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Insolvency Lawyers Singapore 2026: SIP 2.0 Rules, Creditor Rights & Court Powers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 day ago

Singapore’s insolvency lawyers face an inflection point: the revamped Simplified Insolvency Programme (“SIP 2. 0”), announced by the Ministry of Law on 28 January 2026 and effective from 29 January 2026, has reshaped the compliance landscape for distressed companies, their creditors and every insolvency practitioner advising them. Built on the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018 (“IRDA”) and operationalised through the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution (Simplified Debt Restructuring) (Amendment) Regulations 2026 published on 22 January 2026, SIP 2. 0 replaces the pandemic‑era programme introduced in January 2021 with a permanent, dual‑track framework: the Simplified Debt Restructuring Programme (“SDRP”) for viable businesses and the Simplified Winding Up Programme (“SWUP”) for companies that should be wound down.

For directors, creditors and practitioners alike, the central question is no longer whether these rules apply, it is which pathway to choose, and how quickly to act.

 

Key takeaways at a glance:

  • Effective date. SIP 2.0 commenced on 29 January 2026, replacing the 2021 Simplified Insolvency Programme.
  • Two streams. Eligible micro and small companies enter either the SDRP (restructure debts) or the SWUP (simplified winding up).
  • Director action required. Pass the requisite board resolution, assess viability and lodge forms within statutory timelines.
  • Creditor remedies preserved. Secured creditors retain enforcement rights; unsecured creditors may object, vote or petition for court-ordered winding up.

Whether you are a director weighing a rescue attempt, a creditor deciding whether to enforce security or negotiate, or an insolvency practitioner preparing for appointment, this guide, authored for insolvency lawyers in Singapore and their clients, sets out the rules, checklists and tactical playbooks you need.

What Is SIP 2.0? Scope, SDRP & SWUP Explained

SIP 2.0 is the permanent iteration of Singapore’s Simplified Insolvency Programme, a framework designed to give micro and small companies faster, lower‑cost access to formal insolvency processes. The Ministry of Law announced on 28 January 2026 that SIP 2.0 would commence the following day, replacing the original SIP that had been introduced in January 2021 as a temporary, pandemic‑era measure. The policy intent is clear: reward early engagement and realistic viability assessments while protecting creditor interests through clearer procedural rules.

SIP 2.0 offers eligible small businesses a simpler, faster and lower‑cost process when facing financial difficulties. Entry into the Simplified Insolvency Programme now turns, generally, on the passing of the requisite resolution authorising the company’s entry into either of two distinct streams. Industry observers expect this resolution‑based gateway to reduce disputes about eligibility at the threshold stage, channelling energy instead into the substantive restructuring or winding‑up process.

SDRP, Simplified Debt Restructuring Programme

The SDRP is aimed at businesses that are still viable but need help restructuring their debts so that they can recover and continue operating. A company entering the SDRP will prepare a debt restructuring proposal for its creditors, supported by the appointment of a restructuring adviser. The process is designed to be faster and less expensive than a full scheme of arrangement or judicial management under the IRDA.

Key features of the SDRP include:

  • Proposal preparation. The company, with professional guidance, prepares a simplified debt restructuring proposal setting out the terms on which it proposes to restructure its obligations.
  • Creditor voting. Creditors vote on the proposal under specified thresholds set out in the Insolvency (Amendment) Regulations 2026. The thresholds are designed to balance speed with genuine creditor consent.
  • Limited court involvement. The court’s role is focused on approval, modification or rejection of contested outcomes, not on day‑to‑day supervision of the restructuring.
  • Contract protections. Protections under the IRDA, including ipso facto provisions (Section 440), aim to preserve the status quo of the distressed company’s contracts during restructuring.

SWUP, Simplified Winding Up Programme

Where a company is not viable, the SWUP provides a streamlined pathway for winding up. Instead of pursuing a full court‑ordered winding up, with its attendant costs and lengthy timetable, the SWUP permits eligible companies to be wound up in a simplified manner with the appointment of a trustee to realise and distribute assets.

Key features of the SWUP include:

  • Trustee appointment. A licensed insolvency practitioner is appointed as trustee to manage realisation and distribution.
  • Reduced procedural burden. Reporting, advertising and court attendance requirements are scaled back compared with conventional winding up.
  • Distributions. Assets are realised and distributed to creditors according to statutory priorities, but through an accelerated process.

A company may enter into the SDRP or SWUP under SIP 2.0 even if it did not complete the simplified debt restructuring or simplified winding up programme under the previous 2021 SIP.

SIP 2.0 vs SIP 1.0 vs Formal IRDA Processes, How Do Insolvency Lawyers Singapore‑Wide Choose?

Choosing the right pathway is the first strategic decision any insolvency lawyer in Singapore must help a client make. The following comparison table maps the principal differences between SIP 1.0 (the 2021 programme now replaced), SIP 2.0 (effective 29 January 2026) and the full‑form IRDA processes (judicial management, schemes of arrangement and court‑ordered winding up).

Feature SIP 1.0 (2021) SIP 2.0 (2026) Formal IRDA Processes
Legal basis Temporary provisions under IRDA / COVID‑19 measures Permanent provisions under IRDA, operationalised by IRD (Amendment) Regulations 2026 Parts 5–10 of the IRDA 2018
Eligible entities Micro / small companies (2021 eligibility test) Micro / small companies with broader, clearer eligibility criteria and distinct SDRP / SWUP streams Any company (no size cap)
Entry trigger Application to Official Receiver Passing of requisite resolution by the company authorising entry Court application (JM, scheme) or petition (winding up)
Court involvement Minimal Limited, approval, objection and modification functions Extensive, court supervision throughout
Creditor voting / consent Simplified thresholds Specified thresholds with clearer creditor protections Full statutory voting requirements (e.g. 75% in value for schemes)
Effect on contracts Temporary, limited protections Strengthened protections under IRDA amendments (including ipso facto, s.440) Full statutory moratorium / ipso facto regime
Time and cost Faster and cheaper than formal processes Designed to be faster and lower‑cost than both SIP 1.0 and formal IRDA processes Longer timelines and higher professional fees
Practitioner role Restructuring adviser / liquidator Restructuring adviser (SDRP) or trustee (SWUP), licensed insolvency practitioner Judicial manager, scheme manager, liquidator

The likely practical effect is that SIP 2.0 will become the default pathway for eligible micro and small companies in financial distress, reserving full IRDA processes for larger or more complex cases. For companies and directors, SIP 2.0 rewards early engagement and realistic assessment of viability, a company that delays and misses the eligibility window may face the more expensive and protracted formal process. For creditors, the comparison highlights a critical tactical point: the streamlined nature of SIP 2.0 means creditor objection windows are tighter, and enforcement decisions must be made promptly.

Eligibility and Entry Steps, Company, Director & Practitioner Checklists

Entry into SIP 2.0 is designed to be straightforward, but each stakeholder has distinct obligations. The eligibility criteria target micro and small companies, the precise thresholds are set out in the MinLaw operational guidance and Insolvency Office FAQs. The following seven‑step checklist covers the core compliance pathway:

  1. Viability assessment. Directors must honestly assess whether the company is viable (pointing to SDRP) or should be wound up (pointing to SWUP). Obtain professional financial and legal advice at this stage.
  2. Board resolution. The board passes a resolution authorising the company’s entry into SIP 2.0, either the SDRP or the SWUP stream. Entry now turns, generally, on the passing of this requisite resolution.
  3. Creditor notification. Notify key creditors of the intended entry. Transparent engagement at this stage reduces the risk of contested proceedings later.
  4. Prepare SDRP proposal (if restructuring). Prepare the simplified debt restructuring proposal with creditor terms, supported by an appointed restructuring adviser.
  5. Appoint practitioner / trustee. Engage a licensed insolvency practitioner as restructuring adviser (SDRP) or trustee (SWUP). Ensure conflict checks and fee disclosures are completed.
  6. Lodge forms. File the required forms with the Insolvency Office within the prescribed timeline. Refer to the SIP 2.0 FAQs for the current form set.
  7. Comply with statutory timelines. Track all deadlines, for resolution passing, filing and creditor response windows, to avoid procedural default.

Director Duties and Liability Considerations

Directors of distressed Singapore companies should be aware that their duties intensify as insolvency approaches. The IRDA 2018, which is described as an omnibus Act covering corporate and personal insolvency and debt restructuring laws, imposes specific obligations on directors. Section 440 of the IRDA aims to preserve the status quo of the distressed company’s contracts while it undergoes restructuring, by preventing the termination, acceleration of a payment, or forfeiture of the term of a contract. Directors who rely on these protections must ensure that the company has validly entered the SIP 2.0 process, a failure to pass the requisite resolution or to lodge forms in time could expose directors to personal liability for insolvent trading.

Early indications suggest that directors who engage proactively, conducting a genuine viability assessment, convening the board promptly and securing insolvency practitioner guidance, are best placed to benefit from the safe‑harbour protections that the IRDA framework offers.

Creditor Rights, Remedies & Tactical Options Under IRD (Amendment) Regulations 2026

SIP 2.0 is designed to balance debtor relief with creditor protection. The Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution (Simplified Debt Restructuring) (Amendment) Regulations 2026, published on 22 January 2026 via Singapore Statutes Online, set out the procedural rules that govern creditor remedies in Singapore under the new framework. Insolvency lawyers in Singapore advising creditors must map out a tactical response plan from the moment a statutory demand is received, or, indeed, from the moment a debtor company signals distress.

The principal creditor remedies available under and alongside the 2026 amendments include:

  • Enforcement of security. Secured creditors retain the right to enforce their security interests, subject to any moratorium or court order. Where the debtor enters the SDRP, secured creditors should assess whether their security is adequately protected and, if necessary, apply for relief from any stay.
  • Objection to SIP proposals. Creditors may object to SDRP proposals within the prescribed window set out in the 2026 Regulations. Objections should be evidence‑based, setting out the grounds on which the proposal is unfair or commercially unreasonable.
  • Petition for winding up. Where a company is clearly insolvent and no viable restructuring is proposed, creditors may petition for court-ordered winding up under the IRDA, a remedy that remains available alongside (and outside of) SIP 2.0.
  • Urgent injunctions and interim relief. Creditors who face prejudice from a company’s entry into SIP 2.0, for example, where there is evidence of asset dissipation, should consider urgent applications to the court for interim relief or directions.
  • Cross‑class negotiation. In complex cases, creditors may use the SIP 2.0 proposal process as a platform for cross‑class negotiation, seeking to improve terms for their particular class before the vote.

Secured vs Unsecured Creditor Treatment Under SDRP / SWUP

The distinction between secured and unsecured creditors remains critical under SIP 2.0. Secured creditors are, in principle, entitled to enforce their security outside the SIP framework, though this right may be subject to temporary stays where the court considers it just. Unsecured creditors participate in the proposal voting process and, in a SWUP, receive distributions according to statutory priorities after secured claims and preferential debts are satisfied. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be that secured creditors will negotiate bilaterally with the company while the SIP process handles unsecured claims, a dynamic that insolvency lawyers in Singapore should manage carefully to avoid prejudice to either class.

Practical Checklist for Creditors: Preserve, Petition, Vote

  1. Preserve security. Review all security documents and ensure registrations are up to date. Where security is at risk, take enforcement steps immediately.
  2. Respond to statutory demands. Act within the prescribed timeline. A failure to respond may be treated as an admission.
  3. Evaluate the SIP proposal. Obtain independent valuation advice. Compare the proposed return to what a court-ordered winding up would yield.
  4. Vote or object. Exercise voting rights within the creditor meeting timeline. File formal objections where the proposal is commercially inadequate.
  5. Consider petitioning. If the SIP process is abused or the company is clearly non‑viable, petition for winding up under the IRDA.
  6. Apply for interim relief. Where assets are being dissipated or the process is being used to delay legitimate enforcement, make urgent applications to the court.

Court Powers, Urgent Deadlines & Procedural Traps Under SIP 2.0

The court’s role under SIP 2.0 is deliberately limited but strategically important. The 2026 Regulations and the operational guidance from the Insolvency Office define when the court may intervene, what powers it may exercise and the deadlines by which parties must act. Understanding these procedural touchpoints is essential for every insolvency practitioner and creditor in Singapore.

Key court powers and procedural rules include:

  • Approval and modification. The court may approve, modify or reject SIP outcomes, both SDRP proposals and SWUP distributions, where an objection has been filed or where the court considers it just to intervene.
  • Stay of enforcement. In specified circumstances, the court may stay enforcement actions by creditors to allow the SIP process to run its course. The early indications are that courts will exercise this power sparingly, requiring evidence that the stay is necessary to preserve value for creditors as a whole.
  • Expedited dispute resolution. SIP 2.0 is designed for speed. The likely practical effect is that contested matters will be heard on an expedited basis, with shorter hearing windows and stricter timelines for evidence filing.
  • Removal and replacement of practitioners. The court retains the power to remove and replace appointed practitioners where there are grounds of conflict, incompetence or misconduct.

Legislative Timeline: Key Dates for Insolvency Lawyers Singapore Must Track

Date Event Practical Effect
22 January 2026 Insolvency, Restructuring & Dissolution (Amendment) Regulations 2026 published (SSO) Sets procedural rules for SDRP / SWUP; statutory references for creditor protections become operative.
29 January 2026 SIP 2.0 commencement (MinLaw announcement) SOPs and IO FAQs become operational, companies may enter SIP 2.0 streams from this date.
January–February 2026 Firm alerts and practitioner guidance published Practitioners must reconcile official guidance with firm practice notes and update standard operating procedures.

The most common procedural trap is delay. Directors who miss the resolution‑passing deadline, creditors who fail to file objections within the prescribed window, and practitioners who do not lodge forms on time all risk being shut out of the process or having their rights curtailed. The recommended practice is to build a 7/30/90‑day action plan from the date distress is identified, or, for creditors, from the date notice of SIP entry is received.

Practical Playbook for Insolvency Practitioners: Forms, Filings & Trustee Duties

Insolvency practitioner guidance under SIP 2.0 centres on the practitioner’s dual role: facilitating the process for the company while protecting creditor interests. The following playbook, drawn from the Insolvency Office SIP 2.0 FAQs and the 2026 Regulations, sets out the core obligations.

 

Filing and notification checklist:

  1. Accept appointment. Confirm eligibility to act (licensed insolvency practitioner) and complete conflict‑of‑interest checks before accepting appointment as restructuring adviser (SDRP) or trustee (SWUP).
  2. Lodge prescribed forms. File the required forms with the Insolvency Office within the statutory timeline. Refer to the current SIP 2.0 form set published on the IO website.
  3. Notify creditors. Issue statutory notifications to all known creditors within the prescribed period, setting out the nature of the SIP process and creditor rights.
  4. Prepare statutory reports. Under the SWUP, the trustee must prepare and file reports on asset realisations and proposed distributions. Under the SDRP, the restructuring adviser must report on the viability assessment and the terms of the proposal.
  5. Fee disclosure. Disclose all fees and costs upfront. The simplified nature of SIP 2.0 is intended to reduce professional fees compared with formal IRDA processes, practitioners should benchmark their fee proposals accordingly.
  6. Monitor compliance. Track all statutory deadlines and ensure the company complies with its obligations under the SIP framework. Report material non‑compliance to the Insolvency Office promptly.

Red flags practitioners should watch for:

  • Evidence of asset dissipation or transfer at undervalue before or during the SIP process.
  • Director conduct suggesting dishonesty or an intent to misuse the SIP framework to delay legitimate creditor enforcement.
  • Incomplete or misleading financial records provided by the company.
  • Failure by the company to pass the requisite resolution or to meet eligibility criteria.

Interaction With Cross‑Border Insolvency & Asset Tracing

For companies with cross‑border assets or creditors, SIP 2.0 operates within the broader framework of the IRDA 2018, which contains provisions for cross‑border recognition and cooperation. Practitioners advising on SIP 2.0 matters should assess whether foreign proceedings are pending or likely, whether assets located abroad require protective measures, and whether recognition under the UNCITRAL Model Law (as adopted in Singapore) is necessary or available. Cross-border recognition and asset recovery strategies should be planned in parallel with the domestic SIP process.

Quick‑Reference Timelines & Sample Resolution Wording

The following templates and timelines are provided as practical starting points. They should be adapted to the specific circumstances of each case and reviewed by qualified insolvency lawyers in Singapore before use.

 

Sample board resolution, authorising SIP 2.0 entry:

“RESOLVED that the Company, being eligible under the Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP 2.0) and the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018, be and is hereby authorised to enter the [Simplified Debt Restructuring Programme / Simplified Winding Up Programme], and that the directors be authorised to take all steps necessary to give effect to this resolution, including the appointment of [name of licensed insolvency practitioner] as [restructuring adviser / trustee] and the lodging of all prescribed forms with the Insolvency Office.”

 

Sample creditor notice, SIP 2.0 entry:

“NOTICE is hereby given that [Company Name] has, by resolution of its board of directors dated [date], resolved to enter the [SDRP / SWUP] under the Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP 2.0). Creditors are invited to [submit claims / review the proposal / attend the creditors’ meeting] in accordance with the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution (Amendment) Regulations 2026. The prescribed forms and further information are available from the Insolvency Office.”

 

30 / 60 / 90‑day action plan:

Timeframe Directors Creditors Practitioners
Days 1–30 Conduct viability assessment; pass board resolution; appoint practitioner; lodge forms Review notice; preserve security; obtain independent valuation; assess proposal Accept appointment; conflict check; lodge forms; notify creditors
Days 31–60 Cooperate with practitioner; prepare / support SDRP proposal; provide records File objections if needed; exercise voting rights; negotiate bilaterally if secured Prepare statutory reports; facilitate creditor meeting; manage proposal process
Days 61–90 Implement restructuring terms (SDRP) or cooperate with winding up (SWUP) Monitor distributions; apply for court relief if process is abused File final reports; distribute assets (SWUP); monitor compliance (SDRP)

Conclusion

SIP 2.0 has fundamentally recalibrated the insolvency landscape for micro and small companies in Singapore. Directors must act early, conduct viability assessments, pass resolutions and engage insolvency practitioners within days of identifying distress. Creditors must be equally proactive: review security, respond to statutory demands, evaluate proposals and exercise objection rights within tight deadlines. Practitioners must ensure rigorous conflict checks, timely filings and transparent reporting. For all parties, the cost of delay under the new framework is higher than ever. To connect with experienced insolvency lawyers in Singapore or explore the broader insolvency practice area, use the directory and consultation tools available through Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Imran Rahim, PBM at Gateway Law Corporation, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

 

Sources

  1. Ministry of Law, Launch of the Revamped Simplified Insolvency Programme
  2. Ministry of Law, Insolvency Office SIP 2.0 FAQs (PDF)
  3. Singapore Statutes Online, Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution (Simplified Debt Restructuring) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
  4. Credit Counselling Singapore, Simplified Insolvency Programme
  5. Dentons Rodyk, Singapore’s Simplified Insolvency Programme 2.0
  6. Rajah & Tann Asia, Launch of New Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP 2.0)
  7. WongPartnership, From Crisis to Code: SIP 2.0
  8. Drew & Napier, Singapore’s Simplified Insolvency Programme 2.0 (PDF)
  9. OSIR, Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act (IRDA) Overview

FAQs

What is the Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP 2.0) and who is eligible?
SIP 2.0 commenced on 29 January 2026 and provides two streams, the SDRP and the SWUP, for eligible micro and small companies facing financial difficulties. Eligibility criteria and process steps are set out in the MinLaw operational guidance and the Insolvency Office SIP 2.0 FAQs.
SIP 2.0 is a permanent programme (replacing the temporary 2021 SIP) with clearer SDRP and SWUP streams, tighter creditor protections and streamlined court touchpoints. Formal IRDA processes, such as judicial management and schemes of arrangement, remain available for larger or more complex cases.
Creditors may preserve and enforce security, object to SIP proposals within prescribed timelines, petition for court-ordered winding up, or seek urgent interim relief. Procedures and deadlines are set out in the Insolvency (Amendment) Regulations 2026.
Courts may approve, modify or reject SIP outcomes, stay enforcement actions in specified circumstances, expedite hearings on disputed matters, and remove or replace appointed practitioners where grounds exist.
Directors should conduct a viability assessment, convene the board, obtain legal and financial advice from qualified insolvency lawyers in Singapore, notify key creditors, and decide whether to pursue SIP 2.0 entry or a formal IRDA process.
File a formal objection within the prescribed window set out in the 2026 Regulations. Consider urgent applications to preserve security or seek court directions. The Insolvency Office FAQs provide operational guidance on the objection process.

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Insolvency Lawyers Singapore 2026: SIP 2.0 Rules, Creditor Rights & Court Powers

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