Compliance
Building The “3L” Infrastructure For Asia’s New Family Offices
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The surge in the number of single-family offices in Singapore counts as a major success story, but all growth brings certain tasks, and compliance rules are significant. Singapore's central bank and regulator has, alongside other bodies, changed the climate for SFOs. This article examines the picture.
The following article, which considers issues generated by the rapid growth in Singapore-based single-family offices, is most timely. This is a large and varied sector. There are also compliance and other challenges for an area that is still young and learning how to operate. The author of this article, Shahnaz Khan (pictured below), is the founder of Elyff Group headquartered in Singapore including Elyff Concierge and Elyff Events. (More on the author below.) The editors are pleased to share this content; the usual editorial disclaimers apply to views of outside contributors. To comment, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
  
Shahnaz Khan
Singapore’s family office boom is more than a headline. It is a structural shift in Asia’s wealth landscape. The Monetary Authority of Singapore has signalled continued momentum, and by 2024 the number of single-family offices reached roughly 2,000, up from about 1,650 the previous year. That growth, paired with Singapore’s ascent to the world’s fourth wealthiest city with about 242,400 millionaires, underscores why the ecosystem now needs to build beyond tax and regulatory incentives towards a robust “3L” infrastructure for lifestyle, legacy and leadership.
  Policy foundations: why capital Is choosing
  Singapore
  Singapore’s policy stack for family offices is unusually
  comprehensive. The Section 13O/13U fund tax incentives provide
  tax exemption for qualifying funds managed by Singapore-based
  managers. These schemes were extended to 31 December 2029, adding
  predictability for planners. Complementing this is the Variable
  Capital Company (VCC) structure, which gives managers dividend
  and capital flexibility and a scalable umbrella/sub-fund
  framework. For significant principals, the Global Investor
  Programme (GIP) includes an Option C track to set up a Singapore
  SFO with S$200 million ($154 million) AuM, of which S$50 million
  must be deployed in specified local investments. Together, these
  tools anchor capital and talent onshore. (Sources: Monetary
  Authority of Singapore, DLA Piper, Default, Economic Development
  Board.)
Policy fine-tuning is ongoing. MAS introduced a three-month approval regime for family office tax-incentive confirmations, materially shortening set-up timelines. And to channel wealth into purposeful giving, Singapore launched the Philanthropy Tax Incentive Scheme (PTIS) which is a 100 per cent deduction (subject to caps/conditions) for qualifying donors, now running until 31 December 2028. This is key in formalising Singapore’s role as a regional hub for strategic philanthropy. (Sources: Monetary Authority of Singapore, KPMG Assets, EY.)
At the same time, the regulatory perimeter is tightening. MAS has issued additional guidance on AML/CFT good practices and continues to raise standards for intermediaries which is critical for safeguarding the hub amid rapid inflows. (Sources: Allen & Gledhill, Monetary Authority of Singapore.) A robust environment lowering barriers of financial entries with tightening security sounds like a heaven for the inflow of the UHNW into Singapore.
  A strengthening compliance regulatory
  environment
  Alongside tax and structuring incentives, Singapore has
  reinforced its compliance framework across multiple areas. In
  July 2025, MAS introduced revised AML/CFT Notices and Guidelines
  for financial institutions and variable capital companies (VCCs),
  effective 1 July this year. These updates broaden requirements to
  include proliferation financing risk assessments, stronger
  identification of beneficiaries and “trust relevant parties,” and
  more rigorous screening of sources of funds. 
MAS also issued Circular AMLD 12/2024, directing CEOs to ensure that audit functions are properly resourced, that regular AML/CFT risk assessments are maintained, and that audit scopes reflect inherent money-laundering and terrorism-financing risks.
Beyond MAS, the compliance ecosystem is being strengthened across the industry. Trustees and trust companies are now expected to meet higher standards in verifying effective controllers, understanding legal arrangements, and maintaining clear documentation.
The Anti-Money Laundering/Counter-Financing of Terrorism Industry Partnership (ACIP) and Regulated Dealers have published a best-practice paper on Counter-Proliferation Financing, providing guidance to financial and non-financial institutions on managing CPF risks, though it is not legally binding. Meanwhile, capability-building initiatives led by the Wealth Management Institute, the Law Society of Singapore, and government bodies are preparing lawyers, trustees, and wealth managers with specialised programmes in governance, cross-border compliance, AML/CFT, ESG, and succession planning. Together, these measures enhance accountability, transparency, and alignment with international standards, reinforcing Singapore’s position as a trusted hub for wealth management, funds, and family offices.
  The demographic imperative: The great Asian wealth
  transfer
  Between now and 2030, Asia Pacific families are projected to
  transfer about $5.8 trillion in a wave that will amplify demand
  for governance, next-gen preparation, impact investing, and
  cross-border structuring. For wealth managers and service
  providers, the message is clear: the competitive differentiator
  will shift from set-up to stewardship. (Source: Elyff
  Concierge.)
  From policy to practice: Building the “3L”
  infrastructure
  Lifestyle: UHNW families expect frictionless living that respects
  privacy and purpose. Beyond private banking, Singapore should
  scale curated healthcare access, education pathways, global
  mobility planning, and concierge-quality relocation services that
  is well integrated with banks and SFO administrators.
The Julius Baer Lifestyle Index has repeatedly placed Singapore at or near the top for premium service costs, a signal that curated value (not discounts) is the opportunity. Providers that bundle residency, schooling, wellness, and hospitality into service-level agreements for SFOs will win share.
Legacy: With incentives like PTIS and widely-used 13O/13U frameworks, families can institutionalise their giving and investing under robust governance. The next step is turnkey philanthropy platforms. These include vehicle selection (VCC/CLG/Trust), mission design, grant-making ops, and impact measurement which are seamlessly connected to the SFO’s investment policy statement. Onshore structures and local deployment requirements under GIP Option C will further encourage meaningful participation in Singapore’s innovation economy and community. (Source: Monetary Authority of Singapore, Economic Development Board)
Leadership: As wealth professionalises, the bottleneck is people. The market needs next-gen leadership academies that blend governance, investment literacy (public, private, and venture), stewardship, and family dynamics coaching. Pair this with director-readiness tracks for independent board roles and chief-of-staff pipelines for SFOs. Embedding risk culture and AML awareness into these programmes aligns with MAS’s emphasis on controls – futureproofing both reputation and returns. (Source: Allen & Gledhill.)
  Why this matters
  For private banks, trustees, law firms, and multi-family offices,
  Singapore’s acceleration is not just about AuM capture. It’s
  about orchestrating full-stack solutions that combine policy
  fluency with human capital development:
  -- Structure with purpose: lead with 13O/13U and VCC, where
  suitable, but connect them to long-horizon family charters and
  investment theses (private markets, venture, sustainable real
  assets); 
  -- Operationalise philanthropy: use PTIS to catalyse high
  impact giving; offer outsourced grant ops and outcome
  tracking; 
  -- Compress time-to-live: leverage the three-month MAS
  regime to launch faster and then immediately transition clients
  into governance, education, and risk programmes; and 
  -- Elevate assurance: align onboarding and monitoring to
  evolving AML/CFT guidance to protect the franchise and client
  reputations. 
In the global wave of automation and rapid technological development, these services, rare and personalised, are now elevated in value – almost creating a cyclical model calling for the revival of human intervention as a distant nostalgia.
  The call to action
  Singapore has the policy chassis; the next edge is client
  experience. With 2,000 single-family offices and counting
  – and an historic $5.8 trillion transfer underway, providers
  now need to build a cohesive client experience which
  encompass: lifestyle, legacy, leadership stack which will move
  from service vendors to generational partners. For wealth
  leaders, the playbook is clear: translate statutory advantages
  into programmatic value that develops people, not just
  portfolios. 
  About the author
  Shahnaz Khan completed her bachelors at the National
  University of Singapore and her postgrad in King's College
  London. She is the founder of Elyff Group headquartered in
  Singapore including Elyff Concierge and Elyff Events. Elyff
  Concierge provides bespoke lifestyle management, legacy and
  leadership planning services as well as personal assistance
  services to UHNW clients and family offices, while Elyff Events
  designs and delivers tailored bespoke events experiences.