Data on reported missing persons found within a month and feasibility of SG alert location-based notifications for search and recovery
5 May 2026
Question:
Mr Fadli Fawzi: To ask the Coordinating Minister for National Security and Minister for Home Affairs (a) since 2021, how many missing persons have been reported and how many have been found within a month; and (b) whether the Government has assessed the feasibility of usin g the new SG Alert system to send location-based notifications of missing persons to mobile phone users in the vicinity of the missing person report, and if not, why not.
Answer:
Mr K Shanmugam, Coordinating Minister for National Security and Minister for Home Affairs:
1. From 2021 to 2025, there were around 1,300 missing persons reported annually. The Police do not track the time taken to locate a missing person. This can vary significantly from case to case. When the Police receive a missing person report, investigation s will be launched to locate the person. The Police will accord priority to vulnerable missing persons, including young children, elderly persons and persons with intellectual disabilities. The large majority of vulnerable missing persons are found within the day.
2. SG Alert is designed to expeditiously alert the public to time-sensitive and life-threatening emergencies. When the public receives a SG Alert, it is a trigger to them to immediately take protective and life-preserving actions. Frequent and overuse of the SG Alert for a wide variety of scenarios, including to achieve objectives for which
3. it is not designed, like notifications of missing persons, would desensitise the public to its alerts and the sense of urgency associated with it, and reduce its effectiveness as a national emergency communication capability.
4. The Police have well-established procedures to locate missing persons, including appealing for information from the public where appropriate. Such appeals are published through various channels, including social media.
