Office Property in Singapore: A Practical Guide for Tenants & Investors
What this office guide covers
Office property is shaped by hiring cycles, business confidence, and what tenants value most: access, efficiency, image, and total occupancy cost. This guide helps you evaluate office units and buildings with a “real-world” lens.

1) Office demand drivers (what actually moves the market)
Offices don’t rise and fall only because “the economy is good or bad”. Demand is driven by job growth, sector shifts (finance, tech, legal, professional services), and how businesses organise work (hybrid vs full-time office).
- Jobs & headcount: more hiring typically means more space absorption
- Quality flight: in uncertainty, tenants often upgrade to better buildings
- Hybrid strategy: changes space planning (collaboration zones, hot-desking)
- Cost pressure: SMEs optimise footprint; large tenants negotiate incentives
2) Grade A vs Grade B — what it really means
“Grade A” usually signals stronger location, specs, and management — which can translate to better tenant demand and rent resilience. But yield and upside may differ.
| Dimension | Grade A (Typical) | Grade B (Typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Tenant profile | MNCs, finance, premium services | SMEs, back-office, value-driven tenants |
| Leasing resilience | More defensive in downcycles (quality flight) | More price-sensitive, higher churn risk |
| Capex / condition | Higher specs; often newer or upgraded | May need refresh; specs vary widely |
| Investor angle | Stable cashflow focus; lower yield | Potential uplift; execution risk |
3) Total occupancy cost: the “real rent” tenants pay
The headline rent is only part of the story. A practical office decision should include: base rent, service charge, utilities, fit-out amortisation, reinstatement, and downtime risk.
- Service charge: building management fees and shared services
- Fit-out capex: partitions, M&E, data points, carpentry
- Reinstatement: returning unit to original condition at lease end
- Incentives: rent-free periods or fit-out contributions affect net effective rent
4) For investors: WALE, vacancy risk & rental reversion
Office investing is fundamentally about cash flow durability and exitability. The key questions are: who pays, how long they stay, and what happens at renewal.
- WALE: Longer WALE stabilises income but may cap near-term upside
- Vacancy risk: location + building quality determine re-leasing speed
- Reversion: is the passing rent above/below market?
- Capex cycle: older assets may need upgrading to stay competitive
5) Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)
- Choosing an office for “image” but ignoring layout efficiency and costs
- Not checking lift capacity, carpark access, and peak-hour congestion
- Under-budgeting for fit-out and lease-end reinstatement
- Assuming “good building” equals “good investment” without assessing exitability