โYouโre Paying That Muchโฆ for Only 900 Square Feet?โ
One conversation keeps repeating itself.
A prospective tenant looks at a beautifully designed 900 sq ft apartment, hears the monthly rent, and immediately says,
โFor this price, I can rent a landed house thatโs twice the size!โ
And you know what?
Theyโre probably right.
A larger home usually offers more bedrooms, more storage and maybe even enough space to start that home gym youโve been promising yourself for years. Or at least enough room to pile up boxes youโll never unpack.
So why would anyone willingly choose the smaller apartment?
After years of helping buyers and tenants, Iโve realised theyโre not making a bad financial decision.
Theyโre simply measuring value differently.
Theyโre Not Buying Space. Theyโre Buying Time.

We often compare homes by square footage.
900 sq ft versus 1,800 sq ft.
Three bedrooms versus five.
One parking bay versus two.
Those numbers are easy to compare.
But the one thing we rarely measure is time.
And strangely enough, thatโs the one thing we can never earn back.
Think About Your Typical Weekday

The alarm rings.
Someone canโt find their school shoes.
Your first work message arrives before youโve even finished your coffee.
Now imagine the rest of your day.
Drive to school.
Drive to breakfast.
Drive to work.
Drive to buy groceries.
Drive to dinner.
Drive to the pharmacy.
Drive back home.
Some days, it feels like your car knows your schedule better than your family does.
Traffic slowly becomes part of your daily routine, even though nobody ever chose it.
Now Imagine a Different Kind of Life

What if your childโs school was just a short walk away?
What if breakfast was downstairs?
What if your favourite cafรฉ was around the corner?
Need groceries?
Walk over.
Meeting a client?
Walk over.
Need medicine?
Walk over.
Want dinner without worrying about parking?
Walk over.
Suddenly, life feels different.
Not because your apartment became bigger.
But because your world became smaller.
Everything you need is closer.
Convenience Isnโt About Being Spoilt

Some people hear the word โconvenienceโ and imagine luxury.
I donโt.
I think convenience is about reducing unnecessary stress.
Itโs reaching home earlier.
Itโs spending less time searching for parking than searching for what you actually came to buy.
Itโs having dinner with your family instead of sitting through another traffic jam wondering why the red light has lasted longer than your favourite song.
Convenience quietly gives you back pieces of your day.
The Hidden Value Nobody Talks About

Hereโs something I often tell friends.
When comparing two homes with similar monthly costs, donโt stop at the floor plan.
Ask better questions.
Can I walk to a supermarket?
Is there good food nearby?
How long is the morning school run?
Can I reach an MRT station without driving?
If someone falls sick at midnight, how quickly can I get to a hospital?
These arenโt glamorous questions.
But theyโre the ones youโll appreciate every single day after moving in.
Youโre Paying for an Ecosystem

Iโve come to believe that people arenโt paying a premium for a smaller apartment.
Theyโre paying for everything surrounding it.
The cafรฉs.
The restaurants.
The supermarket.
The MRT.
The schools.
The hospital.
The parks.
The everyday conveniences that quietly save minutes, reduce stress and make life feel easier.
In other words, theyโre paying for an ecosystem.
The apartment is simply where they sleep.
The neighbourhood is where they live.
The New Way to Look at Property

The older I get, the less impressed I am by bigger homes.
What impresses me now is a home that gives me back my time.
Because every 20 minutes you save each day eventually becomes hours each month.
Hours you can spend with family.
Hours you can spend building your business.
Hours you can spend doing absolutely nothingโand sometimes thatโs exactly what we need.
Perhaps thatโs why so many people willingly pay more for a smaller apartment.
Not because they enjoy having less space.
But because they value having more life.
Coming Nextโฆ
This idea got me thinking.
If convenience is so valuable, can we actually measure it?
That question inspired something Iโve been working on called the MyPropertyPlaces Walkability Scoreโข.
In the next article, Iโll compare several well-known townshipsโnot by their swimming pools or fancy clubhouses, but by something far more practical.
How much time does each neighbourhood give back to you?
Who knows? One township might surprise us all.
This article is part of our Life Beyond the Front Door series, where we explore what truly makes a place worth calling home. #BeyondTheFrontDoor

