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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsGovernment Announces Major Boost to Mendaki TTFS Scheme
The Singapore government has unveiled significant enhancements to the Tertiary Tuition Fee Subsidy (TTFS) scheme, administered by Yayasan Mendaki, to enable more Malay students to access local tertiary education. Announced by Acting Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs Assoc Prof Faishal Ibrahim on April 10, 2026, at the Minister’s Hari Raya Get-Together, these changes aim to alleviate financial barriers for middle-income families and encourage higher participation in programmes at institutions like the National University of Singapore (NUS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore Management University (SMU), Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD), Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT), and Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS).
This move reflects ongoing efforts to narrow educational attainment gaps within the Malay/Muslim community, where tertiary qualification rates lag behind the national average. Over the past five years, TTFS has supported an average of 10,000 students annually, covering tuition for first full-time diplomas and degrees at public tertiary institutions. The updates, effective from the 2026/2027 academic year, expand eligibility and introduce a new subsidy tier, potentially benefiting thousands more households.
Background and Evolution of the TTFS Scheme
Launched in 1991, the TTFS is a government-funded initiative managed by Mendaki, Singapore's leading self-help group for the Malay/Muslim community. It subsidises the Ministry of Education (MOE) tuition grant portion for eligible Singapore Citizen or Permanent Resident students of Malay ethnicity (including double-barrelled races with Malay as the first component). The scheme targets first full-time subsidised diplomas at the five polytechnics, Advanced Diplomas at the Institute of Technical Education (ITE), and degrees at the six autonomous universities.
Previously, subsidies were tiered based on per capita household income (PCI): 100% for PCI up to S$1,400, 75% for S$1,401–S$1,700, and 50% for S$1,701–S$2,000. These levels were last revised in 2018 to broaden access amid rising living costs. The scheme has played a pivotal role in elevating Malay tertiary enrolment, with rates rising from 15.3% in 2000 to around 35% for the cohort in recent years, though university progression remains a focus area at approximately 20–25% compared to the national 40%+.
Mendaki complements TTFS with additional aid like the Special Malay Bursary and study loans, ensuring holistic support. The enhancements align with Singapore's Forward Singapore exercise, emphasising equitable access to quality higher education as a driver of social mobility.
New Subsidy Tiers: A Clear Comparison
The core update raises PCI thresholds across existing tiers and adds a 25% subsidy band, making TTFS accessible to more families. Here's a side-by-side comparison:
| Subsidy Level | Previous PCI (Monthly) | New PCI (Monthly, AY2026/27) |
|---|---|---|
| 100% | ≤ S$1,400 | ≤ S$1,700 |
| 75% | S$1,401–S$1,700 | S$1,701–S$2,000 |
| 50% | S$1,701–S$2,000 | S$2,001–S$2,200 |
| 25% (New) | N/A | S$2,201–S$2,400 |
This adjustment could extend support to an additional 2,000–3,000 students, based on household income distributions, particularly benefiting middle-income groups previously ineligible.
Targeting Middle-Income Families for Greater Inclusion
The introduction of the 25% tier addresses a key gap: middle-income households (PCI S$2,201–S$2,400) often face 'sandwich' pressures with multiple children in education. Assoc Prof Faishal noted, “Affordability should never stand in the way of our children's pursuit of their aspirations.” For a family with three children and PCI S$2,300, the new tier subsidises S$3,000–S$5,000 annually per student at a polytechnic, easing net fees from S$12,000+ to under S$10,000.
Eligibility requires Singaporean/PR status, Malay ethnicity, full-time first subsidised programme, and application via MyMendaki portal during two annual windows (May–July, October–November). Subsidies disburse directly to institutions, with students notified individually.
Projected Surge in Beneficiaries and University Enrolments
With 10,000 annual beneficiaries pre-enhancement, the raised thresholds are expected to increase uptake by 20–30%, per Mendaki estimates. This aligns with rising Malay poly-to-uni progression: NUS and NTU report growing Malay cohorts, from 4% in 2010 to 7–8% in 2025, aided by schemes like TTFS and MOE's Special Assistance Plan (SAP) schools.
At SMU, TTFS recipients have climbed 15% yearly, contributing to diverse classrooms in business and law. SUSS and SIT, with flexible programmes, see higher part-time Malay uptake. Enhanced subsidies could push university entry rates towards the national average, fostering leaders in fields like engineering at NTU or medicine at NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine.
Integration with University-Specific Aid and Diversity Efforts
TTFS stacks with university bursaries: NUS Enhanced Financial Aid covers living costs for low-income students; NTU's Nanyang Bursary adds S$6,000 yearly. SMU's Financial Aid packages combine with TTFS for full coverage. Universities actively recruit via Mendaki partnerships, open houses, and bridging programmes.
This supports Singapore's merit-based, diverse higher ed: NUS's 2025 intake included 1,200+ Malays (8% of cohort), up from prior years. NTU's Hall of Residence quotas ensure community building, boosting retention (95%+ for subsidised students).
Mendaki's Holistic Support Beyond Tuition
TTFS forms part of Mendaki's ecosystem: Tuition Programmes (free/reduced for primaries/secondaries), Study Grants (S$500–S$2,000), and mentorship via Top Achievers Programme. A new Community Matching Grant matches fundraising dollar-for-dollar up to S$20 million for extra bursaries. Assoc Prof Faishal emphasised, “We want to encourage as many students as possible... particularly to qualify for university.”
- Top Achievers: Pairs uni students with mentors for career guidance.
- Anugerah Scholarships: Full rides for top performers at NUS/NTU/SMU.
- Interim Allowances: Monthly aid for ITE/poly students.
New Committee for Economic Resilience: Preparing Graduates
Complementing TTFS, the Committee for Economic Resilience (co-led by MPs Dr Wan Rizal and Saktiandi Supaat) will implement Economic Strategy Review recommendations. Focus: Upskilling workers, AI adoption for Malay businesses, SME internationalisation. Report due mid-2026, aiding TTFS graduates' employability amid AI/tech shifts.
NTU/SMU courses in AI/business align perfectly, with 90%+ graduate employment rates.
Real-World Impact: Stories from Beneficiaries
TTFS alumni like NTU engineering grad Aisyah (full subsidy, PCI S$1,200 family) credit it for debt-free degree, now at ST Engineering. NUS business student Imran (75% subsidy) balanced family costs, interning at DBS. Projections: Enhancements could add 1,500 uni-bound Malays yearly, closing gaps (Malay uni rate ~22% vs national 42%).
Application Process and Key Deadlines
Apply via MyMendaki (mendaki.org.sg): Two cycles yearly – 1st: May–July; 2nd: Oct–Nov. Submit NRIC, income proof, acceptance letter. Processing 4–6 weeks; direct institution payment. Contact Mendaki for queries; stackable with MOE Tuition Grant (capped at 100%).
Photo by Bing Hui Yau on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Sustaining Momentum in Higher Education
With enhancements, TTFS reinforces Singapore's commitment to inclusive higher ed. Universities like NUS (global top 10) and NTU (top 20 engineering) stand to gain diverse talent, enriching research/innovation. Long-term: Higher Malay graduate rates (target 40%+ by 2030), bolstering economy. Challenges remain – bridging poly-uni gap via preparatory courses – but initiatives like this pave the way.
For more on opportunities at Singapore universities, explore higher ed jobs in Singapore or scholarships.

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