A renovation stalls the moment someone asks a simple question that was not settled early enough: who can sign renovation plans? In Singapore, that question is not administrative. It affects whether your submission is accepted, whether works can proceed lawfully, and whether the design is backed by a professional who is authorized to take responsibility for code compliance and safety.
The short answer is that not every designer, contractor, or draftsperson can sign plans for renovation works. The person who can sign depends on the nature of the works, the approval pathway, and which authority is involved. In many cases, the signatory must be a Qualified Person, typically a registered architect or a professional engineer, acting within the scope of the works.
Who can sign renovation plans depends on the work scope
The biggest mistake owners and project teams make is treating all renovations as interior fit-out. Some projects are purely cosmetic. Others affect fire safety, structural loading, means of escape, mechanical systems, drainage, façade elements, or change of use conditions. Once a renovation touches regulated building elements, the sign-off requirement changes.
For straightforward decorative works, such as replacing finishes, loose furniture, or non-fixed features, formal signed plans may not be required in the same way. But once you are demolishing walls, adding mezzanines, relocating services, changing façade components, altering staircases, or installing equipment with structural implications, professional endorsement usually enters the picture.
That is why the right question is not only who can sign renovation plans, but also what exactly is being renovated, what authority approvals are triggered, and who is legally allowed to endorse that submission.
The main professionals who may sign renovation plans
In Singapore, the usual signatories for regulated renovation submissions are registered architects and professional engineers. Where required, they act as the Qualified Person, or QP, for the submission.
Registered architect
A registered architect typically signs architectural renovation plans where the works fall within architectural scope. This can include layout changes, building envelope modifications, space planning that affects regulated elements, and submissions involving building control compliance. If the project includes additions and alterations to building form, accessibility provisions, fire compartmentation interfaces, or planning-related architectural changes, an architect may be the appropriate lead signatory.
That said, an architect does not automatically cover structural or MEP matters. If the renovation also affects beams, slabs, columns, foundations, loading, or specialized systems, additional endorsements may still be needed from the relevant engineer.
Professional engineer
A professional engineer, or PE, signs renovation plans where engineering design and statutory responsibility sit within engineering scope. This is common for structural alterations, steel supports, equipment platforms, temporary works, retaining elements, geotechnical matters, and MEP systems requiring engineering calculations and compliance review.
For example, if a commercial renovation introduces heavy machinery, cuts into structural members, adds rooftop equipment, or modifies fire-rated services infrastructure, a PE may be required to endorse the engineering design. In practice, many renovation packages need both architectural and engineering input, even if only one party is the primary QP for a particular submission route.
Other consultants and designers
Interior designers, renovation contractors, and draftspeople often prepare layouts and construction drawings, but that does not mean they can sign plans for statutory submission. They may produce the concept, coordinate finishes, or develop shop drawings. However, if the plans must be submitted to an authority or endorsed for regulated works, the signatory generally must be a licensed professional with the proper registration and scope.
This distinction matters. A well-drafted plan is not the same as an endorsed plan. Endorsement carries professional liability and confirms that the signatory accepts responsibility for compliance within the relevant discipline.
When a Qualified Person is required
If your renovation requires formal submission under the building control framework or related authority processes, a QP is often required. The QP is not just signing for convenience. The QP is the professional accountable for preparing or coordinating the submission and confirming that the design meets the applicable codes and regulations.
Whether that QP should be an architect or engineer depends on the dominant scope. For architectural A&A works, a registered architect may lead. For structural engineering works, a PE may lead. On more complex projects, both are involved, with each endorsing the parts that fall under their professional responsibility.
This is where project teams lose time if they appoint the wrong consultant first. If the intended renovation includes hidden structural implications or authority interfaces beyond interior works, the project may need to be re-documented under the correct professional lead.
Common renovation scenarios and who signs
For landed house renovations, the signatory often depends on whether the works are internal alterations, extensions, structural modifications, drainage changes, or façade revisions. Knocking down walls, adding canopies, reconfiguring floor slabs, or altering staircases may trigger architect or PE endorsement, and sometimes both.
For office and retail fit-outs, many teams assume the interior designer’s drawing package is enough. It may not be. If the fit-out affects fire escape routes, fire-rated partitions, mechanical ventilation, kitchen exhaust, electrical loading, sanitary works, or structural floor loading, licensed professional endorsement may be necessary before approvals can proceed.
For industrial units and warehouses, engineering sign-off becomes even more critical. Platform additions, equipment supports, mezzanine installations, loading changes, and process-related services often require a PE. If the project also changes occupancy configuration or building layout, architectural endorsement may be needed alongside engineering submissions.
For hospitality and food and beverage spaces, renovation plans commonly involve multiple authority interfaces. A layout that looks simple on paper may affect fire safety, kitchen exhaust systems, grease discharge, sanitary routing, accessibility, and landlord requirements. In these cases, the signatory question should be reviewed early, not after tender drawings are completed.
Why contractor-drawn plans are not always enough
Contractors frequently prepare practical drawings based on site conditions and construction sequencing. Those drawings can be useful for execution. But authority acceptance depends on whether the plans are endorsed by the right licensed professional.
This is a critical difference for owners trying to move quickly. If a contractor starts design development without confirming whether a QP or PE endorsement is needed, the project may need redesign, resubmission, or technical justification later. That usually costs more than appointing the correct consultant from the start.
There is also a risk allocation issue. A licensed signatory is not merely stamping someone else’s drawing. A proper signatory reviews the scope, checks code implications, validates assumptions, and may require calculations, inspections, or amendments before endorsement.
How to determine who can sign your renovation plans
The practical way to assess signatory requirements is to review five points at the start of the project: the current approved condition of the premises, the intended scope of demolition and new works, whether structural elements are affected, whether building services are being altered, and which authority approvals are likely to be triggered.
If the project touches structure, load paths, or engineering systems, bring in a PE early. If it changes building layout, regulated architectural elements, or formal A&A scope, involve a registered architect early. If both apply, coordinate them as a single submission strategy rather than treating sign-off as a late-stage formality.
This early review is especially important when prior renovations were undocumented, as-built conditions do not match approved plans, or the landlord has technical restrictions. In those cases, the signatory may require additional site verification before any endorsement is possible.
What clients should ask before design starts
Before engaging a designer or contractor, ask whether the proposed renovation requires statutory submission, who will act as the QP, whether structural or MEP endorsement is expected, and what existing drawings or inspections are needed. These are basic project controls, not legal fine print.
You should also ask whether the consultant is signing only a limited discipline package or taking responsibility for integrated coordination. On multidisciplinary renovations, fragmented responsibility often causes delays. One party may assume another is handling fire safety, structural review, or authority comments when that scope was never formally included.
For clients managing commercial timelines, that coordination gap is usually where approvals slip.
The real issue is liability, not just paperwork
If you strip away the forms and submission portals, the question of who can sign renovation plans comes down to professional responsibility. The authorities are not asking for a signature because a drawing looks official. They are asking for a signature because certain building works carry safety, compliance, and public interest implications.
That is why the answer is rarely, “whoever drew it.” The right signatory is the licensed professional legally permitted to endorse that category of work and technically prepared to defend it.
For owners, developers, and contractors, the safest approach is to classify the renovation correctly before documentation begins. If the works require a registered architect, PE, or full QP-led submission strategy, getting that structure right early will save more time than trying to retrofit compliance after design is already underway. If the scope is unclear, a technical review at the front end is usually the fastest way to move the project forward with fewer surprises.