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Understanding how to apply for summary judgment in Singapore is critical for any claimant seeking to resolve a commercial dispute quickly and cost‑effectively. Summary judgment allows a plaintiff to obtain a binding court order without proceeding to a full trial, provided the defendant has no genuine defence to the claim. The procedure is governed by the Rules of Court 2021 (as amended), and the 2026 amendments have introduced material changes to evidence standards, affidavit formats and costs presumptions that every litigation team must now account for.
This guide sets out the complete procedural roadmap, eligibility, documents needed, the timeline from filing to enforcement, costs, and the tactical adjustments required under the 2026 Rules, so that general counsel, in‑house teams and external litigators can act with confidence.
Summary judgment is an interlocutory application that asks the court to enter judgment for the claimant on the basis that the defendant has no defence that raises a genuine triable issue. It is distinct from default judgment, which is an administrative entry of judgment when a defendant fails to file a defence at all. Summary judgment requires an active judicial determination that the defence lacks merit.
The procedure is most commonly deployed in commercial claims involving liquidated sums, straightforward breach‑of‑contract disputes, dishonoured bills of exchange, and money claims supported by clear documentary evidence. It is available in the General Division of the High Court and, subject to its own practice directions, in the Singapore International Commercial Court (SICC). Cases in the SICC may follow modified procedural timetables, and practitioners should consult the applicable SICC practice directions for any differences in filing requirements.
Before committing to this route, claimant counsel should evaluate whether summary judgment is the optimal interlocutory remedy. Alternatives include an application to strike out the defence under the Rules of Court, an application for security for costs, or, in appropriate cases, summary dismissal of a counterclaim. The 2026 Rules changes, discussed in detail below, have tightened the evidential requirements for the applicant’s supporting affidavit, making early evidence collation even more important than before. The full step‑by‑step procedure for how to apply for summary judgment in Singapore is set out in the sections that follow.
The claimant (plaintiff) is the typical applicant. The application may be filed after the defendant has served a defence and pleadings are deemed closed, or, in practice, after the statement of claim has been served and a defence filed, provided there is no outstanding procedural step that must precede the application. Leave of court may be required in certain circumstances, for example where the claim is not solely for a liquidated sum or where the action was commenced by originating application rather than writ.
The legal test requires the applicant to demonstrate that the defendant has no genuine defence, put differently, that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the claimant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The court will not conduct a mini‑trial; it assesses whether the defence raises triable issues sufficient to warrant a full hearing. The Singapore High Court has consistently restated this threshold, emphasising that a mere assertion of a defence without credible supporting evidence is insufficient to defeat an application.
Under the 2026 Rules amendments, the evidence threshold requirements have been refined. Affidavits must now comply with stricter formatting standards: exhibits must be individually numbered and cross‑referenced within the body of the affidavit, and the applicant is expected to identify key documents and exhibits with greater specificity. Industry observers expect that these changes will, in practice, require claimant teams to invest more time in pre‑litigation evidence gathering and exhibit preparation. The likely practical effect is that poorly organised or conclusory affidavits face a higher risk of being found inadequate at the threshold stage.
The following numbered steps provide a practical workflow for claimant litigation teams. The accompanying timeline table consolidates typical durations for each stage.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑application case review and evidence audit | Claimant counsel + in‑house team | 2–7 days |
| Drafting applicant’s affidavit and exhibits | Claimant counsel (legal team) | 3–10 days |
| Draft interlocutory application + proposed order | Claimant counsel | 1–3 days |
| E‑file application and serve respondent | Claimant counsel / process server | Same day filing; service per rules (2–7 days) |
| Respondent files affidavit in opposition | Respondent counsel | 7–14 days (court may compress or extend) |
| Directions hearing / case management | Court (judge/registrar) | 2–4 weeks from filing (varies) |
| Substantive hearing | Counsel for both parties | 1–3 hours to half day |
| Judgment delivered / sealed | Court | Immediately or reserved (days to weeks) |
| Enforcement (writ, garnishee, seizure) | Judgment creditor | 1–6 weeks (depends on enforcement method) |
Before drafting anything, the litigation team must review the pleadings, confirm that the defence does not raise a genuinely triable issue, and calculate the precise sum claimed (including interest). Check for cross‑claims, equitable set‑offs and any pending interlocutory applications that might complicate timing. At this stage, confirm jurisdiction, if the matter is in the SICC, verify that the SICC practice directions do not impose additional requirements. Assemble all primary documentary evidence: the underlying contract, invoices, delivery confirmations, payment records, correspondence and any admissions.
The applicant’s supporting affidavit is the centrepiece of a summary judgment application. It must be sworn or affirmed by a person with direct knowledge of the facts, typically the claimant, a company officer or an authorised representative. The affidavit should set out, paragraph by paragraph, the factual basis for the claim, with each exhibit cross‑referenced by number. Under the 2026 Rules, exhibits must be individually numbered and indexed, and the affidavit should specifically identify which documents are key exhibits relied upon for each element of the claim.
Prepare a separate exhibit bundle with a front‑page index listing every exhibit by number and a brief description. Common exhibits include the executed contract, purchase orders, invoices, proof of delivery, bank statements showing non‑payment, and demand letters. If any document is in a language other than English, attach a certified translation. Also prepare the affidavit of service, confirming that the originating process and pleadings were properly served on the defendant.
The interlocutory application is the formal court filing requesting summary judgment. It should state the grounds concisely, for example: “The Defendant has no defence to the Plaintiff’s claim for the sum of SGD [amount] under the [Contract], and there is no genuine triable issue.” Attach the applicant’s affidavit, the exhibit bundle and the proposed draft order. The proposed order should set out the precise relief sought: entry of judgment for the specified sum, interest (specifying rate and period), and costs on an indemnity or standard basis. Use the prescribed form for interlocutory applications as set out in the Rules of Court and the Singapore Courts e‑filing guidance.
File the interlocutory application electronically through the Singapore Courts’ e‑filing system (eLitigation). All documents must be in PDF format and comply with the court’s formatting and page‑size requirements. Pay the applicable filing fee at the point of e‑filing. Once the application is accepted by the registry, serve it on the respondent in accordance with the Rules of Court, typically by way of the respondent’s solicitors on record. File the affidavit of service promptly. Late or defective service is a common reason for adjournment and delay.
After filing, the registry will typically issue directions setting out a timetable for the respondent to file an affidavit in opposition and fixing the date for a hearing. If the matter is urgent, for instance, where assets are at risk of dissipation, claimant counsel may write to the registry requesting an expedited or compressed timetable. The court retains discretion to fix the matter for an early hearing or to direct that it be heard together with other interlocutory applications. Monitor the court’s directions closely and comply with every deadline.
At the substantive hearing, the applicant’s counsel presents oral submissions supported by the affidavit evidence. The respondent’s counsel argues that the defence raises triable issues and refers the court to the opposing affidavit. The judge or registrar assesses whether the defence is credible and whether there is a genuine factual dispute that can only be resolved at trial. Prepare a concise hearing checklist: confirm the bundle is paginated, ensure authorities are tabbed, bring the original affidavits and exhibits, and prepare a brief chronology. Hearings are typically short, between one and three hours, though complex commercial disputes may take a half day.
If the court grants summary judgment, it will issue an order that can be extracted, sealed and enforced. Enforcement options include a writ of seizure and sale, garnishee proceedings, and examination of judgment debtor. If judgment is reserved, monitor the court for the written decision. Be aware that the respondent may apply to set aside the judgment or to appeal, the timeline for enforcement should account for this possibility.
The documents needed for a summary judgment application in Singapore fall into two categories: the claimant’s application pack and the respondent’s opposition pack. The table below details the claimant’s filing requirements.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Originating process (Writ of Summons or Originating Application) | Drafted by claimant; must include concise claim and relief sought; e‑filed in PDF format via eLitigation. |
| Statement of claim / particulars of claim | Must be served and on file; attach to the application bundle. |
| Defence (as served by defendant) | Include proof of service to demonstrate that pleadings are closed. |
| Applicant’s affidavit of facts | Sworn/affirmed by witness with exhibits individually numbered; must set out facts relied on with cross‑references to exhibits. |
| Exhibit bundle with index | Contracts, invoices, correspondence, bank statements and other primary documentary proof; index required. |
| Affidavit of service | Proof that originating process, pleadings and the application itself were served on the respondent. |
| Schedule of documents | Listing all documents relied on, plus documents not in the bundle but relevant to the claim. |
| Chronology / case summary | One‑ to two‑page timeline of key facts and dates for the hearing judge. |
| Proposed draft order | Precise wording of the relief sought, including judgment sum, interest rate/period and costs. |
| Costs summary or bill | Itemised if seeking a costs order at the application stage. |
| Company search / corporate records | Required where suing a corporate entity, use latest certified extracts from ACRA. |
| Certified translations | Required for any foreign‑language document; translations must be certified. |
Respondents opposing the application should prepare an affidavit in opposition setting out, with specificity, the facts and evidence that give rise to a triable issue. Where appropriate, the respondent may also file a cross‑application for striking out, security for costs, or a stay of proceedings.
Timing is central to tactical success. The key deadlines to track are as follows.
| Deadline | Timeframe | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Filing window for the application | Within 28 days after pleadings are deemed closed (unless court orders otherwise) | This is the standard filing window under the Rules of Court. Missing it requires an application for leave or extension. |
| Service of application on respondent | Per the Rules’ service periods (typically 2–7 days after filing) | Proof of service (affidavit of service) must be filed before the hearing. |
| Respondent’s affidavit in opposition | 7–14 days after service (court‑directed) | The court may compress or extend this period at case management. |
| Directions hearing / case management conference | 2–4 weeks from filing | Court will fix timetable and hearing date. |
| Substantive hearing | 4–10 weeks from filing (varies) | Complex commercial matters may take longer; SICC timelines may differ. |
| Judgment (if reserved) | Days to several weeks after hearing | Some judges deliver oral judgment immediately. |
For matters in the SICC, the procedural timetable may be adjusted to accommodate the international nature of the parties and the potential for cross‑border service. Claimant counsel seeking an expedited hearing should write to the registry promptly, setting out the grounds for urgency. The 2026 Rules have not changed the 28‑day filing window, but early indications suggest that courts are enforcing timetable compliance more strictly, particularly regarding the format and completeness of filed affidavits.
An accurate costs estimate is essential for client advice and budget management. The table below summarises the typical cost items associated with this procedure.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (interlocutory application) | SGD 100–500 | Verify against the current Singapore Courts registry fee schedule; amounts vary by claim type. |
| Counsel fees (summary judgment application) | SGD 2,500–15,000+ | Depends on complexity, counsel seniority and whether the matter is contested. High‑value commercial claims attract higher fees. |
| Disbursements (process server, certified copies, searches) | SGD 100–800 | Includes ACRA company searches, service fees, photocopying and certified translations. |
| Costs order (if application succeeds) | Standard or indemnity basis (court discretion) | The 2026 Rules may affect costs presumptions; verify against the latest case management guidance. |
| Enforcement costs (writ, garnishee) | SGD 200–1,000 + enforcement agent fees | Varies by enforcement method and complexity. |
If summary judgment is granted, the successful applicant typically receives a costs order against the respondent. The court has discretion to award costs on a standard or indemnity basis. Under the 2026 Rules, early indications suggest that courts may apply a stronger presumption in favour of indemnity costs where the defence was found to be without any genuine merit, though practitioners should verify this against emerging case management decisions. All costs are subject to taxation (assessment) by the court if the parties cannot agree on quantum.
The 2026 amendments to the Rules of Court have introduced several changes that materially affect how to apply for summary judgment in Singapore. Understanding these changes is essential for both claimants and respondents.
The most significant change for claimants is the tightened standard for supporting affidavits. The 2026 Rules require that every exhibit be individually numbered and cross‑referenced within the body of the affidavit. Claimant counsel must now identify, with greater specificity, which documents are relied upon for each factual assertion. The likely practical effect is that litigation teams must invest more time in pre‑litigation evidence gathering and in preparing structured, well‑indexed exhibit bundles. Digital filing formats have also been updated, all e‑filed documents must comply with revised formatting standards, including page‑size and bookmarking requirements. Early evidence collation is no longer optional; it is a prerequisite to meeting the threshold.
For respondents, the 2026 Rules raise the bar for opposing affidavits as well. Vague assertions of triable issues are less likely to survive scrutiny under the new framework. Respondents must now provide specific evidence, not mere allegations, to demonstrate that a genuine factual dispute exists. Industry observers expect that this will result in more summary judgment applications being granted where the defence is purely technical or speculative. Respondents should instruct counsel early and begin assembling their evidence before the application is even filed, particularly if they anticipate a summary judgment attack based on the nature of the claim.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jerrie Tan Qiu Lin at Eugene Thuraisingam LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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