The Answer in 60 Seconds

Singapore SMEs trading on credit terms face two structural choices for trade credit insurance: (1) Whole Turnover — blanket policy covering all qualifying buyers under a single credit-management discipline, with the insurer monitoring all approved counterparties; (2) Single-Buyer / Key-Accounts — focused policy covering one named high-risk customer or a select group of key accounts. Both approaches protect against buyer payment default — insolvency, prolonged default, or political risk for export receivables. Indemnity ratio: typically 75-95% for private buyers; up to 100% for sovereign / quasi-sovereign buyers. Premium: 0.05-0.6% of gross monthly sales (typical 0.2%) for whole turnover; per-buyer pricing for single-buyer cover. The four major trade credit underwriters in Singapore are Allianz Trade Singapore (formerly Euler Hermes), Atradius, Coface, and Tokio Marine HCC. Marsh, Aon, WTW, and Howden distribute. Per GIA FY2024 sector data, Trade Credit / Surety / Bonds sit within the offshore Miscellaneous category. Decision factor: SMEs with concentrated risk (single buyer >30% revenue) typically benefit from single-buyer cover; diversified exporters benefit from whole-turnover discipline. Receivables typically represent a substantial proportion of business value for trade-credit-exposed SMEs; confirm the receivables-to-balance-sheet ratio against the firm's own management accounts rather than industry rules of thumb.

What Trade Credit Insurance Does

Trade credit insurance protects sellers against the risk that buyers will not pay for goods or services delivered on credit terms. The product is structurally distinct from cash flow financing, factoring, or letters of credit — it is loss insurance against payment default.

The Triggers

Standard trade credit policies respond to three principal triggers:

  • Buyer insolvency — formal insolvency proceedings (bankruptcy, judicial management, liquidation, scheme of arrangement) against the buyer, recognised in the buyer's jurisdiction.
  • Protracted default / prolonged default — non-payment for a defined period (typically 90 to 180 days after due date) without formal insolvency proceedings. The trigger captures buyers who are commercially insolvent but not yet formally insolvent.
  • Political risk — for export receivables, non-payment caused by political events affecting the buyer's country (war, currency inconvertibility, government action preventing payment, expropriation).

The "non-payment from dispute" exposure is typically excluded — disputes over the goods, services, or contract terms are commercial matters between the parties, not insurance triggers.

Indemnity Structure

  • Indemnity ratio: typically 75-95% for private buyers, up to 100% for sovereign / quasi-sovereign buyers.
  • Waiting period: typically 90 to 180 days for protracted default before indemnity payment.
  • Maximum liability: per-buyer limit set by the insurer based on credit assessment.
  • Aggregate cover: total programme aggregate across all covered buyers.

Credit Limit Setting

The structural feature of trade credit cover is the per-buyer credit limit set by the insurer. The insurer monitors each covered buyer's financial standing through:

  • Credit bureau information: ratings from credit agencies, audited financial statements, payment-behaviour data.
  • Sector and country analysis: industry conditions, country-risk assessment.
  • Trade information: payment experience reports from other policyholders.

The insurer can adjust or withdraw credit limits during the policy period as buyer conditions change. The policyholder must operate within the prevailing credit limits; sales above the limit are at the policyholder's risk.

Whole Turnover Cover

Whole turnover cover blankets all qualifying buyers under a single policy with consistent terms.

Structural Features

  • All-buyer coverage: every qualifying buyer is automatically eligible for cover subject to the insurer's credit-limit decision.
  • Single discipline: consistent credit-management workflow across all buyers.
  • Bulk pricing: rate per dollar of insured turnover, typically 0.05-0.6% of gross monthly sales (most commonly around 0.2% for diversified SMEs).
  • Annual renewal: the policy renews annually with updated rates reflecting the prior year's experience.
  • Discretionary limits: small-buyer thresholds where the SME can extend credit without specific insurer approval (typically up to S$10,000-S$50,000 per buyer).

Pros

  • Comprehensive protection: every credit-extended buyer is in scope.
  • Credit-management discipline: the insurer's credit-limit infrastructure supports the SME's own credit-management framework. Many SMEs find the credit-monitoring infrastructure valuable independently of the insurance payout.
  • Bulk pricing efficiency: spread across all buyers, the rate is materially lower than per-buyer pricing.
  • Financing leverage: lenders typically value trade credit insurance for receivables financing. The cover supports working-capital lines.

Cons

  • Minimum premium: typical minimum S$10,000-S$25,000 annually. Below this turnover, whole turnover is uneconomic.
  • Coverage of low-quality buyers: the insurer may decline or sub-limit weaker buyers, leaving the SME selectively exposed.
  • Credit-limit volatility: limits can move during the policy period as buyer conditions change.
  • Information disclosure burden: monthly or quarterly reporting of receivables, turnover, and overdue accounts.

Typical Profile

Whole turnover suits:

  • Diversified SMEs with many small / mid-sized buyers.
  • Exporters serving multiple counterparties.
  • Distributors and wholesalers with broad customer bases.
  • SMEs using receivables for financing (lenders typically value broad cover).

Single-Buyer / Key-Accounts Cover

Single-buyer cover focuses on a specific named buyer or a small group of key accounts.

Structural Features

  • Defined buyer scope: cover applies to one or several named buyers.
  • Per-buyer underwriting: the insurer underwrites each named buyer specifically, with rate reflecting that buyer's risk profile.
  • Per-buyer credit limit: dedicated credit limit per buyer.
  • Tailored wording: terms can be calibrated to the specific buyer relationship (e.g., long-term framework contracts, project-financed deals).
  • Premium structure: typically rate per dollar of exposure, with the rate varying by buyer.

Pros

  • Targeted protection: addresses the SME's concentrated risk specifically.
  • Bespoke underwriting: terms reflect the specific buyer relationship rather than a portfolio average.
  • Premium efficiency for concentrated portfolios: where the SME's risk is concentrated in 1-3 buyers, single-buyer cover can be more economical than whole turnover with mandatory coverage of weaker buyers in the portfolio.
  • Lower information burden: only the named buyer(s) are reported on.

Cons

  • Other-buyer exposure uninsured: the rest of the portfolio is bare.
  • Per-buyer minimum premium: typically higher per-dollar than whole turnover.
  • Less credit-management infrastructure: the SME maintains its own discipline for non-covered buyers.
  • Underwriter selectivity: insurers will not write every named buyer; the SME's preferred coverage candidate may be declined.

Typical Profile

Single-buyer suits:

  • SMEs with concentrated revenue (one buyer representing 30%+ of revenue).
  • SMEs entering one large project or long-term contract.
  • SMEs with a specific high-risk buyer in an otherwise diversified portfolio.
  • SMEs using single-buyer cover as a project-finance enabler.

Decision Framework

Variable 1: Customer Concentration

  • Top buyer < 15% of revenue: Whole turnover typically optimal.
  • Top buyer 15-30% of revenue: Mixed answer; both routes should be priced.
  • Top buyer 30%+ of revenue: Single-buyer cover focused on the concentration becomes structurally appropriate, potentially complemented by selective whole turnover for the rest.

Variable 2: Revenue Scale

  • Annual revenue below S$3m: minimum premium economics typically rule out whole turnover; selective single-buyer cover where needed.
  • Annual revenue S$3m-S$15m: whole turnover becomes viable.
  • Annual revenue S$15m+: whole turnover with portfolio discipline becomes the default; large key accounts can be carved out for separate or enhanced treatment.

Variable 3: Export vs Domestic Profile

Export sales carry political-risk exposure that domestic sales do not. For SMEs with material export exposure, the political-risk coverage of trade credit insurance is a meaningful complement to the commercial-credit-risk coverage.

For pure-domestic Singapore SMEs, the commercial-credit-risk coverage is the principal protection.

Variable 4: Financing Linkage

If the SME uses receivables for working-capital financing, lenders typically prefer whole turnover cover for the broad receivables-portfolio protection. Single-buyer cover may not satisfy lender requirements for a broad receivables facility.

Variable 5: Credit-Management Infrastructure

Whole turnover effectively outsources part of the credit-monitoring function to the insurer. SMEs without internal credit-management infrastructure benefit from this; SMEs with strong internal credit-monitoring can use single-buyer cover selectively without giving up internal control.

The Singapore Market

Trade credit cover in Singapore is provided principally by four major underwriters with global trade-credit franchises:

  • Allianz Trade Singapore (formerly Euler Hermes; rebranded under Allianz Trade in March 2022).
  • Atradius — global trade credit insurer with Singapore office.
  • Coface — French-origin global trade credit insurer.
  • Tokio Marine HCC — specialty division of Tokio Marine with global trade credit capability.

Major brokers in the Singapore trade credit market include Marsh, Aon, WTW, and Howden. Singapore-specialist trade credit brokerages also operate in the segment.

Per the GIA FY2024 sector results, Trade Credit / Surety / Bonds business is captured within the offshore Miscellaneous category in GIA reporting. Singapore offshore Miscellaneous GWP was substantial in FY2024, reflecting Singapore's role as a regional hub for trade finance.

The Marketlend / QBE Trade Credit Case

The Singapore International Commercial Court's judgment in Marketlend Pty Ltd and another v QBE Insurance (Singapore) Pte Ltd [2025] SGHC(I) 1 addressed important questions on trade credit insurance interpretation and is summarised in our regulatory-change article. The court found in favour of the insurer — holding QBE not liable for the disputed claim of roughly US$9 million — and the judgment underlines the importance of:

  • Not assigning the policy's rights or benefits to a financier without the insurer's written consent.
  • The insured's burden of proving that the underlying transactions were genuine physical trades (the court found two of the trades to be fictitious).
  • Strict compliance with conditions precedent, including producing the documents the insurer requests to verify the trade and the claim.

SMEs negotiating or claiming under trade credit cover should test their wording and their documentation discipline against the issues raised in the judgment.

Coverage Wordings to Test

Indemnity Ratio

75-95% is the typical range. Higher indemnity ratios (90%+) are available for premium uplift or for stronger buyers. The trade-off is indemnity quality vs premium efficiency.

Waiting Period

90-180 days for protracted default. Shorter waiting periods support faster claim payment but typically attract higher premium.

Credit Limit Mechanics

The policy specifies how credit limits are set, monitored, and adjusted. The policyholder's obligations include:

  • Operating within prevailing credit limits.
  • Notifying the insurer of overdue accounts within specified windows.
  • Cooperation in collection and recovery efforts.

Discretionary Limits

The "discretionary limit" or "discretionary cover" allows the policyholder to extend credit to small buyers without specific insurer approval, up to a defined per-buyer threshold and subject to overall portfolio discipline.

Geographic Scope

Standard cover typically worldwide subject to specified high-risk country exclusions. Specific endorsements for politically sensitive destinations.

Currency

Trade credit policies are typically denominated in a single currency (SGD or USD). The policyholder's currency exposure on multi-currency receivables must be managed separately.

Recoveries

The policy typically requires the policyholder to support collection and recovery efforts. Recoveries net of costs are typically shared between policyholder and insurer in proportion to the indemnity paid.

Exclusions

Standard exclusions include:

  • Disputed receivables (until dispute resolved).
  • Receivables from the policyholder's affiliates or related parties.
  • Receivables from buyers in war zones or sanctioned countries.
  • Receivables outside policy-period limits or scope.

Operational Workflow

Underwriting and Inception

  • Application: SME provides receivables portfolio data, customer concentrations, payment experience, financials.
  • Insurer credit assessment: per-buyer limit setting for whole turnover, or per-buyer underwriting for single-buyer cover.
  • Policy issuance: confirmed credit limits, premium calculation, wording.

During the Policy Period

  • Monthly / quarterly reporting: receivables, turnover, overdue accounts.
  • Credit limit monitoring: insurer tracks buyer conditions; limits can be adjusted.
  • Overdue account notification: the policyholder notifies overdues per the wording's timetable.

Claim Process

  • Trigger event: buyer insolvency, protracted default, or political event.
  • Notification: within the wording's timetable, with supporting documents.
  • Waiting period: typically 90-180 days for protracted default.
  • Indemnity calculation: insured loss times indemnity ratio.
  • Payment: typically after waiting period and verification.
  • Recovery: insurer pursues recovery against the buyer; net recoveries shared.

Renewal

  • Loss experience review.
  • Portfolio update.
  • Premium adjustment.

Common Mistakes Singapore SMEs Make on Trade Credit

Treating trade credit insurance as a substitute for credit management. It is not. The insurance is the backstop; the upstream credit policy is the loss-prevention.

Sales above credit limits. Exceeding the limit puts the excess at the policyholder's risk. Sales discipline must align with cover.

Missing overdue-account notification timetables. Late notification can compromise indemnity.

Whole turnover without minimum-volume economics. Below the minimum premium threshold, whole turnover is uneconomic and selective single-buyer cover is the answer.

Single-buyer without considering portfolio context. Single-buyer cover leaves the rest of the portfolio uninsured. SMEs should assess whether the uninsured remainder is acceptable.

Confusing trade credit insurance with surety / performance bonds. Different products responding to different risks. See Surety vs Performance Bond and Trade Credit vs Letters of Credit for the structural distinctions.

Not coordinating with lender requirements. Lenders may have specific trade credit cover expectations for receivables financing facilities.

Forgetting political risk on export receivables. Sovereign-risk events have occurred in markets Singapore SMEs trade with. Political risk coverage is the response.

Inadequate documentation of buyer-side commercial dispute. When trade credit claim arises, the buyer often raises a dispute as a defence. Strong contract documentation is the SME's protection.

Assuming all buyers are coverable. Insurers decline some buyers (sector, geography, financial standing). The decline list shapes the practical cover.

What This Means for Your Business

If you sell on credit terms as a Singapore SME — whether domestically, regionally, or globally — receivables are a significant balance-sheet exposure. Trade credit insurance is the structural protection against buyer default.

The whole turnover vs single-buyer decision rests on portfolio concentration, revenue scale, export profile, financing arrangement, and credit-management infrastructure. For most SMEs above S$5m revenue with diversified portfolios, whole turnover is the structural answer. For SMEs with concentrated revenue or specific high-risk relationships, single-buyer or hybrid structures are the answer.

Your licensed adviser should walk you through the portfolio analysis, the major underwriter quotes, the wording considerations (indemnity ratio, waiting period, credit limit mechanics), and the financing-linkage question. The annual renewal is the right moment to revisit the structure as the SME's portfolio and growth trajectory evolves.

Questions to Ask Your Adviser

  1. For my customer-concentration profile and revenue scale, which structure (whole turnover vs single-buyer) is recommended, and what is the indicative premium under each?
  2. Which of the four major underwriters (Allianz Trade, Atradius, Coface, Tokio Marine HCC) are competitive for my profile, and what are the differentiating features?
  3. What indemnity ratio do you recommend, and what is the premium impact of going from 75% to 90%?
  4. For my export receivables, what political-risk coverage is included, and what countries are within scope?
  5. How does the credit-limit mechanism work — what is the workflow when an insurer reduces a limit on a buyer I am actively selling to?
  6. What is the overdue-account notification timetable, and how is the documentation requirement managed when a buyer raises a dispute?
  7. How does the cover coordinate with my receivables-financing facility — do my lender's documentation requirements align with the trade credit wording?
  8. For the recovery process after an indemnified loss, what is the workflow, and how are recoveries shared between me and the insurer?

Related Information

Published 14 May 2026. Source verified 14 May 2026. COVA is an introducer under MAS Notice FAA-N02. We do not recommend insurance products. We provide factual information sourced from primary regulators and route you to a licensed IFA who can match a policy to your specific situation.