You’ve built your life in Singapore — maybe your spouse is here, your kids in school here. But it’s all tied to one work pass. Permanent Residence lets you and your family put down real roots. The catch: ICA wants a thick stack of documents, and an incomplete or weak submission simply gets rejected, after months of waiting.
Tired of the paperwork mountain? Let’s prepare it properly — before it goes in.
ICA assesses PR applications holistically and at their discretion — there’s no points score, no guarantee, and they don’t tell you why they say no. What you can control is how complete and well-prepared your case is when it goes in. That’s where we work.
ICA wants a lot: passport, pass copy, six months of payslips, three years of tax assessments, education certificates going way back, marriage and birth certificates, and more. Gathering it is a chore — and one missing or unclear piece can stall or sink the whole thing. We give you a clear checklist, organise the stack, and make sure it’s complete before anything is submitted.
PR processing runs roughly six to twelve months. Submit something incomplete or poorly put together, and you wait all that time only to be told no — with no reason given. We’d rather get it right the first time than have you lose half a year and start over.
You can include your legally married spouse and unmarried children under 21 in the same application. For many families that’s the whole point — settling here together rather than everyone’s status hanging on one work pass. We prepare the family documents alongside yours so the whole application moves as one.
The strongest applications are complete, consistent, and clearly presented; the weakest are rushed and full of gaps. We can’t promise an outcome — that’s ICA’s call alone — but we can make sure your case is the best-prepared version of itself. Come talk to us first; that conversation is where a strong application starts.
There are two ways to approach a PR application. One risks half a year and a silent rejection; the other doesn’t. Here’s the difference.
We review your profile, organise the full document stack, check it’s complete and consistent, and add value-add documents where they help. Then it goes in — clean, complete, and putting your best case forward.
Dump whatever you have into the e-PR portal and submit. If something’s missing, unclear, or your case is weakly presented, you wait six to twelve months — and the rejection letter gives no reason.
In other words: skipping the preparation is what costs you the most time.
From the first profile review to the documents, the submission, and what comes after PR.
An honest look at your employment, income, tax history and time in Singapore — so you know where you stand before you commit.
A clear checklist, then we help you compile and organise the full stack — payslips, tax assessments, certificates, translations — and check it’s complete.
Your PR application prepared and submitted through ICA’s e-PR system, put together clearly and consistently.
Spouse and unmarried children under 21 included in the same application, with their documents prepared alongside yours.
Once you’re a PR, you need a valid REP to travel. We can help with REP renewal so your status stays protected.
PR is the step before citizenship. When the time comes, we can talk you through that next stage too.
Yes. As the main applicant you can include your legally married spouse and your unmarried children under 21 in the same application. Each person is assessed on their own, but they’re tied to your profile — so for many families, applying together is exactly the point. We prepare everyone’s documents alongside yours.
Quite a lot. You can change jobs freely without being tied to a work pass, buy a resale HDB flat, contribute to and use CPF, and you’re on better footing for your family’s schooling and healthcare. PR is also the step before citizenship. In short, you stop living pass-to-pass and start settling here as a local.
ICA asks for a thick stack — typically your passport, work pass copy, several months of payslips, a few years of tax assessments, education certificates, and marriage and birth certificates if family are included. It’s a lot, and gaps cause problems. We give you a clear checklist and help you organise and check it all before submission.
Roughly six to twelve months, depending on your profile and ICA’s caseload — some come back sooner, some take longer. Because the wait is long, it’s worth getting the application complete and well-prepared the first time rather than risking a rejection after months of waiting.
No — and you should be wary of anyone who says they can. PR approval is entirely at ICA’s discretion, assessed holistically, with no published formula. What we can do is make sure your application is complete, consistent and putting your strongest, most honest case forward. That’s the part within your control, and it’s where we add value.
There’s no limit on how many times you can apply, and a rejection isn’t the end of the road. Usually it’s worth waiting until something in your profile genuinely strengthens — a promotion, higher income, a change in family situation — before reapplying. We can review what happened and advise on whether and when to try again.
Yes — this is important for families to understand upfront. A male child who is granted PR is generally liable for National Service in Singapore. It’s one of the things we’ll make sure you’ve thought through before applying as a family, so there are no surprises later.