Most Litigated Parties

Based on 25 entries from 642 reported Singapore court judgments

Analysis

Among 642 reported Singapore court judgments between January 2025 to March 2026, the Public Prosecutor is the most frequently appearing party with 87 cases, reflecting its role in criminal prosecutions. The Attorney-General follows with 13 cases, primarily in constitutional and administrative proceedings. Institutional parties dominate the top positions — the Law Society of Singapore appears in 9 cases related to professional discipline.

Among private litigants, the most active include Gurpreet Gill Maag, DKC, DKB with 4, 4, 4 cases respectively. Corporate parties appearing in multiple cases include The Law Society of Singapore, Maybank Singapore Limited, United Overseas Bank Limited. Most parties (21 of 25 listed) appear in 4 or fewer reported decisions.

Data coverage: between January 2025 to March 2026

Full Rankings

1
87
2
13
5
4
7
DKC Person
4
8
DKB Person
4
10
4
12
3
15
3
17
3
18
3
21
3
22
3
24
3
25
3

Methodology

Rankings are based on 642 reported Supreme Court and subordinate court judgments published on eLitigation.sg between January 2025 and March 2026. Counts reflect appearances in reported decisions only — unreported matters, settlements, and advisory work are not included.

Who are the most frequent litigants in Singapore courts?

The Public Prosecutor is the most frequent party with 87 of 642 reported cases between January 2025 to March 2026, followed by the Attorney-General (13 cases) and the Law Society of Singapore (9 cases).

Which individuals appear most often in Singapore court cases?

Among individual litigants in 642 reported cases between January 2025 to March 2026, Gurpreet Gill Maag leads with 4 cases, followed by DKC (4 cases) and DKB (4 cases).

Which organizations are involved in the most Singapore litigation?

The Public Prosecutor leads with 87 cases, reflecting criminal prosecutions. Other frequently appearing organizations include the Attorney-General (13 cases) and the Law Society of Singapore (9 cases) between January 2025 to March 2026.

Other Rankings