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Certificate of Entitlement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the certificate of entitlement as a proof of right of abode in the UK, seeRight of abode in the United Kingdom § Proof of the right of abode.
Document entitling a person to own a motorised vehicle in Singapore

TheCertificate of Entitlement (COE) are classes of categories as part of a quota license for owning a vehicle inSingapore.[1] The licence is obtained from a successful winning bid in anopen bid uniform price auction which grants the legal right of the holder to register, own and use a vehicle in Singapore for an initial period of 10 years. When demand is high, the cost of a COE can exceed the value of the car itself.[2] The COE system was implemented in 1990 to regulate the number of vehicles on the road and control traffic congestion, especially in a land-constrained country such as Singapore.

History

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See also:Carfree city,Car dependency,Car-free movement, andTransit-oriented development

On 1 May 1990, the previous transportation unit ofSingapore's Public Works Department (PWD) instituted a quota limit to vehicles called the COE, as rising affluence in the country catapulted land transport network usage and previous measure to curb vehicle ownership by simply increasing road taxes was ineffective in controlling vehicle population growth.[3]

The premise was that the country had limited land resources, ie. limited supply of roads and car parks / parking lots, (with scarce land being managed to have a greater emphasis on providing an adequate supply of homes), along with demand for vehicle ownership spiralling out of control, would result in traffic conditions exceeding the criterion of a healthy road network that is sustainable by developments in land transport infrastructure resulting in gridlock.

Along with acongestion tax called theElectronic Road Pricing (ERP), the COE system is one of many key pillars in Singapore's traffic management strategies that aims to provide a sustainable urban quality of life.[4][5] In place of the COE and the ERP, the government has encouraged its citizens and tourists alike to take advantage of the extensive public transportation network to get around the country instead, such as theMass Rapid Transit (MRT),Light Rail Transit (LRT) orpublic buses, and to embrace a "car-lite society".[6]

System

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Before buying a new vehicle, potential vehicle owners in Singapore are required by theLand Transport Authority (LTA) to first place a monetary bid for a Certificate of Entitlement (COE). The number of available COEs is governed by a quota system called the Vehicle Quota System (VQS) and is announced by LTA in April of each year with a review in October for possible adjustments for the period of one year starting from May. Approximately one-twelfth of the yearly quota is auctioned off each month in a sealed-bid, uniform price auction system and successful bidders pay the lowest winning bid.

Vehicle Quota System (VQS)

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The number of COEs available to the public is regulated by the Vehicle Quota System (VQS) that is calculated every 6 months based on the following conditions:[7]

  1. Actual number of vehicles taken off the roads (i.e. number of vehicles de-registered)
  2. Allowable growth in vehicle population
  3. Adjustments arising from temporary COEs that have expired or were cancelled.

Formula

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Since the change in the total motor vehicle population is given by the number of registrations minus the number of de-registrations and any unallocated quota in a given year may be carried over to the following year, the quota formula is as follows:[8]

(Total COE Quota)qy=g.(Motor vehicle population)y1+(Projected de-registrations)y+(Unallocated quota)qy1{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}({\text{Total COE Quota}})_{qy}=&g.({\text{Motor vehicle population}})_{y-1}\\&+({\text{Projected de-registrations}})_{y}\\&+({\text{Unallocated quota}})_{qy-1}\end{aligned}}}

In the formula above, the subscripty{\displaystyle y} denotes calendar year and the subscriptqy{\displaystyle qy} denotes quota year (May to April). Initially, projected de-registrations for (calendar) yeary{\displaystyle y} were simply taken to be equal to actual de-registrations iny1{\displaystyle y-1} but from quota year 1999–2000 onwards, a projected number of de-registrations has been used.

Each year, the quota is set to allow for a targetedg{\displaystyle g} percent growth in the total motor vehicle population, plus additional quota licenses to cover the number of motor vehicles that will be deregistered during the (calendar) year, plus any unallocated quota licenses from the previous quota year.

Validity

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The holder of a COE is allowed to own a vehicle for an initial period of 10 years, after which they must scrap or export their vehicle or bid for another COE at the prevailing rate if they wish to continue using their vehicle for an intended remaining lifespan.

At the end of the 10-year COE period, vehicle owners may choose to deregister their vehicle or to revalidate their COEs for another 5-year or 10-year period by paying the Prevailing Quota Premium, which is the three-month moving average of the Quota Premium for the respective vehicle category. You do not need to bid for a new COE to renew the existing COE of your vehicle. A 5-year COE cannot be further renewed, which means that at the end of a 5-year COE, the vehicle will have to be de-registered and either scrapped or exported to another country other than Singapore.

Depending on the value of the COE at the time of renewal vehicle owners are subjected to a somewhat emotional dilemma of whether to pay for a new COE which can amount to more than the market value of the vehicle or to deregister their vehicle. The emotional dilemma is certainly enhanced when the vehicle owner is forced to deregister and scrap an otherwise road worthy vehicle due to lack of time or insufficient funds to afford the COE at the prevailing rate.

For comparison in terms of vehicle value to COE value a Second Hand 2007 Mercedes-Benz C200K with a COE expiring in 2017 was advertised at S$86,800. As of November 2013 for a category B Car with a displacement above 1600cc the COE is priced at S$84,578.

Auction process

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COE biddings starts on the first and third Monday of the month and typically lasts for three days to the following Wednesday. Bidding duration will be pushed further in some circumstances, including public holidays. Bidding results can be obtained through the local media on the same day or on a website.[9]

All COE bids made in the two car categories (Cat A and B COEs) and the motorcycle category (Cat D COEs) must be made in the name of the buyer. Once COE is obtained, the vehicle has to be registered in the name of the bidder, i.e. Cat A, B and D COEs are non-transferable. To provide flexibility, successful COE bids in the Cat C (Goods vehicles and Buses) and Cat E (Open Category) in the name of the individuals are transferable. However these can only be transferred once within the first 3 months, while successful bids by companies are not transferable at all.

An additional restriction on car ownership is the requirement that motor vehicles more than ten years old, known as "time expired" vehicles, must either renew the COE for another 5 or 10 years or de-register the vehicle for scrapping or exporting from Singapore, usually to neighbouring countries inASEAN. COEs renewed for 10 years are renewable indefinitely, but for vehicles which have a renewed COE of only 5 years, the owner of the vehicle has to scrap the vehicle at the end of the period with no option to renew the COE, totaling a car ownership of 15 years.

Some of these vehicles, especially luxury ones, have been exported further to otherright hand drive countries such asAustralia andNew Zealand, which has traditionally imported such vehicles from Japan. The result of the peculiarities of the Singapore car market has resulted in Singapore being the second largest exporter of used cars in the world after Japan. Cars are exported to many countries, including beyond Asia such asKenya andSouth Africa in Africa as well asJamaica andTrinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean. As these cars are often only about ten years old, they are often in high demand as they remain in relatively good condition.[10][11]

Owners of such vehicles are given financial incentives to do this, which include aPreferential Additional Registration Fee (PARF). This program was implemented to reducetraffic congestion and it complements other measures to curb road usage such as theElectronic Road Pricing (ERP) program.

COE Category Refinement in 2013

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In September 2013, The COE system has been refined to include a new criterion for Category A cars. Under the change, the engine power of Cat A cars should not exceed 97 kilowatts (kW). This is equivalent to about 130 brake horsepower. This is in addition to the previous criterion of engine capacity of Cat A cars not exceeding 1600 cubic centimetres. However, cars with engine power output exceeding 97 kW (130 hp) will be classified under Category B in COE bidding exercises starting February 2014 despite having engine capacity below 1600 cubic centimetres. The review of the COE categories' criteria was because LTA wanted to differentiate and regulate the buying of mass market and premium cars under Cat A in a bid to control COE prices that hovered closer and closer to S$100,000.[12]

Categories of COE

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Initially, COEs were divided into eight categories but after many revisions, the system has been simplified to five categories.Categories A, B & D are non-transferable. Taxis used to be classed under category A but issuance of COEs became unrestricted from August 2012 onwards.[13]

Prior to May 1999

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CategoryVehicle Class
Cat 1Cars 1000cc & below
Cat 2Cars 1001-1600cc & Taxis
Cat 3Cars 1601-2000cc
Cat 4Cars above 2000cc
Cat 5Goods Vehicles & Buses
Cat 6Motorcycles
Cat 7"Open" (for any kind of vehicle)

Current Categories

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CategoryVehicle Class
Before May 2022From May 2022
Cat ACars 1600cc & below, and the engine power output should not exceed 97 kW (130 bhp)Non-fully electric cars 1,600cc & below, and maximum power output up to 97 kW (130 bhp); and fully electric cars with maximum power output up to 110 kW (147 bhp)
Cat BCars above 1600cc, or the engine power output exceeds 97 kW (130 bhp)Non-fully electric cars above 1,600cc, or maximum power output exceeds 97 kW (130 bhp); and fully electric cars with maximum power output above 110 kW (147 bhp)
Cat CGoods Vehicles & Buses (including public transport buses)
Cat DMotorcycles
Cat E"Open" (for any kind of vehicle, in 2017 motorcycles are no longer included in Cat E COE)

Historical records

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Car growth rate

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Period%Remark
May 1990 to May 20093.03.0% + deregistrations as per last annum
Jun 2009 to Jun 20101.5Reduced to 1.5% + deregistrations as per last annum, partly due to low price COE
Jul 2010 to Jul 20121.5% as per last annum + recent half-yearly deregistrations, rate are extended to July
Aug 2012 to Jan 20131.0Taxi are moved to Cat E
Feb 2013 to Jan 20140.5Reduced to 0.5% and expected to last till Jan 2015
Feb 2014 to Jan 2015Change to recent quarterly deregistrations
Feb 2015 to Jan 20180.25Reduced to 0.25%
Since Feb 20180.0COE growth rate frozen for personal cars and motorbikes only.[14][15]

COE range

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Previous CategoryHighestLowest1Current CategoryHighestLowestRemarks
May 1990 – Apr 1999SGDPeriodSGDPeriodFrom May 1999SGDPeriodSGDPeriod
Cat 1 (1000 cc & below)41,008Jul 1997210Feb 1991Cat A3106,000Oct 2023[16]2Nov 2008aa. Major historical plunge partly due to theGreat Recession and over-projections of vehicle de-registrations in 2008/09
b. Major historical plunge partly due to1997 Asian financial crisis
Cat 2 (1001 – 1600 cc) & taxi102000Jul 1997909Mar 1991
Cat 3 (1601 – 2000 cc)83,500Dec 199450Jan 1998bCat B150,001Oct 2023[16]200Jan 2009a
Cat 4 (2001 cc & above)152000Dec 1994800Apr 1991
Cat 5 (Goods Vehicle & Bus)39,000Dec 19941Apr 1991Cat C91,101Mar 2023[17]1Dec 2006–
Mar 2007c
c. Partly due to strict emission standards from Oct 2006
Cat 6 (Motorcycle)3,506Aug 19971Jan 1994,
Feb 1994d
Cat D13,189Nov 2022[18]1Nov 2002–
Mar 2003d
d. Mainly due to higher quota and lower than minimum bidders
Cat 7 (Open)95,986Dec 1994998Mar 1991Cat E158,004Oct 2023[16]3,200Jan 2009
Cat 8 (Weekend Car)245,300Sep 19941,110Oct 1991OPCCOE rebate up to $17,000
1. Excluded initial quote for first 3 months (May~Jul'90). Previous lowest record due to higher quota for year 1991

2. It was stopped on Sep 1994, the scheme was replaced by the Off-Peak Car rebate

3. Taxi are moved to Cat E from Aug 2012

Reception

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In 1994, academics Winston Koh and David Lee of the National University of Singapore proposed to reform the bidding process. Instead of bidding in dollars, applicants for COEs would bid in percentage of the price of the vehicle.[4] In 2003, economist Tan Ling Hui of the International Monetary Fund reiterated the idea.[8] In 2023, with COE prices surging, the idea of percentage bidding resurfaced in the general media. Proponents of percentage bidding argued that it was more equitable than bidding in dollars.[19][20][21]

References

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  1. ^Tan, Ling Hui (2003)."Rationing Rules and Outcomes: The Experience of Singapore's Vehicle Quota System".IMF Staff Papers.50 (3):436–457.ISSN 1020-7635. Retrieved18 August 2024.
  2. ^Grant, Jeremy (4 March 2014)."Singapore overtakes Tokyo as world's most expensive city". FT.com. Retrieved7 July 2014.
  3. ^Singapore, National Library Board."Certificate of Entitlement - Infopedia".eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
  4. ^abKoh, Winston T.H.; Lee, David K.C. (1994). "The Vehicle Quota System in Singapore: An Assessment".Transportation Research A.28A (1):31–47.
  5. ^Auto, Hermes (23 March 2022)."Singapore core inflation eases in February but jump in car prices drive up overall inflation | The Straits Times".www.straitstimes.com. Retrieved1 June 2022.
  6. ^Menon, A P Gobinath (18 November 2017)."Getting Singaporeans to embrace a car-lite society".TODAY. Retrieved6 October 2023.
  7. ^"Overview of a Vehicle Quota System". Land Transport Authority of Singapore. Retrieved24 January 2013.
  8. ^abTan, Ling Hui (2003). "Rationing Rules and Outcomes: The Experience of Singapore's Vehicle Quota System".IMF Staff Papers.50 (3):437–457.
  9. ^http://www.onemotoring.com.sgArchived 6 January 2009 at theWayback Machine
  10. ^Farah Abdul Rahim (23 October 2005)."100,000 used Singapore cars expected to be exported this year". Channel NewsAsia. Archived fromthe original on 29 June 2007. Retrieved18 April 2007.
  11. ^Chakraborty, Drima (30 July 2022)."Where do our old cars go? Surprisingly to Jamaica and Kenya, found one Reddit user".AsiaOne. Retrieved18 August 2024.
  12. ^COE System to Include Engine Power for Cat A CarsArchived 19 November 2013 at theWayback Machine
  13. ^"Taxis out of COE bidding process from August".Channel News Asia. 27 July 2012. Archived fromthe original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved27 February 2013.
  14. ^"Zero growth rate for cars and motorcycles extended for 3 years until Jan 31, 2025".TODAY. Retrieved25 October 2023.
  15. ^"Zero car and motorcycle growth from February 2018".TODAY. Retrieved25 October 2023.
  16. ^abc"COE premiums for large car and Open categories hit record highs for 6th straight exercise".TODAY. Retrieved18 October 2023.
  17. ^Lee, Nian Tjoe (8 March 2023)."COE for commercial vehicles hits new high again; premiums also up for cars and motorbikes".The Straits Times.ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved1 July 2023.
  18. ^cue (29 December 2022)."COE premiums at all-time highs in 2022; buyers could get slight reprieve in latter half of 2023 | The Straits Times".www.straitstimes.com. Retrieved30 December 2022.
  19. ^"The Big Read: As premiums keep going through the roof, is it time to review the 33-year-old COE system?".TODAY. Retrieved12 June 2023.
  20. ^"Commentary: Instead of making it expensive to own a car, why not make it expensive to use instead".CNA. Retrieved12 June 2023.
  21. ^Tan, Christopher (9 June 2023)."Motor Mouth: Fixing COE anomalies requires more than tweaking supply".The Straits Times.ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved12 June 2023.

External links

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Library resources about
Certificate of Entitlement
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