Buying in Johor Bahru vs Renting in Singapore: The 2026 Math

Buying in Johor Bahru vs Renting in Singapore

For many Singapore-based renters, the monthly cost of owning a freehold unit in Johor Bahru near the RTS Link is comparable to — and often lower than — what they already pay in Singapore rent, with the crucial difference that JB payments build equity instead of disappearing. With the RTS Link opening January 2027 (a ~5-minute ride to Woodlands North), the commute objection largely dissolves. This page lays out the real math so you can decide on numbers, not hype.

The core comparison

Renting in Singapore Owning at Maxim The Address (JB)
Typical monthly outlay S$1,500–2,800+ for a room/small unit ~RM1,800–2,600/mo instalment (Type A from RM426k)
What you build Nothing — rent is gone Equity in a freehold asset
Tenure None Freehold (permanent ownership)
Commute to SG n/a ~5 min via RTS (from Jan 2027) + shuttle
Upside None Capital appreciation in the RTS corridor
Space per dollar Low Markedly higher (450–865 sq ft)

Figures are indicative. Singapore rents vary widely; JB instalments depend on unit, loan margin and rate. Get your exact numbers on WhatsApp.

Why the math increasingly favours buying

  • Rent is a 100% loss; a mortgage is forced savings. Even a modest monthly figure builds equity in a freehold title you can keep, pass on, or sell.
  • The SGD-to-MYR gap works for you. You earn (or your tenant earns) Singapore dollars and pay ringgit costs — roughly a 3.3x exchange advantage on every monthly payment.
  • The RTS removes the commute penalty. From January 2027, JB-to-Woodlands is about five minutes; Maxim sits ~3 km from the CIQ with a planned shuttle.
  • You can make it pay for itself. Buy a dual-key Type C and a tenant can cover much of your instalment, or let the whole unit for a projected 6–8% gross yield.

The honest counter-points

  • Buying is a long-term, lower-liquidity commitment; renting keeps you flexible.
  • Off-plan completion is around 2029–2030, so this is a buy-and-hold, not instant occupancy.
  • Foreign buyers must clear the RM600,000 SEZ threshold (so Type B/C, not Type A) — see foreigner eligibility.
  • Currency, interest rates and occupancy all carry risk; model conservatively.

Who should seriously consider buying

If you are a Singaporean PR or Malaysian working in Singapore, a long-term JB-Singapore commuter, or an investor wanting SGD-supported rental income, the buy case is strong. If you need maximum flexibility or a short time horizon, renting may still suit you better.

Frequently asked questions

Is it cheaper to buy in JB than rent in Singapore?
For many people, yes — a Maxim The Address Type A instalment (from RM426,000) is often comparable to or below a Singapore room/small-unit rent, and it builds equity rather than being lost.

Does the RTS Link make JB living practical for Singapore workers?
Yes — from January 2027 the RTS connects Bukit Chagar to Woodlands North in about five minutes, making a JB base viable for daily Singapore commuting.

Can a Singaporean buy at Maxim The Address?
Yes, under the Johor-Singapore SEZ RM600,000 threshold — the Type B (from RM617k) and Type C (from RM816k) units qualify, plus a RM50,000 levy. See the eligibility guide.


Reviewed by Jason Chan, Malaysia property consultant (DMS Team). Information only, not financial advice. Figures indicative; confirm rates, rents and eligibility before deciding.

Talk it through: WhatsApp for a rent-vs-buy breakdown · Check loan eligibility · See the price list · Back to Maxim The Address overview

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