Between 2023 and 2030, McKinsey projects an intergenerational transfer of about US$5.8 trillion across Asia‑Pacific families. Ultra‑high‑net‑worth households are expected to control roughly 60% of that sum. This looming transfer is changing where wealthy families place governance, custody and capital‑management functions. The scale of the transfer feeds direct demand for bespoke solutions. Families want discretionary trusts, onshore holding companies and single‑family offices that can equalise inheritances and preserve operating assets. They also want contract‑based liquidity that avoids forced sales. These needs favour jurisdictions with deep trustee services, robust insurers and clear legal rules.
Singapore meets those needs at scale. By end‑2024 the city‑state hosted more than 2,000 single‑family offices and catered to over 4,500 UHNW individuals. Local wealth managers reported double‑digit growth in family‑office mandates between 2021 and 2024. Singapore’s household financial assets exceeded S$1.8 trillion by 2024, supporting a dense domestic market for private banking and bespoke fiduciary services. Regulatory clarity has lowered friction. MAS introduced streamlined licensing pathways for family offices and managers. Singapore now has more than 30 life insurers offering high‑net‑worth product suites, and several global reinsurers maintain major regional hubs there. The Variable Capital Company (VCC) regime has enabled over 1,200 VCC registrations by mid‑2025, giving families efficient onshore pooling and redomiciliation options.
Insurance‑anchored solutions are central to the proposition. Cash‑value life policies provide enforceable, contract‑based liquidity. Policy loans and structured premium financing let families fund equalisation, buy‑outs and co‑investments without selling core businesses. Reinsurance capacity in Singapore supports large, long‑dated wrappers and bespoke mortality or longevity risk transfers. The numerical rise in onshore structures is not arbitrary. Asset‑price appreciation and wealth accumulation since 2009 created larger estates. Higher private‑market allocations and regional IPO activity materially increased investible balances. Rising intra‑regional trade and capital flows helped, too. In Q2 2025, the Asia‑Pacific absorbed US$31.2 billion in portfolio investment, a 15% year‑on‑year rise. H1 2025 mergers and acquisitions (M&A) into the region reached US$15.3 billion, up 118% year‑on‑year. Such flows increase the operational need for regional treasury, custody and fiduciary hubs.
Service density shortens execution time. A concentrated supply of trust lawyers, tax specialists, actuaries and private‑bank relationship managers reduces legal and operational uncertainty. That lowers the effective cost of implementing complex estate and investment structures. The behavioural effect is self‑reinforcing: more families locate there because other families and advisers already have established operations. Confidentiality and legal protections matter. Section 47 of the Banking Act makes unauthorised customer disclosure a criminal offence. That legal shield, combined with strong contract law and an extensive network of double‑tax treaties, enhances predictability for cross‑border settlements. At the same time, families must document genuine substance: local directors, offices, trustees and documented decision‑making to withstand foreign tax scrutiny.
Financial consultants must adapt their playbook. They should emphasise demonstrable economic purpose, choose licensed intermediaries and design Measurement, Reporting and Verification (MRV) ‑ready structures for Common Reporting Standards (CRS) and the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). They must also price in insurance‑counterparty risk and potential cross‑border tax challenges. Conservative structuring and transparent governance reduce the risk of reclassification and protect reputations.
The data point to a structural shift rather than a momentary fad. The US$5.8 trillion projection and the rapid growth in single‑family offices reflect both demographic inevitability and a purposeful industry response. Singapore’s combined legal clarity, product depth and service concentration explain why many families and their advisers converge there.
Singapore
adheres to Warren Edward Buffett’s maxim, “The first rule of investing is don’t lose
money. The second rule is don’t forget
the first rule.”




