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Employment Lawyers Singapore 2026: Retirement, Re‑employment (64/69) & Non‑compete Enforceability

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

From 1 July 2026, Singapore’s statutory retirement age rises to 64 and the re‑employment age increases to 69 under the Retirement and Re‑employment (Prescribed Re‑employment Age) Notification 2026. For general counsel, HR directors and employment lawyers Singapore‑wide, these changes create immediate compliance obligations, alter the enforceability calculus for non‑compete clauses, and demand a thorough review of every re‑employment contract currently in force. This guide delivers the litigation‑focused analysis, practical checklists and sample clause templates that decision‑makers need before the effective date arrives.

Key Takeaway: Three Immediate Actions for Employers

From 1 July 2026, employers must offer re‑employment to eligible employees up to age 69, and retirement cannot be forced before age 64. Any existing restraint‑of‑trade clause that was drafted for a shorter employment horizon should be audited now, a broader or longer non‑compete may be found unreasonable if it bites during or after a re‑employment term that the employer itself was legally obliged to offer.

Every organisation with employees aged 60 or above should take three steps before July:

  • Audit your workforce. Identify every employee who will reach the new retirement age of 64, or the new re‑employment ceiling of 69, within the next 12 months. Map each individual against your current re‑employment offer process and timeline.
  • Review restrictive covenants. Pull every employment contract that contains a non‑compete, non‑solicitation or non‑dealing clause for employees aged 60 and above. Assess whether the duration, geographic scope and activity restriction remain reasonable in light of a potential re‑employment term lasting up to age 69.
  • Re‑draft re‑employment offers. Ensure your template re‑employment contract complies with the updated statutory framework, including a minimum one‑year term, written offer at least three months before the employee reaches retirement age, and clear terms on restraints that will apply upon eventual separation.

Quick Snapshot, Retirement 64 / Re‑employment 69

  • Statutory retirement age: raised from 63 to 64, effective 1 July 2026.
  • Prescribed re‑employment age: raised from 68 to 69, effective 1 July 2026.
  • Trajectory: the government’s stated policy roadmap targets retirement age 65 and re‑employment age 70 by 2030.

What Changed: The RRA Notification 2026 and the Legal Timeline

The Retirement and Re‑employment (Prescribed Re‑employment Age) Notification 2026 was made on 19 February 2026 and comes into operation on 1 July 2026. It prescribes 69 years of age as the re‑employment age for employees who attain 68 years of age on or after 1 July 2026. Simultaneously, the retirement age under the Retirement and Re‑employment Act 1993 (RRA) increases from 63 to 64. Together, these changes extend the statutory window during which employers must offer re‑employment by one year at each end, keeping Singapore on track to reach retirement age 65 and re‑employment age 70 by 2030.

The RRA has governed Singapore’s retirement and re‑employment framework since its enactment in 1993. Its core mechanism is a prohibition on employers dismissing employees on the ground of age before they reach the minimum retirement age, coupled with a positive obligation to offer re‑employment to eligible employees beyond that age, up to the prescribed re‑employment ceiling. The RRA Notification 2026 adjusts both thresholds upward as part of a phased schedule that has seen incremental increases since 2012.

Instrument / Event Effective Date Practical Employer Action
Retirement & Re‑employment (Prescribed Re‑employment Age) Notification 2026 1 July 2026 Update retirement policies; notify employees; adjust re‑employment offering process to reflect new age thresholds.
Retirement and Re‑employment Act 1993 (ongoing statutory obligations) Current Ensure re‑employment offers meet minimum contract length and terms; maintain records of all offers, acceptances and refusals.
Future scheduled increases (policy roadmap to 2030) Through 2030 Build phased workforce planning and payroll projections for retirement age 65 and re‑employment age 70.

Who Is Covered / Who Is Excluded

The RRA applies broadly to all employees, including those employed on a contract of service, regardless of salary level. However, domestic workers, public servants and seafarers are excluded from the Employment Claims Tribunals framework and certain provisions. For re‑employment purposes, an employee must have served the employer for at least three years before reaching the minimum retirement age to be eligible. The employee must also have satisfactory work performance and be medically fit for continued employment.

Transitional Rules and Key Statutory Definitions

The transitional mechanism operates by reference to the employee’s age on the effective date. For the re‑employment age increase, the new threshold of 69 applies to employees who attain 68 years of age on or after 1 July 2026. Employees who turned 68 before 1 July 2026 remain subject to the previous re‑employment age of 68. The same transitional logic applies to the retirement age: an employee who turned 63 before 1 July 2026 could already have been lawfully retired before the new threshold takes effect.

Employer Obligations and HR Compliance Checklist for Employment Lawyers Singapore Should Know

Under the Ministry of Manpower’s responsible re‑employment framework, employers must offer re‑employment to eligible employees who reach the minimum retirement age, up to the re‑employment age. The obligation is not discretionary, failure to make a compliant offer exposes employers to claims before the Employment Claims Tribunals and potential penalties.

Offer Timing and Minimum Contract Length

The MOM guidance stipulates that employers must offer re‑employment at least three months before the employee reaches the retirement age. The re‑employment contract must be for a minimum term of one year, renewable annually up to the prescribed re‑employment age. Employers should implement the following compliance steps:

  1. Identify eligible employees. Run a quarterly report of all staff who will reach 64 within the next six months. Cross‑reference with performance records and medical fitness certifications.
  2. Issue the written offer. Present a formal re‑employment offer letter at least three months before the employee’s 64th birthday, specifying the new role (if different), remuneration, benefits and term.
  3. Document acceptances and refusals. Where an employee accepts, execute a fresh contract or addendum. Where an employee declines, retain a signed refusal letter that records the terms offered.
  4. Offer an Employment Assistance Payment (EAP) where applicable. If the employer cannot find a suitable vacancy internally, a one‑off EAP may be payable as an alternative to re‑employment, subject to the statutory prescribed amount.
  5. Maintain records. Keep all correspondence, offers and refusals for at least five years, these documents are critical evidence in any subsequent dispute.

Interaction with CPF, Benefits and Termination Clauses

The rise in the retirement age to 64 does not directly alter Central Provident Fund (CPF) contribution rates or withdrawal ages, which are governed by separate legislation. However, because re‑employed staff remain employees, employer CPF contributions continue at the applicable rates for the employee’s age band. Industry observers expect that as the re‑employment age reaches 69, and eventually 70 by 2030, employers will need to budget for additional years of CPF contributions at senior‑employee rates. Employers should consult the CPF Board’s official guidance for the latest contribution rate tables applicable to older workers.

On termination clauses, the re‑employment contract should include a clear provision addressing how restrictive covenants operate upon expiry or early termination of the re‑employment term. Ambiguity on this point is a frequent source of litigation, as discussed below.

Non‑Compete Enforceability in Singapore After the Age Change, Litigation Analysis

The enforceability of non‑compete clauses, also called restraint of trade clauses or restrictive covenants, is one of the most litigated issues before Singapore employment lawyers. The 2026 retirement and re‑employment changes amplify this area of risk because they extend the period during which an employee may remain in active service, potentially rendering duration‑based restraints unreasonable.

The Legal Test, Case Law Summary and Doctrinal Points

Singapore courts apply a well‑established two‑stage test when assessing non‑compete enforceability. First, the restraint must protect a legitimate proprietary interest of the employer, such as trade secrets, confidential information or trade connections. Second, the restraint must be reasonable in the interests of the parties and in the public interest, having regard to its duration, geographic scope and the scope of restricted activities.

The following leading authorities inform the analysis:

  • Man Financial (S) Pte Ltd v Wong Bark Chuan David [2008] 1 SLR(R) 663 (Court of Appeal). The Court of Appeal confirmed that all restraint of trade clauses are prima facie void and unenforceable unless the employer can demonstrate a legitimate protectable interest and that the restraint goes no further than reasonably necessary to protect that interest.
  • Buckman Laboratories (Asia) Pte Ltd v Lee Wei Hoong [1999] 1 SLR(R) 205. This decision illustrated that courts will consider the employee’s seniority, access to confidential information and the nature of the industry in calibrating reasonableness.
  • Lek Gwee Noi v Humming Flowers & Gifts Pte Ltd [2014] 3 SLR 27. The High Court emphasised that a restraint lasting two years was excessive where the employee’s role was not sufficiently senior to justify such duration.
  • Smile Inc Dental Surgeons Pte Ltd v Lui Andrew Stewart [2012] 4 SLR 308 (Court of Appeal). The Court held that the geographic scope of a non‑compete must bear a rational nexus to the employer’s business operations and the employee’s sphere of influence.

Across these authorities, the consistent thread is that the court conducts a fact‑specific balancing exercise. A clause that is too broad in any one dimension, duration, territory or activity, risks being struck down entirely, because Singapore courts generally do not “blue pencil” or sever offending portions of a restraint unless the clause was drafted with clear, severable sub‑provisions.

Practical Enforcement Risk Matrix

The likely practical effect of the 2026 changes on non‑compete enforceability in Singapore is nuanced. Where an employee has been re‑employed under the RRA and subsequently departs, the total period of continuous service may now span decades, including up to five additional years of re‑employment beyond age 64. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise whether a restraint that was drafted for a standard employment tenure of, say, ten years, remains proportionate when applied to someone who has been in the employer’s service for 30 or more years and has reached age 69.

Obligation / Action Trigger Practical Approach
Offer re‑employment Employee reaches retirement age (64) Offer in writing at least 3 months prior; one‑year term, renewable annually up to age 69.
Review restrictive covenants Any employee ≥60 or due to reach retirement within 12 months Audit restraints for duration and territory; produce tailored clause or compensation‑based alternatives.
Documenting refusal Employee declines re‑employment offer Keep signed refusal; demonstrate that a reasonable offer was made on compliant terms.

Re‑Employed Employees: Special Enforceability Issues

A critical question for employment lawyers in Singapore is whether the original non‑compete clause in an employee’s initial contract survives, or is superseded by, the re‑employment contract. The answer depends on the precise drafting. If the re‑employment contract is silent on restrictive covenants, there is an argument that the original restraint has lapsed together with the original contract upon retirement. Conversely, if the re‑employment contract expressly incorporates or renews the original restraint, fresh consideration (the re‑employment itself) supports the clause’s enforceability.

Early indications suggest that best practice is to include a standalone restraint clause in the re‑employment contract, supported by express fresh consideration, rather than relying on incorporation by reference to a decades‑old agreement. This approach addresses the “consideration gap” and allows the employer to recalibrate the restraint’s duration and scope to reflect the employee’s current role and access to sensitive information, which may be different from the role held at the outset of employment.

Where an employee retires without being re‑employed and the original contract’s restraint activates, courts will assess reasonableness at the date the contract was entered into, but may still consider the employee’s age and proximity to retirement as factors bearing on hardship and the public interest. The longer the total tenure, the stronger the employee’s argument that a post‑termination restraint imposes a disproportionate burden on an individual who is, in practical terms, in the final years of their working life.

Drafting Re‑Employment and Restraint Clauses: A Pragmatic Toolkit

Given the evolving statutory landscape, general counsel and employment lawyers in Singapore should treat the 1 July 2026 effective date as a drafting deadline. Every re‑employment offer template and every restraint clause for staff aged 60 and above should be reviewed against the principles set out above.

Sample Clause Pack, Three Variants with Commentary

Clause 1, Standalone non‑compete in re‑employment contract (narrow scope)

“For a period of [6/12] months following the termination or expiry of this Re‑employment Agreement, the Employee shall not, within Singapore, directly or indirectly carry on or be engaged in any business that competes with the Division in which the Employee was employed during the final [12] months of the Re‑employment Term.”

Commentary: This clause limits duration to 6–12 months, confines geography to Singapore, and restricts the scope to the employee’s specific division. It addresses the reasonableness concern by tying the restriction to the employee’s actual sphere of influence during the re‑employment term, not the entire original career.

Clause 2, Non‑solicitation alternative (client‑focused)

“For a period of [12] months following separation, the Employee shall not solicit or deal with any client or customer of the Employer with whom the Employee had material dealings during the final [24] months of the Re‑employment Term, for the purpose of providing services that compete with those offered by the Employer.”

Commentary: Non‑solicitation clauses are generally viewed by courts as less restrictive than blanket non‑competes. This variant is often the pragmatic fallback where the employer’s real concern is client relationships rather than the employee setting up an entirely competing enterprise.

Clause 3, Garden‑leave provision with restraint offset

“The Employer may, at its sole discretion, place the Employee on garden leave for a period not exceeding [3] months during the notice period. Any period of garden leave served shall be deducted from the post‑termination non‑compete period, such that the total restricted period (garden leave plus post‑termination restraint) does not exceed [12] months.”

Commentary: Combining garden leave with a restraint offset demonstrates proportionality. It reassures courts that the employer is not double‑counting the restricted period and gives the employer continued control during the notice period while the employee remains on payroll.

Red flags to avoid:

  • Worldwide geographic scope where the employer operates only in Singapore and the ASEAN region.
  • Restraint durations exceeding 12 months for non‑executive re‑employed staff.
  • Incorporation of the original contract’s restraint by silent reference, always include a fresh, standalone clause.
  • Absence of severability provisions, if one dimension of the restraint is struck down, the entire clause may fail.

Dispute Scenarios, Remedies and Enforcement Strategy

Three dispute scenarios are most likely to arise in the wake of the 2026 changes:

  • Scenario A, Retire, re‑employ, depart. An employee retires at 64, is re‑employed to age 69, then leaves and joins a competitor. The employer seeks to enforce a non‑compete from the re‑employment contract. The court will examine the re‑employment contract’s restraint on its own terms, applying the reasonableness test to the clause as drafted.
  • Scenario B, Retire and compete. An employee retires at 64, declines the re‑employment offer and immediately sets up a competing business. The employer attempts to enforce the restraint in the original employment contract. The key question is whether the restraint survives the retirement‑triggered termination and whether fresh consideration supports it.
  • Scenario C, Re‑employed and alleged breach during employment. A re‑employed employee is discovered moonlighting for a competitor while still on the re‑employment contract. This is primarily a breach‑of‑duty and breach‑of‑contract claim, not a post‑termination restraint issue, but damages and injunctive relief are available.

Enforcement Checklist for Litigators

  1. Secure and preserve evidence of the breach immediately, screenshots, witness statements, client communications.
  2. Review both the original employment contract and the re‑employment contract to identify the operative restraint clause.
  3. Assess whether fresh consideration supports the restraint in force.
  4. Consider whether an interlocutory injunction is warranted and prepare the undertaking as to damages.
  5. Evaluate the balance of convenience: the court will weigh the employer’s commercial harm against the hardship to an older employee whose remaining working years are limited.
  6. Explore commercial resolution, a negotiated settlement or agreed undertaking may be faster and cheaper than contested litigation, especially where the employee is near the end of their career.

Practical Next Steps and Decision Matrix for GC and HR

Between now and 1 July 2026, the following seven‑point action plan provides a structured approach to compliance. For further guidance, visit the Employment, Singapore practice area or explore the Lawyer directory, Singapore / Employment filter.

  1. Run a census of all employees aged 60+ and map each against the new retirement age (64) and re‑employment age (69).
  2. Update HR policies and employee handbooks to reflect the new thresholds.
  3. Audit every active employment contract and re‑employment contract for restraint clauses.
  4. Categorise restraint risk using a RAG matrix: Red, broad restraints (worldwide scope, >12 months, senior employees approaching re‑employment age) requiring immediate re‑drafting; Amber, moderate restraints requiring review and possible narrowing; Green, narrow, recently drafted clauses that remain proportionate.
  5. Issue compliant re‑employment offers at least three months before any employee reaches 64.
  6. Brief senior management and line managers on the new obligations and the commercial risk of non‑compliance.
  7. Engage experienced employment lawyers in Singapore to conduct a privileged enforceability review of high‑risk restraints and to prepare updated template contracts for re‑employment.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ang Ann Liang at CHP Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Retirement & Re‑employment (Prescribed Re‑employment Age) Notification 2026, Singapore Statutes Online (AGC/SSO)
  2. Ministry of Manpower (MOM), Responsible Re‑employment Guidance
  3. Retirement and Re‑employment Act 1993, Singapore Statutes Online
  4. Global Law Experts, Enforce Non‑compete Singapore 2026
  5. Allen & Gledhill, Retirement and Re‑employment Ages Raised to 64 and 69
  6. Lexology, Changes to Retirement and Re‑employment Ages
  7. Legal 500, Labour and Employment: Local Firms in Singapore
  8. Singapore Courts, Judgments Database
  9. Central Provident Fund Board, Official Guidance

FAQs

What is the re‑employment age in 2026?
From 1 July 2026, the prescribed re‑employment age in Singapore rises to 69. This applies to employees who attain 68 years of age on or after 1 July 2026. Employers must offer re‑employment to eligible employees up to this new ceiling, subject to the employee meeting the statutory criteria of at least three years’ service, satisfactory work performance and medical fitness.
Singapore’s statutory minimum retirement age increases from 63 to 64 with effect from 1 July 2026. Employers are prohibited from dismissing an employee on the ground of age before the employee reaches 64. This one‑year increase is part of a phased roadmap that aims to raise the retirement age to 65 by 2030.
Employers must offer re‑employment to eligible employees who reach the minimum retirement age, up to the re‑employment age. The offer must be made in writing at least three months before the employee reaches 64, for a minimum one‑year term renewable annually. If no suitable position exists, an Employment Assistance Payment may be payable. Full guidance is published by the Ministry of Manpower.
The increase in the statutory retirement age does not directly change CPF withdrawal ages or contribution rate schedules, which are governed by the Central Provident Fund Act. However, because re‑employed employees remain in active service, employer CPF contributions continue at the applicable age‑band rates for a longer period. Employers should consult the CPF Board’s official guidance for the most current contribution tables.
Yes, a non‑compete clause can be enforced after re‑employment, provided it satisfies the standard two‑stage legal test: the clause must protect a legitimate proprietary interest, and it must be reasonable in scope, duration and geographic reach. Where the restraint appears in the re‑employment contract with fresh consideration, enforceability is strengthened. Restraints carried over from the original contract without renewal may face challenges on consideration and proportionality grounds.
The RRA does not require identical terms. Employers may offer re‑employment on modified terms, including different roles, reduced hours or adjusted remuneration, provided the terms are reasonable. However, the MOM’s tripartite guidelines encourage employers to offer terms that are fair and to discuss changes transparently with the employee before the re‑employment date.
There is no statutory maximum. Industry observers generally regard 6 to 12 months as the defensible range for non‑executive re‑employed staff in Singapore. For senior executives with extensive access to trade secrets or client relationships, a 12‑month restraint confined to the relevant market may be sustainable. Restraints exceeding 12 months face heightened scrutiny, particularly when applied to employees in their late 60s whose remaining career runway is inherently limited.

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Employment Lawyers Singapore 2026: Retirement, Re‑employment (64/69) & Non‑compete Enforceability

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