Dividends are a major draw for Singaporean investors, and REITs sit near the top of the list.
The larger trusts have just posted their latest results, and dividend investors are paying attention.
One thing trips up many income investors, though. REITs are not all the same.
The type of property a trust owns decides how steady its income is, where its growth comes from, and what tends to go wrong.
Three recent reporters show this clearly, with each one standing in for a different type.
The Healthcare REIT: Parkway Life REIT
Parkway Life REIT (SGX: C2PU), or PLife REIT, is one of Asia’s largest listed healthcare REITs. It owns 74 properties worth S$2.57 billion as at 31 March 2026, spread across three Singapore hospitals, 60 Japan nursing homes and 11 France nursing homes.
Healthcare REITs are prized for steady income. The latest quarter shows why.
Gross revenue dipped 2.1% year on year (YoY) to S$38.2 million. Net property income (NPI) eased 2.7% to S$35.8 million.
Yet distribution per unit (DPU) rose 15.1% YoY to S$0.044.
The softer top line came from a weaker Japanese yen and the exit of the Miyako Group, which affected five Japan nursing homes worth around 1.6% of FY2026 portfolio gross revenue. PLife REIT took back the five Osaka properties in January and February 2026. Security deposits of four to eight months largely covered what was owed.
The DPU jump came from the Singapore hospitals, after a three-year rent rebate ended.
This is what defines a healthcare REIT like PLife REIT: long leases with rent increases built in. Its renewed Singapore master lease runs 20.4 years, to 31 December 2042, and the annual rent review formula started in FY2026. Minimum rent rose from S$79.7 million in FY2025 to S$99.1 million in FY2026, up 24.3%. On a pro-forma basis, FY2025 DPU plus the higher FY2026 Singapore rent works out to S$0.183, against the actual FY2025 DPU of S$0.153.
The Retail and Commercial REIT: CICT
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (SGX: C38U), or CICT, is one of Singapore’s largest REITs. It owns retail, office and integrated developments across Singapore, Germany and Australia, and is sponsored by CapitaLand Investment Limited (SGX: 9CI).
A retail and commercial REIT earns from shoppers and office tenants. That ties its income to the economy in a way healthcare does not.
CICT’s quarter showed the upside of that link. Gross revenue rose 8.0% YoY to S$426.7 million. NPI rose 7.9% to S$314.4 million. The lift came from moving to full ownership of CapitaSpring on 26 August 2025 and a first contribution from Gallileo.
The operating numbers backed it up. Shopper traffic rose 3.2%, while tenant sales per square foot rose 2.2% YoY led by suburban malls. Rental reversions came in at +4.4% for retail and +6.1% for office. Committed occupancy was 95.2%, down 1.7 percentage points quarter on quarter.
CICT distributes half-yearly, so no DPU was declared this quarter.
The bigger story is portfolio reshaping, which comes with the territory for a large commercial REIT. CICT has proposed buying Paragon for an agreed S$3.9 billion, funded partly by selling Asia Square Tower 2 for S$2.48 billion, a 9.9% premium to its end-2025 valuation. Management has put pro-forma DPU accretion from the swap at 1.7%.
The Business Space and Industrial REIT: CapitaLand Ascendas REIT
CapitaLand Ascendas REIT (SGX: A17U), or CLAR, is Singapore’s oldest industrial REIT.
It owns 229 properties across business space and life sciences, industrial and data centres, and logistics, located in Singapore, the US, Australia and the UK and Europe. Total assets under management stood at S$18.6 billion as at 31 March 2026.
This is the type where the growth has been, driven by logistics and data centres. CLAR shows the reward and the cost together.
Like CICT, it reports half-yearly, so there was no revenue, NPI or DPU this quarter. Rental reversion came in at +10.6% on renewed leases, led by the US at +15.1% and Singapore at +10.5%. Management guided mid-single-digit reversion for FY2026.
CLAR has been busy. It closed about S$525 million of acquisitions in the quarter and announced another S$1.1 billion, including its first deal in Japan, a 49% stake in a Tier III hyperscale data centre in Greater Osaka.
Growth at that pace has to be paid for.
Aggregate leverage rose to 42.0% as at 31 March 2026. It should ease to around 37.3%, but only after a S$903.5 million equity fund raising completed in April 2026. More units means the same income is shared among more of them. So a strong reversion number, on its own, does not tell you what happens to your DPU.
Get Smart: Know The Type Before You Buy
Three REITs, three types, three ways of earning your income.
The healthcare REIT pays you with long leases and built-in rent increases. The retail and commercial REIT pays you off shoppers and offices, with the reshaping that a large portfolio brings. The business space and industrial REIT pays you the fastest growth, alongside the leverage and new units that fund it.
Knowing the type tells you what to expect before you read a single number. It tells you where the income holds steady, where it follows the economy, and where the growth comes with a bill attached.
For a dividend investor, that is the first thing to get right.
Imagine a life where steady income flows, no matter the market. Our new free report, “Retire Early with Dividends,” reveals how. We’ve pinpointed 5 dependable Singapore dividend stocks that offer a proven, stress-free path to financial freedom. Stop just dreaming and start building your early retirement plan today. Your free guide awaits here.
Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Telegram for the latest investing news and analyses!
Disclosure: Chin Hui Leong owns units of PLife REIT, CICT and CLAR.



