SINGAPORE – While the Republic expects to collect a “significant” increase in corporate taxes in the coming years, this does not mean that the goods and services tax hike will be rolled back.
The additional corporate tax revenue will strengthen Singapore’s fiscal position and support its growing needs, but does not replace the structural role of the GST, which is a “stable and reliable revenue base”, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong on Feb 26.
The increase in GST – from 7 per cent to 9 per cent over two stages in 2023 and 2024 – was done to fund permanent and growing healthcare spending needs of an ageing population, added PM Wong, addressing concerns raised by MPs over three days of debate on the Budget 2026 statement that he had delivered on Feb 12.
He was responding to a call by Workers’ Party MP Gerald Giam (Aljunied GRC) to re-evaluate the GST hike, given
a larger-than-expected $15.1 billion Budget surplus
for the 2025 financial year that was in part due to stronger corporate tax collections.
When the decision was made in 2022 on when to increase the GST rate, there was no sign that corporate income tax collections would rise significantly, and discussions on global tax reform were still evolving, said PM Wong.
The eventual outcomes and their revenue implications were far from certain, he said. “It would not have been responsible to fund permanent healthcare commitments using revenue sources that were uncertain and could yet dry up.”
GST was the only broad-based and sustainable option, and the Government also made sure to mitigate its impact on Singaporeans, said PM Wong, adding that the majority of collections are from higher-income households, tourists and foreigners.
He laid out the medium-term outlook for revenue and expenditure as he tackled criticism from opposition MPs on his Government’s fiscal marksmanship. During the debate, several WP MPs had questioned whether the Government was overly conservative in its fiscal projections and wound up running a surplus that was too large.
On revenue, PM Wong said the authorities expect a structural increase to kick in from the 2027 financial year, when the first tranche of additional collections rolls in from the domestic top-up tax that Singapore is implementing under the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) 2.0 global tax reform framework.





