30/03/2026
To address rising insurance premiums and private healthcare costs by instilling discipline in healthcare consumption, particularly for minor procedures, MOH has mandated that new IP riders sold from April 1 can no longer cover the minimum IP deductibles set by the ministry.
This means that those with the new riders have to pay at least $1,500 before insurance coverage kicks in.
In addition, the co-payment cap will be doubled from the current $3,000 to $6,000, requiring policyholders to pay a larger portion of their bills.
Medical costs are expected to continue rising in 2026 globally, with the Asia-Pacific region reporting the highest increase at 14 per cent, according to the 2026 Global Medical Trends report published in November 2025 by global advisory, broking and solutions company WTW.
According to the report, Singapore is expected to overtake Indonesia to become the Asia-Pacific market with the highest medical inflation at 16.9 per cent.
Past WTW annual reports showed that medical inflation in Singapore had been under 10 per cent until 2024, when it rose to 12.3 per cent, and further grew to 15.5 per cent in 2025.
Factors leading to higher medical inflation here include an ageing population; adoption of costly new technologies, treatments and medication; and high operating expenses driven by increasing real estate prices and salaries due to a shortage of healthcare staff.
The Global Asia Insurance Partnership (GAIP), a non-profit tripartite partnership of the insurance industry, regulators and academia, said the health protection gap in Asia – the difference between healthcare costs and financial resources available, including insurance – is now the single largest protection gap. This is compared with other gaps such as mortality and catastrophe protection gaps.
“In Singapore, the discussion is not only about medical inflation, but also about broader healthcare cost trends, including utilisation, how care is delivered, and what these mean for long-term affordability,” said Ms Min Hung Cheng, chief executive officer of GAIP.
The figure had stayed under 10 per cent until 2024. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.