207 views
Photo by Miles Rothoerl via Pexels

Dorm upgrades may tighten supply, lift rents in 2026

Occupancy dips to 97.1% as supply grows.

The worker dormitory market is positioned for resilience in 2026, but bed rents could rise about 5% as supply tightens when operators carry out Dormitory Transition Scheme (DTS) upgrades, according to a DASL and Knight Frank report.

The report said the DTS and New Dormitory Standards (NDS) require refurbishments to meet DTS by 2030 and NDS by 2040, and it pointed to a Ministry of Manpower grant announced in January 2026 to partially defray retrofit costs, with higher support for operators completing works by end-2028 than those finishing in 2029 or 2030.

It said average islandwide bed rent eased 1.0% in H2 2025 to $485 per bed per month, whilst occupancy in a basket of Class 4 purpose-built dormitories dipped to 97.1%, suggesting some easing in near-term pressure even as utilisation stayed high.

The report cited incoming supply over the next few years, saying that at least six more purpose-built dormitories with around 47,000 beds are expected to be completed, including a MOM-developed site at Sengkang West with 7,200 beds, which is expected to begin operations by end-2028.

It also noted a Building and Construction Authority tender in December 2025 for a Terusan Edge dormitory site for up to 3,200 workers, envisaged for completion in 2028, with the tender closing in February.

Join Singapore Business Review community
A NOTE FROM SINGAPORE BUSINESS REVIEW

The people you want to reach are already in this room.

Every quarter, SBR lands on the desks of the founders, CFOs, and directors running Asia's most consequential companies. Every day, they open our newsletter and read our website. It's a room that took twenty years to build — and it's the one most of our partners are trying to get into.

The good news is that the door is open. We work with companies on thought leadership articles, sponsored content, industry summits across Southeast Asia, regional awards programmes, podcasts, and media placements in print and digital. The shape of the right partnership depends on what you're trying to do, which is why we'd rather start with a conversation than send a rate card.


If you have something this room should know about, tell us. We'll tell you honestly whether we can help, and how.

No rate cards until we understand the brief. It's a better use of everyone's time.

Top News

AI growth stalls as 78% cite weak data infrastructure
Confluent said firms are prioritising data streaming as they move AI projects from pilots into production.
Singapore emerges as key hub in Asia-Pacific’s next medtech wave
The city-state’s regulatory strength helps translate medical innovations into globally validated products.
Healthcare