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If a person passes away domiciled overseas but leaves assets in Singapore, bank accounts, real property, securities or insurance proceeds, the executor named in the foreign grant of probate usually cannot deal with those assets until the grant is recognised locally. The fastest route in most cases is to reseal a foreign grant in Singapore rather than apply for an entirely new grant from scratch. Resealing is a streamlined court procedure governed by the Probate and Administration Act that extends the authority of a qualifying foreign grant to cover Singapore‑situated assets.
This 2026 guide walks executors, foreign personal representatives and their advisers through every stage of the resealing probate Singapore process, from eligibility checks and document preparation to filing, costs, realistic timelines and the practical steps that follow once the Memorandum of Resealing is in hand.
Before assembling documents, every executor should answer one threshold question: does the foreign grant qualify for resealing, or must I apply for a fresh Singapore grant? The answer turns on where the grant was issued and whether any complicating factors exist.
Use the decision snapshot below:
| Scenario | Recommended path |
|---|---|
| Grant issued in the UK, Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand, India or Hong Kong | Reseal the foreign grant |
| Grant issued in the US, Japan, China, Germany or other non‑Commonwealth country | Apply for a fresh Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration |
| Contested will or disputed beneficiaries in Singapore | Fresh grant (contentious probate) |
| Foreign grant revoked or expired | Fresh grant |
Industry observers expect the number of cross‑border probate Singapore applications to keep rising in 2026 as expatriate wealth structures grow more complex. Choosing the right path at the outset avoids months of unnecessary delay.
Eligibility for resealing a foreign grant turns primarily on the jurisdiction that issued it. The Family Justice Courts’ practice directions and the Probate and Administration Act set out the framework.
Singapore’s resealing regime recognises grants of probate and letters of administration issued by courts in Commonwealth countries and territories, as well as Hong Kong. Common originating jurisdictions include the United Kingdom, Australia, Malaysia, India, New Zealand, Canada, Brunei, Sri Lanka and Hong Kong. The grant must have been made by a court of competent jurisdiction and must still be in force at the time of the Singapore application. Both grants of probate (where there is a will naming an executor) and letters of administration (where the deceased died intestate or an administrator was appointed) are eligible, provided they originate from a qualifying jurisdiction.
For executors managing assets across multiple territories, our guide on how to coordinate wills for assets across multiple countries provides additional strategic context.
If the foreign grant was issued by a court in a non‑Commonwealth country, such as the United States, Japan, China, Germany, France or Switzerland, resealing is not available. The executor or next‑of‑kin must instead apply to the Singapore Family Justice Courts for a fresh Grant of Probate or fresh Letters of Administration. This is a more involved process that requires proving the will and the testator’s domicile independently under Singapore law. Executors in this position should budget additional time and cost, as outlined in the comparison table later in this article.
The resealing probate Singapore process follows a largely standardised sequence. Below is the procedure as set out in the Family Justice Courts’ Part XII practice directions on probate proceedings and the eLitigation filing guidance.
Confirm that the foreign grant was issued in a Commonwealth jurisdiction or Hong Kong. Verify the grant is still valid, it must not have been revoked, suspended or superseded. Obtain a sealed certified true copy (CTC) of the foreign grant directly from the issuing court. Where the grant or will is in a language other than English, arrange a certified translation at this early stage. If the applicant is not the original executor named in the grant but rather a personal representative acting under a chain of representation, additional documentation proving the chain may be needed.
The documents for resealing a grant in Singapore are prescribed by court rules. The complete checklist includes:
Detailed guidance on affidavit requirements is available in the Family Justice Courts’ Part XII probate proceedings practice directions. Executors handling Hong Kong‑originated grants may find parallels in our guide to resealing of probate in Hong Kong.
Applications are filed at the Family Division of the High Court. The filing is done via the eLitigation electronic filing system, where the case type is classified as a Probate (Resealing) application. A Singapore‑qualified solicitor must be engaged to file the application electronically on the executor’s behalf, litigants in person cannot file probate applications via eLitigation.
Key practical points at the filing stage:
The court registrar reviews the application on the papers. If the documents are in order and no caveats have been lodged, the application proceeds without an oral hearing. If deficiencies are found, the registrar issues a requisition and the applicant’s solicitor must remedy the gaps before the application can be approved.
Once the court is satisfied, it issues a Memorandum of Resealing. This document effectively extends the authority of the foreign grant to cover Singapore. It does not replace the original grant, it supplements it. The executor should then extract certified true copies of the Memorandum of Resealing for use with banks, the Singapore Land Authority and other institutions. Multiple certified copies are advisable, as each institution will require its own copy.
The table below consolidates every document typically required for a resealing application. Use it as a pre‑filing checklist to reduce the risk of court requisitions.
| Document | Who Provides It | Authentication Required |
|---|---|---|
| Sealed certified true copy (CTC) of the foreign grant | Issuing court in the foreign jurisdiction | Court seal of the issuing court |
| Certified copy of the will (if testate) | Issuing court or probate registry | Court seal or notarial certification |
| Death certificate | Civil registry in the country of death | Original or certified copy; apostille or consular legalisation if not in English |
| Affidavit of the applicant (executor/administrator) | Prepared by Singapore solicitor, sworn by applicant | Sworn before a Commissioner for Oaths or notary public |
| Affidavit of foreign law | Qualified lawyer admitted to practice in the foreign jurisdiction | Sworn before a notary public; apostille or consular legalisation may be required |
| Schedule of Singapore assets | Executor, based on bank statements, title searches, CDP/share statements | Exhibited in the applicant’s affidavit |
| Certified English translations | Accredited translator | Translator’s certification of accuracy |
| Applicant’s identity documents | Applicant (passport or NRIC) | Certified copy |
| Administration oath (for letters of administration) | Prepared by Singapore solicitor | Sworn before a Commissioner for Oaths |
| Notices to beneficiaries / creditors (if required) | Singapore solicitor | As directed by court rules |
For estates involving assets in India as well as Singapore, the guide to obtaining probate in India offers a useful jurisdictional comparison. Where the deceased’s will is held overseas and a copy is needed for the Singapore application, the process for retrieving a copy of a will in Ireland illustrates the kind of steps that may be required, adapted to the relevant jurisdiction.
Realistic timelines depend on document readiness, the issuing court’s responsiveness and whether the Singapore court raises any requisitions. The estimates below reflect typical ranges reported in current practitioner guidance and should be treated as indicative, individual cases may vary.
| Stage | Typical Timeline | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| Obtaining sealed CTC of foreign grant and supporting documents | 2–6 weeks (depends on foreign court) | Varies by jurisdiction; court and notary fees abroad |
| Preparing Singapore application (affidavits, schedule, translations) | 1–3 weeks | Legal fees: S$2,000–S$5,000+ |
| Filing and court processing (no requisitions) | 4–8 weeks | Court filing fees: S$200–S$500 |
| Addressing court requisitions (if any) | 2–6 additional weeks | Additional legal fees for amendments |
| Total (straightforward resealing) | 2–4 months | S$3,000–S$8,000 all‑in (estimate) |
Below is a side‑by‑side comparison of resealing versus applying for a fresh grant, which helps executors assess the best approach for their cross‑border probate Singapore matter.
| Process | Typical Timeline | When It Is Preferable |
|---|---|---|
| Reseal a foreign grant | 2–4 months | Grant from Commonwealth country or Hong Kong; uncontested will; valid, subsisting grant |
| Fresh Grant of Probate (Commonwealth origin) | 3–6 months | Foreign grant expired or revoked; will contested in Singapore; chain‑of‑representation issues |
| Fresh Grant of Probate (non‑Commonwealth origin) | 6+ months | Grant from US, EU, Japan, China or other non‑Commonwealth country |
| Fresh Letters of Administration (intestate, non‑Commonwealth) | 6–9 months | Deceased died intestate; non‑Commonwealth domicile; multiple claimants |
All figures are estimates based on current practitioner guidance and assume no contested proceedings. Complex estates, involving disputes, missing documents or multiple jurisdictions, can take significantly longer. Executors should consult a qualified Singapore probate lawyer for a case‑specific estimate of reseal probate fees in Singapore.
Obtaining the Memorandum of Resealing is not the final step. Executors must then present the resealed grant to each institution holding the deceased’s Singapore assets.
Yes, Singapore banks accept a resealed foreign grant as sufficient authority for the executor to operate or close the deceased’s accounts. Each bank will typically require a certified true copy of the Memorandum of Resealing, a certified copy of the death certificate, the executor’s identification documents, and the bank’s own estate release forms. Processing times vary by institution, but most banks release funds within two to six weeks of receiving a complete set of documents. Executors should contact each bank’s estate or trust department early to confirm their specific documentary requirements, as these can differ between institutions.
If the deceased owned real property in Singapore, the executor must lodge the appropriate instruments with the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) to effect transfer or sale. For HDB flats, the executor liaises with the Housing and Development Board. In both cases, the Memorandum of Resealing together with the transmission application or transfer instrument forms the basis for registration. Legal fees for conveyancing are additional to the resealing costs outlined above. Engaging a Singapore conveyancing solicitor is strongly recommended at this stage.
Shares held through the Central Depository (CDP) or with brokerages require a transmission application to the relevant intermediary. The executor presents the Memorandum of Resealing, a completed transmission form and supporting identity documents. CDP typically processes transmissions within a few weeks once documentation is in order.
There are situations in which resealing a foreign grant is unavailable or impractical, and the executor must pursue a different route:
In each of these scenarios, the executor should apply for a fresh Grant of Probate or fresh Letters of Administration through the Family Justice Courts. The fresh grant procedure is more detailed, it involves proving the will, establishing domicile and potentially advertising for creditors, but it remains the recognised pathway. The probate process in Ireland illustrates how cross‑border fresh‑grant procedures operate in another Common Law jurisdiction, offering a useful comparison.
The Singapore judiciary publishes guidance on frequently encountered errors in non‑contentious probate and resealing applications. Drawing on that guidance, the most common pitfalls include:
Reviewing the application against the judiciary’s published list of common errors before filing is one of the simplest ways to prevent requisitions and keep the resealing timeline on track.
To help executors prepare efficiently, the following resources are available:
These templates are intended as starting points only. Every resealing application should be tailored to the specific facts of the estate and reviewed by a Singapore probate lawyer before filing.
For executors of cross‑border estates, the ability to reseal a foreign grant in Singapore offers a materially faster and more cost‑effective path than applying for a brand‑new grant. The procedure is well‑established, the documentary requirements are clear, and, provided the foreign grant originates from a Commonwealth country or Hong Kong, resealing can typically be completed within two to four months. The keys to a smooth application are thorough document preparation, a properly drafted affidavit of foreign law, and an accurate schedule of Singapore assets. Where the foreign grant is not eligible for resealing, a fresh grant remains available as an alternative.
In either case, early engagement with a qualified Singapore probate practitioner is the single most effective step an executor can take to avoid delays and protect the interests of the estate’s beneficiaries.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mark Cheng at MARK CHENG LAW CORPORATION, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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