Updated 16 Apr 2026
What happens when your SSB matures (or you redeem it early)
The SSB redemption process: windows, fees, accrued interest calculation, SRS-funded redemption, and what happens to SSBs after the holder dies.
Informational only, not financial advice. Process details below are current as of Q2 2026 based on MAS technical specifications.
SSBs are unusual in that you can exit any month at face value — a feature no fixed deposit or T-bill offers. But the redemption process has specific windows, fees, and timing rules. Here’s what actually happens from “submit redemption request” through “money in your account.”
Two paths: maturity vs early redemption
Maturity (the 10-year endpoint)
After 10 years, SSBs mature automatically. On the 1st business day of the maturity month, you receive:
- Principal (full face value)
- Final coupon (the year-10 payment)
No action is required — no redemption request, no fee. Proceeds land in your linked bank account (cash-funded SSBs) or SRS account (SRS-funded).
Source: MAS “How to Redeem SSB”
Early redemption (any month after the first 6)
You can redeem any month, starting from the 7th month after issue. The redemption window follows MAS’s monthly calendar:
| Event | Timing |
|---|---|
| Window opens | 6pm on the 1st business day of the month |
| Window closes | 9pm on the 4th-last business day of the month |
| Proceeds credited | End of the 2nd business day of the following month |
The “4th-last business day” is a common point of confusion — it is not the fourth Thursday. Check the exact date on MAS before submitting.
Source: MAS SSB FAQs
The S$2 fee
Every redemption request costs S$2, non-refundable. Submitted per bond lot per request. If you redeem 3 separate bond lots, you pay S$6.
Source: MAS SSB FAQs
Accrued interest (the partial-period math)
SSBs pay coupons every 6 months. If you redeem between coupon dates, you receive pro-rated accrued interest for the partial period, plus your principal.
Worked example
Say your SSB’s coupon schedule looks like this:
- Year 1 coupon: 1.40%
- Coupons paid: 1 July and 1 January (every 6 months)
You invested S$10,000 on 1 Jan. You decide to redeem in April, 3 months into the next coupon period.
- Full 6-month coupon would have been: S$10,000 × 1.40% × 0.5 = S$70
- Accrued (3 of 6 months): S$70 × (3/6) = S$35
You receive: S$10,000 principal + S$35 accrued interest − S$2 fee = S$10,033
(Plus you keep any earlier coupon payments — the S$70 from the 1 July payout that already landed in your account.)
The MAS technical specs use actual/actual day-count convention for accrued interest — the real calculation is day-by-day, not month-by-month. The illustration above approximates.
Source: MAS SSB technical specifications
Partial redemption
You don’t have to redeem the whole bond lot. Minimum redemption is S$500, in multiples of S$500.
If you hold S$10,000 and redeem S$3,000, the remaining S$7,000 continues earning coupons as scheduled.
SRS-funded SSBs: different redemption flow
If you bought the SSB with SRS funds, redemption must be submitted through your SRS Operator (DBS, OCBC, or UOB) — not via the CDP/Internet Banking path used for cash-funded SSBs.
Proceeds return to your SRS account, not to a regular bank account. You can subsequently withdraw from SRS (with the usual tax implications) or invest the proceeds in another SRS-eligible instrument.
The S$2 fee is deducted from the SRS account.
Source: MAS SSB SRS technical specifications
Application channels for redemption
Submit redemption requests through:
- DBS/POSB digibank (cash-funded) or DBS SRS (SRS-funded)
- OCBC internet banking or OCBC Digital app (cash or SRS)
- UOB internet banking (cash or SRS)
- DBS/POSB ATMs (cash-funded only)
What if you die holding SSB?
SSBs are transferable to beneficiaries via your estate. The process:
- Executor or administrator of the estate (named in will or appointed by court) approaches CDP or the SRS Operator.
- For cash-funded SSBs held in CDP: transfer to beneficiary’s CDP account, or redeem for cash to the estate.
- For SRS-funded SSBs: handled by the SRS Operator per the deceased member’s SRS rules.
- Authorized inheritance transfers are not subject to the S$200,000 Individual Limit — so a beneficiary who already holds S$200,000 in SSB can still inherit more.
Source: Ask MAS — SSB transfer on death · Public Trustee’s Office
Common mistakes
- Submitting redemption after the 9pm deadline on the 4th-last business day. The request rolls to the next month — you get paid a month later.
- Forgetting the S$2 fee per lot. If you bought 3 separate bond lots over different months and redeem all three at once, you pay S$6 in fees, not S$2.
- Expecting instant money. Proceeds land on the 2nd business day of the next month, not the current month. Plan liquidity accordingly.
- Confusing early redemption with maturity. Both credit principal, but maturity has no S$2 fee and no redemption window — it happens automatically.
- Trying to redeem before month 7. You must hold through at least the first coupon before redemption is allowed.
- Mixing CDP and SRS lots in one redemption request. Each custody channel requires a separate request — you can’t batch them.
Quick reference
| Action | Window | Fee | Proceeds when |
|---|---|---|---|
| Redeem early | 1st biz day 6pm → 4th-last biz day 9pm | S$2 | 2nd biz day of next month |
| Hold to maturity | N/A | S$0 | 1st biz day of maturity month |
| Cash-funded redeem | Bank iBanking / ATM (DBS/POSB) | S$2 | To bank account |
| SRS-funded redeem | Through SRS Operator | S$2 (from SRS) | To SRS account |
Related reading
- How Singapore Savings Bonds work — issuance, coupons, application
- SSB vs T-bill comparison — when to hold vs redeem vs switch instruments
- SSB tracker — current SSB issues and coupon schedules