Singapore

Singapore Travel Planning & Itineraries

The most efficient city on earth. A 6-million-person island-state where the metro runs on time to the second, street food wins Michelin stars, and you can walk from colonial shophouses to futuristic rooftop infinity pools in 20 minutes. Perfect for a 3-4 day stopover on the way to Southeast Asia. Expensive by regional standards, unbeatable for travelers who value organization over chaos.

Our AI planner helps you pace your Singapore days, pick the right neighbourhoods, and build a route that makes sense.

Planning Your Singapore Trip

Best Time to Visit

February-April is the best window — the driest, least humid months. Year-round it's 27-31°C and humid because the equator is 137km away. November-January is the wettest season with daily afternoon storms. Avoid the Formula 1 weekend in September unless that's the point (hotels triple). Chinese New Year (January/February) is festive but everything closes for 3 days.

Budget Overview

Budget: $60-100 USD/day (hostel dorm, hawker centre meals at S$5-8 per plate, MRT transit). Hawker food is the key to budget travel here and is world-class regardless. Mid-range: $150-260 USD/day (4-star hotel, mix of hawker meals and sit-down dinners, Gardens by the Bay, ArtScience Museum). Luxury: $500+ USD/day (Marina Bay Sands, Raffles, Fullerton Bay, Capella Singapore, fine dining, private driver). Singapore luxury hotels are world-class and priced accordingly.

Getting There

Fly into Changi (SIN) — consistently ranked the world's best airport, with direct flights from most major global hubs. From YYZ (Toronto), expect 17-19 hours via one stop in Tokyo, Hong Kong, or Dubai. Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, and Emirates are the premium picks; Scoot and AirAsia handle budget. Changi to downtown is 20 minutes by MRT (~S$2.50) or 25 minutes by taxi (~S$25).

Getting Around

MRT is the spine. The subway is clean, fast, air-conditioned, and reaches nearly every neighbourhood worth visiting. Pick up an EZ-Link or Singapore Tourist Pass (~S$17/3 days) on arrival. Grab (the local Uber) is cheap for late nights. Walking between Marina Bay, Chinatown, and the CBD is doable but punishing in midday humidity — plan indoor breaks.

Common Singapore planning mistakes

1

Only booking 2-3 days

Singapore feels small but rewards 4-5 days. Hawker centres, gardens, Sentosa, and a Bintan day trip need time.

2

Ignoring hawker centres

The Michelin-starred hawker stalls are the best cheap food experience on earth. Skip them for hotel breakfasts is a crime.

3

Wearing non-breathable clothes

Its 90F and 85% humidity year-round. Linen, cotton, quick-dry. Leave the jeans at home.

4

Missing Gardens by the Bay at night

The OCBC Garden Rhapsody light show at 7:45pm and 8:45pm is free and jaw-dropping. Most tourists only see it by day.

Singapore Neighbourhoods

Marina Bay

The iconic modern waterfront with Marina Bay Sands, Gardens by the Bay, ArtScience Museum. Most photogenic, most expensive. Best for: first-timers, honeymooners, luxury travelers.

Orchard Road

The shopping spine with mall after mall, luxury boutiques, and business hotels. Central but sterile. Best for: shoppers, business travelers.

Chinatown

Historic shophouses, the best hawker centres (Maxwell, Chinatown Complex), temples, and boutique hotels. Atmospheric and walkable. Best for: foodies, first-timers, culture seekers.

Tiong Bahru

The original Art Deco residential neighbourhood turned hipster district. Independent cafés, bookstores, great food. Best for: repeat visitors, slow travelers.

Kampong Glam / Arab Street

The Malay-Muslim quarter with the Sultan Mosque, boutique hotels, and Middle Eastern restaurants. Walkable and distinct. Best for: food lovers, photographers.

Sentosa Island

The resort/theme-park island — beach clubs, Universal Studios, luxury resorts. Artificial but fun. Best for: families, beach days.

Singapore Food & Drink

Hawker Chan Hong Kong Soy Sauce Chicken

Hawker / Michelin

First Michelin-starred hawker stall in the world. Go for the S$3 soy sauce chicken rice at Chinatown Complex Food Centre.

Tian Tian Hainanese Chicken Rice

Hawker / Street food

Maxwell Food Centre legend. Anthony Bourdain rated it the best version in Singapore. S$5-8.

Odette

Fine dining / 3 Michelin

Modern French at the National Gallery. Book 2 months ahead. Tasting menu from S$328.

Burnt Ends

Modern Australian BBQ

1 Michelin, 29 Asia's 50 Best. The pulled pork sanger at the bar is non-negotiable.

Jumbo Seafood

Local institution

Chilli crab and black pepper crab on the Singapore River. Touristy but the real deal. Bring bibs.

Long Chim

Thai / David Thompson

Inside Marina Bay Sands. Excellent late-night pad kra pao and tom kha gai.

Atlas Bar

Art Deco cocktail bar

Parkview Square. Home to one of the world largest gin collections and the most photographed bar in Singapore.

Day Trips from Singapore

Pulau Ubin

40 min from centre

Rustic kampung island 15 min by bumboat from Changi Village. Rent a bike and time-travel 50 years. Half-day trip.

Johor Bahru (Malaysia)

1 hr

Cross the Causeway for cheaper shopping, seafood, and Legoland. Bring your passport, expect 60-90 min at immigration.

Sentosa Island

15 min

Resort island with beaches, Universal Studios, SEA Aquarium, and the S.E.A. Wings of Time show. Half to full day.

Bintan (Indonesia)

55 min ferry

55-min ferry to beach resorts, private villas, and spa days. Doable as day trip but overnight is better.

Ready to build your Singapore days?

Tell us your dates, pace, and interests — we’ll draft a day-by-day Singapore itinerary in under a minute.

A Sample Singapore Itinerary

Here’s a flavour of what our AI planner builds. Generate your own personalized Singapore itinerary in 60 seconds.

Day 1

Arrive + Marina Bay

  • Check in, Changi-to-downtown MRT orientation
  • Gardens by the Bay — Cloud Forest + Flower Dome
  • Dinner at Lau Pa Sat satay street
  • Drinks at CE LA VI rooftop, Marina Bay Sands view
Day 2

Chinatown + Hawker Culture

  • Maxwell Food Centre — Tian Tian chicken rice
  • Buddha Tooth Relic Temple + Ann Siang Hill walk
  • Chinatown Complex — Hawker Chan soy sauce chicken
  • Peranakan dinner in Katong + Joo Chiat shophouses
Day 3

Sentosa + Beach Day

  • Cable car to Sentosa
  • S.E.A. Aquarium or Universal Studios
  • Palawan Beach or Tanjong Beach Club lunch
  • Wings of Time evening sunset show
Day 4

Little India, Arab Street, Kampong Glam

  • Tekka Centre breakfast
  • Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple + Mustafa Centre
  • Haji Lane shopping + Sultan Mosque
  • Rooftop cocktails at Atlas Bar (Parkview Square)
Day 5

Day Trip + Departure

  • Pulau Ubin bumboat + bike ride (half day)
  • Or Bintan ferry spa day
  • Lunch back in Singapore at Hawker Chan
  • Departure from Changi (allow 3 hours)

Singapore Travel FAQ

How many days do I need in Singapore?

Three to four days is perfect. Day 1: Marina Bay Sands + Gardens by the Bay + rooftop bar. Day 2: Chinatown hawker centres + Little India + Arab Street walking tour. Day 3: Sentosa Island beach day or Universal Studios. Day 4: botanic gardens + a final hawker crawl. Singapore is a great 72-hour city.

Is Singapore really as strict as they say?

Mostly urban myths. Chewing gum is restricted (you can bring 2 packs for personal use). Jaywalking fines exist but are rarely enforced. Don't do drugs (seriously — the death penalty is real). Smoking is banned in most public areas. Everything else is normal and laid-back. It's not North Korea.

Are hawker centres safe and good?

Yes, they're the best thing about Singapore. Hygiene is strictly regulated and the food is spectacular — Michelin-starred chicken rice, laksa, char kway teow, biryani, nasi lemak. Maxwell, Lau Pa Sat, Tiong Bahru, and Chinatown Complex are the must-hit centres. Plates run $4-8 USD.

Is Singapore worth the extra cost over Bangkok or KL?

For a 3-day stopover, absolutely — the efficiency, food quality, and infrastructure are unmatched in the region. For a 2-week trip, Bangkok + KL + Singapore together is the classic combo: cheap street life in Bangkok, cultural depth in KL, organized luxury in Singapore.

Do I need cash?

Barely. Singapore is almost entirely cashless — cards and mobile pay work everywhere, even most hawker stalls. Keep S$50 for emergencies and you're set. No need for a currency exchange unless you prefer cash for small purchases.

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Want Singapore planned for you?

Your Savvy Jetsetter advisor personally plans Singapore trips with handpicked hotels, Fora Reserve perks, restaurant bookings, and end-to-end support. Hotel bookings are complimentary; the hotel pays the commission.