Middle East Conflict Forces Indian Exporters to Reroute Trade through Singapore
Dawn Lee
Singapore, May 07, 2026 For an Indian manufacturer of industrial components, an export sale is never really complete until the money moves, and money…
Most founders evaluating jurisdictions open a spreadsheet, type in corporate tax rates, scan the headline top rates – Singapore 17%, Dubai 9% – and move on. Analysis complete. Decision half-made.
But headline top rates are only part of the picture – what really matters to business owners is the actual tax take and the actual effective corporate income tax rate and in Singapore, this is always lower than the headline rate (frequently less than 10% of company net profit).
Why?
What The Surface-Level Comparison Misses: One of the Smallest Countries in the World, with the Largest Sovereign Wealth Fund in the World
The massive fiscal elephant in the room is Singapore’s Sovereign Wealth Funds managed by Temasek, GIC, MAS, etc. While their exact values are kept secret, they are estimated to likely be the largest in the world, north of US$2 trillion.
How?
Unlike nearly every government out there, for every year of its 60+ years of existence, Singapore has run a budget surplus (barring the COVID-19 response, when the government drew down a small portion to cushion citizens and businesses), saving prudently and consistently for generations.
Put simply, Singapore is not short of government income or hungry for taxes. In fact, for 60 years Singapore has maintained one of the most business and entrepreneur-friendly tax systems in the world – Zero capital gains, dividends, interest, inheritance or wealth taxes. As well as consistently low and lightly applied income taxes, with some of the most generous allowances, rebates and incentives for businesses anywhere.
A trusted business platform you can count on – built on rock-solid fiscal discipline. A track record no other government, global business platform or trusted offshore business hub can come close to.
The Singapore Context: The “Take Little – Grow More” Philosophy
Why this matters: Singapore’s government earns approximately S$28.5 billion annually from its’ sovereign wealth fund investment returns’ (GIC, Temasek, MAS). Meaning Singapore finances itself from compounded investment returns from growing the Singapore pie, rather than from trying to extract taxes from the businesses set up there.
A government that finances itself from a multi-trillion-dollar investment portfolio does not design its tax system to extract maximum revenue from the businesses it attracts.
It designs its tax system to attract them because the economic activity and GDP that those businesses generate are worth more than the tax they pay(GIC FAQs, FY2026)
That philosophy has held for sixty years. And once you understand it, the framework stops looking complicated and starts looking intentional.
And that’s why for decades, global entrepreneurs have trusted Singapore as a base to build and go global and why every month thousands of new global entrepreneurs are happy to set up in Singapore, and pay consistently low taxes (rather than paying no tax in a less trusted offshore location, but always worrying about that knock on the door by the tax-man someday).
Yes, 17%. Unchanged since 2010, itself a signal of stability in a world where tax policy shifts with elections.
But most companies pay significantly less.
Firstly, nearly every company automatically receives either the Start-up Tax Exemption (for their first 3 years) or the Partial Tax Exemption (after their first 3 years). Beyond this, many companies also benefit from a wide array of transparent and simple to apply for exemptions, allowances, rebates, grants and incentives. Plus, the government frequently rebates back significant reductions in corporate tax bills to support business.
New companies typically receive the Start-Up Tax Exemption (SUTE) for their first three years:
| Chargeable Income (usually equivalent to Net Profit) | Exemption | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|
| First SGD 100,000 | 75% exempt | ~4.25% |
| Next SGD 100,000 | 50% exempt | ~8.5% |
After year three, the Partial Tax Exemption kicks in permanently, exempting up to SGD 102,500 of income annually, with no application and no expiry.
New companies typically receive the Start-Up Tax Exemption (SUTE) for their first three years:
| Chargeable income (usually equivalent to Net Profit) | Exemption | Effective rate |
|---|---|---|
| First SGD 10,000 | 90% exempt | ~1.7% |
| Next SGD 190,000 | 50% exempt | ~8.5% |
So, an established company earning profits of SGD 200,000 (after all allowances and write-offs), only pays an effective rate of 8.16% corporate income tax on its taxable profits before rebates.
On top of that, Singapore has given every taxpaying operating company (1+ local employee) a CIT rebate for the last three consecutive years: 50% in YA 2024, 50% in YA 2025, and 50% in YA 2026 — auto-applied, no paperwork.
So, in both of our examples above, the tax paid would have been cut in half again.
For example, a company earning taxable profits of SGD 500,000 (after all allowances and write-offs) in 2025, only needs to pay an effective rate of 5.5% corporate income tax on its taxable profits, after rebates.
And remember all investment profits (capital gains, dividends, interest, etc.) are usually tax-free.
However, the real advantage is not just in reduced rates. It is in what is not taxed at all:
So, if your returns flow through share appreciation, dividends, and an eventual exit – i.e. investment income, then the 17% corporate income tax rate does not apply at all, as investment income is generally tax-free in Singapore.
Plus, Singapore maintains the widest network of double taxation avoidance agreements (with > 100 jurisdictions), investment facilitation agreements and free trade agreements of any economy in the world, combined with the trust, goodwill, and professionalism to back these up. Often unlocking huge tax savings on global structures and investments.
| Measure | Details | Effective from |
|---|---|---|
| CIT rebate YA 2026 | 50% of tax payable, capped at SGD 40,000 | Auto-applied |
| Cash grant | SGD 2,000 requires 1 local employee in 2025 | Auto-disbursed Q2 2026 |
| AI Investment deduction (EIS) | 400% deduction on qualifying AI spend, capped at SGD 50,000/yr | YA 2027–2028 |
| Internationalisation Costs: DTDi cap raised | 200% deduction on overseas expansion, cap raised to SGD 400,000 | YA 2027 |
| Overseas Investment: MRA Grant enhanced | Up to 70% co-funding on internationalisation costs for SMEs | Apr 2026 |
| Enterprise Financing Scheme | Borrowing cap raised to SGD 50M per borrower group | Apr 2026 |
| Section 13W — permanent | Capital gains on share disposals are non-taxable, with no expiry date | Already in effect |
| M&A Scheme extended | 25% allowance on acquisitions up to SGD 40M/yr | Until Dec 2030 |
| Factor | Singapore | Dubai / UAE |
|---|---|---|
| Headline CIT rate | 17% | 9% (introduced 2023) |
| Effective rate, new company Yr 1–3 | ~2.5–5% | Varies; free zone conditions apply |
| Capital gains tax | Zero | Zero |
| Dividend tax | Zero | Zero |
| CIT framework stability | Unchanged since 2010 | Introduced 2023; still maturing |
| Sovereign credit rating | AAA | AA- |
| Budget position | Structural Surplus | Oil-dependent |
| Geopolitical risk | Low; neutral; 6,000km from Gulf conflict | High, 200km from the active Iran war zone |
| Policy consistency (10-year view) | Very high | Uncertain; dependent on regional stability |
Perhaps a 9% or zero headline corporate income tax rate looked more compelling before February 28, 2026. Before you consider the actual effective rate, and before you factor in stability, resilience and risk.
Taking the whole picture into account, how does Singapore’s effective rate of 4–5% for most new businesses look like?
A tax rate comparison tells you one number. The actual cost of a jurisdiction though, is several numbers, and some of them do not have obvious units.
Singapore’s filing requirements for companies under SGD 5 million in revenue are genuinely simple, straight-forward and transparent. Digital systems work. IRAS is responsive. The cost of staying compliant in Singapore — in accounting fees, legal time, and management attention — is a fraction of what comparable compliance costs in most competing jurisdictions. That difference is the real cost you pay in time and money every year, before even considering profitability.
Singapore has DBS, OCBC, and UOB — three of Asia’s strongest banks — plus every major global bank with genuine capabilities. Corporate accounts can be opened. International transfers are clear. Multi-currency accounts function. This sounds basic until you have operated in a jurisdiction where it is not.
Singapore’s courts are independent. Contracts are enforced impartially for all business owners and have been reliable for decades. IP is protected. Corruption is absent. When a dispute happens — and eventually one will — the outcome is predictable. For any company that will one day be acquired, funded by a PE firm, or audited by international counterparties, jurisdiction credibility has direct commercial value.
Singapore draws talent from India, China, Australia, Southeast Asia, and beyond — in a city where English is the working language and people genuinely want to live. The Employment Pass system is not trivial, but it is among the most genuinely open and reliable in Asia for bringing in international hires.
Singapore’s fundamental economic direction has not changed in sixty years. For a founder making a ten-year commitment to a jurisdiction, that consistency is not a soft factor. It might be the most important one.
Two founders. Both profitable. Both weigh Singapore.
Founder A sees 17% and moves on.
Founder B models 5% in year two. Notes that her exit is untaxed, dividends flow cleanly, banking works, and her structure held up under due diligence from a US acquirer without a single jurisdiction question. Then, watch businesses operating through the Gulf start asking hard questions about supply chain exposure, connectivity, and physical risk — while her city keeps running exactly as it always has.
Both founders looked at the tax. Only one of them looked at Singapore.
Let’s break this down with a practical example.
Two founders are setting up identical businesses. Both expect to make SGD 300,000 in profit in their second year.
On paper:
Looks efficient.
But now layer in the real-world costs.
Explicit costs (you can see these):
Intrinsic costs (you feel these later):
That “9%” is no longer just 9%. It starts compounding into cost, time, and risk.
Now look at the same numbers in Singapore.
Because of the Start-Up Tax Exemption and rebates:
Already lower than expected.
But the real difference shows beyond tax:
Explicit advantages:
Intrinsic advantages:
On paper, Founder A “saved” on tax.
In reality:
When you choose a jurisdiction, you’re not just choosing a tax rate.
You’re choosing:
That’s the difference between a visible cost (tax) and a total cost (tax + friction + risk + opportunity).
Singapore’s 17% headline rate is rarely what founders actually pay. Between startup exemptions, partial tax relief, and automatic rebates, most new businesses land at an effective rate of 4–8% — with zero tax on capital gains, dividends, and wealth. Add sixty years of policy consistency, AAA-rated stability, independent courts, and institutional banking, and no other jurisdiction comes close to the full package. The headline number is the least important one. The decision, for most founders, makes itself.
VIVOS is a Singapore-based advisory firm specialising in incorporation, structuring, banking, and immigration for global founders and businesses. If you would like to understand what your business would actually pay, and how to navigate Singapore’s tax framework efficiently, speak to our team.
From tax efficiency to banking and exit readiness, structure your business in a jurisdiction that works with you, not against you.
Do companies pay capital gains tax in Singapore?
No. Capital gains are completely tax-free, with no expiry clause.
Are dividends taxed in Singapore?
No. Singapore follows a one-tier system, so dividends are tax-free in shareholders’ hands.
How long do tax exemptions apply to startups?
The Start-Up Tax Exemption (SUTE) applies for the first 3 years, followed by Partial Tax Exemption indefinitely.
Is Singapore better than Dubai for business setup?
It depends — while Dubai offers a lower headline rate, Singapore offers greater stability, lower risk, stronger banking, and long-term predictability.
Is it easy to open a corporate bank account in Singapore?
Yes — compared to many jurisdictions, banking in Singapore is structured, reliable, and globally integrated.
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