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The MRA Grant now covers up to 70% of eligible expenses (capped at S$100,000 per target market) from April 1, 2026, to March 31, 2029.
Funding is split across Market Set-up (up to S$30K), Overseas Promotion (up to S$20K), and Business Development (up to S$50K).
To qualify, your company must be ACRA-registered, maintain at least 30% local shareholding, have group sales of S$100 million or less (or 200 or fewer workers), and target a country where past annual sales did not exceed S$100,000.
Applications often fail due to outstanding ACRA/IRAS penalties, disorganized financial records, or weak operational substance.
The grant operates on a reimbursement basis – approval must be secured via the Business Grants Portal before signing vendor contracts.
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Expanding your business overseas is a pivotal growth step, yet high upfront capital requirements often present a significant hurdle for ambitious SMEs. To facilitate this transition, the Singapore Budget 2026 has enhanced the Market Readiness Assistance (MRA) Grant, offering local enterprises up to S$100,000 in government co-funding to cover 70% of eligible expansion expenses. Here is how your business can strategically leverage this fiscal support to scale internationally while maintaining optimal cash flow.
The $100K Internationalization Grant: What SMEs Need to Know
While foreign expansion offers immense growth, navigating new regulatory and commercial landscapes carries inherent risks. The newly enhanced MRA Grant systematically mitigates these financial barriers, allowing businesses to scale with greater capital security. To secure this funding, enterprises must align with specific qualification benchmarks and structured deployment categories outlined below.
Key Eligibility Criteria for Singapore SMEs
To qualify for this financial support, Enterprise Singapore (EnterpriseSG) requires applicants to meet a set of strict baseline standards at the time of application. Before initiating the process, your company must verify the following criteria:
- Active Local Presence: The business must be registered and actively operating in Singapore under the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA).
- Local Shareholding: A minimum of 30% local shareholding must be held directly or indirectly by Singapore Citizens or Permanent Residents.
- SME Status: The company’s group-level annual sales turnover must not exceed S$100 million, OR its total group employment size must be 200 workers or fewer.
- A Genuine “New Market”: The target country is only eligible if your company’s annual sales in that specific jurisdiction have not exceeded S$100,000 in any of the preceding three consecutive years.

Supported Cross-Border Expansion Activities
The S$100,000 grant cap is structured across three strategic pillars, allowing businesses to systematically derisk their internationalization process and offset real-world operational expenses:
- Market Set-up (Capped at S$30,000): Defrays professional and legal advisory fees necessary to establish a compliant foreign presence. Eligible expenses include drafting joint venture agreements, securing local regulatory licenses, and registering intellectual property (such as trademarks or patents) in the target country.
- Overseas Market Promotion (Capped at S$20,000): Supports cross-border brand positioning and customer acquisition. This covers costs for participating in international trade fairs, trade booth rentals, localized digital marketing campaigns (including targeted SEO and ads), and overseas launch events.
- Business Development (Capped at S$50,000): Allocates the largest share of funding toward identifying strategic partners and validating product-market fit. This pillar covers customized market research, in-market business matching services, and the engagement of specialized consultants to structure your go-to-market strategies.
Strategic Update Note: Please note that the standalone MRA framework is scheduled for consolidation into the new unified “EDGE” grant system in the second half of 2026. This upcoming transition will remove the strict “new market” restriction, allowing businesses to claim up to S$100,000 annually to deepen and scale operations within existing overseas markets.
Common Reasons SMEs Fail to Secure Government Grants
The enhanced 70% MRA Grant framework provides an excellent fiscal foundation, with successful approval closely tied to regulatory alignment. Application timelines are optimized when administrative and compliance benchmarks are fully met prior to submission, allowing evaluating authorities to focus entirely on commercial viability.

Non-Compliance with ACRA & IRAS Regulations
Enterprise Singapore assesses corporate readiness by ensuring an applicant’s standing is fully updated with IRAS and ACRA. Prior to project evaluation, a seamless baseline is established when all tax filings and annual returns are completely settled. Maintaining a clear administrative profile across these regulatory authorities is an essential step that builds strong institutional trust from the outset.
Messy Financial Records & Lack of Audit Readiness
Utilizing government funding is structured around a shared commitment to financial transparency and organized record-keeping. The claim and disbursement processes operate most efficiently when supported by structured bookkeeping, updated management accounts, and verifiable source documents like invoices and bank statements. Establishing an organized, audit-ready financial trail eliminates administrative back-and-forth and ensures expansion expenses are processed smoothly.
Weak Corporate Structure and Local Substance
To support sustained domestic growth, evaluating authorities look for established operational roots alongside the required 30% local shareholding threshold. Demonstrating active economic substance through your Singapore entity adds significant value to the application. Maintaining physical operations, localized staffing, or an active management presence on the ground underscores the operational foundation necessary to drive a successful international expansion.
3 Steps to Prepare Your Business for the Grant Application
Securing an expansion grant requires proving your business is structurally, legally, and financially compliant. Taking these three proactive operational steps early will eliminate administrative hurdles and ensure a seamless approval process.

Step 1: Execute a Comprehensive Corporate Health Check
Ensure your company registry on the ACRA system is fully updated to avoid unnecessary administrative delays.
- Resolve Penalties: Double-check that all annual returns are lodged and any outstanding late-filing fees are completely settled.
- Update the RORC: Maintain your Register of Registrable Controllers (RORC) accurately and file it properly with ACRA.
- Verify SSIC Codes: Confirm that your registered office address, Singapore Standard Industrial Classification (SSIC) codes, and directorship details precisely match your actual physical operations.
Step 2: Ensure Financial Compliance & Bookkeeping Accuracy
Establish strict financial transparency to meet Enterprise Singapore’s rigorous expense-tracking and viability benchmarks.
- Update Management Accounts: Keep your Profit & Loss (P&L) statements, Balance Sheets, and General Ledgers updated on a monthly basis.
- Secure the Audit Trail: Match every eligible expense with a signed agreement, official invoice, and bank transaction receipt. Avoid cash or unverified personal card payments.
- Manage Cash Flow: Ensure you have sufficient working capital to fund the project upfront, as the MRA Grant operates strictly on a reimbursement basis (up to 70%).
Step 3: Optimize Corporate Structure and Directorship
Structure your company to prove that the Singapore entity is the actual operational driver of your global expansion project.
- Validate Local Shareholding: Confirm that at least 30% of shares are held by Singapore Citizens or Permanent Residents, properly reflected in your ACRA BizFile.
- Appoint Active Resident Directors: Ensure your resident or nominee directors are actively involved in strategic decision-making, with documented proof.
- Demonstrate Local Substance: Maintain physical business premises, hire local staff, and ensure active Central Provident Fund (CPF) contributions to prove real economic substance.
Secure Your Global Expansion with Koobiz Corporate Solutions

Compliance demands for the S$100,000 MRA Grant shouldn’t distract you from your core expansion strategy. As your growth partner, Koobiz ensures your business meets Enterprise Singapore’s rigorous benchmarks long before submission.
We optimize your application readiness through targeted corporate solutions:
- ACRA Compliance Audits: Updating corporate registries, settling returns, and aligning SSIC codes.
- Audit-Ready Bookkeeping: Implementing monthly accounting structures that streamline expense tracking.
- Corporate Structure Optimization: Strengthening local economic substance to align with funding criteria.
Do not let administrative delays compromise your international growth timeline. Contact Koobiz today to mitigate compliance risks and launch your global entry with confidence.

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