Leading Employment Law Lawyers & Firms by Reported Cases — Singapore
17 reported cases · January 2024 to May 2026
Updated
Across 17 reported Employment Law judgments in Singapore courts (January 2024 to May 2026), Legal Clinic LLC is the most active firm by reported case count (2 cases), Kuah Boon Theng is the most active lawyer (2 case appearances). This ranks named firms and lawyers by how often they appear in reported decisions — a descriptive count of activity, not an assessment of quality or standing.
Overview
The dataset records 17 reported Employment Law judgments decided in Singapore between January 2024 and May 2026, placing this practice area 24th of 49. The High Court (SGHC) heard 21 of these matters and the District Court (SGDC) recorded eight across the dataset's court distribution. The most common sub-topic was termination (5 cases), followed by employers' duties, breach of contract of service and unfair dismissal, each appearing in 3 cases. Across these judgments, 17 judges, 33 law firms and 73 individual lawyers appeared on the record.
Data coverage: between January 2024 and May 2026
Which law firms handle the most Employment Law cases in Singapore?
Legal Clinic LLC and JWS Asia Law Corporation each appeared in 2 Employment Law cases between January 2024 and May 2026, the most of any firm. A total of 33 law firms appeared in Employment Law cases during this period across 17 reported judgments in the dataset.
Who are the leading Employment Law lawyers in Singapore?
Kuah Boon Theng is among the most active Employment Law lawyers in Singapore, with 2 case appearances between January 2024 and May 2026, followed by Lee Eng Beng and Christine Chiam with 1 each. In total, 73 individual lawyers appeared across the 17 reported judgments in this practice area.
Which judges handle the most Employment Law cases in Singapore?
Chua Lee Ming and Wong Li Kok, Alex each handled 2 Employment Law cases between January 2024 and May 2026, the most of any Singapore judge in this dataset. Kannan Ramesh and Debbie Ong Siew Ling followed with 1 case each, among 17 judges who heard such matters.
How many Employment Law cases are heard in Singapore courts?
The dataset records 17 reported Employment Law judgments between January 2024 and May 2026. By court distribution, the High Court (SGHC) accounts for 21 entries and the District Court (SGDC) for eight, making the High Court the primary court for this practice area.
What are the main sub-topics in Singapore Employment Law cases?
Among the 17 Employment Law judgments, the leading sub-topic is termination (5 cases), followed by employers' duties, breach of contract of service and unfair dismissal, each appearing in 3 cases between January 2024 and May 2026.
Case Volume by Year
Key Issues & Sub-Topics
Termination 5 cases
Employers’ duties 3 cases
Contract of service — Breach 3 cases
Unfair dismissal 3 cases
Contract of service — Termination without notice 2 cases
Contract of service — Restrictive covenants — Enforceability of restraint of trade clauses 2 cases
Work Injury Compensation Act 1 case
Contract of service — Illegal terms 1 case
Pay — Whether overtime pay may be offset by fixed monthly allowance 1 case
Pay — Shift workers 1 case
Leave — Annual leave 1 case
Benefits — Medical bills 1 case
Rest days — Hours of work 1 case
Contract of service — Whether contract of service or contract for services 1 case
Contract of service —Termination with notice — Whether termination was wrongful 1 case
Contract of service — Whether employee’s conduct amounted to breach of employment contract — Whether employer entitled to terminate employee without notice 1 case
Contract of service — Restrictive covenants — Protection of trade connection with clients and suppliers 1 case
Unfair Dismissal 1 case
Employees’ duties — Duty of good faith and fidelity and duty to act in the interests of the company 1 case
Contract of service — Breach — Loss of Chance 1 case
Contract of service — Breach — Implied term of mutual trust and confidence 1 case
Key Statutes
Court Distribution
Cases
Methodology & disclaimer
Firms and lawyers are ranked by the number of reported Supreme Court judgments they appear in, published on eLitigation. Counts reflect appearances in reported decisions only — unreported matters, settlements, and advisory work are not included. This is a descriptive count of activity by reported case volume, not an assessment of quality or standing, and not an endorsement or recommendation of any firm or lawyer. It is information, not legal advice.