JPMorgan’s Asia Pacific Fund (which includes Singapore equities).
- Franklin Asian Equity Fund – invests in blue-chip companies across Asia, including Singapore banks and REITs.
Key points:
- You hold units in INR; the AMC manages all cross-border compliance and FX conversion internally.
- No LRS paperwork, TCS deduction, or Schedule FA filing needed, everything stays domestic.
- Subject to SEBI’s overseas investment limits (USD 7 bn for mutual funds, USD 1 bn for ETFs). AMCs may pause inflows if the cap is reached.
- Most India-domiciled Singapore-exposure schemes are Specified Mutual Funds. All gains are deemed short-term and taxed at your slab rate, regardless of holding period.
Pros:
- Simplest route to get Singapore exposure (INR-based, no foreign account).
- No LRS, TCS, or estate tax implications.
- Fully SEBI-regulated and easy to access on Indian platforms.
Cons:
- Limited product availability, few Singapore or Asia-focused funds exist.
- Inflows may be paused if SEBI’s overseas cap is reached.
- Indirect exposure: performance depends on the underlying master fund and its costs.
Taxation: How Your Returns Are Treated in India
When investing in Singapore from India, returns are subject to two layers of taxation: foreign-side taxes (what Singapore or the fund's domicile country takes) and Indian taxation (your final liability when filing the Income Tax Return).
For how the double tax treaty taxes dividends, interest, and gains, read India–Singapore DTAA.
This structured comparison breaks down the tax and estate implications across the four most practical routes available to Indian investors.
Foreign-side taxes
Route | Asset Domicile | Dividend WHT at Source (Foreign) | Capital Gains Tax at Source | Estate Tax Exposure |
Direct SGX Stocks | Singapore | 0% (Dividends from Singapore-resident companies are paid under the one-tier system; no WHT to shareholders) | None (0%) | No Estate Tax |
Direct SGX S-REITs | Singapore | 0% for individual investors. | None (0%) | No Estate Tax |
US-listed ETFs/ADRs (e.g., EWS) | US | 25% WHT on dividends for Indian residents after filing W-8BEN under the US–India treaty (otherwise 30%). | None for non-resident aliens (US CG not taxed unless present in the US ≥ 183 days during the tax year). | Yes. US Estate Tax risk applies above USD 60,000. |
UCITS ETFs (LSE/Xetra) | Ireland/ Luxembourg | 0% Irish/Lux WHT on fund distributions to properly documented non-residents. Any underlying WHT (if any) is handled inside the fund. | None | None |
India-domiciled Funds/FoFs | India | None (any foreign WHT is handled within the scheme; not withheld from the investor at source). | None | None (Domestic Indian Asset) |
Indian Taxation and Compliance
Assuming the investor is a resident individual in India (FY 2025–26 rules):
Route | Dividend/Distribution Income (India) | Capital Gains (Sale in India) | Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) |
Direct SGX (Stocks/REITs) | Fully taxable in India under “Income from Other Sources” at your individual slab rate. | STCG: slab (if held ≤ 24 months).
LTCG: 12.5% (no indexation) if held > 24 months. | Not applicable for Singapore company dividends/S-REIT distributions to individuals (no Singapore WHT). |
US-listed ETFs/ADRs | Taxable in India under “Income from Other Sources” at your applicable income-tax slab rate.
U.S. payer withholds 25 % after submission of Form W-8BEN (India-U.S. tax treaty, Article 10); 30 % if the form is not filed. | STCG: slab (if held ≤ 24 months).
LTCG: 12.5% (no indexation) if held > 24 months. | FTC available for the 25% US WHT; file Form 67 on time to claim. |
UCITS ETFs (Accumulating Class) | None received (dividends are automatically reinvested inside the fund). Tax arises on sale. | STCG/LTCG same as above (12.5% LTCG if > 24 months; STCG slab). | No FTC, as Ireland/Luxembourg UCITS funds do not levy withholding tax on reinvested income or capital gains. |
India-domiciled Funds | • Taxed at your income-tax slab rate.
• AMC deducts 10 % TDS if total dividends exceed ₹5,000 per FY | All gains taxed at slab rate (treated as short-term) since most global / international schemes qualify as Specified Mutual Funds under post-July 2024 rules. | No FTC (Foreign tax is adjusted at the fund level, not visible to the investor). |
Why consider investing in Singapore?
REIT hub
40+ listed REITs with 4–6% yields, high liquidity, and regional assets across Asia.
Dividend culture
Banks like DBS, UOB, and OCBC pay consistent dividends; focus is on income, not speculation; this can be seen in the table below:
Top Singapore Dividend Stocks & REITs (Average Annual Yields)
Company / REIT | Sector | Avg Dividend Yield (2024) | Type |
DBS Group Holdings Ltd. | Banking | 5.5% | Stock |
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) | Banking | 5.2% | Stock |
United Overseas Bank (UOB) | Banking | 5.0% | Stock |
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (CICT) | Retail / Commercial REIT | 5.4% | REIT |
Mapletree Logistics Trust (MLT) | Industrial / Logistics REIT | 5.6% | REIT |
Ascendas REIT | Industrial / Business Parks | 5.3% | REIT |
Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (MPACT) | Office / Retail REIT | 6.0% | REIT |
Keppel DC REIT | Data Centres | 4.8% | REIT |
Frasers Centrepoint Trust (FCT) | Retail | 5.2% | REIT |
SATS Ltd. | Aviation Services | 3.0% | Stock |
Stability
Strong regulation by MAS, low corruption, and predictable policies.
Tax efficiency
No capital gains or dividend tax for individuals; S-REIT payouts are tax-exempt.
Gateway to Asia
Easy access to Asian growth with Singapore’s safety and transparency.
For Indians
Diversified, steady income for residents; tax-free returns for NRIs in Singapore.
Platforms that help Indians invest in Singapore
There are multiple platforms through which Indian investors can access Singapore stocks, ETFs, and REITs. Some are global brokerages that directly provide access to SGX, while others offer indirect exposure via US- or UCITS-listed ETFs. Below is a comparison of leading options.
Direct Access to Singapore Exchange | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
UCITS ETFs | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
US-domiciled Singapore ETFs | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
ADRs of Singapore Companies | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
India-domiciled funds | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
FEMA compliance support | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
Tax reporting support | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
INR-based analytics | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
Conclusion
For Indian investors, Singapore stands out as Asia’s most stable and income-focused market, combining developed-market discipline with regional growth. Its dividend culture, strong REIT ecosystem, and transparent regulations make it a natural choice for those seeking steady, long-term global exposure.
Today, investing in Singapore is no longer complex. Whether through direct SGX listings, international ETFs, or domestic feeder funds, the routes are clear and compliant under LRS. What matters is choosing an approach that balances simplicity, tax efficiency, and comfort with cross-border investing.
At Paasa, we make this journey seamless, helping investors access Singapore’s markets with full FEMA compliance, tax-ready reporting, and the confidence that every step is globally integrated yet India-aware.
About Paasa
Paasa is built as a global-first investing platform for Indian investors. For HNIs, family offices, and institutions, we provide structured access not just to the US but to markets across Singapore, Europe (UCITS), the UK, Japan, and beyond.
Whether your allocation includes SGX-listed stocks and REITs, UCITS ETFs on LSE or Xetra, or US-listed instruments like EWS, Paasa enables every practical route available under India’s LRS framework. More importantly, we manage the India-facing side of global investing from FEMA compliance and tax-ready reporting to INR-based portfolio analytics.
This way, you can focus on building a globally diversified portfolio that includes Singapore and other key markets, while Paasa handles the complexity behind the scenes.
Relevant Reads
Compare routes, costs, and taxes across markets with these quick reads.
- Invest in US from India
- Invest in Ireland from India
- Invest in Switzerland from India
- Invest in China from India
- Invest in Japan from India
- Invest in UK from India
- Invest in Poland from India
- Invest in Germany from India
Disclaimer
This blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment, tax, or legal advice. The information provided is based on publicly available sources and Paasa’s understanding of current regulations, which may change over time.
Investing in international markets involves risks, including currency fluctuations, regulatory changes, tax implications, and market volatility. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Investors are encouraged to seek advice from their financial, tax, and legal advisors before making any investment decisions.


