Community Development Council Vouchers Scheme
The Community Development Council Vouchers Scheme (Chinese: 社区发展理事会邻里购物券; Malay: Baucar CDC; Tamil: CDC பற்றுச்சீட்டு), known colloquially as CDC Vouchers, is a social transfer and economic stimulus program in Singapore, administered by the five Community Development Councils (CDCs) under the purview of the People's Association (PA) and the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY). First introduced in 2020 as a targeted relief measure for lower-income households during the COVID-19 pandemic, the scheme has since evolved into a universal, digitalised fiscal transfer program. It is now distributed on a recurring basis to all Singaporean households, regardless of income level or housing type.[1][2][3]
Purpose
The scheme serves two primary policy objectives: to provide direct financial assistance to Singaporean households coping with the rising cost of living and inflationary pressures, and to stimulate the local economy by channeling consumption toward participating hawkers, heartland merchants, and, in later tranches, supermarket chains. The initiative is a key component of the Singapore government's broader social support framework, often integrated with major fiscal packages such as the Assurance Package (AP), the Household Support Package, and the Cost-of-Living (COL) Support Package.[2][4][5][6]
Denominations
Unless otherwise stated, each household or citizen is issued vouchers in the following denominations. These vouchers carry a direct value in Singapore dollars (S$); however, they are not interchangeable when making purchases, and exact change is not provided for transactions of a lower value. Supermarket vouchers, as the name suggests, are only valid at supermarkets such as Sheng Siong, NTUC FairPrice, and Cold Storage.
| Vouchers | Denominations | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Usage | Type | $2 | $5 | $10 | $20 | $50 | Total |
| CDC vouchers (non-May) | Regular | Household | 15 | 12 | 6 | $150 | ||
| Supermarket | 15 | $150 | ||||||
| CDC vouchers (May) | Regular | 25 | 20 | 10 | $250 | |||
| Supermarket | 15 | 5 | $250 | |||||
| Climate vouchers | 5 | 4 | 12 | 3 | $300 | |||
| SG60 vouchers[7] | Regular | Adults (age 21 to 59) | 15 | 20 | 17 | $300 | ||
| Seniors (age 60 or above) | 30 | 14 | 27 | $400 | ||||
| Supermarket | Adults (age 21 to 59) | 14 | 8 | $300 | ||||
| Seniors (age 60 or above) | 20 | 10 | $400 | |||||
Operation
Operationally, the CDC Vouchers Scheme utilizes the RedeemSG platform, a government-built digital voucher infrastructure that allows residents to claim and spend vouchers using their Singpass accounts and mobile devices, thereby eliminating the logistical friction associated with physical paper vouchers. As of 2026, the scheme has disbursed billions of dollars in vouchers, with high utilization rates exceeding 97% across multiple tranches, reflecting its widespread acceptance and integration into the daily consumption habits of the population.[8][5][9]
History
In early 2020, Singapore implemented its circuit breaker measures, a stringent lockdown measure in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that halted most non-essential economic activities. While necessary for public health, these measures severely impacted the livelihoods of daily-rated workers and small business owners, particularly those in the residential public housing estates where the majority of Singaporeans live. Hawkers and small merchants saw footfall evaporate, threatening their survival. Simultaneously, lower-income households faced immediate liquidity crunches due to wage cuts and job losses.[2][3]
Pilot tranches
Recognising the dual crisis affecting both consumers and small businesses, the five District Mayors, led by the Mayors' Committee, conceptualised the CDC Vouchers Scheme as a "community initiative". On 12 June 2020, then-Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat launched the inaugural scheme at a virtual event. This pilot was funded by a S$20 million grant allocated from the Unity and Resilience Budgets of 2020.[3]
Unlike later nationwide iterations, this first tranche was strictly means-tested. It targeted "identified lower-income households" who were most vulnerable to the economic shock. Approximately 400,000 households were identified as eligible beneficiaries. Each eligible household received S$50 in physical paper vouchers. The vouchers were printed in small denominations of S$2 to facilitate micro-transactions at hawker stalls and small shops, ensuring that the entire value could be easily spent on low-cost meals or essential items without requiring cash change. Eligible households received notification letters via mail. To collect the vouchers, residents had to physically visit their designated Community Centres (CCs) or Residents' Committees (RCs) and present their National Registration Identity Card (NRIC) for verification.[3]
Following the successful uptake of the first tranche, a second tranche was launched in January 2021. This tranche continued the focus on lower-income households, providing further relief as the economy began a slow recovery. The objective remained consistent: defraying the cost of living for the vulnerable while driving revenue to heartland businesses.[3][10]
Nationwide expansion
In Budget 2021, the government announced that the CDC Vouchers Scheme would be expanded from a niche welfare program into a nationwide fiscal transfer applicable to all Singaporean households. This shift acknowledged that the economic impact of the pandemic and rising global inflation were affecting the middle class as well as the poor.[1][2]
To scale the scheme from 400,000 households to over 1.3 million, the reliance on physical paper vouchers became untenable. The solution was RedeemSG, a digital voucher system developed by Open Government Products (OGP), a division of GovTech (Government Technology Agency). RedeemSG utilizes a web-based interface where a unique voucher link is sent via SMS. A designated household member logs in to the claim portal using Singpass.[11][12][13]
Institutionalisation
By 2023, the CDC Vouchers Scheme had transitioned from an ad hoc pandemic measure to a structured component of Singapore's social safety net, specifically within the Assurance Package (AP) designed to cushion the impact of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rate increase from 7% to 9% from 2023 to 2024.[14] A major structural change was introduced in the 2023 tranche. Feedback from the public indicated a desire for greater flexibility, as many households purchased daily necessities from supermarkets rather than wet markets. The voucher value was split into two distinct, non-transferable categories: S$150 for heartland merchants and hawkers, S$150 for participating supermarkets.[1]
In response to persistent cost-of-living concerns, the government increased both the frequency and value of the vouchers in 2024.[15] The scheme continues to be a central pillar of the Assurance Package and Cost-of-Living Support Package announced in Budget 2025 by Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Lawrence Wong.[16][17]
Challenges
Phishing and scams
Scammers have targeted the scheme's reliance on SMS links. Victims receive SMS messages that appear to be from the government, asking them to click a link to "claim" their vouchers. These links lead to phishing sites designed to steal Singpass credentials or banking details. The Police and MCCY have issued repeated advisories stating that official SMSes will never ask for banking details and will only come from the sender ID "gov.sg" or "RedeemSG".[18][19][20]
Illicit resales
The scheme's terms and conditions explicitly prohibit the resale of vouchers or their exchange for cash.[21] Listings occasionally appear on platforms like Carousell and Facebook Marketplace offering to sell vouchers for cash at a discounted rate. The CDCs monitor these platforms and work with administrators to take down such listings. Sellers face potential investigation for fraud or criminal breach of trust.[22]
References
- ^ a b c "History and Milestones". www.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ a b c d "About CDC Vouchers Scheme 2021 & 2022". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ a b c d e "400,000 HOUSEHOLDS TO BENEFIT FROM CDC VOUCHERS SCHEME" (PDF). Community Development Council. 2020-06-12. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ Lee, Clara (2025-02-20). "Commentary: Budget 2025 and the appeal of CDC vouchers over cash handouts". Institute of Policy Studies. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ a b "Nearly S$4 Billion in CDC & SG60 Vouchers Spent in Singapore". Indian Aviation College. 2026-01-03. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "All Singaporean Households to get $500 CDC Vouchers from 13 May 2025". Ministry of Finance (MOF). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "SG60 Vouchers". www.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 25 January 2026.
- ^ "RedeemSG". Government Technology Agency of Singapore (GovTech Singapore). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "More than 75 per cent of Singaporean households claim latest tranche of CDC vouchers: Low Yen Ling". The Straits Times. 2025-05-21. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "Newsroom". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "$130m CDC voucher scheme goes paperless, to be app-based". The Straits Times. 2021-10-18. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "How to Claim & Spend CDC Vouchers". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "RedeemSG - Voucher System". redeem.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "$1.5 billion Support Package to Provide Further Relief for All Singaporean Households with more support for Lower- to Middle-Income Groups". Ministry of Finance (MOF). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "About CDC Vouchers Scheme 2024 (June)". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "All Singaporean Households to get $500 CDC Vouchers from 13 May 2025". Ministry of Finance (MOF). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "About CDC Vouchers Scheme 2026 (January)". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "CDC SMS links, scam or not?". Government Technology Agency of Singapore (GovTech Singapore). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "Police warn of scams involving fake websites, infographics on government payouts". CNA. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "Scam CDC voucher redemption links circulating, police report filed". mothership.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "Terms & Conditions for Residents". vouchers.cdc.gov.sg. Retrieved 2026-01-04.
- ^ "CDC and SG60 vouchers listed on e-commerce platforms will be taken down: CDCs". The Straits Times. 2025-08-07. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 2026-01-04.