SINGAPORE – After racking up thousands of dollars in unpaid maintenance and sinking fund contributions, two foreigners who jointly owned a four-bedroom unit at Parkshore in Tanjong Rhu lost their property through a forced sale.
To recover these funds, the condominium’s management corporation strata title (MCST) sold the unit in September 2025.
A notice of intended sale, published in The Straits Times on Dec 23, 2024, stated that the owners owed about $61,000 to the MCST. A property title search showed the former owners hold Indonesian citizenship.
Checks by ST showed that the 2,325 sq ft freehold unit was sold for about $4 million at auction, which was 14.7 per cent lower than its opening price of $4.7 million.
Under the Building (Strata Management) Act, MCSTs have the power to force the sale of a unit to recover money owed.
Such forced sales – although uncommon – are the most severe outcome an MCST can pursue when owners fall behind on maintenance and sinking fund payments.
At least one notice of intended sale has been placed by an MCST each month over the past year, based on checks by ST.
The sums owed in these notices ranged from about $9,450 to $55,798.
In one such notice published on Feb 20, 2026, a unit owner at Park Court in Joo Chiat district was said to have owed $55,798 – arrears in contributions and accumulated interest.
Another notice dated March 24, 2026, stated that a unit owner at Melville Park owed the MCST about $9,708.
Lawyers and property management consultants noted that not every such notice leads to an actual sale. In most cases, owners settle arrears after the process begins, mortgage banks step in or the matter is otherwise resolved before the property is sold.
But they can be a useful tool to get people to pay up, they said.
“The fear of the MCST embarking on the forced-sale process and actually witnessing the MCST taking incremental steps towards that objective might be sufficient coercive power for the SP (subsidiary proprietor) to propose an instalment plan to settle the arrears,” said Mr Kok Yee Keong, a partner at Harry Elias Partnership LLP.
An SP is an individual or entity that owns a unit within a strata-titled property, such as a condominium unit or apartment, in Singapore.



