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3 simple steps from “thinking about it” to “sorted”:
1. Apply in minutes — free to submit
2. Review personalised offers from multiple banks and regulated providers
3. Choose an offer to get your disbursement
Our goal is to make borrowing decisions clearer, faster, and more transparent. Lendela is a loan matching platform where you apply once to receive multiple personalised offers with clear fees and terms, so that you can decide based on affordability and total cost – not promotional headlines.
This is the practical guide to personal loans in Singapore – eligibility (including minimum annual income), repayment schedule, repayment period (tenure), fees, documents, and timelines. Always remember to use EIR/APR to understand your true loan cost (not just the headline rate), to choose a repayment schedule that you can sustain, and that your monthly income and existing obligations heavily influence eligibility and limits.
A personal loan is a fixed-amount instalment facility that you repay over a defined repayment period, also called tenure. Each monthly payment follows a repayment schedule that splits the instalment into interest + principal.
Common use cases include:
Consolidating multiple repayments
Home improvements
Medical or emergency expenses
Education-related costs
Large purchases you prefer to spread out
Remember: it’s not “free cash” – treat it like a contract you’ll honour for the full repayment period.
Personal loans in Singapore are priced using several components. The advertised interest rate is only one part of the overall borrowing cost.
To understand the true cost of a loan, borrowers should also look at the effective interest rate (EIR), any processing fees, and the monthly instalments created by the loan tenure.
Different lenders may price these elements differently depending on your income profile, credit history, and existing credit facilities.
Quick definitions:
Advertised rate: the marketing headline
EIR/APR: a yearly cost measure that’s more comparable across offers
Repayment schedule: month-by-month breakdown of how your instalment reduces the balance
Best practice: review the repayment schedule before you commit, then sanity-check total payable amount.
Term | What it means | Why it matters |
Advertised rate | The headline rate shown in marketing | Can look “low” even when total cost isn’t |
EIR/APR | Better indicator of true yearly borrowing cost | More reliable for cost comparisons |
Repayment schedule | Month-by-month breakdown (principal + interest) | Shows your real commitment |
Repayment period (tenure) | How long you repay (e.g. 12–60 months) | Longer = lower monthly payment, higher total cost |
Eligibility is profile-based. Most banks and regulated providers assess a combination of:
Monthly income and employment stability
Minimum annual income (the lowest annual income requirement set by each institution; it varies by product and residency status)
Residency status (e.g. Singaporean/PR/Pass holder)
Credit history
Existing credit facilities and repayment behaviour
Requested amount and repayment period
Loan providers may also review outstanding credit card balances and recent loan applications when assessing affordability.
The same advertised package can price very differently for different profiles – this is why personalised offers matter more than best-case headlines.
Your repayment period determines two things:
1) Your monthly repayment amount
2) Total interest paid over the full repayment schedule
General rule:
Shorter repayment period → higher monthly repayment, lower total interest
Longer repayment period → lower monthly repayment, higher total interest
The repayment schedule matters because it shows the commitment month-by-month – not just the headline rate. Choosing the right loan tenure is therefore important for balancing affordability and total borrowing cost.
*Example illustration only (numbers will vary by offer, fees, and individual profile): $10,000 over 12 months at 10% p.a. EIR → estimated monthly repayment ~S$879.16*
Month | Monthly repayment | Interest portion | Principal portion | Remaining balance |
1 | $879.16 | $83.33 | $795.83 | $9,204.17 |
2 | $879.16 | $76.70 | $802.46 | $8,401.71 |
3 | $879.16 | $70.01 | $809.15 | $7,592.56 |
6 | $879.16 | $49.73 | $829.43 | $5,138.26 |
9 | $879.16 | $28.94 | $850.22 | $2,621.94 |
12 | $879.16 | $7.26 | $871.90 | $0.00 |
In Singapore, there are industry-wide rules and internal affordability checks that affect how much you can access and how offers are priced. What this means in practice:
Monthly income influences both eligibility and affordability
Higher existing obligations can reduce approval odds and increase cost
“Bigger approved amount” isn’t automatically a better decision – sustainability wins
Lenders may assess your credit limit exposure across existing credit cards and loans to ensure the new instalment remains affordable.
A simple affordability sanity check:
Monthly repayment ÷ monthly income = affordability ratio
Pick a ratio you can sustain even in months with higher expenses.
Fees can meaningfully change the all-in cost. Common ones include:
Processing/admin fees
Late payment fees
Early repayment/redemption fee (if you plan to clear early)
Contract variation fees (tenure change, payment date change)
Best practice: judge the offer by total payable amount (principal + interest + fees) – not the headline rate – and always review the full terms and conditions of the loan agreement.
When evaluating a personal loan, it is important to look beyond the headline interest rate. The total cost of borrowing usually depends on several factors, including:
the effective interest rate (EIR)
processing fees charged by the lender
the loan tenure and resulting monthly instalments
any early repayment or late payment charges
the terms and conditions of the credit facility
Looking at these factors together gives you a clearer picture of the true cost of borrowing.
If you want to compare personalised loan offers across lenders based on these factors, you can start here: https://sg.lendela.com/compare-personal-loans
A Lendela application usually looks like this:
1) Decide your target amount + repayment period (tenure)
2) Align amount and tenure with a monthly repayment that fits your repayment schedule
3) Prepare key documents
4) Submit your application, upload necessary supporting documents, and review personalised offers in your Lendela account (if your goal is to compare interest rates, fees and repayment options across banks and financial institutions quicker, you can also start here)
5) Proceed by choosing an offer only when you’re comfortable with total cost and terms
Looking for speed-first options? For smaller urgent needs, see cash loan in Singapore – or for a longer instalment plan-based loan, see quick loan in Singapore.
Typical documents (varies by profile):
Proof of income (recent payslips/CPF contribution history/IRAS NOA)
Identity verification (NRIC/passport)
Supporting bank statements (if requested)
Tip: keep your details consistent – mismatches can slow checks and disbursement.
If you don’t qualify, it’s usually one (or more) of these:
Income doesn’t meet minimum annual income requirements
High utilisation or multiple recent applications
Past late payments/adverse credit history
Requested amount or repayment period is too aggressive
Practical next steps:
Reduce the requested amount or adjust the repayment period only if monthly repayment stays affordable
Stabilise repayment behaviour for 2–3 months
Avoid repeated “trial” submissions everywhere – it can work against you
Because clarity beats guesswork, saves you time, and gives you confidence that you have picked the right loan for you.
With Lendela, you can:
Apply once and view personalised offers matched to your profile
See fees and terms more clearly, so you can judge true cost
Reduce trial-and-error submissions (which risk to impact your credit score negatively) and focus on offers that fit your repayment schedule
Use the calculator at the top of this page to sense-check your affordability – not to chase the biggest amount.
When using it, input:
Amount
Repayment period (tenure)
Then validate:
Can you sustain the monthly repayment across the full repayment schedule?
If income fluctuates, do you still have buffer?
Minimum annual income varies by institution and often differs by residency status and product. Beyond the minimum, monthly income and stability also affect affordability checks and pricing.
Choose a repayment period that keeps monthly repayment sustainable with buffer. Shorter tenure usually lowers total interest but raises monthly repayment; longer tenure does the opposite.
A repayment schedule is your month-by-month payment plan: due dates and how each instalment reduces interest and principal over time.
Common documents include proof of income (pay-slips/CPF/IRAS NOA), identity verification (NRIC/passport), and sometimes bank statements. Requirements vary by employment type and residency status.
Some people search for “instant loans”, but “instant” typically refers to faster decisioning for straightforward profiles. Disbursement timelines still depend on verification steps and the institution’s process. Via Lendela, the typical timeline from application to disbursement is around 1-2 days even though some applicants receive their money within hours.
Some loan providers allow early repayment, but an early repayment/redemption fee may apply. Check this upfront if early settlement is likely.
Likely, yes. Frequent application activity can work against you. It’s generally smarter to avoid repeated submissions with individual banks and regulated providers.
Advertised rate is the marketing (promotional) headline. EIR/APR is a better indicator of true yearly cost because it reflects repayment mechanics over time and may incorporate fee effects.