From 1 July 2026, the Local Qualifying Salary 2026 rises from S$1,600 to S$1,800 per month, with the hourly equivalent moving from S$9 to S$10.50. This single number quietly governs how every Singapore SME counts its local headcount for the purpose of S Pass and Work Permit quotas — and unless your payroll is already calibrated for it, your foreign-worker entitlement will shrink the moment the new threshold takes effect. Per the Ministry of Manpower, the LQS is the minimum gross monthly wage at which a local Singaporean or PR employee counts as one full local headcount for foreign-worker quota maths.
The change was announced in MOM’s Local Qualifying Salary update following Budget 2026 and is the most operationally disruptive HR change of the year for services-sector employers, F&B operators, and any company holding S Pass or Work Permit headcount. It also reaches into Letter of Consent renewals where a Dependant’s Pass holder running a small business has hired a Singaporean.
This guide explains how the new threshold reshapes quota maths, what HR managers must action before 1 July 2026, and where the most expensive mistakes will be made — written for a Singapore HR audience that has to live with the calculation, not just read about it.
What the Local Qualifying Salary 2026 actually changes
The LQS is not a minimum wage in the European sense. It is a quota counter. A local employee is only counted as one full local headcount towards foreign-worker quota if their gross monthly salary meets the LQS. If they earn less, they may count as half a head, or not at all. The full-time and part-time mechanics from 1 July 2026 are as follows:
- Local employee paid at least S$1,800/month — counted as 1.0 local headcount.
- Local employee paid at least S$900/month but below S$1,800 — counted as 0.5 local headcount.
- Local employee paid below S$900/month — not counted at all.
- Part-time hourly equivalent from 1 July 2026 — S$10.50/hour (was S$9.00).
Per MOM’s quota counting guidance, the figure used is the fixed monthly salary — basic wage plus fixed allowances, excluding overtime, bonuses, productivity payments, reimbursements, employer CPF, and any in-kind benefits. Variable commission and unstructured allowances generally do not count.
Worked example: a 10-headcount services SME
Assume a Services-sector firm has ten local employees (mix of full-timers and one part-timer) and currently holds three S Pass workers. As at 30 June 2026, the local headcount tally looks like this:
- Eight full-time locals at S$2,400+/month — 8.0 local heads
- One part-time admin at S$1,650/month gross — 1.0 head (above the old S$1,600 LQS)
- One part-time data clerk at S$1,400/month — 0.5 head
- Total at 30 June: 9.5 local heads
From 1 July 2026, with no payroll change, the count becomes:
- Eight full-time locals at S$2,400+ — 8.0 heads
- The S$1,650 admin — drops to 0.5 head (now below S$1,800)
- The S$1,400 data clerk — stays at 0.5 head
- Total from 1 July: 9.0 local heads
The Services-sector S Pass sub-Dependency Ratio Ceiling is 10% of total workforce. A drop from 9.5 to 9.0 local heads can be the difference between renewing your third S Pass smoothly and having an application bounced for being over quota. Multiply that across a 25-person firm and the sub-DRC math gets unforgiving fast.
Action checklist for HR managers before 1 July 2026
The risk window is the next eight weeks. Any pass renewal or new application submitted on or after 1 July 2026 will be assessed against the new LQS. Build the following into your H1 2026 operations:
1. Re-baseline payroll for borderline locals
Identify every Singaporean or PR employee earning between S$1,600 and S$1,799 in fixed monthly salary. Decide whether to lift each one to S$1,800 (preserving the full quota count) or accept a halving of their contribution to your foreign-worker quota. The decision is rarely just about the wage — it is about how many S Pass or Work Permit renewals you have queued in H2.
2. Re-paper part-time contracts at S$10.50/hour
Part-time staff must hit S$10.50/hour from 1 July 2026 to count as a half-head (and 8 hours/day x 22.5 days at that rate clears the S$1,800/month line). Issue contract amendments that document the new hourly rate and its effective date. Keep the old contract in the personnel file as evidence of the lawful re-baselining.
3. Re-run quota maths and forecast renewals
Pull every foreign-worker renewal that falls between July 2026 and June 2027. For each, confirm headroom under both the sectoral DRC and the S Pass sub-DRC under the new LQS. Where headroom disappears, decide now whether the answer is a salary uplift, a non-renewal, or a structural shift towards a sector where the foreign-worker quota is more generous.
4. Update CPF and IR8A projections
An LQS uplift hits employer CPF at 17% (or higher for younger workers) and pushes the AIS-reportable wage. Brief your finance team on the year-end IR8A and CPF cashflow before they discover it via a variance report. Where eligible, layer in the Progressive Wage Credit Scheme co-funding to soften the hit — IRAS auto-pays this without an application.
Our standalone walkthrough on the real cost of hiring a foreign professional in Singapore sets out the full P&L impact of an EP or S Pass hire and is a useful companion when you re-cost your H2 plan.
How the LQS change affects Letter of Consent renewals
Dependant’s Pass holders who run a Singapore-incorporated business under a Letter of Consent are caught by the LQS through the back door. To hold or renew a LOC for self-employment, ICA and MOM expect the business to be a real, ongoing operation — and where the DP-business-owner has hired locals, those locals are now counted under the new LQS for any quota the business uses.
If you operate a small services business under a LOC and have hired one or two part-time locals at S$1,650, you face the same halving of headcount and may lose your S Pass entitlement entirely at next renewal. Our piece on the Letter of Consent (LOC) Singapore 2026 framework sets out the renewal process; layer the LQS revision over that and re-run your sums before submitting.
Sectoral quirks: cleaning, security, F&B and manufacturing
The LQS interacts with the Progressive Wage Model in cleaning, security, landscape, retail, food services, waste management, and the in-house Occupational PWMs. For Progressive Wage Model sectors, the LQS is the floor; the PWM-mandated wage is usually higher and continues to apply. From 1 July 2026:
- Cleaning, Security, Landscape, Retail: PWM wage tiers continue, but every entry-level role must clear the new S$1,800 LQS for full headcount counting and to satisfy the sectoral PWM where it crosses S$1,800.
- Food services PWM: kitchen helpers and service crew must meet both the PWM wage step and the new LQS. The Workfare-PWCS overlay continues to co-fund part of the uplift.
- Manufacturing process workers: most are foreign and not directly affected, but the local headcount supporting them (forklift drivers, line leads, supervisors) must meet S$1,800 to keep the quota math intact.
- F&B and the Non-Traditional Sources route: from September 2026, MOM is expanding the NTS Occupation List by eight occupations across social services, food services and air transportation. NTS hires must be paid at least S$2,000/month and count against the 8% NTS sub-cap. Our 2026 Singapore Work Permit employer’s guide walks through the renewal mechanics in detail.
The full salary stack: LQS, S Pass and EP floors
The LQS sits at the bottom of a four-tier wage architecture for foreign-worker hiring. To plan H2 2026 properly, you need the full stack visible at once:
- Local Qualifying Salary — S$1,800/month from 1 July 2026 (this article).
- S Pass minimum qualifying salary — S$3,300/month general, S$3,800/month Financial Services as at May 2026, rising to S$3,600 / S$4,000 from 1 January 2027 per MOM. See our Complete Singapore S Pass Guide 2026 for the age-stepped tiers.
- EP minimum qualifying salary — S$5,600/month general, S$6,200/month Financial Services as at May 2026, age-stepped up to S$10,700 / S$11,800 at age 45+. Detail and COMPASS scoring in The Complete Singapore Employment Pass Guide 2026.
- Levy by sector and tier — the cost layer that sits on top of the salary, see our Singapore foreign-worker levy 2026 breakdown.
For HR managers responsible for the company-wide MOM compliance posture, our 2026 MOM compliance calendar sets out the month-by-month deadlines that the LQS shift slots into. If your business also touches incorporation, accounting or corporate-secretarial obligations, the team at Raffles Corporate Services publishes a parallel S Pass employer guide that pairs neatly with this LQS update.
Bottom line for HR managers
The Local Qualifying Salary 2026 uplift to S$1,800 is mechanically simple but operationally heavy. The mistake to avoid is treating it as a payroll-only adjustment. It is a quota event. Every local at S$1,600–S$1,799 either gets a raise or quietly halves your foreign-worker entitlement, and the firms that act in May and June will renew their S Pass and Work Permit holders without drama in Q3. The firms that wait until July will find their quota maths has moved underneath them.
If you would like a licensed employment agency to re-run your quota under the new LQS, queue your H2 2026 pass renewals, or build the LOC renewal pack for a Dependant’s Pass-holding business owner, the team at Singapore Employment Agency — the consumer brand of Little Big Employment Agency Pte Ltd (MOM Licence 19C9790) — handles end-to-end pass and renewal work for SMEs. For incorporation, accounting and corporate-secretarial work that often arrives alongside an HR restructuring, our sister firm Raffles Corporate Services is the related-party referral.
— The Editorial Team, Little Big Employment Agency