SINGAPORE: The Singapore Police Force (SPF) will tighten the regulation of massage businesses later this year, it said on Tuesday (Apr 21).Under a new regulatory framework for such businesses, open-concept massage establishments will no longer be exempt from licensing, SPF said in a news release.The move comes after the police observed a rise in vice-related activities and infringements of exemption conditions in open-concept massage establishments (MEs), and amid a steady increase in public unhappiness because of the "number of open-concept MEs and the social disamenities they create", SPF said.Open-concept massage establishments have been exempted from licensing since 2018, and only have to comply with exemption conditions such as registering with the police and ensuring that there are no rooms, partitions or cubicles in their premises that would allow massage services to be administered in private.Show MoreShow LessUnder the new rules, which will come into effect in the second half of 2026, the exemption will be removed and replaced by a new licence category.Operators will be subject to more stringent licensing, including the requirement to obtain the relevant land use approval from the Housing and Development Board (HDB) or Urban Redevelopment Authority before the premises can be used as an open-concept massage establishment."Operators must also comply with licensing conditions, including the requirement not to set up rooms, partitions or cubicles within the ME," SPF added.HDB will be working closely with SPF to clamp down on errant massage establishments, Minister for National Development Chee Hong Tat said."Errant operators will not be permitted to continue their illegal business activities in our neighbourhoods, regardless of whether they are operating out of HDB rental or sold shops," Mr Chee added. "We will weed them out and not allow such undesirable activities to spread in our housing estates and affect the living environment for residents."