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Global Investor Programme (GIP) Singapore How to Obtain PR Via Investment

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

The Global Investor Programme Singapore is the city-state’s flagship investor route for obtaining Singapore Permanent Residency (PR). Administered by the Economic Development Board (EDB), the GIP is designed for high-net-worth individuals, family office principals, and founders who can deploy substantial capital into the Singapore economy. With the EDB factsheet updated on 5 May 2025 raising the non-refundable application fee and clarifying current investment thresholds and parliamentary figures reported by The Straits Times on 27 February 2026 confirming that just 450 PR grants were made under the programme between 2015 and 2025, prospective applicants face a selective, high-stakes process. This page sets out current eligibility criteria, investment routes, timelines, documentation requirements and practical relocation considerations for anyone evaluating the GIP as a path to Singapore PR.

At a Glance: Key GIP Facts

  • Option A Business investment: Minimum S$10 million in a new or existing Singapore business entity.
  • Option B GIP-select fund: Minimum S$25 million invested into an EDB-approved GIP-select fund.
  • Option C Single Family Office (SFO): Minimum S$200 million in net investible assets under management (AUM), with a specified portion deployed in Singapore.
  • Application fee: S$20,000 (non-refundable), effective from 5 May 2025 per the EDB factsheet.
  • PR grants (2015–2025): Approximately 450 applicants were granted PR under the GIP, as reported in Parliament.
  • Outcome: Successful applicants and eligible family members receive Singapore Permanent Residency.

Who Should Consider the Global Investor Programme Singapore?

The GIP is not a general investor visa. It targets a narrow cohort of global wealth creators whose activities will generate measurable economic impact in Singapore. The following profiles are best positioned:

  • Family office principals: Individuals managing substantial private wealth through a single family office structure, particularly those willing to establish or relocate an SFO to Singapore under Option C.
  • Founders and C-suite executives: Entrepreneurs with a proven track record of building and scaling businesses especially those prepared to establish or expand operations in Singapore under Option A.
  • Institutional or private fund investors: HNWIs allocating capital through professionally managed vehicles and willing to commit S$25 million or more to an EDB-approved fund under Option B.
  • Regional HQ owners: Business leaders who intend to anchor their Asia-Pacific headquarters in Singapore, combining company formation with GIP eligibility.

Applicants without a clear economic footprint in Singapore, those with complex sanctions exposure, or individuals with unresolved regulatory or criminal matters are unlikely to succeed and should seek specialist pre-screening before proceeding.

GIP Application Process Step-by-Step Timeline

The GIP application process involves multiple agencies and sequential stages. The following timeline reflects current EDB and ICA procedural guidance, though processing times are indicative and vary by case complexity.

  1. Pre-assessment and eligibility pre-screen (1–2 weeks): An initial review of the applicant’s business track record, net worth, proposed investment structure and any potential red flags. This stage determines which of the three GIP options is most suitable.
  2. Investment structuring and documentation (2–8 weeks): Depending on the chosen route, this involves company incorporation (Option A), fund subscription (Option B), or SFO establishment and AUM evidence compilation (Option C). Legal opinions, escrow arrangements and KYC documentation are assembled.
  3. Submit GIP e-application to EDB: The completed application including the S$20,000 non-refundable application fee is submitted electronically to the EDB.
  4. EDB evaluation and In-Principle Approval (IPA) (8–16 weeks): EDB conducts its assessment, including background and key-individual checks. Applicants may be asked to attend an interview or supply supplementary documentation.
  5. Investment deployment (2–12 weeks): Upon receiving IPA, the applicant must complete the qualifying investment transferring funds, subscribing to the approved fund, or demonstrating AUM deployment and submit evidence to EDB.
  6. ICA PR grant (4–12 weeks): Following EDB’s recommendation, ICA issues the PR grant. The grant is discretionary; there is no automatic entitlement.
  7. Post-grant compliance Re-Entry Permit (REP): New PRs must obtain a Re-Entry Permit to travel in and out of Singapore while maintaining PR status. The REP application process was revised effective 1 December 2025, and ongoing renewals require evidence of substantive ties to Singapore.

GIP Application Timeline Summary

Milestone Expected Duration
Pre-screen & eligibility review 1–2 weeks
Structuring & documentation 2–8 weeks
EDB review & IPA 8–16 weeks
Investment deployment 2–12 weeks
ICA PR decision 4–12 weeks

GIP Investment Routes What Qualifies and Exact Thresholds

Option A Start or Expand a Business in Singapore

Applicants must invest a minimum of S$10 million in investible capital (including paid-up capital) in a new business entity or in the expansion of an existing Singapore-based operation, as specified in the EDB factsheet. EDB expects demonstrable economic contribution local hiring commitments, revenue generation, and a credible business plan outlining growth projections. Applicants who are expanding an existing business must show a track record of at least three years of audited financial statements.

Option B Investment via a GIP-Select Fund

Applicants must commit a minimum of S$25 million into an EDB-approved GIP-select fund. The current list of approved funds is published by EDB and should be verified directly before any subscription. Fund investments typically carry lock-up periods, and applicants should scrutinise the fund’s Private Placement Memorandum (PPM), audited NAV history, and the general partner’s track record before committing capital.

Option C Single Family Office (SFO)

This route requires the applicant to establish a single family office in Singapore managing a minimum of S$200 million in net investible assets, with a specified portion deployed and maintained in Singapore-based investments. Applicants pursuing Option C should be aware of the interplay between MAS exemption frameworks (such as Section 13O and 13U structures) and the GIP’s AUM evidence requirements. Consolidated asset statements, trust deed documentation and investment mandates will all be scrutinised.

How to Check GIP-Approved Funds and Conduct Fund Due Diligence

Before committing S$25 million to a GIP-select fund, investors should follow a structured due diligence process:

  1. Confirm EDB select fund status: Cross-reference the fund against the EDB published list of GIP-select funds. Fund approvals can be withdrawn, so verification should occur immediately before subscription.
  2. Request and review the PPM: Examine the fund’s strategy, investment mandate, fee structure, lock-up terms, redemption mechanics and liquidity provisions.
  3. Assess audited NAV history: Review the fund’s independently audited net asset values over its operating life to evaluate performance and asset quality.
  4. Evaluate the GP track record: Investigate the general partner’s prior fund performance, regulatory standing and operational capacity.
  5. Examine Singapore-based portfolio allocation: Some funds are expected to deploy a meaningful portion of capital into Singapore-based investments confirm this with the fund manager.
  6. Obtain an independent legal opinion: Ensure the subscription structure satisfies EDB requirements and that escrow or transfer mechanics are in place to protect capital before PR is granted.
  7. Monitor fund solvency: Industry observers note that GIP-approved funds are not immune to financial distress. At least one GIP-approved venture fund has been placed under judicial management, underscoring the importance of ongoing solvency monitoring, staggered closings and independent governance review.

Thorough KYC, source-of-funds documentation, sanctions screening and fund governance review are essential to both satisfying EDB requirements and protecting the applicant’s capital.

GIP Eligibility and Key Requirements

The Global Investor Programme Singapore is a discretionary scheme there is no automatic right to PR even if investment thresholds are met. The EDB programme page sets out the core eligibility framework:

  • Business and entrepreneurial track record: Applicants must demonstrate a substantive history of founding, owning or managing successful businesses. Revenue thresholds and industry focus vary by option.
  • Net worth: Sufficient personal or family net worth to support the proposed investment and ongoing economic engagement with Singapore.
  • Commitment to Singapore: EDB evaluates the applicant’s genuine intention to be based in Singapore, including plans for local hiring, regional operations and community engagement.
  • Family inclusion: A spouse and unmarried children under 21 may be included in the PR application. The ICA provides guidance on family inclusion procedures and the supporting documents required (marriage certificates, birth certificates, relationship evidence).
  • Character and background checks: All applicants undergo regulatory, criminal and adverse media screening. Unresolved investigations, sanctions designations or inconsistent disclosures can result in rejection.

Required Documentation Checklist

The following checklist covers the core documents expected for a GIP pre-screen. A downloadable PDF version of this checklist is available below for applicants beginning their preparation.

  • Personal identification: Passport bio page, curriculum vitae, proof of current residential address.
  • Corporate documents (Option A existing business): Certificate of Incorporation, ACRA business profile, audited financial statements for the most recent three years.
  • Business plan (Option A new business): Detailed business plan, projected profit-and-loss statements, market analysis and hiring roadmap.
  • Fund documents (Option B): Subscription agreement, PPM/LP agreement, fund prospectus, confirmation of fund manager’s EDB select fund status.
  • Evidence of investment funds: Bank statements demonstrating liquid capital, proof of fund transfer or escrow documentation.
  • SFO AUM evidence (Option C): Trust deeds, consolidated investment statements, asset schedules, investment mandates.
  • KYC and source-of-funds package: Bank reference letters, source-of-wealth memoranda, beneficial ownership declarations, personal tax returns.
  • Background checks: Police clearance certificates, professional and personal references.

Due Diligence, KYC and Risk Considerations

EDB and ICA conduct rigorous KYC and anti-money laundering (AML) screenings on every GIP applicant. Sanctions checks, adverse media searches, and source-of-wealth verification form the backbone of the review. Common grounds for rejection include inconsistent information across documents, unresolved regulatory investigations, or adverse findings in background checks.

A particular risk for Option B investors is the possibility that a GIP-approved fund encounters financial distress after the investment is made. Industry observers recommend several mitigations: escrow arrangements that release funds only upon PR confirmation, staggered capital commitments, independent legal opinions on the subscription structure, and continuous monitoring of fund financial health. Applicants should also ensure that source-of-funds documentation is comprehensive, consistent and independently verifiable gaps in the paper trail are among the most common causes of application delays or adverse outcomes.

Practical Relocation Notes Presence Rules, REP and Tax Basics

Re-Entry Permit (REP) and Physical Presence

Singapore PRs who wish to travel internationally must hold a valid Re-Entry Permit. The Ministry of Home Affairs introduced revisions to the REP application and renewal process effective 1 December 2025, and PRs should familiarise themselves with the updated procedures. REPs are typically granted for an initial period of five years and are renewed subject to evidence of substantive economic and social ties to Singapore including physical presence, local employment, property ownership and children’s enrolment in Singapore schools.

Tax Residency Basics

Singapore tax residency for individuals is determined primarily by the 183-day rule administered by IRAS: an individual who is physically present or employed in Singapore for 183 days or more in a calendar year is generally treated as a tax resident. IRAS also applies an administrative concession for individuals who are present for at least three consecutive years. Newly arrived PRs should plan their days-in-Singapore carefully to secure tax resident status from their first year. References to shorter presence periods (e.g., 60 or 90 days) are context-specific and should not be relied upon without consulting IRAS guidance directly.

Local Practicalities

GIP applicants should factor in housing costs (Singapore’s residential market is among the most expensive in Asia), schooling options for children (international or local schools), Central Provident Fund (CPF) obligations applicable to PRs, and for Option A applicants local hiring requirements as part of their business plan. Company Formation in Singapore through ACRA is straightforward but requires compliance with corporate governance, accounting and annual filing obligations.

Comparison GIP vs Other Investor or Entrepreneur Routes

The GIP is unique among Singapore immigration pathways because it grants PR directly without the intermediate step of holding an employment pass or work visa. However, it is not the only route available to entrepreneurs and investors. Founders with smaller capital bases may consider the EntrePass or Tech.Pass, while senior executives may pursue an Employment Pass followed by the Professionals/Technical Personnel and Skilled Workers (PTS) scheme. Family Ties PR is available for those with Singaporean citizen or PR family members.

Comparison Table: Singapore Investor and Entrepreneur Routes

Route Eligibility Min Investment / Requirement Typical Timeline to PR Best Suited For
GIP Option A Established entrepreneurs / business owners S$10 million business investment 6–12 months (direct PR) Founders expanding into Singapore
GIP Option B HNWIs investing via approved funds S$25 million into GIP-select fund 6–12 months (direct PR) Passive investors with significant capital
GIP Option C Family office principals S$200 million AUM (SFO) 6–12 months (direct PR) Ultra-HNWIs establishing SFOs
EntrePass Innovative entrepreneurs / start-up founders No minimum capital; must meet innovation criteria 2+ years (EP → PR application) Tech founders, early-stage entrepreneurs
Employment Pass → PTS → PR Professionals earning above EP threshold No investment; salary/qualification requirements 2–4+ years Senior executives, professionals
Family Ties PR Spouse / child of Singapore citizen or PR No investment; relationship-based Variable (ICA discretion) Family members of citizens / PRs

Client Scenarios How GIP Structuring Works in Practice

Scenario 1: Family Office Principal (Option C)

A European family office principal managing over S$300 million in diversified assets relocates the family’s SFO to Singapore. The structuring process involves compiling consolidated AUM statements, establishing a MAS-exempt fund vehicle, and demonstrating that a material portion of assets will be deployed locally. Expected lead time from pre-screen to PR grant: approximately 9–12 months.

Scenario 2: Technology Founder (Option A)

A Southeast Asian founder of a fast-growing fintech company invests S$10 million to establish a Singapore-headquartered entity, hiring 15 local employees within the first year. Audited financials from the existing business and a detailed hiring plan form the core of the EDB submission. PR is granted within 8 months; the founder secures a 5-year REP.

Scenario 3: Fund Investor (Option B)

A Middle Eastern HNWI subscribes S$25 million to a GIP-select private equity fund with a Singapore-focused mandate. Due diligence includes PPM review, GP track record assessment, and escrow mechanics ensuring capital is protected until IPA is received. The entire process, from pre-screen to PR grant, spans approximately 10 months.

Scenario 4: Hybrid Structuring Smaller Family Office

A family with AUM below the S$200 million Option C threshold pivots to Option A, incorporating a Singapore holding company and deploying S$10 million into a regional business. This hybrid approach combines Company Formation in Singapore with incremental investment planning, creating a pathway to PR while building an operational base for further expansion. The recommended next step in every scenario is a formal pre-screen to confirm eligibility and optimal structuring.

Next Steps Legal Pre-Screen

An effective GIP application begins with a structured eligibility pre-screen. This typically involves a review of the applicant’s business track record, net worth documentation, proposed investment structure and any potential red flags. The pre-screen evaluates which of the three GIP investment routes is most appropriate, identifies documentation gaps, and maps out the structuring and compliance steps required. Applicants are encouraged to download the GIP Pre-Screen Checklist (PDF) containing the full documentation requirements outlined above and begin assembling their file before engaging legal counsel for a tailored assessment.

Downloadable Checklist: Documents Required for GIP Pre-Screen

The following items mirror the Required Documentation Checklist above and are formatted as a ready-download PDF for applicants beginning the pre-screen process:

  • Passport bio page, CV, proof of address
  • Corporate documents: Certificate of Incorporation, ACRA business profile, three years’ audited accounts (Option A existing business) or detailed business plan with projected P&L (Option A new business)
  • Fund documents (Option B): Subscription agreement, PPM, LP agreement, EDB select fund confirmation
  • Investment evidence: Bank statements, proof of transfer, escrow documentation
  • SFO AUM evidence (Option C): Trust deeds, consolidated statements, investment mandates
  • KYC and source-of-funds: Bank reference letters, source-of-wealth memoranda, beneficial ownership declarations, tax returns
  • Background checks: Police clearance certificates, professional and personal references

Sources

FAQs

How much do I need to invest to get PR in Singapore via the GIP?
The current minimum investment thresholds under the Global Investor Programme Singapore are S$10 million (Option A — business investment), S$25 million (Option B — GIP-select fund), and S$200 million AUM (Option C — single family office). These figures are set out in the EDB factsheet dated 5 May 2025. Between 2015 and 2025, approximately 450 applicants received PR under the programme, as reported in Parliament on 27 February 2026.
Eligibility is based on a combination of factors: a substantive business or entrepreneurial track record, demonstrable personal net worth, the ability to generate economic impact in Singapore, and a genuine commitment to residing in the country. The assessment is discretionary, and meeting the investment threshold alone does not guarantee approval. Spouses and unmarried children under 21 may be included in the application.
Three options are available: Option A (invest S$10 million in a new or existing Singapore business), Option B (invest S$25 million in an EDB-approved GIP-select fund), and Option C (establish a single family office in Singapore with a minimum S$200 million AUM). Each option has distinct documentation, structuring and compliance requirements as detailed in the EDB factsheet.
EDB publishes an official list of GIP-select funds in PDF format. Prospective investors should verify a fund’s approved status directly with EDB before committing capital, as the list is periodically updated. Independent due diligence — including PPM review, NAV audit history, GP assessment, and legal opinion on the subscription structure — is strongly recommended.
Typical end-to-end timelines range from 6 to 12 months, though this varies significantly. The pre-screen and documentation stage may take 3–10 weeks, EDB evaluation typically requires 8–16 weeks, and the ICA PR grant decision follows in 4–12 weeks. The process is discretionary, and delays are common where supplementary documentation is requested or background checks require additional time.
Yes. A GIP applicant’s spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may be included in the PR application. ICA guidance sets out the supporting documents required, including marriage certificates, birth certificates and evidence of the family relationship. Male dependants may be subject to National Service obligations upon obtaining PR.
Singapore PRs must hold a valid Re-Entry Permit (REP) to re-enter the country after travelling abroad. REP renewals are contingent on demonstrating substantive ties to Singapore, including physical presence, employment, property ownership and family integration. The MHA revised the REP process from 1 December 2025, and PRs who fail to maintain adequate ties risk having their REP — and effectively their PR status — revoked.

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Global Investor Programme (GIP) Singapore How to Obtain PR Via Investment

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