Blair Plain Conservation Area price trends show a tightly supplied, heritage landed enclave where per-square-foot (PSF) prices have steadily climbed to the mid‑$3,000s PSF range on average, with premium, fully restored units transacting well above that depending on build-up and condition.[10][7] For buyers and investors, this means higher entry prices but strong value preservation and resilient demand given its conservation status, proximity to the CBD, and limited future supply.
This article is a focused cluster guide under Homejourney’s main Blair Plain Conservation Area development overview, drilling specifically into Blair Plain Conservation Area price trends and market analysis so that you can benchmark fair value, understand risks, and plan your property investment in D02 with confidence. For a broader look at unit types, pros and cons and liveability, you can also refer to the main guide: Blair Plain Conservation Area in D02: Unit Types, Prices, Pros & Cons | Homejour... .
Where is Blair Plain Conservation Area and what makes it unique?
Blair Plain Conservation Area sits along Blair Road and the surrounding streets within District 02, on the city-fringe between Tanjong Pagar, Chinatown and Everton Park.[5][10] URA designates this as a conservation enclave of mainly two- and three-storey shophouses and terrace houses, preserving their pre-war facades while allowing modern internal layouts.[5] Walking through Blair Road in the evenings, you will see a mix of owner-occupiers, design studios and discreet offices behind ornate Peranakan-style facades – it feels noticeably quieter than the bars of Keong Saik but more lived-in than purely commercial conservation rows.
From a practical perspective, Blair Plain is about 8–10 minutes’ walk to Outram Park MRT interchange (East-West, North-East and Thomson-East Coast Lines) and close to the future Cantonment MRT on the Circle Line, giving excellent rail connectivity into Raffles Place, Shenton Way and Orchard within 2–4 stops.[1][5] Many residents I’ve spoken to here walk to the CBD or Greater Southern Waterfront work nodes in under 20 minutes, which is a key driver of both owner-occupier and rental demand.
Blair Plain Conservation Area: Development profile & unit characteristics
Unlike a typical Singapore condo, Blair Plain Conservation Area is a URA conservation landed cluster, not a single strata-titled condominium project. The URA cadastral records and transaction logs (as compiled on Homejourney’s project page) show multiple titles under the same project name along Blair Road.[10] Key characteristics buyers should note:
- Property type: Conservation terrace / shophouse (landed housing under URA conservation status).[5][10]
- Location: Blair Road, off Neil Road and Kampong Bahru Road, D02 (Chinatown / Tanjong Pagar / Everton Park).[5][10]
- Tenure: Predominantly freehold titles in this conservation cluster, which is a major draw for long-term wealth preservation.[5]
- Unit sizes: Recent residential transactions recorded sizes around 131.5–138.6 sqm (approx. 1,415–1,492 sq ft) of land or strata area, while many houses here have larger built-up areas due to multiple storeys.[10][5]
- Configuration: Most homes are 3–4 storeys with 3–5 bedrooms, often with an airwell, rear yard and sometimes private parking (depending on plot depth).[1][5]
Because these are conservation landed houses, layouts can vary significantly depending on how each owner has restored or reconfigured the interior. Some homes retain long, linear layouts with internal courtyards, while others open up the ground floor into a loft-style living-dining area with a modern kitchen at the rear. If you are used to conventional condo stacks, always review actual floor plans and conduct a physical viewing to understand airflow, light and privacy.
Current Blair Plain Conservation Area prices (2024–2026)
Based on transaction data compiled on Homejourney from URA caveats and other public records, Blair Plain Conservation Area has seen the following recent deals:[10][5]
- Feb 2025: Approx. 138.6 sqm (1,492 sq ft) unit transacted at about $6.63 million, reflecting roughly $4,445 PSF on the land/strata area.[10]
- Sep 2024: Approx. 131.5 sqm (1,415 sq ft) unit transacted at around $5.30 million, or about $3,744 PSF.[10]
- Additional 2025 resale transactions within the enclave show prices in the range of roughly $2,896 to $3,118 PSF for larger plots, depending on size and condition.[5][7]
Third‑party analytics for the broader Blair Plain Conservation Area cluster indicate that, over the last 12 months, sale prices have ranged from about $2,896 PSF to $4,446 PSF, with an average of roughly $3,487 PSF.[7][8] This is consistent with what we see when walking the area and speaking with agents specialising in conservation homes, especially for units closer to Outram Park MRT and those with higher-quality restoration work.
Important price disclaimer: All prices above are estimates based on URA and public data as of early 2026 and may not reflect the latest closed or private deals. Always verify current prices on Homejourney’s live project page for Blair Plain Conservation Area Projects Directory and consult a licensed property professional before making commitments.
Historical price trends & market cycle insights
Looking at longer-term price charts for Blair Plain Conservation Area and nearby conservation clusters, there are several clear patterns:[7][8][10]
- Steady appreciation: Over the last decade, conservation landed homes here have significantly outperformed average non-landed prices in D02 on a PSF basis, supported by freehold tenure, scarcity and lifestyle appeal.
- Resilience in downturns: During periods of broader market uncertainty (for example, during COVID years), transaction volumes dipped but PSF values for well-located, well-restored units remained relatively firm, with fewer distressed sales.
- Widening price band: The gap between entry-level conservation homes in original/dated condition and turnkey designer-restored units has widened, with the latter achieving strong premiums above enclave averages.
From a lived-experience standpoint, I’ve noticed that buyers who missed earlier opportunities in other conservation areas like Emerald Hill or Cairnhill often turn to Blair Plain and Everton Park as the “last affordable” city-fringe conservation pockets – and that continued spillover demand has helped keep price momentum strong even as additional cooling measures were introduced.
How Blair Plain compares with nearby D02 and CBD properties
When you evaluate Blair Plain Conservation Area price trends and market analysis, it helps to benchmark against alternatives:
- Versus nearby condos in D02: Many CBD‑fringe condos around Tanjong Pagar, Everton Park and Spottiswoode trade in the ballpark of low‑ to mid‑$2,000s PSF depending on age and facilities, which is typically below Blair Plain’s landed conservation PSF.[10][7] However, condos offer pools, gyms and security, which conservation houses do not.
- Versus other conservation enclaves: Districts 9 and 11 conservation terraces (e.g. Emerald Hill) often command PSFs equal to or higher than Blair Plain, but they are further from the core CBD office belt and Greater Southern Waterfront.
- Versus non‑conservation landed: Freehold, non-conservation terraces in city-fringe areas can be comparable in absolute prices but rarely match the architectural character or URA-protected charm that Blair Plain offers.
For many buyers, the decision is less about pure PSF and more about lifestyle and asset scarcity. You are effectively buying a piece of architectural heritage that URA safeguards from overdevelopment – which is attractive for long-term value preservation, but it also comes with renovation constraints and responsibility.
Rental market and yield estimates
Because Blair Plain is dominated by owner-occupied conservation homes, rental data points are more limited than for mass-market condos, but several consistent themes emerge from URA rental caveats and on-the-ground observations:[5][7]
- Tenant profile: Senior executives working in the CBD, expat families seeking character homes, and small professional firms (e.g. design, consulting) using shophouse-style spaces.
- Expected monthly rents: Depending on interior condition and built-up area, 3–4 bedroom conservation homes here can fetch roughly mid‑ to high four-figure, and in some cases low five-figure monthly rents. Individual cases vary significantly based on restoration level, furnishings and exact location.
- Indicative yields: Given purchase prices in the $5–7 million range, gross yields typically sit in the 2–3% range, which is common for prime and heritage segments in central Singapore.


















