How to Hire Your First Employee in Singapore

A first-hire checklist for Singapore SMEs covering role design, contracts, KETs, CPF, payroll, onboarding and probation.


Business

A founder finally has enough work to hire someone, but the first employee changes everything. You are no longer just selling and delivering. You now need a clear role, employment terms, payroll, CPF, onboarding and a way to manage performance.

Hiring your first employee in Singapore is not only a recruitment decision. It is an operating-system decision. A messy first hire can create confusion, cash-flow pressure and compliance issues.

This guide gives SMEs a practical sequence for making the first hire properly.

Decide what the first employee must own

Do not hire a vague helper. Hire for a specific job that removes a real bottleneck.

Business bottleneck
Possible first hire
Success measure
Founder spends too much time on admin
Operations or admin executive
Invoices, scheduling and follow-ups handled accurately
Leads are not followed up
Sales coordinator
Response time and pipeline hygiene improve
Delivery quality is inconsistent
Service delivery executive
Work delivered to checklist
Marketing is neglected
Marketing executive
Content, campaigns and enquiries tracked
Infographic showing the first employee hiring checklist for Singapore SMEs.
A first hire works best when role, terms, payroll and onboarding are prepared before day one.

Write the role outcome before writing the job ad. If you cannot define success, the employee cannot either.

Prepare the employment terms

MOM guidance on Key Employment Terms sets out items that should be included where applicable. The point for SMEs is simple: put the important terms in writing.

  • Job title and main duties.
  • Start date and place of work.
  • Working hours and rest days.
  • Salary, allowances and payment date.
  • Leave, medical benefits and probation.
  • Notice period and termination terms.
  • Confidentiality, company property and data handling.

For more detail, connect this with SBO guides on employment contracts and mandatory payroll deductions.

Set up payroll and CPF

Before the first salary run, know whether CPF applies, what employer share is due, and what payroll deductions are required. CPF rules differ for Singapore Citizens and Singapore Permanent Residents, and foreign employees generally follow work-pass rules instead.

Payroll item
Why it matters
Where to prepare
Basic salary
Foundation for pay and CPF computation
Employment contract and payroll system
CPF
Employer and employee contributions where applicable
CPF submission process
SDL
Employer levy obligation
Monthly payroll calculation
Self-help group contributions
May apply depending on employee profile
Payroll deduction setup
Payslip
Record of salary and deductions
Payroll template or software

Use SBO’s CPF contribution calculator when estimating Singapore Citizen or PR payroll cost.

Build an onboarding plan

  1. Send signed contract and first-day instructions.
  2. Prepare laptop, accounts, access and work tools.
  3. Explain business model, customers and service standards.
  4. Walk through role outcomes and first-week tasks.
  5. Set a 30-day check-in and probation review criteria.

The first week should not be a treasure hunt for passwords and instructions. A structured start reduces mistakes and helps the employee become productive faster.

Manage probation properly

Probation is not a waiting period. It is a review period. Set expectations early and document feedback.

  • Review work quality, speed and reliability.
  • Check whether the employee understands the role.
  • Give clear feedback before the probation end date.
  • Confirm, extend or end employment based on documented reasons.
  • Follow the contract and Employment Act obligations where applicable.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I prepare before hiring my first employee?

Prepare the role scope, salary budget, employment terms, payroll process, CPF setup where applicable, onboarding checklist and first-month review criteria.

Do I need a written employment contract in Singapore?

Written terms are strongly recommended, and employers should provide key employment terms where required. A clear contract prevents misunderstandings.

Do employers need to pay CPF for the first employee?

CPF obligations depend on the employee’s citizenship or PR status, wage type and current CPF rules. Employers should check CPF Board guidance and use proper payroll calculations.

What is the biggest first-hire mistake?

Hiring for a vague role. The first employee needs clear ownership, success measures and onboarding, otherwise the founder simply gains another management problem.

The bottom line

Hiring your first employee is a major step from solo operator to employer. Treat it as a system: role, contract, payroll, CPF, onboarding and review.

The better you define the job before hiring, the easier it is to train, manage and keep the person. A good first hire should remove a bottleneck, not create a new one.

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