When evaluating cloud vs on-premise HR software Singapore employers eventually face the same fork: cloud subscription or on-premise installation. Most vendors push cloud, and for most businesses, they are right. But the real question is not which model sounds better. It is which one fits your team size, data requirements, and compliance posture. Our team has seen companies with 15 staff overpay for enterprise on-premise systems they cannot maintain, and 200-person companies use cloud platforms that store employee data in servers outside Singapore. Both are mistakes.
Key Takeaways
- Cloud HR has a lower upfront cost: No server hardware, no IT setup, a monthly subscription instead of licence fees.
- On-premise gives full data control: Data stays on your own servers, which matters for organisations with strict data sovereignty requirements.
- PDPA applies to both models: Singapore’s Personal Data Protection Act applies regardless of deployment type (Source: PDPC, https://www.pdpc.gov.sg/overview-of-pdpa/the-legislation/personal-data-protection-act).
- CPF compliance depends on the software, not the server: Whether cloud or on-premise, the platform must still correctly calculate CPF by age bracket (Source: CPF Board, https://www.cpf.gov.sg/employer/employer-obligations/how-much-cpf-contributions-to-pay).
- PSG grant covers cloud SaaS only: The Productivity Solutions Grant does not apply to on-premise licence purchases (Source: Enterprise Singapore, https://www.enterprisesg.gov.sg/financial-support/productivity-solutions-grant).
What Is the Difference Between Cloud and On-Premise HR Software?
Cloud HR software runs on servers managed by the vendor and is accessed via a web browser or mobile app. On-premise HR software is installed on servers your company owns and manages. The compliance obligations (CPF, MOM, IRAS) are identical. What changes is who manages the infrastructure and where the data lives.
| Factor | Cloud HR | On-Premise HR |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | Low (subscription) | High (licence + server) |
| IT maintenance | Vendor handles | Your IT team |
| Data location | Vendor’s data centre | Your premises |
| Compliance updates | Automatic from the vendor | Manual patch process |
| Mobile access | Standard | Requires VPN or setup |
| PSG eligibility | Yes (pre-approved vendors) | No |
For most Singapore SMEs without a dedicated IT team, the cloud is the practical default. On-premise is a legitimate choice for large enterprises with IT staff, strict data sovereignty requirements, or existing server infrastructure.
What Are the PDPA Implications of Cloud HR in Singapore?
Singapore’s PDPA requires that any third party processing employee personal data (including cloud HR vendors) meet equivalent data protection standards (Source: PDPC, https://www.pdpc.gov.sg/overview-of-pdpa/the-legislation/personal-data-protection-act). The key issue with cloud HR is data residency: where are the servers located?
Ask every cloud vendor these questions before signing:
- Are your data centres located in Singapore?
- Do you provide a Data Processing Agreement (DPA)?
- What encryption standard is used for data at rest and in transit?
- What is your breach notification procedure?
A cloud vendor with Singapore-based data centres and ISO 27001 certification has the strongest PDPA compliance posture. On-premise avoids the cross-border transfer issue entirely, but creates a different obligation: your IT team is now responsible for all data security.
What Does Total Cost of Ownership Look Like for Each Model?
For most Singapore SMEs, cloud HR has a lower total cost of ownership over a three-year period when you include server hardware, IT support, and manual compliance update costs for on-premise. The exception is large enterprises with existing IT infrastructure, which can absorb those fixed costs.
A rough comparison for a 50-person Singapore company:
- Cloud HR: SGD 5 to 10 per employee per month. At an average of SGD 7, that is SGD 4,200 per year. With 50% PSG subsidy on an eligible vendor, the net cost drops to approximately SGD 2,100 per year.
- On-premise HR: Licence cost plus server hardware (SGD 5,000 to 20,000 upfront), IT maintenance, and manual compliance updates. No PSG grant applies.
The PSG grant significantly changes the cloud math for Singapore SMEs. Check the current Enterprise Singapore pre-approved vendor list before comparing (Source: Enterprise Singapore, https://www.enterprisesg.gov.sg/financial-support/productivity-solutions-grant).
Which Singapore Companies Should Choose On-Premise?
On-premise HR software makes sense for Singapore companies with strict data sovereignty requirements, existing IT infrastructure, or regulatory mandates that prohibit third-party data processing. This is typically large enterprises in finance, healthcare, or defence-adjacent sectors.
For everyone else, the maintenance burden of on-premises is not justified. When the CPF Board changes the contribution rates (which happens periodically), a cloud vendor pushes the update to all customers immediately. With on-premise, you wait for a patch and apply it manually. During that gap, your payroll may be computing incorrect CPF amounts.
This gap creates real compliance risk. A Singapore employer using outdated on-premise software can process multiple payroll runs with the wrong CPF rate after a rate change. The back-correction process is time-consuming and costly.
“Cloud HR removes one maintenance burden. It adds one compliance question: where is the data? Answer that question before you sign.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Is cloud HR software safe for Singaporean employee data?
Cloud HR software is safe if the vendor meets PDPA standards, including encryption, access controls, and breach notification (Source: PDPC, https://www.pdpc.gov.sg/overview-of-pdpa/the-legislation/personal-data-protection-act). Request the vendor’s Data Processing Agreement and confirm the data centre location before signing.
Does on-premise HR software get automatic CPF updates in Singapore?
No. On-premise HR software requires the vendor to release a patch and your IT team to apply it whenever the CPF Board changes contribution rates. This creates a compliance gap between the rate change and your next patch cycle. Cloud software updates centrally, so all customers receive the new rate simultaneously.
Can I switch from on-premise to cloud HR software in Singapore?
Yes, migration from on-premise to cloud HR is common, and most Singapore cloud vendors have data migration services. The key steps are exporting historical payroll records, employee master data, and leave balances, then importing them into the cloud platform. Allow 4 to 8 weeks for a clean migration at a 50-person company.
Which is better for a 20-person Singapore SME: cloud or on-premise?
Cloud HR is better for a 20-person Singapore SME in almost every case. No IT infrastructure is needed, PSG grant reduces subscription cost by up to 50%, and CPF and MOM compliance updates are automatic. On-premise at that size creates maintenance obligations that outweigh any benefit.
What happens to my HR data if the cloud vendor shuts down?
Reputable cloud HR vendors include data export provisions in their contracts. Before signing, confirm you can export all employee records, payroll history, and leave records in a standard format (CSV or XLSX) at any time. This is a standard clause to negotiate, and any vendor that refuses it is a risk.
Conclusion
For Singapore SMEs, cloud HR wins on cost, convenience, and automatic compliance updates. The PDPA data residency question is real but answerable: choose a vendor with Singapore-based servers and a signed Data Processing Agreement. On-premise remains a valid choice for large enterprises with IT staff and data sovereignty mandates. For everyone else, the total cost and maintenance burden of on-premises does not stack up against a cloud subscription, especially with the PSG grant available.
Tipsoi’s cloud HR platform stores data in Singapore and includes a full Data Processing Agreement for PDPA compliance. Get a quote. Download Tipsoi’s HR Software Vendor Evaluation Scorecard to structure your comparison.


