To help new parents spend more time with their babies, the Government is giving them additional weeks of parental leave to be shared between both parents.
The new Shared Parental Leave will be 10 weeks from April 2026 and paid for by the Government.
The move was announced by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong at the National Day Rally (NDR) on Sunday (18 Aug).
He noted that many parents “would like to spend even more time with their children, especially when they are infants”, with some asking for more parental leave.
However, employers and businesses are concerned about manpower issues when their employees are gone for a long time.
Currently, fathers have four weeks’ paternity leave and mothers have 16 weeks’ maternity leave.
Husbands may also share up to four weeks of their wife’s maternity leave — meaning she would have less.
However, “that is not so ideal”, Mr Wong said.
Having studied the matter carefully, he added:
I think we can further enhance our leave schemes.
Thus, the Government will provide parents with additional weeks of shared leave, on top of the paternity/maternity leave they now have.
It will be rolled out in two steps to allow employers some time to adjust to it.
For babies born from 1 April 2025, parents will get six extra weeks. Parents of babies born from 1 April 2026 will get 10 extra weeks.
That adds up to a total of 30 weeks, or about 7.5 months of paid leave for parents.
“The additional 10 weeks will be paid for by the Government,” Mr Wong said, adding that the Shared Parental Leave may be taken by either fathers or mothers.
On 1 Jan this year, Government-paid paternity leave was doubled to four weeks, Mr Wong noted.
However, employers were left to offer the additional two weeks on a voluntary basis.
From 1 April 2025, this will be mandatory — meaning “if fathers apply for leave, employers must agree”, Mr Wong said.
This comes after he noted that almost half of Singapore’s fathers do not take their paternity leave.
Mr Wong also acknowledged that married couples with children who would like bigger families may worry about the additional costs.
To that, he said understood the concerns, so a “new scheme for large families” will be introduced.
This initiative will provide more support for those thinking about having a third child and more help to parents who have three or more young children.
As the details are still being worked out, the PM hoped to share more details next year during the Budget.
Mr Wong hoped the moves would “go some way” into reassuring young couples to “embrace (their) marriage and parenthood journey”.
The Government wants to create a more family-friendly environment in Singapore, hopefully motivating more Singaporeans to translate their aspirations of marriage and children into reality, he said, adding:
We are building a Singapore made for families; and we will help you keep a good balance between your working and parenting responsibilities.
Also read: More babies this year? We have a long, long way to go
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Featured image adapted from Omar Lopez on Unsplash.
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