Dear Stacked,
My husband and I recently moved from a five-room HDB flat into a two-bedroom condo in the Jervois Road enclave. The move was a deliberate trade-off: we accepted a smaller living space so we could decouple and free up one name for a second property purchase without incurring Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD).
We are now deciding between a new launch and a resale property for the next purchase. Our budget is between $1.5 million and $1.8 million, with around $800,000 in outstanding loan on the current unit.
For new launches, our concern is that rental yield is uncertain and entry prices are high. At our budget, we would likely be limited to a one-bedroom condo in the Core Central Region (CCR) or a two-bedroom condo outside the CCR. For resale, we see potential for stability in cash flow and near-term returns, but possibly at the expense of capital appreciation.
We have visited several city-fringe and CCR projects including Zyon Grand, Promenade Peak, Vela Bay, and Hudson Place, but have not committed to any. We are also wondering whether it makes sense to stretch our finances for a three-bedroom unit to future-proof its later saleability, given that we are a family of four and may outgrow the current unit in six to eight years.
Thank you.
(This is part of an ongoing series where we answer reader questions about the property market. If you have one of your own, send it to stories@stackedhomes.com.)
Hi and thanks for writing in!
The underlying question in your case is whether you’ll be purchasing the next property solely as an investment asset, or do you prioritise it as a potential fallback home for your family in six to eight years time.
Addressing this will help you figure out if the next property purchase should be a unit in a new launch project, or a resale property.
Whether you feel your next purchase should be from an investment approach, or as a potential family home will point toward different regions, different unit types, and different trade-offs at your budget. Deciding on which takes priority will help to narrow down your options.
To help you work through it, we will look at what the pricing data actually shows across different regions, how new launches and resale properties have compared on long-run returns, and what that points to given your budget and family situation.
The challenge for many buyers today isn’t access to information.
It’s interpreting that information in a way that makes sense for their finances, goals, and stage of life.
Over time, that’s also why we decided to work with agents who shared the same data-driven and advisory-led approach behind our editorial, consultants who could help readers think through decisions more objectively, rather than simply push transactions.
Today, the team has worked with more than 2,000 clients across over $5B in property transactions.
What the price gap between the new launch market versus the resale actually looks like.
In general, new launch projects are expected to cost more compared to resale alternatives, and on a psf basis, the data confirms this. Based on data compiled by Stacked, the price premium ranges from 30–51%, depending on the specific unit type.
But the price gap in terms of total purchase price is narrower, because new launch units are increasingly smaller due to the harmonisation of Gross Floor Area (GFA) and price management strategies by developers.
Average $PSF for transactions in 2025 by unit type
| Unit type | New sale | Resale | % difference |
| 1-bedroom | $2,770 | $1,828 | 51.46% |
| 2-bedroom | $2,629 | $1,829 | 43.74% |
| 3-bedroom | $2,531 | $1,674 | 51.21% |
| 4-bedroom | $2,519 | $1,784 | 41.19% |
Average price for transactions in 2025 by unit type
| Unit type | New sale | Resale | % difference |
| 1-bedroom | $1,291,745 | $981,764 | 31.57% |
| 2-bedroom | $1,783,518 | $1,523,138 | 17.09% |
| 3-bedroom | $2,503,210 | $2,081,199 | 20.28% |
| 4-bedroom | $3,570,299 | $3,174,257 | 12.48% |
Average size (sqft) for transactions in 2025 by unit type
| Unit type | New sale | Resale | % difference |
| 1-bedroom | 469 | 542 | -13.52% |
| 2-bedroom | 679 | 843 | -19.41% |
| 3-bedroom | 988 | 1247 | -20.76% |
| 4-bedroom | 1382 | 1740 | -20.58% |
We have excluded ECs for the new sale figures above since you will not be eligible, but have included resale ECs in the resale figures.
For the two-bedroom comparison, the psf premium for a new launch over resale is 43.7%, but the gap in terms of absolute price narrows to 17.1% because an average new launch two-bedroom unit of about 679 sq ft is 164 sq ft smaller than its resale equivalent at 843 sq ft.
We think that purchasing a new launch unit may be within your budget, an assumption that is based on the broad response from most buyers in the market today, who are willing to accept new units with a relatively smaller floor area in exchange for a newer product.
This trade off matters more for you than it might be for a typical real estate investor. As you’ve shared, you have a family of four living in a two-bedroom unit. A new launch two-bedroom unit in the 650–700 sq ft range would be smaller than many resale alternatives at the same price, which is fine if this property stays permanently tenanted, but limits its usefulness as a fallback home.
Now let’s take a look at how the trade-offs differ by region.
Average two-bedroom transactions in 2025 by region
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