If you’re 55 or older and logged into your CPF account recently, you may have noticed something missing. The Special Account is no longer there. For many members, that raised an immediate question: Where did my retirement savings go?
Here’s the thing. The change isn’t about taking benefits away. It’s about restructuring how retirement funds are managed. The CPF Special Account Rules 2026 reflect a new system that consolidates savings and keeps the focus firmly on long-term retirement income.
What Happened to the Special Account?
From 19 January 2025, the CPF Board progressively closed the Special Account for members aged 55 and above. When this happened, your savings were automatically transferred. Amounts up to the Full Retirement Sum moved into your Retirement Account. Any excess above that flowed into your Ordinary Account.
So in 2026, if you are 55 or older, you no longer maintain an active Special Account. Instead, your long-term retirement savings now sit in your Retirement Account. That’s the account that will eventually fund your monthly payouts under CPF LIFE from age 65.
Think about it this way. Instead of spreading retirement money across different buckets, the system now centralises it into one main retirement pool.
How Contributions Are Allocated Now
Under the CPF Special Account Rules 2026, contributions that would previously have gone into the Special Account are redirected.
From 1 January 2026, the portion meant for the Special Account goes fully into the Retirement Account, but only until you hit the Full Retirement Sum. Once that limit is reached, future contributions that would have gone to the Special Account are channelled into the Ordinary Account instead.
This approach prioritises building your Retirement Account first. At the same time, it gives flexibility through the Ordinary Account for housing, investments, or withdrawals subject to CPF rules.
Interest Rates Still Work in Your Favour
Many members worry that closing the Special Account might reduce interest benefits. The good news is that it does not.
The government has extended the 4 percent interest rate floor for Special, MediSave, and Retirement Account monies until 31 December 2026. That means your Retirement Account continues to earn at least 4 percent per year.
On top of that, members aged 55 and above receive extra interest. You earn an additional 2 percent on the first $30,000 of your combined CPF balances, capped at $20,000 for the Ordinary Account, plus an extra 1 percent on the next $30,000. This extra interest is credited into your Retirement Account.
In simple terms, your retirement savings are still compounding at attractive rates.
Voluntary Top-Ups Under the New Rules
With the Special Account closed, voluntary top-ups now go to your Ordinary Account, Retirement Account, and MediSave Account only.
Cash top-ups still qualify for tax relief, up to $8,000 per year for yourself and another $8,000 for loved ones, subject to the Full Retirement Sum cap. However, top-ups that qualify under the Matched Retirement Savings Scheme no longer receive tax relief.
If you have funds sitting in your Ordinary Account earning lower interest, you may consider transferring them to your Retirement Account up to the Enhanced Retirement Sum. This allows you to earn 4 percent interest and potentially increase your future CPF LIFE payouts.
What This Means for Your Retirement
For members turning 55 in 2026, the Basic Retirement Sum is $110,200, the Full Retirement Sum is $220,400, and the Enhanced Retirement Sum is $440,800. These benchmarks guide how much you can set aside for future payouts.
The CPF Special Account Rules 2026 simplify the structure. Your retirement savings are now concentrated in the Retirement Account, earning strong interest and building toward lifelong monthly income. The key is understanding where your money sits and making deliberate decisions about transfers and top-ups.