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Which court orders are not required to be submitted to CPF Board for the purpose of division of CPF assets in a divorce?


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Updated by CPF
You do not need to submit your court order to CPF Board if:
1.    Your court order only involves dividing a property where the outgoing owner will receive a full CPF refund. This applies to these property transactions (non-exhaustive):
  1. Transfer
  2. Sale
  3. Part-share sale
  4. Surrender
  5. Removal of occupier's name
  6. Cancellation of purchase
2.    The property will remain solely owned by its current owner (no change in ownership).
 
This streamlined process allows you to complete your housing transactions faster without waiting for CPF Board's response. Please refer to Annex A (PDF, 256KB) for examples of court orders that are not required to be submitted to the CPF Board.
 
The Board will not be replying to court orders that need not be submitted to us. This will enable us to focus our efforts on serving members with complex court orders that require CPF Board’s review. Affected parties may refer to our FAQs for information on housing refund rules and property matters.
 
Please note that the above process does not change the conveyancing requirements. For conveyancing transactions involving properties with CPF savings embedded, please continue to submit the relevant applications (e.g. Notice of Refund, Application form for use of CPF savings under the CPF Housing Schemes) via our Housing Business Partner Portal. See applications to be submitted for conveyancing transactions.
 
Separately, you may also wish to know the types of court orders required to be submitted to CPF Board.

This information is sourced from CPF


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