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Startup Tax Exemption (SUTE) Singapore | How New Companies Save Tax On Their First S$200,000 Of Chargeable Income

by Ishika Bhandari May 28, 2026 7 MIN READ

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Qualifying new companies can get a lower tax bill during their first 3 consecutive Years of Assessment by using Startup Tax Exemption Singapore SUTE. It is one of Singapore’s most useful early-stage tax reliefs, but many founders misunderstand what it actually gives.

SUTE does not mean a company saves S$200,000 in tax. It means a qualifying company can enjoy tax exemption on part of its first $200,000 of normal chargeable income for each eligible YA. For YA 2020 onward, IRAS gives 75% exemption on the first S$100,000 and 50% exemption on the next S$100,000. The maximum exempt income is S$125,000 per YA.

What Is SUTE In Singapore?

SUTE stands for Start-Up Tax Exemption. It is a tax exemption scheme for qualifying new start-up companies in Singapore. The scheme reduces taxable income during the company’s first 3 consecutive YAs. So founders can keep more cash inside the business during the early growth stage.

The relief applies only to normal chargeable income taxed at Singapore’s prevailing corporate income tax rate of 17%. It does not remove the need for proper accounting, tax computation, ECI review, or annual corporate tax filing.

How Much Tax Exemption Can a New Company Get?

For YA 2020 onward, the SUTE calculation is simple.

Normal Chargeable IncomeExemption RateExempt Amount
First S$100,00075%Up to S$75,000
Next S$100,00050%Up to S$50,000
Maximum Per YAUp to S$125,000

At the 17% corporate tax rate, the maximum tax saving is S$21,250 per YA. But only if the company has at least S$200,000 of normal chargeable income and meets all conditions. Across 3 eligible YAs, the maximum tax saving can reach S$63,750.

SUTE Qualifying Conditions Singapore IRAS

SUTE qualifying conditions Singapore IRAS rules are strict. A company must meet all the key conditions for that YA of claim.

A qualifying company must:

  • Be incorporated in Singapore.
  • Be a tax resident in Singapore for that YA.
  • Have no more than 20 shareholders throughout the basis period for that YA.
  • Have all shareholders as individuals, or have at least one individual shareholder holding at least 10% of issued ordinary shares.
  • Not be an investment holding company.
  • Not undertake property development for sale, investment, or both.

IRAS excludes investment holding companies and property development companies because the scheme is meant to encourage entrepreneurship, not passive investment or property project structuring.

New Start-Up Tax Exemption First Three YAs

The new start-up tax exemption first three YAs rule is where many founders make mistakes. The relief is available only for the first 3 consecutive YAs. These YAs continue to count even if the company has no income, no chargeable income, or has not started business in one of those years.

For example, if a company’s first 3 YAs are YA 2026, YA 2027, and YA 2028, it cannot decide to skip YA 2026 because it had no profit and start claiming later. If the company first becomes profitable only in YA 2028, that may still be its third eligible YA. 

YA 2029 would then move to the partial tax exemption scheme if the company qualifies. IRAS gives similar guidance on unclaimed early YAs still counting as part of the first 3 consecutive YAs.

75% Exemption First S$100,000 Startup Example

The 75% exemption first S$100,000 startup rule can be understood with a simple tax example.

Assume a qualifying company has S$200,000 of normal chargeable income in YA 2026.

Calculation ItemAmount
First S$100,000 at 75% exemptionS$75,000 exempt
Next S$100,000 at 50% exemptionS$50,000 exempt
Total exempt incomeS$125,000
Taxable income after SUTES$75,000
Tax at 17%S$12,750
Tax without SUTE on S$200,000S$34,000
Estimated tax savingS$21,250

This is why SUTE is valuable, but the wording must be accurate. The relief reduces tax on chargeable income. It is not a direct grant and not a S$200,000 tax saving.

SUTE Individual Shareholder Test Singapore

The SUTE individual shareholder test Singapore rule matters when founders bring in holding companies, investors, or corporate shareholders. A company can still qualify if it has corporate shareholders. But at least one individual shareholder must hold at least 10% of the issued ordinary shares throughout the basis period for that YA.

This means shareholding changes should be checked before year-end. If the cap table changes during the basis period and the individual shareholder condition is not met throughout the period, the company may lose SUTE eligibility for that YA.

What If The Company Does Not Qualify?

If a company does not qualify for SUTE, it may still qualify for the Partial Tax Exemption scheme. For YA 2020 onward, PTE gives 75% exemption on the first S$10,000 of normal chargeable income and 50% exemption on the next S$190,000. The maximum exempt income under PTE is S$102,500 per YA.

This is useful for investment holding companies, property development companies, older companies, and companies that fail the SUTE shareholder or tax residency conditions.

Common SUTE Mistakes Founders Should Avoid

Many founders lose value because they treat SUTE as automatic. IRAS may compute the exemption during filing, but the company must still confirm eligibility and file correctly.

Common mistakes include:

  • Assuming every new company qualifies.
  • Forgetting tax residency for the YA of claim.
  • Missing the shareholder test after fundraising or restructuring.
  • Assuming inactive early years can be replaced by later profitable years.
  • Thinking SUTE removes Form C-S, Form C-S (Lite), or Form C filing.
  • Treating investment holding or property development companies as eligible.
  • Not keeping accounts and tax schedules ready for IRAS review.

IRAS also warns against abuse of the start-up tax exemption scheme through shell companies and artificial arrangements. It states that audits of possible abuse have led to tax recovery and penalties of more than S$25 million.

Filing and Record Steps For New Companies

A company claiming SUTE must still file Form C-S, Form C-S (Lite), or Form C by the filing due date to confirm eligibility and claim the exemption. IRAS states that the Corporate Income Tax Return filing due date is 30 November.

New companies should also prepare management accounts, tax computation, shareholder records, tax residency support, revenue schedules, expense support, and any capital allowance workings. This keeps the claim clean and reduces back-and-forth during filing.

Conclusion

Startup Tax Exemption Singapore SUTE can reduce tax for qualifying new companies during the first 3 consecutive YAs, but founders should understand the limits clearly. 

A strong SUTE claim works best when tax residency, shareholder records, and filing documents are reviewed early, and the expert team at Arnifi helps companies build that setup. With the right structure, founders can use Singapore’s start-up tax relief properly while keeping records ready for filings, funding discussions, and long-term growth.

FAQs

1. What Is SUTE In Singapore?

SUTE is the Start-Up Tax Exemption scheme for qualifying new Singapore companies. It gives tax exemption on part of the company’s normal chargeable income during its first 3 consecutive YAs.

2. How Much Exemption Can A Start-Up Get Under SUTE?

For YA 2020 onward, a qualifying company can get 75% exemption on the first S$100,000 and 50% exemption on the next S$100,000 of normal chargeable income. The maximum exempt income is S$125,000 per YA.

3. What Are The Shareholder Conditions For SUTE?

The company must have no more than 20 shareholders throughout the basis period for that YA. All shareholders must be individuals, or at least one individual shareholder must hold at least 10% of the issued ordinary shares.

4. Does A Company Need To File A Tax Return To Claim SUTE?

Yes. A qualifying company must file Form C-S, Form C-S (Lite), or Form C by the filing due date to confirm eligibility and claim the exemption.

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