Could your idea meet the test to start and scale a company in Singapore? This short introduction sets clear expectations for a step‑by‑step, Singapore‑specific how‑to that mirrors current Ministry of Manpower (MOM) practice.
Who is this for? Founders, technopreneurs, investors and other entrepreneur profiles planning to relocate and build a high‑impact venture will find practical checkpoints here. The EntrePass is presented as a visa pathway that lets founders run their own venture rather than remain tied to an employer, though assessment is rigorous.
This introduction previews the full journey: eligibility routes, timing for private limited company setup, documents and the 10‑page business plan, submission, in‑principle approval, issuance, compliance, renewal and family options. Two make‑or‑break levers matter most: meeting at least one qualifying criterion and producing a business plan that supports renewal milestones.
Note: Outcomes hinge on evidence — IP, funding, research links or accelerator support — rather than broad ambition statements. This content is informational, not legal advice; plan timelines carefully to avoid missing IPA deadlines with MOM.
Key Takeaways
- This page is a practical, step‑by‑step how‑to aligned with MOM practice.
- It is aimed at founders and entrepreneurs seeking to start in business Singapore.
- EntrePass lets you run your own venture, but assessment is strict.
- Focus on one qualifying route and a renewal‑ready business plan.
- Provide evidence (IP, funding, partners, accelerators) over broad claims.
- Plan timelines carefully; this is informational and not legal advice.
What the EntrePass is and who it is designed for in Singapore
The entrepreneur pass is a founder‑focused work route for foreign founders and investors who plan to build innovative, scalable businesses locally.
In practical terms, the scheme supports early‑stage companies with clear innovation, R&D or high-growth potential. Evidence matters: IP, research links, accelerator acceptance or venture funding strengthen an application.
EntrePass vs Employment Pass for founders and executives
The entrepass targets entrepreneurial risk and company creation. It looks for defensible innovation and measurable economic contribution.
The employment pass suits executives hired into established payroll roles. It is better if you will work for a local employer rather than run your own venture.
Why innovation and R&D matter
Singapore prioritises ventures that transfer knowledge, create local jobs and invest in R&D. Sectors such as biotech, cleantech and deep tech are typical fits.
Businesses typically not eligible
MOM generally excludes routine trades and lifestyle businesses. Common examples include coffee shops, bars, massage parlours, traditional herbal dispensing and employment agencies.
| Feature | EntrePass | Employment Pass |
|---|---|---|
| Target applicant | Founder/investor building a new business | Hired executive or professional |
| Primary assessment | Innovation, R&D, funding, IP | Qualifications, salary, employer sponsorship |
| Typical fit | High‑growth tech and research firms | Established firms and standard roles |
If your venture does not meet the stated eligibility criteria, consider the employment route as an alternative for working in the country.
Before you apply: incorporate a private limited company and plan your move
Begin by registering the business and mapping a move that proves you will run operations locally.

Private limited company timing rules and the six-month threshold
The company must be a private limited company or you should be ready to incorporate one. If the limited company is already registered, it generally should be no older than six months at the point of an entrepass application.
Relocation expectations and running the business from Singapore
Relocate to work and lead the company on the ground. That means making key decisions locally, hiring staff, and setting up operations rather than managing from abroad.
When you should consider an Employment Pass instead
Consider an employment pass if the business is not sufficiently innovative, the company is older than six months, or your role mirrors an executive post in an established business.
Checklist for applicants: confirm the venture fits the scheme, choose incorporation timing, secure a local address for issuance, and plan short-term entry on a visit pass while you finalise steps.
Treat the move as a project plan with dependencies (banking, leases, hiring, compliance) so milestones and documents align with later sections on documents and the business plan.
Eligibility pathways: how to meet at least one qualifying criterion
Start by choosing one qualifying pathway and gathering documentary evidence that proves it. Candidates must satisfy at least one criterion and back it with verifiable records. Below are the practical routes commonly accepted.
Innovator route: intellectual property
What counts: ownership or exclusive licensing of nationally recognised IP that gives a clear competitive edge and is hard to replicate.
Typical evidence: patent certificates, licensing agreements, valuation reports or third‑party IP searches.
Research collaboration with institutes
What counts: active research collaboration with A*STAR, a university or recognised institute of higher learning.
Contracts for services are not enough. The collaboration must relate to the proposed business and include an institutional contact for verification.
Incubator or accelerator pathway
Being an incubatee in government‑supported programmes such as Startup SG Accelerator helps meet eligibility requirements.
Provide acceptance letters, programme scope and milestone reports to show traction.
Entrepreneur funding and investor record
Raising at least S$100,000 from recognised VCs or business angels is a common entrepreneur route. Proof includes shareholder certificates or signed investment commitments.
Alternatively, a proven record as an investor or senior executive with scaling outcomes supports the investor pathway.
- Evidence matters: clear documents, institutional contacts and quantifiable outcomes.
- How expertise helps: strong technical track record and recognised achievements lower perceived execution risk and improve chances of approval.
Entrep pass application guide singapore: the required documents checklist
Start by gathering the mandatory identity and education records, then layer supporting business evidence. A neat set of paperwork speeds review and lowers chances of a request for more material.

Personal records and identity
Essential: completed application form, passport personal particulars page, and a passport‑size photo taken within the last three months.
Include certified copies of educational certificates to show professional credibility.
Employment testimonials and achievements
Supply English testimonials that state role, scope, leadership outcomes and measurable results. MOM values specifics: product launches, revenue growth or team scale‑up figures.
Business supporting materials
Attach MOUs, client contracts, brochures, press releases, certifications and investor letters. Each item must link clearly to your business model or the qualifying route (IP, research collaboration or funding).
“Clear evidence beats broad claims — show who, what, when and how.”
| Document type | Why it matters | Typical format |
|---|---|---|
| Passport particulars | Identity verification for approval | Scanned personal particulars page (PDF) |
| Education & testimonials | Shows capability and leadership | Degree certs and English testimonials |
| Business materials | Market validation and feasibility | MOUs, contracts, brochures, press releases |
Formatting tips: submit English documents or certified translations. Keep collateral concise and dated. Link each item to the qualifying claim in your business plan.
When you are ready to proceed, review the detailed submission steps and apply for a pass. The 10‑page business plan is the next, central document and should align with renewal expectations.
How to write a strong 10-page business plan that matches MOM expectations
Craft a tight, ten-page plan that shows how your team, offering and finances reduce execution risk and create local value. Keep language plain and evidence-led. The plan must be in English and no longer than ten pages.
Applicant profile and management team
Explain the founder’s track record, awards, and relevant qualifications. State leadership scope and scaling experience clearly.
List key team members, roles and measurable outcomes they delivered. Attach CV highlights and links to verifiable accomplishments.
Product, innovation edge and market analysis
Describe the product or service and why it is hard to replicate. Tie the innovation to local priorities like R&D, IP or productivity gains.
Provide customer segments for Singapore and the region, competitive mapping, pricing rationale and adoption pathways rather than broad TAM claims.
Operations, go-to-market and financial projections
Show on-the-ground execution steps: hiring, vendor relationships, premises, and regulatory actions. Give timelines and responsibilities.
Include realistic financial projections with key assumptions, revenue drivers, cost structure and runway. Use conservative scenarios tied to milestones.
Linking milestones to renewal
Set measurable objectives from day one so renewal reviewers can track progress. State deliverables, dates and the evidence you will keep for renewal assessments.
“An evidence-led plan that maps to renewal criteria reduces perceived risk and speeds approval.”
- Set the standard: be concise, factual and documentary.
- Format: executive summary, applicant, product, market, operations, finances, milestones.
- Timing: expect typical processing of around eight weeks; clarity lowers the chance of delays.
How to submit your EntrePass application and what happens during assessment
Prepare your submission packet so reviewers can verify claims quickly and without follow‑up. Start with the completed application form, then attach supporting documents in the same order referenced in your business plan. Keep each item dated and cross‑referenced to a plan section.
Where and how to submit, and payment options
You may file online via the MOM channel specified at the time of filing. One common over‑the‑counter route is submission at a SingPost branch with a S$70 fee. Check MOM’s current instructions before you travel to a branch.
What happens during assessment and who reviews it
Reviewers check credibility, innovation, economic contribution and consistency across documents. Officials validate IP, funding and research links against the criteria set out by the ministry.
Applications may be routed to other agencies for specialist review, such as SPRING Singapore, IMDA and the National Research Foundation (NRF). That extra scrutiny explains why technical R&D evidence and clear milestones help.
Processing times, delays and how to respond to requests
Typical processing is around eight weeks. Timelines extend when documents are missing, funding is unclear, collaboration evidence is weak or market plans lack detail.
If MOM asks for clarifications, respond quickly and with targeted evidence. Keep answers consistent with the business plan and avoid introducing new claims without documentary proof.
“A complete, well‑ordered dossier reduces follow‑ups and improves the chance of timely approval.”
| Step | What to submit | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Form and ID | Completed form, passport page, photo | Identity and eligibility verification |
| Business dossier | 10‑page plan, CVs, contracts, IP docs | Shows viability, innovation and local impact |
| Evidence of funding/collab | Investment letters, MOUs, accelerator acceptance | Meets qualifying criteria and reduces execution risk |
| Payment | Online or SingPost S$70 over‑the‑counter | Completes submission; check MOM channel for updates |
Outcome: a positive decision is an in‑principle approval issued via EP Online. You then have six months to complete entry and registration steps to secure the visa and final pass issuance.
In-Principle Approval and entry to Singapore: what to do within six months
The in-principle approval confirms conditional acceptance and starts a fixed window to complete your onshore steps. The IPA letter unlocks operational actions, but you must satisfy issuance formalities before deadlines. Treat it as a conditional green light, not final clearance.
What the IPA letter allows you to do and key deadlines to watch
The IPA letter typically gives you six months to enter and request pass issuance. Use this period to secure a local address, line up final company registration if required, and arrange documents for submission.
Build a practical checklist: travel plans, premises, banking, and the paperwork for issuance. Some notices require ACRA registration within a stated timeframe (for example, 30 days) — follow the exact timeline on your letter.
Entry visa considerations if you are applying from overseas
If you need an entry visa, the IPA may include a single-journey visa. That visa lets you travel to complete issuance steps and, if eligible, obtain a short-term visit pass while you finalise requirements.
Avoid booking immovable commitments until the IPA arrives. Move quickly once it does: request issuance, complete any medical or biometric steps, and await the notification letter that confirms collection details from MOM.
“Plan travel and company setup around the IPA timeline to reduce the risk of missing critical deadlines.”
- Confirm deadlines in the IPA letter and act promptly.
- Use the single-journey visa or a visit pass to enter and complete issuance.
- Keep documents and evidence ready to avoid delays in the final pass issuance.
Issuing and collecting your EntrePass: steps after approval
The final operational phase begins when you request issuance through EP Online while you are in Singapore. Accuracy is crucial: errors in addresses or passport details slow delivery and may breach compliance.

Issuance requirements, addresses and delivery details to prepare
Practical must-haves: passport particulars, current immigration pass details, a Singapore residential address and a delivery address. Add an authorised recipient contact who can accept courier alerts.
There is an issuance fee of S$150. Plan for extra documents in some cases — a disembarkation/embarkation card or a signed declaration may be requested.
Medical exam, fingerprinting and photo registration when required
Certain profiles need a medical examination or health declaration. Book a clinic early so your clearance aligns with the issuance timeline.
New arrivals, or those whose last biometric registration was more than five years ago, must register fingerprints and a photo. Complete biometric registration within two weeks of notification to avoid delays.
Collecting the card and what the notification letter covers
Once MOM issues the card, you get a notification letter. That letter usually gives a one‑month travel window and lists next steps, including whether biometrics are required.
After biometrics and documentation are complete, the physical card typically arrives within four working days. Keep records of delivery details and the authorised recipient to ensure smooth receipt.
| Step | What to provide | Typical timing |
|---|---|---|
| EP Online issuance request | Passport, immigration pass, addresses, recipient contact | Immediate submission; verification begins |
| Medical/health checks (if required) | Clinic form or health declaration | Book within days to align with issuance |
| Biometric registration | Fingerprint and photo (new or lapsed >5 years) | Complete within 2 weeks of notification |
| Card delivery | Valid delivery address and authorised recipient | Usually within 4 working days after issuance |
After you receive the pass: registration, compliance, and ongoing obligations
Once you receive your visa, prompt activation and registration keep your business compliant from day one.
Registering with the Ministry of Manpower and keeping details current
Complete activation on the ministry manpower portal as soon as you arrive. Register your residential and company addresses and confirm a contact person for official mail.
Keep details current: update role descriptions, contact points and employment records whenever they change.
Staying compliant while operating your company
Operate the business as described in your plan and retain core documents: contracts, invoices, CPF records and minutes of board decisions.
Maintain basic corporate governance and payroll accuracy to meet ongoing requirements and support future renewal.
Notifying MOM about key changes
Notify mom promptly for the following events:
- Change in business activity or company name
- Change of company or residential address
- Role, salary or employment status shifts
- Updates to personal particulars or authorised contacts
“Continuous compliance reduces the risk of cancellation and makes renewal straightforward.”
| Action | Who must notify | Typical timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Address update | Pass holder / company secretary | Within 14 days |
| Role or salary change | Employer and pass holder | Within 14 days |
| Business activity change | Company | Promptly, with supporting documents |
Practical tip: use a compliance calendar and a single folder for documents. Capture evidence continuously so renewal is based on records, not reconstruction.
Renewal strategy: meeting spending, hiring, and shareholding requirements over time
Treat renewals as a multi-year plan that proves the company creates local jobs and value over time.

Validity periods: a new entrepass is typically issued for one year. The first renewal is usually for one year. Subsequent renewals commonly last two years.
Progressive benchmarks and interpretation
Benchmarks scale with years held. Typical thresholds are:
- Year 2 — S$100,000 business spending + 3 local FTEs or 1 local PME.
- Year 4 — S$200,000 + 6 FTEs or 2 PMEs.
- Year 6 — S$300,000 + 9 FTEs or 3 PMEs.
- Year 8+ — S$400,000 + 12 FTEs or 4 PMEs.
Who counts as local staff
Local FTE: Singapore citizen or PR earning ≥ S$1,100/month with CPF for at least three months.
Local PME: citizen or PR earning ≥ S$3,600/month with CPF for at least three months.
Shareholding and evidence
From Year 2 applicants commonly need to hold about 30% of the company. Keep cap tables, shareholder agreements and signed share certificates ready.
“Renewal is forward planning — document activity, not reconstruct it.”
Required documents include audited financial statements, CPF records, office lease and current ACRA details. Exclude overseas royalties, overseas outsourcing and remuneration paid to the founder when counting qualifying business spending.
Timing: expect typical processing of around eight weeks. Prepare evidence early so renewals are driven by performance, not forms.
Bringing family members to Singapore on Dependant Pass or Long-Term Visit Pass
Plan early: align family relocation with your business milestones and renewal windows so evidence and timing match.
Who qualifies
Dependant and long-term visitor eligibility
The Dependant Pass covers a legally married spouse and unmarried children under 21, including legally adopted children. The Long-Term Visit Pass may cover a common-law spouse, unmarried handicapped children over 21, unmarried stepchildren under 21, and parents.
Sponsorship thresholds
To sponsor a spouse or children, the business must show S$100,000 business spending and either 3 local FTEs or 1 local PME.
To sponsor parents, higher thresholds apply: S$200,000 business spending and either 6 local FTEs or 2 local PMEs.
Work rules for family members
Dependant holders generally need an employment pass, S Pass or Work Permit to take paid employment. Some may apply for a Letter of Consent to operate a business in limited cases. Long‑Term Visit holders require a separate work authorisation such as a Work Permit to be employed.
“Delay family relocation until business benchmarks are met if evidence is not yet robust.”
| Family category | Eligible relationship | Required business spending | Local hiring |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spouse & children | Legally married spouse; unmarried children <21 | S$100,000 | 3 FTEs or 1 PME |
| Parents | Mother / Father | S$200,000 | 6 FTEs or 2 PMEs |
| Other dependants | Common-law spouse, stepchildren, handicapped child | Case-by-case; LTVP possible | Assess against criteria |
Documentation expectations: marriage or birth certificates, adoption papers if applicable, and dated business evidence (banking, payroll, leases, CPF records) that support the claimed business spending and local hires.
Conclusion
A clear, evidence‑led route helps founders move from concept to on‑the‑ground business in a predictable way.
Begin by validating fit and meeting a qualifying eligibility route, then form a private limited company and build the 10‑page plan that ties milestones to renewal tests.
Compile concise documents, submit the application, act fast on any in‑principle approval and complete issuance steps. Stay compliant with records that show local spending and hires.
Key success factors: strong evidence for at least one qualifying pathway, a credible operating model as a singapore entrepreneur and consistent documentation that links to renewal metrics.
Avoid routine business models, missing the six‑month incorporation timing, weak IP/funding proof or generic plan narratives. Treat the business plan as a living operating document with measurable milestones and proof trails.
Next steps: choose the right route (EntrePass or employment pass), prepare evidence, sanity‑check timelines and ensure your Singapore operating footprint is credible before you seek approval or a visa.
FAQ
What is the EntrePass and who is it designed for?
How does the EntrePass differ from an Employment Pass for founders and executives?
Why does Singapore prioritise innovative and R&D-intensive ventures for this route?
Which businesses are typically not eligible under the EntrePass scheme?
When must I incorporate a private limited company to be eligible?
What are relocation expectations once I receive approval?
When should I consider an Employment Pass instead of this entrepreneur route?
What qualifying pathways can meet the eligibility criteria?
How does intellectual property ownership or licensing help my case?
What constitutes an acceptable research collaboration?
How important are incubator and accelerator endorsements?
What evidence do I need if relying on VC or angel funding?
How does my technical background or track record affect assessment?
What personal and business documents are required?
Which employment testimonials and recognition should I include?
What supporting business materials help the case?
How do I write a strong 10-page business plan that meets MOM expectations?
What should I say about the management team?
How detailed should the market analysis be?
What financial projections and operational plans are expected?
How and where do I submit the EntrePass application and pay fees?
How is the application evaluated and which bodies may review it?
What are typical processing times and factors that extend timelines?
What does an In-Principle Approval (IPA) letter allow me to do and what deadlines apply?
What entry visa considerations apply if applying from overseas?
What happens after approval: issuance and collection steps?
Are medical exams and fingerprinting always required?
What compliance obligations must I meet after receiving the pass?
How should I prepare for renewals to meet spending, hiring and shareholding requirements?
What are the typical local hiring and spending benchmarks for renewals?
Who counts as a local full-time equivalent (FTE) or a local professional?
How should I document ongoing business activity and shareholding expectations?
Who can I sponsor to come to Singapore on Dependant Pass or Long-Term Visit Pass?
What are the work rules for family members in Singapore?
What documents are usually required to sponsor family members?
Who should I contact for clarifications or help with complex cases?

Dean Cheong is a Singapore-based B2B growth strategist and the CEO of VOffice. He helps companies scale revenue through sharper sales execution, CRM implementation, and go-to-market strategy, backed by a strong foundation in business banking and finance from Nanyang Technological University and a track record of driving sustainable, performance-led growth.