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Strategic Goods Control in Singapore: Regulation of Imports and Exports (amendment) Act 2026, Export Licences, Insurer & Logistics Obligations

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Singapore’s framework for strategic goods control received its most significant overhaul in years when the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act was published on 13 April 2026, expanding the scope of controlled items, tightening licensing triggers and strengthening enforcement powers available to Singapore Customs. For exporters, freight forwarders, insurers and in-house counsel operating in or through the city-state, the practical implications are immediate: permit workflows must be updated, commercial contracts reviewed, sanctions-screening procedures reinforced and insurance wordings scrutinised before goods move.

This practitioner guide sets out exactly what changed under the 2026 amendment, which products and transactions are now caught, how to apply for the correct strategic goods licence, and the export contract clauses, insurer notifications and logistics-provider obligations that need attention now. Whether you are a trade compliance officer mapping new licensing triggers onto your product line, a general counsel drafting export-control warranties for a cross-border sale, or a marine insurer reviewing coverage exclusions, the checklists and sample clauses below translate the statutory text into concrete, operational steps.

What Changed Under the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act 2026, Legislative Summary & Timeline

The Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act (Act 26 of 2025, published 13 April 2026) amends the parent Regulation of Imports and Exports Act to bring Singapore’s trade-control regime into closer alignment with evolving multilateral export-control frameworks and the government’s non-proliferation objectives. The amendments reinforce Singapore Customs’ position as the administering authority for strategic goods control in Singapore and introduce several mechanisms that directly affect day-to-day compliance operations.

Key Amendments at a Glance

  • Expanded scope of controlled items. The amendment broadens the categories of goods, technology and services subject to licensing requirements, including goods that may be certified under preferential tariff arrangements. Businesses must cross-reference their product lines against the updated control schedules.
  • Enhanced administrative powers. Singapore Customs gains strengthened powers to investigate, inspect and enforce compliance, including authority to require production of documents, access premises and impose conditions on licences.
  • Tightened record-keeping and counterparty-screening obligations. Permit holders and applicants face more prescriptive requirements around maintaining records in English (or providing English translations), retaining documentation for prescribed periods, and conducting due diligence on end-users and end-uses.
  • New and expanded offence definitions. The amendment introduces additional offence provisions, including for materially false declarations and failure to comply with conditions attached to permits, with penalties calibrated to the severity of the breach.
  • Alignment with the Strategic Goods (Control) Act framework. The amendments operate alongside the Strategic Goods (Control) Act (SGCA) and its subsidiary legislation, ensuring that the broader import-export regulatory architecture dovetails with the specific strategic-goods-control regime administered under the SGCA.

Effective Dates & Transitional Provisions

Businesses should note that the amendment’s provisions will take effect on a phased basis. Some provisions commenced on publication; others await ministerial commencement orders. The table below maps the key legislative dates that are most relevant for trade compliance in 2026.

Date Legislative Instrument / Action Practical Effect for Businesses
13 Apr 2026 Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act published (Act 26 of 2025) Expanded scope of controlled items; new offence definitions; enhanced administrative and enforcement powers for Singapore Customs.
1 Dec 2025 Strategic Goods (Control) Order 2025 (SGCO 2025), updated control-list schedule already in force Updated SGCO schedule, exporters must reclassify product lines against the revised schedule of controlled strategic goods.
Ongoing / phased Entry into force of specific licensing, TradeNet procedural updates, and ministerial commencement orders Businesses must monitor the Singapore Statutes Online and Singapore Customs advisories for staged implementation dates and update TradeNet workflows, STS applications and contractual clauses accordingly.

Note: Multiple subordinate instruments and Orders may have staged effective dates. Compliance teams should monitor the Singapore Statutes Online entry for the Amendment Act and the SGCO 2025 for precise commencement details.

Which Products & Transactions Now Require a Strategic Goods Export Licence?, Scope, Controlled Items & Classification

Singapore’s export controls regime covers a broad spectrum of goods, technology and activities. Under the Strategic Goods (Control) Act and its subsidiary legislation, particularly the Strategic Goods (Control) Order, the control list is divided into two main parts: munitions items (military goods) and dual-use items (goods, software and technology with both civilian and potential military or weapons-of-mass-destruction applications). The SGCO schedule is aligned with major multilateral export-control regimes including the Wassenaar Arrangement, the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Australia Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime.

Examples of Commonly Misclassified Items

Businesses frequently underestimate the breadth of items that may fall within the SGCO schedule. Industry observers note that the following categories are particularly prone to misclassification:

  • Electronic components and semiconductors. Certain integrated circuits, field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), and high-specification sensors may meet the technical-parameter thresholds in the dual-use schedule.
  • Software and encryption products. Software that incorporates controlled cryptographic functionality or is designed for the development of listed items can trigger licensing requirements, even when delivered as a download.
  • Test, inspection and production equipment. Precision machine tools, coordinate-measuring machines and specialised production equipment may be controlled where they exceed specified accuracy or capability parameters.
  • Chemical precursors and biological agents. Items listed under the Australia Group or Chemical Weapons Convention schedules are controlled regardless of commercial end-use.
  • Navigation and avionics equipment. Inertial navigation systems, accelerometers and gyroscopes above certain performance thresholds are controlled under the Wassenaar and MTCR lists.
  • Specialty materials. Carbon fibre, maraging steel, titanium alloys and other advanced materials may be controlled when they meet or exceed specified tensile-strength or purity parameters.

Intangible Transfers & Technical Assistance

A critical area of focus under the SGCA is the control of intangible transfers of technology, the electronic transmission of technical data, software source code or manufacturing know-how that would enable the development or production of a controlled item. Exporters must recognise that emailing technical drawings, uploading controlled software to a cloud platform accessible by an overseas party, or providing verbal technical assistance in relation to a listed item can all constitute a “transfer” requiring a permit under Singapore law. The 2026 changes reinforce the expectation that businesses maintain auditable records of such transfers.

End-Use & End-User Controls (Sanctions Overlay)

Beyond list-based controls, Singapore’s regime includes “catch-all” provisions. Even where a product is not on the SGCO schedule, an export licence may be required if the exporter knows or has reason to believe that the goods will be used in connection with weapons of mass destruction, their delivery systems, or other prohibited end-uses. Sanctions compliance in Singapore demands that exporters screen their counterparties, buyers, end-users and intermediaries, against relevant sanctions and restricted-party lists. The 2026 amendment underscores the obligation to document this screening and retain evidence of due diligence.

Three-step classification decision tree for exporters:

  1. Function check. Does the product, software or technology fall within a category described in the SGCO schedule (Parts 1 or 2)?
  2. Technical-parameter check. Does the item meet or exceed the specific performance thresholds (accuracy, speed, capacity, frequency, purity) stated against its control entry?
  3. End-use / end-user risk check. Regardless of list-based classification, is there any indication that the item will be used for a prohibited purpose or diverted to a sanctioned or restricted end-user?

If the answer to any step is yes or uncertain, the exporter should apply for a permit or seek a formal classification ruling from Singapore Customs before proceeding.

How to Apply for an Export Licence in Singapore, Procedures, TradeNet, STS, Timelines & Fees

Obtaining the correct strategic goods licence is a multi-step process that begins with product classification and ends with TradeNet submission and ongoing record-keeping. Singapore Customs administers strategic goods permits through the national TradeNet system. Exporters may also benefit from the Strategic Trade Scheme (STS), which offers streamlined permit processing for qualifying companies with robust internal compliance programmes.

Do You Need an Export Licence?, Customs Export Permit vs Strategic Goods Permit

All exporters must obtain a standard Customs export permit before shipping goods from Singapore. This is a general trade-documentation requirement. A strategic goods permit is a separate, additional requirement that applies specifically to items listed on the SGCO schedule or caught by catch-all provisions. The two are not interchangeable: an exporter of controlled items needs both.

TradeNet Message Codes & Sample Submission Checklist

Strategic goods permit applications are submitted electronically via TradeNet. Key permit types and their associated TradeNet message codes include:

  • Strategic goods export permit. For outbound shipments of listed items from Singapore.
  • Strategic goods transit permit (XP prefix). Required for the bringing in transit of strategic goods. The TradeNet declaration type code is TNP-TTF, and this permit must be obtained before the conveyance reaches Singapore.
  • Brokering permit. Required where a Singapore-based person arranges or facilitates the transfer of controlled items between two overseas parties, even if the goods never enter Singapore.
  • Bulk permit. Available for companies with a track record of compliance, allowing multiple shipments of specified items to approved destinations over a defined validity period, without individual per-shipment applications.

Submission checklist, documents typically required:

  1. Completed TradeNet application (correct message/declaration type code selected).
  2. Technical specifications or datasheets for the controlled item.
  3. Purchase order, sales contract or letter of intent from the buyer.
  4. End-user certificate or end-use declaration from the ultimate consignee.
  5. Import licence or authorisation from the destination country (if applicable).
  6. Classification self-assessment demonstrating the SGCO schedule entry the item falls under.
  7. Evidence of counterparty screening (sanctions and restricted-party checks).

Strategic Trade Scheme (STS), Benefits and Qualifying Conditions

The STS, administered by Singapore Customs, provides qualifying companies with facilitated permit processing, including the ability to apply for bulk permits and benefit from expedited turnaround. The STS Handbook (revised March 2026) sets out the eligibility criteria, which centre on a company’s internal compliance programme (ICP). Qualifying conditions typically include: a documented ICP with clear management commitment, regular training, product-classification procedures, counterparty screening, record-keeping systems and internal audit processes. Companies with STS-tier status demonstrate to Singapore Customs that they have the organisational maturity to handle strategic goods responsibly.

Practical Tips: Classification Evidence, Technical Specs & Translations

Trade compliance teams should ensure that all records, particularly those maintained in languages other than English, are accompanied by English translations, as required under the amended regime. Supporting documentation should be granular: generic product descriptions are insufficient. Singapore Customs expects technical datasheets that map directly to the parameters in the relevant SGCO schedule entry. Where classification is ambiguous, obtaining a written advisory opinion from Singapore Customs before export provides a defensible compliance position.

Commercial & Contractual Steps to Reduce Enforcement and Liability Risk, For Exporters, Insurers & Logistics Providers

Legislative compliance alone does not insulate businesses from commercial loss. Export contract clauses must allocate regulatory risk explicitly between the parties, address the possibility that a required licence may be refused or delayed, and manage the intersection between export controls and insurance coverage. The 2026 changes make this exercise more urgent because the expanded scope of strategic goods control in Singapore means that transactions previously outside the licensing regime may now be caught.

Sample Contract Clauses

The following five clause templates address the most common regulatory-risk scenarios. They should be adapted to the specific transaction and reviewed by qualified counsel before use.

Clause 1, Export Controls Compliance Warranty.
“Each party warrants that it shall comply with all applicable export control and sanctions laws and regulations, including the Strategic Goods (Control) Act (Cap 300), the Regulation of Imports and Exports Act (Cap 272A) as amended, and any subsidiary legislation, orders or regulations made thereunder. Neither party shall export, re-export, transfer, tranship or broker any goods, technology or services that are the subject of this Agreement in breach of such laws.”

Clause 2, Licence Contingency.
“The Seller’s obligation to deliver the Goods is conditional upon the Seller obtaining all necessary export licences and permits from Singapore Customs and any other relevant authority. If any required licence or permit is refused, revoked or made subject to conditions that the Seller cannot reasonably comply with, the Seller may terminate this Agreement by written notice without liability for non-delivery, and any advance payments shall be refunded within [30] business days.”

  • Clause 3, Delivery Suspension. “The Seller shall be entitled to suspend delivery without penalty where it reasonably determines that fulfilment may contravene applicable export control or sanctions requirements, pending resolution of the compliance concern. Any contractual delivery dates shall be extended by the period of such suspension.”
  • Clause 4, Sanctions Indemnity. “The Buyer shall indemnify and hold harmless the Seller against all losses, damages, fines, penalties, costs and expenses arising from the Buyer’s breach of any export control or sanctions law, including any misrepresentation as to the end-use, end-user or final destination of the Goods.”
  • Clause 5, Insurer Notification & Cooperation. “Where the Goods are classified as strategic goods under Singapore law, the Assured shall promptly notify the Insurer in writing of (a) the strategic-goods classification and applicable permit reference, (b) any investigation, audit or enforcement action commenced by Singapore Customs or any other competent authority, and (c) any change in the export-licence status of the Goods. The Assured shall cooperate fully with the Insurer in relation to any claim arising from or connected with an alleged breach of export controls.”

Where to Put the Risk (Seller vs Buyer), Recommended Wording

The allocation of export-control risk depends on the INCOTERMS rule selected and the parties’ respective ability to obtain licences. Under CIF or CFR terms, the seller typically bears responsibility for export clearance and should therefore assume the licence-contingency and compliance-warranty obligations. Under FCA or EXW terms, the buyer assumes responsibility earlier in the chain, but the seller remains liable under Singapore law if the goods are strategic and exported without a valid permit. Industry observers expect that the expanded scope of the 2026 amendment will push more sellers toward explicit licence-contingency language regardless of the INCOTERMS rule, precisely because the consequence of a refused or delayed licence now affects a wider range of products.

Insurance Market Approach, What Insurers Will Ask

Insurers and underwriters of cargo, marine liability and trade-credit policies are increasingly scrutinising export-control compliance as a pre-condition of cover. The likely practical effects of the 2026 changes for the insurance market include:

  • Pre-inception disclosure. Insurers will request confirmation of whether the assured’s product lines include any items on the SGCO schedule and whether valid permits are in place.
  • Sanctions and export-control exclusions. Standard policy wordings already contain sanctions-exclusion clauses, but the expanded scope of controlled items means policyholders should check whether their coverage responds to losses arising from a denied or delayed export permit.
  • Subrogation considerations. Where a loss is connected to a buyer’s breach of end-use undertakings, insurers may seek to exercise subrogation rights against the defaulting counterparty, making the sanctions indemnity clause (Clause 4 above) commercially critical.
  • Policy amendments. Assureds should consider endorsements that expressly address the interplay between export-licence contingencies, delivery-suspension rights and indemnity periods to avoid coverage gaps.

Operational Obligations for Freight Forwarders and Logistics Firms, Strategic Goods Control in Singapore’s Supply Chain

Freight forwarders, carriers and logistics providers occupy a critical position in the strategic goods control chain. Under the Regulation of Imports and Exports Act and the SGCA, these parties bear legal obligations that extend beyond simply moving cargo from origin to destination. The 2026 amendment reinforces the expectation that logistics firms are active participants in compliance, not passive intermediaries.

Freight Forwarder Checklist: Pre-Shipment Screening, Documentation & Carrier Liability

  • Verify permit status before acceptance. Before accepting a consignment for carriage, confirm that the shipper holds a valid strategic goods permit (where required) and that permit conditions, including approved routes, modes of transport and consignees, match the booking instructions.
  • Screen counterparties. Run the shipper, consignee and notify party against applicable sanctions and restricted-party lists. Retain dated evidence of each screening check.
  • Obtain and file documentation. Collect copies of the strategic goods permit, end-user certificate, commercial invoice and packing list. File these records systematically, the amended regime prescribes minimum retention periods and may require English translations for all trade-related documents.
  • Train frontline staff. Booking clerks, operations coordinators and documentation teams must understand the red flags that suggest a controlled shipment (unusual routing, inconsistent technical descriptions, reluctance to provide end-user details).
  • Establish escalation protocols. Where a consignment raises a compliance concern, forwarders must have a clear internal escalation path to a compliance officer or legal counsel before the goods are loaded.

Transit & Free Trade Zone (FTZ) Handling Guidance

Strategic goods passing through Singapore in transit or transhipment are subject to specific permit requirements. A strategic goods transit permit (prefixed “XP”) must be obtained through TradeNet (declaration type code TNP-TTF) before the conveyance reaches Singapore. Goods taken directly into a Free Trade Zone upon arrival may benefit from certain procedural facilitations, but this does not eliminate the permit requirement for controlled items. Logistics firms managing FTZ inventory must ensure that any strategic goods held in the zone are documented, segregated and released only upon presentation of a valid permit.

For air-transit consignments, the interface with the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) adds a further layer: transit cargo must comply with both the strategic-goods-control regime and applicable aviation-security requirements. Forwarders should coordinate with their ground-handling agents to ensure that customs strategic goods permit references are captured accurately in air waybill data.

Enforcement, Penalties, Audits & Dispute Handling

Non-compliance with strategic goods control requirements in Singapore carries serious consequences. Offences under the SGCA and the Regulation of Imports and Exports Act can attract substantial fines and imprisonment. The 2026 amendment introduces additional offence provisions for materially false declarations and failure to comply with licence conditions. Administrative penalties and enforcement measures, including permit revocation, suspension and the imposition of additional conditions, are also available to Singapore Customs.

Businesses should be aware that Singapore Customs conducts compliance audits of permit holders and STS-tier companies. Record-keeping deficiencies, failure to produce documents on request and discrepancies between declared and actual shipments are common audit triggers.

Immediate Response Playbook

If Singapore Customs serves notice of an investigation, audit or enforcement action:

  1. Preserve all documents. Immediately instruct all relevant personnel to preserve, and not alter, destroy or delete, all documents, emails, electronic records and system logs relating to the relevant transactions.
  2. Notify legal counsel. Engage qualified international-trade counsel before responding to any request for information or attending any interview.
  3. Notify your insurer. If the matter may give rise to a claim under any trade-credit, cargo, liability or directors-and-officers policy, provide prompt written notice to the insurer in accordance with the policy’s notification clause (see Clause 5 above).
  4. Cooperate, but protect privilege. Cooperate with the investigation to the extent required by law, while preserving legal professional privilege over internal legal advice and privileged communications.

Practical Compliance Checklist & Templates for Trade Compliance 2026

The following ten-point checklist provides a summary of the immediate actions that exporters, freight forwarders and insurers should take in response to the 2026 changes to strategic goods control in Singapore:

  1. Reclassify your product line. Review all products, software and technology against the updated SGCO 2025 schedule and any further amendments.
  2. Identify newly controlled items. Flag any products that were not previously listed but now fall within expanded control categories.
  3. Apply for or update permits. Submit new TradeNet applications where required; update existing bulk-permit conditions and STS registrations.
  4. Review and amend commercial contracts. Insert or update export-control compliance warranties, licence-contingency clauses, delivery-suspension rights and sanctions indemnities.
  5. Notify insurers. Disclose any changes to the strategic-goods classification of insured goods and confirm that policy wordings remain adequate.
  6. Update counterparty-screening procedures. Ensure KYC and sanctions-screening processes cover all parties in the transaction chain, buyer, end-user, intermediary, freight forwarder and financier.
  7. Ensure record-keeping compliance. Confirm that all trade records are maintained in or translated into English and retained for the prescribed period.
  8. Train relevant staff. Conduct refresher training for export operations, documentation, sales, procurement and logistics teams on the 2026 amendments and updated internal procedures.
  9. Establish an internal audit cycle. Schedule periodic internal audits of export-control compliance, including spot checks on classification decisions, permit utilisation and record-keeping.
  10. Monitor for further changes. Subscribe to Singapore Customs advisories and monitor the Singapore Statutes Online for subordinate legislation, commencement orders and updated procedural guidance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Goh Kok Leong at ANG & PARTNERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Singapore Statutes Online, Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act
  2. Singapore Customs, Strategic Goods Control Overview
  3. Singapore Customs, Strategic Goods Control List
  4. Strategic Trade Scheme (STS) Handbook, March 2026
  5. Singapore Statutes Online, Strategic Goods (Control) Order 2025
  6. Ministry of Trade and Industry, Wrap-Up Speech on the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Bill
  7. TradeNet Procedural Guidance, Strategic Goods Permit Procedures
  8. Wassenaar Arrangement, Control Lists

FAQs

What changed under Singapore's Regulation of Imports and Exports (Amendment) Act 2026?
The Amendment Act, published on 13 April 2026, expanded the scope of goods and transactions subject to licensing requirements, strengthened Singapore Customs’ enforcement and inspection powers, introduced new offence provisions for false declarations and non-compliance with permit conditions, and tightened record-keeping and counterparty-screening obligations for permit holders.
Products listed on the Strategic Goods (Control) Order schedule, including military items, dual-use goods, controlled software and technology, require a strategic goods permit for export, transit, transhipment or brokering. Items not on the list may still require a licence under catch-all provisions if there is reason to believe they will be used for a prohibited end-use such as weapons of mass destruction.
Classify your product against the SGCO schedule, determine the correct permit type (individual, bulk, transit or brokering), and submit the application electronically via TradeNet with supporting documentation including technical specifications, an end-user certificate and evidence of counterparty screening. Companies with robust internal compliance programmes may qualify for the Strategic Trade Scheme, which offers expedited processing and bulk-permit eligibility.
A strategic goods transit permit (prefixed “XP”) must be obtained through TradeNet using the declaration type code TNP-TTF before the conveyance arrives in Singapore. Goods taken into a Free Trade Zone remain subject to permit requirements. Logistics firms must ensure permits are in place and that documentation is filed before the cargo is loaded or released.
Exporters should incorporate an export controls compliance warranty, a licence-contingency clause (permitting termination if a permit is refused), a delivery-suspension right, a sanctions indemnity from the buyer, and an insurer-notification and cooperation clause. These clauses allocate regulatory risk, protect against non-delivery liability and support insurance-claim procedures.
Offences under the SGCA and the Regulation of Imports and Exports Act can attract substantial fines, imprisonment or both. The 2026 amendment introduces additional offence categories. Administrative consequences include permit revocation, suspension and the imposition of restrictive conditions. Compliance audits by Singapore Customs may be triggered by record-keeping deficiencies or discrepancies in declared shipments.
Insurers should require pre-inception disclosure of any SGCO-listed products, review sanctions-exclusion clauses in light of the expanded control list, and require prompt notification of any investigation or enforcement action by Singapore Customs. Subrogation rights against buyers who breach end-use undertakings are commercially important and should be supported by a sanctions indemnity clause in the underlying sale contract.
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Strategic Goods Control in Singapore: Regulation of Imports and Exports (amendment) Act 2026, Export Licences, Insurer & Logistics Obligations

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