Securing a work visa is often the final, yet most nerve-wracking hurdle in the international hiring process. For professionals eyeing a move to Singapore, the Employment Pass (EP) is the gold standard. It’s the pass that opens doors to working in one of the world’s most dynamic business hubs. But as global mobility standards tighten and competition rises, simply meeting the minimum salary requirement is no longer a guarantee of approval.
The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) in Singapore maintains rigorous standards to ensure that foreign talent complements the local workforce. This means your application needs to do more than just tick boxes; it needs to tell a compelling story of value, expertise, and necessity. A rejected application can mean months of delays, appeals, and disrupted business plans.
Whether you are an HR manager handling the paperwork or a candidate anxious about your prospects, understanding the nuances of the EP application process is crucial. This guide breaks down exactly what makes a strong application, how to navigate the new COMPASS framework, and the common pitfalls that lead to rejection.
Understanding the Employment Pass Landscape
The Employment Pass is designed for foreign professionals, managers, and executives. It allows you to work in Singapore and earn a minimum fixed monthly salary (which varies by age and sector).
Historically, the EP assessment was somewhat opaque, largely revolving around salary and qualifications. However, recent years have seen a shift towards transparency and a more holistic evaluation system. The government wants to ensure that companies are hiring fairly and that the foreign talent brought in raises the overall caliber of the industry.
Before you even log into the Employment Pass Application Online portal, you must understand the criteria against which you are being judged. It is not just about who the candidate is, but who the employer is and how the two fit together.
The Game Changer: The COMPASS Framework
As of September 2023, all new EP applications are evaluated under the Complementarity Assessment Framework, known as COMPASS. This is a points-based system that has fundamentally changed how applications are prepared.
To pass COMPASS, an application needs to score 40 points across four foundational criteria and two bonus criteria. Understanding this scoring system is the single most important step in submitting a great application.
The Foundational Criteria (Individual and Firm-related)
There are four core areas where you can earn points. You typically need to score 10 points (meeting expectations) in each, or 20 points (exceeding expectations) in some to offset zeros in others.
- Salary (Individual): Your fixed monthly salary is compared to local professionals, managers, executives, and technicians (PMETs) in your sector. If you are in the top 90th percentile, you get 20 points. If you are between the 65th and 90th, you get 10 points. Below that, you get zero.
- Qualifications (Individual): This looks at your academic background. A degree from a top-tier institution typically earns 20 points. A degree-equivalent qualification usually earns 10 points. No degree means zero points.
- Diversity (Firm-related): This checks whether the candidate’s nationality is over-represented in the hiring company. If the candidate’s nationality makes up a small percentage of the firm’s PMETs, you score higher. This encourages companies to build a diverse team rather than hiring from a single foreign source.
- Support for Local Employment (Firm-related): This compares the firm’s share of local PMETs against industry peers. If the company hires a healthy percentage of locals compared to others in the same sector, they score points here.
The Bonus Criteria
If an application is borderline on the foundational criteria, bonus points can save the day.
- Skills Bonus (Shortage Occupation List): If the job falls under a list of occupations requiring highly specialized skills currently in shortage in Singapore (e.g., certain tech roles, agri-tech, or green economy roles), you can earn substantial bonus points.
- Strategic Economic Priorities Bonus: This rewards firms that participate in selected government programs on innovation or internationalization.
Step 1: Pre-Application Due Diligence
A great application is won before it is even submitted. The preparation phase is where you identify weaknesses and address them.
Verify the Self-Assessment Tool (SAT)
MOM provides a Self-Assessment Tool online. This is your first checkpoint. Run the candidate’s details through the SAT. If the tool says the application is unlikely to be successful, take that warning seriously. It usually means the salary is too low for the candidate’s experience level or the qualifications are not recognized.
Audit the Candidate’s Resume
Your CV needs to be more than a list of duties; it must demonstrate progression and expertise. Ensure that there are no unexplained gaps in employment. If there are gaps (e.g., sabbaticals, study breaks), have explanations ready. The job description in the application must match the seniority of the candidate’s experience.
Check the Educational Accreditation
Not all degrees are created equal in the eyes of the MOM. You must ensure the candidate’s university is accredited. Since September 2023, verification proof for educational qualifications is mandatory. You will need to engage background screening companies to verify the authenticity of the degree and the accreditation of the institution. Do this early, as it can take weeks.
Step 2: Crafting the Job Description
One of the most common reasons for delays is a disconnect between the job title, the salary, and the job description.
MOM officials see thousands of applications. They know what a “Marketing Director” should be paid and what they should be doing. If you submit an application for a “Director” with a junior-level salary and a job description that involves basic administrative tasks, it raises a red flag.
Specificity is Key
Avoid generic, copy-pasted job descriptions. Tailor the description to the specific needs of the business. Highlight specialized skills that justify why a local candidate could not be found for this specific role.
Alignment with Salary
The salary must command the respect of the role. In Singapore, salary benchmarks increase with age. A 25-year-old applicant requires a lower qualifying salary than a 45-year-old applicant. The logic is that a 45-year-old should command a higher wage due to experience. Ensure the salary offered is commensurate with the candidate’s years of experience and the market rate for that role in Singapore.
Step 3: The Fair Consideration Framework
Before you can apply for an EP, you generally must advertise the job on MyCareersFuture.sg for at least 14 days. This is part of the Fair Consideration Framework (FCF) to ensure employers consider local candidates fairly.
Take the Ad Seriously
Do not treat this as a bureaucratic hurdle. Write a genuine job ad. Review local applicants seriously. If you reject local applicants, you must be able to document why they were not suitable based on merit and skills.
The Consequence of non-compliance
If MOM suspects that a company has pre-selected a foreigner and the ad was just for show (window dressing), they can reject the EP application and bar the company from hiring foreign workers. Keep records of who applied and your interview notes. If you are audited, you will need to prove you gave locals a fair shot.
Step 4: Documentation Strategy
The paperwork is where the devil resides in the details. A “great” application is one that is administratively perfect.
Consistency Across Documents
The name on the passport must match the name on the educational certificates and the resume. If a candidate has changed their name due to marriage or other reasons, you must provide legal affidavits or marriage certificates. Discrepancies in names are a frequent cause of clarification requests, which delay the process.
Translation and Notarization
If documents are not in English, they must be translated by a certified translator. Submit both the original and the translated copy.
The Verification Proof
As mentioned regarding COMPASS, verification proof for education is now critical. Ensure this is done through one of the MOM-approved background screening agencies. This is a separate step from just uploading a PDF of a diploma.
Step 5: Handling the “Reject” or “Request for Information”
Even the best applications can hit a speed bump. Sometimes, MOM will ask for additional information. This is not a rejection; it is a request for clarity.
The RFI (Request for Information)
If you get an RFI, respond quickly and comprehensively. Usually, they might ask for:
- Company organizational charts (to see where the candidate fits).
- Detailed business plans (to see if the company is viable).
- Bank statements (to prove the company can pay the salary).
- Proof of contracts or invoices (to prove business activity).
Provide exactly what is asked for. Do not hide information. If the company is a startup with low revenue, explain the funding situation and show the runway. Transparency builds trust.
The Appeal
If the application is rejected, all is not lost, but the clock is ticking. You have three months to appeal. Do not simply re-submit the same information. You must address the reason for rejection.
- Is it salary? You may need to review the market rate.
- Is it qualifications? You may need to prove the candidate’s exceptional track record or specialized skills that outweigh the lack of a degree.
- Is it the firm’s profile? You may need to show how this hire will help transfer skills to locals.
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
To ensure your application is seamless, steer clear of these frequent mistakes:
- Inflating Titles: Calling a junior employee a “Vice President” to justify an EP application usually backfires if the salary and duties don’t match the title.
- Ignoring the “Fixed” in Fixed Monthly Salary: Allowances that fluctuate (like sales commissions or overtime pay) cannot be counted toward the qualifying salary. Only fixed, guaranteed monthly allowances count.
- Last Minute Applications: Do not wait until a candidate is boarding a plane. Processing times can vary from 10 days to 8 weeks depending on checks.
- Neglecting the Company’s CPF Record: For the company to score points on “Support for Local Employment,” its Central Provident Fund (CPF) contributions for local staff must be up to date and accurate. Ensure your local hiring records are clean before applying for foreign passes.
The Role of the Employer
Finally, it is worth noting that the “greatness” of an application often reflects the credibility of the employer. MOM looks at the track record of the company. Does the company pay on time? Do they have a history of discriminatory hiring? Do they contribute to the Singaporean economy?
A strong employer brand and a clean compliance record with the Ministry of Manpower serve as a “credit score” of sorts. If you are an employer, maintaining good standing with local employment laws is the best way to ensure future EP applications are processed smoothly.
Moving Forward
Submitting a great Employment Pass application is an exercise in precision and narrative. It requires aligning the candidate’s elite skills with the company’s strategic needs and the country’s economic goals.
By understanding the COMPASS framework, conducting thorough pre-application checks, and ensuring your documentation is meticulous, you significantly increase your chances of success. The goal is to make it easy for the reviewing officer to say “Yes.” When the value of the candidate is clear and the paperwork is flawless, approval is usually just a matter of time.

