Banking Guide · SearchOffshore

Offshore Banking
in Singapore

A guide to offshore and private banking in Singapore — covering MAS-regulated banks, account types, minimum deposits, KYC requirements and how Singapore compares to other international banking jurisdictions.

Overview

Singapore is consistently ranked among the world's top three international banking centres — a Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)-regulated financial hub managing over SGD 5 trillion in assets and home to more than 150 commercial banks from over 40 countries. Singapore banking is valued by internationally mobile individuals, entrepreneurs, family offices and corporate treasuries for its political stability, rule of law, English language, USD and multi-currency capability, robust AML framework, and the confidence that comes from one of Asia's most credible financial regulators. Singapore is not a banking secrecy jurisdiction — it participates fully in CRS automatic exchange and has a FATCA IGA with the United States — but it provides a level of institutional quality and financial infrastructure that few jurisdictions globally can match.

Key Facts

Singapore Banking at a Glance

SGD 5tn+

Total assets under management in Singapore

150+

Commercial banks licensed to operate in Singapore

AAA

Singapore sovereign credit rating — among the highest globally

MAS

Monetary Authority of Singapore — regulator for all Singapore banks


Types of Banking Available

Singapore Banking Services for International Clients

Account TypeWho It ServesTypical MinimumCurrencyKey Features
Private Banking AccountUHNW individuals and family offices with substantial investable assetsUSD 1–5 million+ (varies by institution)Multi-currency — USD, SGD, EUR, GBP, HKD, AUD standardDiscretionary or advisory investment management; lending against portfolio; dedicated relationship manager; full wealth planning services
Priority / Premier BankingHNW individuals with assets above bank threshold but below private banking minimumUSD 200,000–500,000 (varies)Multi-currencyEnhanced service tier; investment products; preferential rates; dedicated contact
Corporate Current AccountSingapore-incorporated companies; foreign companies with Singapore operations; holding companiesSGD 1,000–10,000 initial deposit; varies widelySGD primary; USD and multi-currency widely availableTrade finance; SWIFT payments; payroll; internet banking; debit cards; FX
Trust / Fiduciary AccountSingapore trusts; family office fund structures; VCC fund accountsVaries — relationship-basedMulti-currencyManaged on behalf of trustee or fund manager; custodian services; securities settlement
Family Office AccountSingle and multi-family offices registered in Singapore; Section 13O/13U qualifying entitiesRelationship-based; often USD 5–20m+ AUMMulti-currencyInvestment management; custody; securities; FX; lending; consolidated reporting

Account Opening Requirements

What Singapore Banks Typically Require

For Individuals

Personal account opening

Valid passport and a second form of identification; proof of residential address (recent utility bill, bank statement — typically within 3 months); source of wealth documentation explaining how your assets were accumulated; source of funds documentation for the initial deposit; tax identification number for CRS purposes; in most cases, an in-person meeting with the bank is required for private banking relationships, though some digital banks allow remote onboarding for lower-tier accounts.

For Companies

Corporate account opening

Certificate of incorporation and constitutional documents; register of directors and shareholders; proof of registered address; identification documents for all directors, beneficial owners and authorised signatories; corporate structure chart showing ultimate beneficial ownership; business plan or description of activities; source of funds for initial deposit; anticipated transaction volumes and business purpose. Singapore banks conduct thorough KYC on corporate accounts — expect 2–8 weeks for account opening.

For Offshore Companies

BVI, Cayman, Jersey entities

Singapore banks will open accounts for companies incorporated in offshore jurisdictions (BVI, Cayman, Jersey, Guernsey) but the requirements are more stringent and approval is not guaranteed. The bank must be satisfied with the commercial rationale for the offshore structure, the identity of all beneficial owners, and the legitimacy of the business. Offshore holding companies are generally accepted for investment holding purposes; pure trading intermediaries with no apparent commercial rationale for the offshore structure face more scrutiny.

For Family Offices

Section 13O/13U entities

Family offices registered under MAS Section 13O or 13U — the primary Singapore family office incentive framework — are well understood by Singapore banks and typically receive efficient service. The MAS application approval, the AUM commitment, and the fund structure documentation collectively satisfy most of the bank's KYC requirements. Singapore's concentration of family office expertise means specialist private banks and private banking teams are specifically structured to serve this client type.


The Singapore Banking Landscape

Types of Banks Operating in Singapore

Bank TypeMAS LicenceServicesTypical Clients
Full Bank (Local)Full bank licence — unrestricted bankingComplete retail, corporate and private banking; ATM network; SGD current accounts; trade finance; mortgagesSingapore residents and businesses; retail and corporate clients
Full Bank (Foreign)Qualifying Full Bank (QFB) licence — expanded access for major international banksCorporate and institutional banking; private banking; trade finance; investment banking; limited retail servicesMNEs; institutional investors; corporates; UHNWI
Wholesale BankWholesale bank licenceCorporate, institutional and wholesale banking; no SGD retail depositsCorporations; financial institutions; institutional investors
Merchant BankMAS-approved merchant bankCorporate finance; M&A; capital markets; lending; no retail depositsCorporates; PE and M&A transactions
Private BankTypically operate under full or wholesale bank licence with private banking focusWealth management; investment management; lending; estate planning; family office servicesUHNWI; family offices; high-net-worth individuals
Digital Full BankDigital full bank licence (introduced 2022)Digital-first banking; lower minimums; API-driven services; business accountsSMEs; tech-forward businesses; digital-native companies

Singapore vs Other Banking Centres

How Singapore Compares

FactorSingaporeSwitzerlandJerseyDubai (DIFC)
Regulatory reputationExcellent — MAS is among Asia's most respected regulatorsExcellent — FINMA; centuries of private banking traditionVery good — JFSC; aligned with UK regulatory standardsGood — DFSA; growing international recognition
Geographic focusAsia-Pacific; Southeast Asia; India; Greater ChinaEurope; Latin America; Middle East; globalUK; Europe; Africa; Middle EastMiddle East; Africa; South Asia; CIS
Currency strengthSGD stable; USD widely available; excellent multi-currencyCHF very strong; USD and EUR widely availableGBP primary; multi-currency availableAED pegged to USD; USD widely available
Private banking minimumUSD 1–5m+ at leading private banksCHF 500k–2m+ at leading private banksGBP 500k+ typicalUSD 500k–1m+ typical
CRS participationYes — full participantYes — full participantYes — full participantYes — full participant
Account opening easeModerate — thorough KYC; in-person often requiredModerate — strong KYC; relationship-drivenModerate — JFSC-compliant KYCModerate — improving; some digital options
Time zoneGMT+8 — covers Asia, Australia, Middle East overlapGMT+1 — European business hoursGMT — London time zoneGMT+4 — between Europe and Asia

Who Uses Singapore Banking

Common Client Types and Use Cases

Family Offices

The fastest-growing segment

Singapore's 1,100+ registered single family offices — drawn by the MAS Section 13O and 13U tax incentive framework — create sustained demand for private banking. Singapore private banks have built specialist family office teams providing investment management, custody, lending, FX, estate planning and consolidated reporting. For family offices relocating from Europe or the Middle East, Singapore private banking provides institutional-quality service in a time zone aligned with Asia-Pacific investment portfolios.

Regional Business Treasuries

Asia-Pacific corporate banking

Multinationals and regional businesses headquartered in Singapore use Singapore banks for their regional treasury operations — multi-currency cash pooling, FX hedging, trade finance and supply chain finance across Southeast Asia, South Asia and Greater China. Singapore's deep correspondent banking relationships and SWIFT connectivity make it the natural Asia-Pacific treasury hub for international corporates.

UHNW Individuals Relocating to Singapore

Private banking for new residents

Internationally mobile UHNW individuals relocating to Singapore — increasingly from Europe, Middle East and China — establish Singapore private banking relationships as part of their overall relocation. Singapore's 0% capital gains tax, 0% inheritance tax, and single-tier dividend system make it a compelling residency destination, and Singapore private banks are deeply experienced in onboarding new resident clients with complex international asset structures.

Offshore Holding Company Banking

Singapore accounts for offshore entities

BVI, Cayman and other offshore holding companies with Singapore nexus — because the beneficial owner is Singapore-resident, or because the company holds Singapore investments — frequently bank in Singapore. Singapore banks are experienced with these structures and will open accounts for offshore companies with clear commercial rationale, properly documented beneficial ownership and a satisfactory KYC package.


Compliance and Transparency

What CRS and FATCA Mean for Singapore Account Holders

Singapore is a full participant in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) — the automatic exchange framework through which Singapore banks report the financial account information of non-Singapore-resident account holders to the MAS, which then exchanges that information with the account holder's home tax authority. Singapore also has a FATCA Model 1 IGA with the United States, meaning US persons holding Singapore accounts have their account information reported to the US IRS via the MAS.

What this means in practice: if you are UK-resident and hold a Singapore bank account, the Singapore bank reports the account balance, interest income and other financial information to the MAS annually, and MAS exchanges this with HMRC. The same applies to residents of all CRS participating jurisdictions. Singapore banking does not provide secrecy from home country tax authorities.

This is not a disadvantage for legitimate international banking — it is the standard global framework. Singapore banking's value lies in its institutional quality, stability, multi-currency capability and service excellence, not in financial privacy from home tax authorities.

Singapore banks apply rigorous Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) standards aligned with FATF recommendations. Singapore is on no international blacklist and is consistently assessed as a jurisdiction with robust AML controls. This quality of compliance is itself a reason institutional counterparties trust Singapore-held accounts.

See also: What is CRS? · What is FATCA? · Beneficial Ownership · Tax Residency


Browse all wealth managers and financial services providers listed in Singapore — MAS-regulated private banks, investment managers and family office services.

Browse Singapore Financial Providers

FAQ

Singapore Offshore Banking — Common Questions

Yes — Singapore banks open accounts for non-residents, though the requirements are more stringent than for Singapore residents and approval is not guaranteed. Non-residents typically need to visit Singapore in person for an account opening appointment at a private bank or priority banking branch, provide full KYC documentation (passport, proof of address, source of wealth, source of funds, tax identification number), and demonstrate a legitimate reason for banking in Singapore — typically existing Singapore investments, a Singapore holding company, a family office registered in Singapore, or a Singapore business relationship. Digital bank accounts for non-residents are available from some Singapore licensed digital banks with lighter onboarding requirements, but these serve lower-value transactional banking rather than private banking or wealth management. The bar for non-resident private banking account opening has risen significantly since 2020 — Singapore banks apply the same AML scrutiny to non-residents as to residents, and accounts for individuals or companies with complex offshore structures require detailed documentation.
Minimum relationship sizes at Singapore private banks vary considerably by institution and are not always publicly disclosed. As a general guide, the leading international private banks in Singapore — the Swiss banks, major US and European institutions — typically set minimum investable asset thresholds of USD 1 million to USD 5 million for private banking clients. Some boutique private banks and regional wealth managers set lower thresholds of USD 500,000 or equivalent. Priority or premier banking tiers at retail banks typically require SGD 200,000–500,000 in deposits or managed assets. Family office accounts through the MAS Section 13O or 13U framework require minimum AUM of SGD 10 million (13O) or SGD 50 million (13U) committed to Singapore-based investment management. These thresholds are indicative — individual banks set their own requirements and the actual threshold for a specific client may be higher or lower depending on the relationship and the client's overall profile.
Singapore and Switzerland serve different primary client bases and are genuinely complementary rather than straightforwardly comparable. Switzerland is the world's largest private banking centre by AUM, with the broadest range of private banks, the deepest pool of private banking professionals globally, and a centuries-long tradition of serving UHNW clients from across Europe, Latin America and the Middle East. Singapore is the leading private banking centre for Asia-Pacific — it is the natural choice for UHNW individuals with significant Asia-Pacific investment portfolios, for families relocating from Asia, and for those who want their private banking in the same time zone as their assets. Both participate in CRS and are fully transparent with home tax authorities. For clients with both European and Asian assets or connections, having private banking relationships in both jurisdictions is common. The "better" choice depends entirely on where the client's assets are, where the client spends their time, and which currencies and investment markets are most relevant to their portfolio.
Yes, Singapore banks do open accounts for companies incorporated in BVI, Cayman Islands and other offshore jurisdictions — but approval is not automatic and the KYC requirements are more extensive than for Singapore-incorporated companies. The bank needs to understand and document: the commercial rationale for the offshore structure (why is there a BVI or Cayman company rather than a Singapore company?); the identity and background of all ultimate beneficial owners; the nature of the business and expected transaction flows; and the source of funds. Offshore holding companies with a clear investment purpose — holding Singapore equities, holding Singapore real estate, holding interests in a Singapore fund — are generally accepted. Offshore trading intermediaries where the commercial rationale for the offshore structure is unclear face more scrutiny and are sometimes declined. Engaging a Singapore corporate services provider or bank introduction specialist before applying can significantly improve the success rate for offshore company account opening.
Yes. Singapore is a full participant in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and has a FATCA Model 1 IGA with the United States. Singapore financial institutions — including all banks, investment managers and custodians — identify non-Singapore-resident account holders and report their account information (balances, income, proceeds) to the MAS annually. The MAS automatically exchanges this information with the tax authority of the account holder's jurisdiction of tax residence. This means: if you are a UK tax resident holding a Singapore bank account, HMRC receives information about that account from the MAS each year. Singapore banking does not offer financial privacy from home country tax authorities. This is the global standard and applies to all major banking jurisdictions including Switzerland, Luxembourg, Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man, UAE and Cayman.

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