A.W. Law LLC — Advocates & Solicitors
Roy Paul Mukkam, Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Handled by

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

NEGLIGENCE CLAIM LAWYER SINGAPORE

Negligence Claim Lawyer in Singapore

A Singapore negligence lawyer in Chinatown. Duty of care, breach, causation, loss. Free 10-min Negligence Discovery Session. Fees in writing.

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Or · weekdays, 9am – 10pm · Updated 24 April 2026

Timeline
6–18 months for most cases · longer if contested at trial
First meeting
Free · 10 minutes
Fees
Reasonable success-fee basis where possible · flat fee or capped hourly for non-injury claims
Heard at
State Courts for claims up to S$250,000 · High Court above that
Governing law
Civil Law Act · Limitation Act (6 years for most negligence, 3 years for personal injury)
Suitable for
Physical injuries, property damage, economic loss from professional advice, workplace accidents
Not for
Disputes over contract terms (see breach of contract) · purely emotional harm with no recognised injury
Languages we handle
English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt
Translation staff on hand for each.

Someone was careless, and you paid the price

If you are searching for a negligence claim lawyer in Singapore, something has probably gone wrong at someone else’s hand. A driver who was not paying attention. A contractor who cut corners. A doctor who missed an obvious sign. An accountant whose wrong advice cost you a tax bill.

I’m Roy. I handle negligence claims at A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown. Singapore law gives you real rights when someone’s carelessness causes you loss, whether that is a physical injury, damaged property, or a financial hit. The law is stricter than people expect, though. You need all four elements, and you need proof.

The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.

What a negligence claim in Singapore actually is

Negligence is the legal name for carelessness that causes someone else loss. It is the largest single category of civil claims in Singapore, handled by the State Courts for most claims and the High Court for claims over S$250,000.

To win a negligence claim in Singapore, you must prove four things, in this order:

  1. Duty of care. The defendant owed you a legal obligation to take reasonable care. The Singapore courts decide this using the two-stage Spandeck test from Spandeck Engineering v DSTA (2007): was the harm foreseeable, and was the relationship close enough?
  2. Breach of duty. The defendant fell below the proper standard. For ordinary people, that is the standard of a reasonable person. For professionals, it is the standard of a reasonable professional in their field.
  3. Causation. The breach actually caused your loss. No breach, no link, no claim.
  4. Damage. You suffered a recognised loss: physical injury, property damage, or financial loss.

The main law is common law (built up by judges over hundreds of cases), supplemented by the Civil Law Act (which deals with things like apportionment between defendants and contributory negligence) and specific statutes for certain situations. No single Act sets out “negligence” in Singapore, because it evolved through case law.

Common types of negligence claims we handle:

  1. Road traffic accidents. The biggest category by volume. Covered in depth on our personal injury claims page.
  2. Workplace injuries. Employer failed to provide safe working conditions.
  3. Medical negligence. Doctor or hospital fell below the expected standard of care.
  4. Professional negligence. Accountants, lawyers, surveyors, architects giving wrong advice. See professional malpractice.
  5. Occupier’s liability. Slip-and-fall at a mall, hawker centre, or HDB common area.
  6. Defective product claims. Injury from a faulty appliance or vehicle.

When a negligence claim makes sense, and when it does not

Before I take on a negligence matter, I ask four questions.

  • Are all four elements there? If the defendant did not owe you a duty, or the harm was not caused by their specific action, the claim fails no matter how sympathetic the facts are.
  • Can you prove it? Independent evidence matters. Police reports, medical records, photos, witness statements, expert reports. A claim based only on your word against theirs is hard to run.
  • Is the defendant worth suing? Winning a judgment you cannot enforce is pointless. If the defendant is insured (driver, employer, doctor, building owner), the insurer pays. If they are an uninsured individual with no assets, recovery may be impossible.
  • Is the 6-year deadline still open? Under the Limitation Act, you have 6 years for most negligence claims, but only 3 years for personal injury. Miss it and the court will not hear you.

The three situations we see most often:

  • Clear breach, clear loss, insured defendant. Road accidents, workplace injuries with documented medical evidence, slip-and-falls at insured premises. Usually settles in 6 to 12 months.
  • Disputed standard of care. Medical negligence, professional negligence. The defendant argues they met the proper standard. These need expert witnesses and take longer, 12 to 24 months.
  • Contributory negligence argument. The defendant admits some fault but says you were also careless. Payout is reduced by your percentage of blame. We price this in at the first meeting.

What to expect, honestly

How long it takes.

Most negligence claims settle within 6 to 18 months. A simple road accident case with clear liability can close in 6 to 9 months. A contested claim with expert witnesses runs 12 to 24 months. A full trial at the State Courts adds another 6 months on top. Most cases settle before trial, because going to trial is expensive for both sides.

How much it costs.

Realistic Singapore fees for a straightforward negligence matter:

  • Letter of claim and early negotiation: S$1,500 to S$3,500 flat.
  • Filed civil suit, uncontested or early settlement: S$3,500 to S$8,000 all-in.
  • Contested trial with expert witnesses: S$10,000 to S$30,000 or more.

For personal injury cases, we often work on a reasonable success-fee basis: we only get paid out of what we recover for you. For claims that involve property damage or economic loss, we usually quote a flat fee per stage or a capped hourly rate, always in writing first. The 10-min Discovery Session is always free.

If you win, the court usually orders the defendant to pay some of your legal costs. You do not always get back the full amount you paid, but you recover most of it on a successful claim.

What is the hard part.

Two things. One, proving the standard of care. For professional negligence and medical negligence especially, you need an expert witness to say “yes, the defendant fell below the standard a competent professional should have met.” Experts cost money and take time. Two, the waiting. Medical reports, expert opinions, court schedules. We push as hard as we can, but some parts cannot be rushed.

How we handle negligence claims at A.W. Law

A few things we do differently:

  • Honest read at the first meeting. If one of the four elements is missing, we tell you. We do not run speculative claims that will cost you more than they recover.
  • One lawyer from start to finish. Roy handles your file end to end. No handover.
  • Flat fees where we can. Letters and early-stage work are usually fixed prices. Contested trial work is capped in writing.
  • Letters in simple terms. Every document we send on your behalf is explained to you first.
  • WhatsApp until 10pm on weekdays. Between the accident and the settlement, you will want answers. We respond.
  • English, Malay, or Tamil. Whichever you are comfortable in.

We are at 133 New Bridge Road, #20-03 Chinatown Point. Two minutes from Chinatown MRT, Exit E.

What happens next

If someone’s carelessness has cost you, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Negligence Discovery Session using the form on this page, or WhatsApp us using the button anywhere on the screen.

Nothing commits you. By the end of the session, you will know whether all four elements of negligence are there, a realistic range for your claim, and what the first 30 days look like, including which records to gather and whether an expert report is needed.

How we handle it

Your negligence claims, step by step.

  1. Step 01

    Book free 10-min Negligence Discovery Session

    Tell us what happened and what you lost. We tell you straight away whether the four elements of negligence (duty, breach, causation, loss) are all there, and what a realistic compensation range looks like.

  2. Step 02

    Evidence gathering and expert reports

    We help you collect the paperwork. Medical records, accident reports, photos, witness statements, and where needed an expert report to prove the defendant fell below the proper standard.

  3. Step 03

    Letter of claim and negotiation

    We send a formal letter of claim to the defendant or their insurer setting out the case and the amount sought. Most matters settle here once the evidence is strong.

  4. Step 04

    Court filing if negotiations stall

    If the defendant refuses to settle, we file a writ of summons at the State Courts. We prepare your case, handle mediation, and run the trial if it gets there. Most contested negligence claims settle before the full hearing.

What to bring

For your first meeting.

Don't worry if you can't get everything — come anyway, and we'll tell you what's missing.

  • Medical records, hospital bills, and specialist reports (if injured)
  • Police report, accident report, or incident report
  • Photos of the scene, the damage, or your injuries
  • Contact details of any witnesses
  • Records of financial losses: payslips, repair invoices, lost business revenue
  • Any correspondence with the defendant or their insurer

Your bench

Who handles your negligence claims

3 lawyers at A.W. Law LLC take negligence claims matters. The lead takes your first meeting.

Lead on this matter
Roy Paul Mukkam — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Your lawyer on this matter

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

Roy has over a decade of civil litigation experience at the State Courts and the Supreme Court, including complex negligence and tort files. He was called to the Singapore Bar in 2013 after reading law at the University of Warwick. He has appeared in reported matters including a High Court minority oppression dispute and acted for banks, The Law Society of Singapore, and individual claimants. He speaks English, Malay, and Malayalam.
Languages
English · Malay · Malayalam
Practice focus
Civil Litigation · Bankruptcy & Insolvency · Criminal Law
Qualifications
LL.B. (Hons), University of Warwick (2006) · Advocate & Solicitor, Singapore Bar (2013)
Read full biography
Abdul Wahab — Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Wahab

Managing Director

Speaks
English · Malay · Tamil
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation
Muhammad Hasif — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Hasif

Associate Director

Speaks
English · Malay · Bahasa Indonesia
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation

Common questions

Negligence Claims — frequently asked.

How do I prove negligence in Singapore?

You need to show four things, in order. One, the defendant owed you a duty of care (the Singapore courts apply the Spandeck test: was the harm foreseeable, and was there sufficient proximity between you and the defendant?). Two, the defendant breached that duty by falling below the standard of a reasonable person (or a reasonable professional, if they are a doctor, accountant, or lawyer). Three, the breach caused your loss. Four, you actually suffered damage (physical injury, property damage, or financial loss). Miss any of the four and the claim fails.

What is duty of care in Singapore?

Duty of care is a legal obligation to take reasonable steps to avoid causing harm to another person. Drivers owe a duty to other road users. Doctors owe a duty to their patients. Employers owe a duty to employees. Occupiers of buildings owe a duty to visitors. In Singapore, the courts decide whether a duty exists using a two-stage test from Spandeck Engineering v DSTA (2007): was the harm reasonably foreseeable, and was the relationship between the parties close enough (proximity)? Most everyday situations, including road accidents and medical treatment, clearly pass.

How long do I have to sue for negligence in Singapore?

Under the Limitation Act, you have 6 years from the date of the negligent act for most negligence claims. But personal injury claims (physical harm to you, not just property or money) have a shorter 3-year limit. Miss the deadline and the court will refuse to hear you, even on a strong case. For latent damage (where the harm only becomes clear years later), the clock can run from the date you reasonably ought to have known.

Can I sue for emotional distress in Singapore?

Usually only if it comes with a recognised psychiatric injury, not just stress or upset. Singapore law allows claims for nervous shock (a recognised psychiatric illness like PTSD, clinical depression, or anxiety disorder caused by a traumatic event) where the claimant has the proper medical evidence. A parent who witnessed a child being hit by a car may claim. Someone who is merely upset after an argument generally cannot. The evidence bar is high and needs a psychiatrist's report.

What is the difference between negligence and tort?

Negligence is one type of tort. A tort is a civil wrong (not a crime, not a breach of contract) that gives the injured person the right to sue. Negligence is the biggest category, but there are others: nuisance (interference with your property), trespass (someone entering your land or touching you without consent), defamation (damaging your reputation), and conversion (dealing with your goods as if they were theirs). See our tort claims page for the full picture.

How much does it cost to sue for negligence in Singapore?

A simple negligence claim in the State Courts costs S$3,500 to S$8,000 for an uncontested matter. A contested trial runs S$10,000 to S$30,000 or more, depending on complexity and whether expert witnesses are needed. For personal injury cases we often take work on a reasonable success-fee basis: we only get paid from what we recover. We quote a written fee cap before any paid work starts, and we are honest about when legal costs may outweigh the likely recovery.

What is contributory negligence in Singapore?

Contributory negligence means you were partly responsible for your own loss. For example, a cyclist not wearing a helmet who suffers a head injury in a collision. The court may still award damages, but reduces them by a percentage (often 10 to 40 percent) to reflect your share of the fault. In Singapore, contributory negligence reduces the award but does not wipe it out entirely. We assess this honestly at the first meeting.

Can I sue for pure economic loss in Singapore?

Sometimes. Pure economic loss means money lost without any physical injury or property damage, for example losses from bad professional advice. Singapore courts allow recovery where the Spandeck test is satisfied, especially in professional negligence cases: accountants giving wrong tax advice, lawyers missing deadlines, surveyors undervaluing a property. See our professional malpractice page. For claims against other parties, pure economic loss is harder to recover and we give you a frank read at the first meeting.

Related matters we handle

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