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Singapore’s family offices: Time to professionalise or risk falling behind

By Lennard Yong

Whilst regulatory movements have opened the door for family offices, many SFOs remain under-equipped.  

Singapore has long been a trusted launchpad for businesses. With its deep talent pool, pro-business culture, and world-class financial infrastructure, it’s a natural hub for global families building professional investment structures.

As the global financial landscape shifts from unipolar to multipolar, with Asia-Pacific taking centre stage, Singapore's political and economic stability positions it as the natural destination for investors looking for a trusted wealth management centre.

Recent regulatory changes have made Singapore even more appealing for Single Family Offices (SFOs). The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) recent fund tax incentive framework updates, for instance, broadened eligible investments and enabled more flexible fund structures.

These tax incentives, coupled with clear economic-substance thresholds – including a minimum of S$20m in assets under management and locally based investment professionals – promote proper governance, clear accountability, and sufficient onshore presence for effective supervisory engagement.

Regulatory progress vs. operational reality
Whilst regulatory movements have opened the door for family offices, they also highlight a harsh reality: many SFOs remain operationally under-equipped. Despite Singapore’s developing family office environment, a surprising number continue to rely on legacy processes like manual workflows, informal decision-making, and unstructured reporting.

Add on multi-jurisdictional tax/legal/compliance requirements, and even routine operations become fragmented and inefficient. All this hinders SFOs’ ability to scale and transition across generations.

The next generation of SFOs principals will inherit not just wealth, but a unique responsibility. Robust systems are no longer “nice to have;” they’re the price of credibility, succession stability, and long-term growth. As younger leaders step in, they need clear reporting structures, strong risk management, compliance clarity, and transparent governance that match institutional norms.

The professionalisation imperative
SFOs often find it difficult to professionalise because their strengths and weaknesses are two sides of the same coin. Legacy makes SFOs resilient and values-driven, cultivates tight-knit decision-making, intuitive processes, and long-standing trust – yet these same qualities are the ones most resistant to standardisation and adaptation.

And unlike other financial structures, these family-derived values often define an SFO’s identity.

To stay ahead globally, the next phase of SFOs’ evolution must centre on professionalising processes (investment governance, operational workflows, and compliance) whilst simultaneously preserving their family ethos. Expectations of doing this will only intensify as intergenerational wealth transitions accelerate.

This is where specialised advisors and professional services firms come in. The right professional partner must act as an extension of the family’s operational backbone and understand the unique blend of SFOs’ emotional and economic systems, balancing between the family legacy and the corporate functions.

Trusted partners can help SFOs navigate in-market regulatory realities, implement structure and compliance, and build resilience without overextending internal resources or losing what makes them unique.

Scale can then accelerate when powered by technology. The new era for SFOs will come with digital platforms that integrate governance, compliance, and operations into one cohesive solution, enabling SFOs to manage fiduciary structures, investment and financial reporting, plus regulatory requirements in one place.

Turning regional momentum into sustainable stewardship
In today’s multipolar global landscape, capital is no longer concentrated in the US and Europe. The APAC region is experiencing economic ascendancy. SFOs must now manage family wealth not just within, but across jurisdictions, asset classes, and generations.

Singapore’s position as a stable, trusted base gives local SFOs a clear advantage – but only if they professionalise quickly enough to secure their long-term stability. Those that embrace professionalisation will secure a vital advantage in a region on the brink of massive expansion.

The opportunity is clear: the next chapter for SFOs will be defined not by legacy alone, but by their ability to combine heritage with modern capability. Policymakers have laid the foundation; now it’s up to Singapore’s family offices to turn that intent into action.

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