In a speech at the Singapore Real Estate Agents Conference held at the HDB Hub in Toa Payoh, Ms Indranee said the measures are meant to raise the professionalism of the real estate industry and prepare it for the future.
The other goals are to improve the quality of training for property agents, and promote a continuous learning mindset among them.
Ms Indranee said the CEA will also tighten the accreditation criteria and design requirements for training courses, and adopt a more rigorous audit framework for training providers to “ensure a consistently high level of quality”.
The new measures to raise industry standards stem from recommendations made by a workgroup that conducted a 17-month study to review and improve the training ecosystem for the real estate sector.
There are 34,427 property agents here as at Jan 1, 2023, up from 30,399 in 2021, based on CEA figures.
Mr Adam Wang, 46, president of the Singapore Estates Agent Association, said he felt agents will take the increase in training hours positively, as they will get to upskill and gain more knowledge.
He reckons property agents will be open to a further increase in training hours from 16 to 24, as there has been a shift in mindsets among agents, who want to show the public their professionalism and ability to provide valuable advice.
He added that the higher training requirements will take effect only in October 2025 to give training centres more time to prepare and revamp their course materials.