Many SME owners assume that corporate governance is something reserved for listed companies, large boards and institutional investors. In practice, good governance is just as important for SMEs — and often more straightforward to implement. It is about having clear decision-making, accurate records, timely filings, strong financial controls and a business culture that reduces risk.
In Singapore, governance and compliance are not merely administrative obligations. They help SMEs build credibility with banks, investors, suppliers, customers and government agencies. They also reduce the risk of penalties, disputes and operational disruption. For growing businesses, good governance can also make expansion, fundraising and succession planning easier to manage.
From my experience in Singapore, failure to implement a governance framework can lead to compliance failures, such as failing to lodge a report on time, meaning financial penalties. In extreme cases, I have also seen statutory records not reflecting the commercial position the company is operating under.
1. Start With Director Accountability
In many SMEs, the directors are also the founders, shareholders and day-to-day managers. This overlap can speed up decision-making, but it can also blur the line between ownership and stewardship.
The corporate regulator, ACRA, highlights that directors remain legally responsible for the company’s affairs, even where tasks are delegated to management, finance teams, corporate secretaries or tax agents.
With effect from May 2026, heavier penalties apply for directors who breach duties such as failing to act in the company’s best interests or to exercise reasonable diligence. Maximum fines have increased from S$5,000 to S$20,000, and serious offences may involve both fines and imprisonment of up to 12 months.
For SME directors, “reasonable diligence” can include practical steps such as regularly reviewing management reports, understanding major contracts before approval, ensuring tax and regulatory filings are completed on time, and asking questions when financial or operational issues arise.
A practical starting point is to maintain a simple “reserved matters” list. This should identify decisions that require unanimous approval by directors or shareholders, such as taking on significant debt, issuing shares, approving major contracts, entering into related-party transactions, opening overseas entities, changing key bank mandates, or approving dividends.
2. Build A Compliance Calendar Around The Financial Year-End
SMEs should maintain a compliance calendar that works backwards from the company’s financial year-end, to ensure the key compliance due dates are not missed.
Some important deadlines include:
- Annual general meetings (AGM): Non-listed Singapore companies must hold their AGM within six months after the financial year-end, unless exempt or the AGM has been properly dispensed with.
- Annual returns: All Singapore companies, including inactive or dormant companies, must file annual returns with ACRA. The filing deadline is generally within 7 months of the financial year-end.
- Company secretary appointment: A licensed company secretary must be appointed within six months of registration.
- Auditor appointment: An auditor must be appointed within three months of incorporation unless the company qualifies for an audit exemption. For reference, the small company exemption applies when a private company meets two of the following three conditions: revenue ≤ S$10m, assets ≤ S$10m, and employees ≤ 50.
3. Keep Statutory Registers And Ownership Records Current
Good governance requires accurate records of who owns, controls and manages the company. Any changes to officers and shareholders must be reported within 14 days to avoid late lodgement penalties.
Companies should also pay attention to beneficial ownership and nominee arrangements to ensure compliance with the Register of Registrable Controllers requirements.
4. Treat Tax Compliance As A Governance Matter
Tax compliance should not be viewed as a purely accounting function. It is a governance issue because directors remain responsible for ensuring filings are timely and accurate.
I have discussed tax compliance in the past, but a quick summary is as follows:
Income Tax
The Estimated Chargeable Income (ECI) return is due within three months from the end of their financial year, unless they qualify for an ECI filing waiver or are specifically not required to file.
The corporate income tax return is due by 30 November each year unless a waiver applies.
Directors remain responsible for timely and accurate filing even when a tax agent has been engaged, and late filing or non-filing may result in penalties of up to S$5,000 if directors continually fail to manage their compliance obligations.
GST
A business must register for GST if its taxable turnover is more than S$1 million under the retrospective view at the end of the calendar year, or if it is expected to be more than S$1 million in the next 12 months under the prospective view.
Businesses should also monitor the GST InvoiceNow requirement. IRAS states that GST-registered businesses are required to use InvoiceNow-ready solutions to transmit invoice data directly to IRAS, with phased implementation beginning from 1 November 2025 for certain newly incorporated companies applying for voluntary GST registration, and from 1 April 2026 for all businesses applying for new voluntary GST registration.
At the Committee of Supply 2026, the Government further announced that all remaining GST-registered businesses will be required to onboard InvoiceNow progressively between April 2028 and April 2031, with transitional grants of up to S$1,000 for SMEs.
Transfer Pricing
SMEs with cross-border related-party transactions must comply with the arm’s length principle when transacting with related parties and maintain contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation to substantiate their pricing where relevant.
5. Manage Employment, Payroll And CPF Obligations Carefully
SMEs should maintain proper employment records, issue itemised payslips, process CPF contributions on time, and ensure employment terms are clearly documented.
The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) states that employers must maintain records for all employees covered by the Employment Act. For current employees, employers must keep the most recent 2 years of records. For former employees, the last two years of records must be retained for one year after the employee leaves.
CPF contributions are due on the last day of the calendar month. In addition to late-payment interest, enforcement action may be taken if employers repeatedly fail to pay by the due date.
6. Put Data Protection And Cybersecurity On The Agenda
Most SMEs now collect personal data through customer forms, websites, e-commerce platforms, HR records, marketing campaigns or supplier databases. Data protection is therefore a core governance issue.
Under the Personal Data Protection Act, organisations must appoint a Data Protection Officer (DPO) and make the DPO’s contact information publicly available.
SMEs should not wait for a data incident before assigning responsibility for data protection. Practical steps include maintaining a personal data inventory, limiting access rights, reviewing vendor contracts, training staff, implementing password and access controls, and preparing a data breach response plan.
7. Make Governance Proportionate, Practical And Repeatable
A SME governance framework should be practical, scalable and easy to maintain. Good governance in key areas should include:
Corporate Compliance
- A compliance calendar tied to the financial year-end
- Clear director and shareholder approval thresholds
- Accurate statutory registers and ownership records
Financial And Tax Controls
- Monthly financial reporting and bank reconciliations
- Documented tax, GST and transfer pricing processes
Employment And Payroll
- Proper employment records and itemised payslips
- Clear payroll and CPF procedures
Data Protection And Operations
- A basic data protection management process
- Regular review with corporate secretarial, tax and accounting advisers
Good governance is ultimately about discipline. It helps SMEs make better decisions, protect value, reduce regulatory risk and build trust with stakeholders.
In Singapore’s competitive business environment, SMEs that invest early in governance and compliance are better positioned to scale sustainably and confidently. If you’d like to discuss how any of this applies to your business, feel free to reach out.