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Singapore added 55K jobs in 2025, but nearly 80% of those went to non-residents
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YOGANEETHA SIVAKUMAR
- 05 MAY 2026
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Singapore’s labour market has continued to expand, but locals aren’t driving most of the growth
In Mar, Singapore’s Ministry of Manpower (MOM) released its quarterly Labour Market report, highlighting job trends in the city-state, including employment growth and workforce composition.Since the fourth quarter of 2021, the labour market has continued to expand, and for the full year of 2025, total employment grew by 55,500, up from 44,500 in 2024.
However, of these 55,500 jobs, 79% (or 43,900) went to non-residents, while just 11,600 were taken up by residents (citizens and permanent residents).
This works out to roughly a four-to-one ratio—meaning that for every new job secured by a resident last year, about four went to a foreign worker.
Where the jobs went
A closer look at the data reveals that resident job growth is not only smaller in scale, but also more narrowly concentrated.ADVERTISEMENT
In 2025, most gains among residents were clustered in higher-skilled sectors such as financial services and health and social services.Non-resident employment, on the other hand, was driven largely by sectors with more labour-intensive demands. Construction stood out as a key industry, continuing its reliance on foreign manpower to support infrastructure and building projects.
In the fourth quarter of 2025, both resident and non-resident employment rose in administrative & support services and retail trade, largely driven by seasonal hiring for events and the year-end holiday period.
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Not a one-off trend
2025 was not an outlier. This year’s figures are simply the latest in a pattern that has played out consistently over the past few years.| Year | Total Employment Growth | Resident | Non-resident |
| 2023 | +88,400 | +4,900 | +83,500 |
| 2024 | +44,500 | +8,800 | +35,700 |
| 2025 | +55,500 | +11,600 | +43,900 |
In each of the past three years, non-resident employment growth has significantly outpaced resident growth. In 2023, a strong year for total employment growth, residents accounted for less than 6% of all new jobs.
Even in 2025, a year that saw a notable increase in resident employment, non-residents still accounted for close to four in five of all new jobs created.