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S’pore’s social workers handle 50 cases at a time, work till 4AM, and still earn S$4K
Some social workers are reaching a breaking point, leading them to leave the profession
A quiet crisis is unfolding among Singapore’s social workers, the professionals who keep vulnerable families from falling through the cracks.
Many are juggling 30 to 50 active cases at any given time, and alongside the emotional demands of the job, social workers typically start on modest salaries of around S$4,000. Some are even reaching a breaking point, with the pressure in certain cases leading practitioners to leave the profession altogether.
What does a typical day look like for these workers, and what measures are in place to help them cope with mounting stress?
Too many cases, too little time
On paper, social workers in Singapore manage an average of 22 cases per year, according to the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF). On the ground, however, several practitioners have told media outlets that the reality is markedly different.
In 2022, some social workers who spoke with former MP Louis Ng said they were managing between 30 and 50 cases at any given time—that’s almost at least 50% more than the average number from MSF. He described such workloads as excessive, warning that they are directly detrimental to the quality of care social workers can provide.
With caseloads that high, there is simply not enough time to give each family the attention it needs. And when a crisis strikes, they cannot choose between one client and another because everyone’s situation is equally serious.
The cases are not straightforward. A single file might involve family violence, a child at risk, a parent with untreated mental illness, and a household on the verge of eviction—all at once.
One social worker told Channel News Asia (CNA) that the job ultimately comes down to ensuring children are safe, the elderly have a place to stay, and families are not in conflict. But doing that well requires time that most social workers say they do not have.
Moreover, heavy administrative demands compound the problem. One worker noted that direct contact with clients—the actual work of helping—accounts for only 5 to 10% of his time. The rest is paperwork.
The COVID-19 pandemic has only worsened the strain on our social workers, with a Jul 2021 study by the Asian Social Work and Policy Review finding that nearly 60% of frontline social workers experienced anxiety at the height of the pandemic and about 45% even faced depression.
When passion becomes a liability
Many social workers enter the field driven by a strong sense of purpose. But within the sector, some say passion alone is not enough to sustain them—and may even be counterproductive.
An anonymous founder of Instagram account @SGSocialWorkMemes, known within the industry for its candid portrayal of social workers’ experiences, shared in an interview with CNA that this narrative can have unintended consequences.
Framing social workers as being motivated by outcomes rather than income, they said, can become an excuse to justify lower pay, turning fair compensation into a perceived bonus rather than an entitlement for the work and hours put in.
Starting salaries in the sector sit at around S$4,000 per month, with many earning between S$3,000 and S$4,000. For a role that carries significant responsibility and emotional strain, some argue that the pay does not adequately reflect the demands of the job.
The overemphasis on passion also, over time, feeds a broader misconception: that social work is something anyone can do, or that social workers are essentially paid volunteers. This undermines the real expertise, training, and skill the profession requires.
Burnout in practice
Another social worker who spoke with CNA, Amelia (not her real name) has been in the sector for 10 years. She described a workday that sometimes runs from 9AM to 4AM, managing 20 of her own cases, supervising eight social workers who each carry an average of 30 cases, and responding to back-to-back crises throughout.
These crises can range from a text about a client running out of milk powder for their child, to a message about a husband beating his wife—sometimes with a photo of a bruise or bloody wound attached—to bringing three children to the hospital and having them admitted at 4AM, just five hours before work begins the next morning.
This is what burnout looks like in social work: not just exhaustion, but vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue accumulated over years of absorbing other people’s worst moments. As one worker described it, “The more you do, the more you can’t look away.”
Beyond the emotional toll, social workers also describe structural frustrations. One recurring requirement is “mandatory sightings” of children—home visits or video calls to physically verify their safety. Workers say this surveillance function can sit uneasily alongside the profession’s broader aim of supporting marginalised families rather than monitoring them.
Tensions are further compounded by rigid programme structures in Singapore’s social service system. When funding and targets are tied to specific outcomes, such as employment, social workers may find themselves unable to formally address interconnected issues like housing instability or mental health, even when these are clearly central to a family’s situation. Watching those needs go unmet within a system too narrowly defined can add to long-term strain.
What is being done
The pressures on our social workers have not gone unnoticed.
MSF has been progressively revising salary guidelines in recent years. In the latest update for the social service sector, starting salaries for social workers and counsellors rose by 3% in 2025 to S$3,970.
Overall, recommended salaries across roles in the sector increased by an average of 5%. Some positions saw larger adjustments of up to 15% in the 2026 financial year, which runs from Apr 2026 to Mar 2027.
Beyond pay adjustments, the National Council of Social Service also rolled out the Sabbatical Leave Scheme last Feb, offering social service professionals 10 weeks of paid sabbatical leave with salary support of up to S$15,000 to recharge and rejuvenate, on the condition that participants mentor junior colleagues and share their learnings upon return.
Taken together, these measures reflect gradual efforts to strengthen the sector, though growth remains modest relative to demand. As of Dec 2024, there were 3,031 accredited social work professionals in Singapore—an increase of about 7.8% in the number of registered social workers from the year before.
To expand the workforce, several efforts are underway.
In Sept 2025, the Singapore University of Social Sciences launched its sixth school, the School of Social Work and Social Development, aimed at strengthening the sector through education, research and partnerships. The launch comes as Singapore faces increasingly complex challenges and a projected demand for 2,000 additional social service professionals over the next five years.
The underlying question
Singapore’s social service sector needs to expand because the need for it is growing. An ageing population, rising mental health concerns, and increasingly complex, multi-generational family issues are driving up caseloads.
But social work carries a high level of responsibility and an equally high emotional burden, with pay that many in the profession describe as modest relative to the demands of the job.
As the gap between rising demand and limited capacity persists, the question becomes whether the system can scale fast enough to sustain those holding it up—before burnout turns into attrition, and attrition into gaps in care for the families who need it most.
- Read other articles we’ve written on Singaporean businesses here.
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