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Study abroad in Singapore

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Singapore.

Capital

Singapore

Languages

English / Mandarin / Malay / Tamil

Academic Year

Most universities run two main semesters: August to December and January to May, with special terms or summer modules from May to July depending on the institution.

Population

5.6M+

Typical Budget

SGD 1,500 - 2,600/month

Overview

A futuristic, hyper-efficient island city-state where East meets West.

Country Overview

What student life feels like in Singapore.

Singapore is the safest and cleanest entry point into Asia. It's a global financial hub with top-tier universities (NUS/NTU) that consistently rank among the world's best.

While expensive, it offers an unparalleled standard of living, world-class infrastructure, and is the perfect travel hub for exploring the rest of Southeast Asia. It's 'Asia Light'—all the culture without the chaos.

Country Framework

What shapes student life in Singapore.

Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.

Safety Snapshot

The safest country in the world for international students. You can walk anywhere at any time of night with zero fear. Laws are strict and surveillance is high.

Editorial view of Singapore

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

23

Crime Index

Low

World avg: 44.7

78

Safety Index

Very safe

World avg: 55.3

88

Cost of Living

Expensive

SGD 1,500 - 2,600/month

Crime factors measured

General perception of crime levels Perceived safety during daylight and nighttime Concerns about specific crimes (mugging, robbery, car theft, physical attacks, harassment, bias-motivated incidents) Property crime severity (burglary, theft, vandalism) Violent crime severity (assault, homicide, sexual offenses)

Big Cities vs Small Towns

Big Cities

  • Singapore is a city-state — there is only one city, so the 'big city' experience is universal: ultramodern, efficient, safe, and expensive.
  • NUS and NTU are consistently ranked in the world's top 15 — academic prestige is exceptional.
  • Cost of living is high (accommodation especially), but the scholarship system for international students is generous and part-time work is legally permitted.
  • Proximity to Southeast Asia makes Singapore a gateway city — cheap flights to Bali, Bangkok, and KL from S$30.

Small Towns

  • There are no small towns in Singapore — the entire country is one urban zone of 5.9 million people.
  • Different neighbourhoods offer distinct feels: Jurong West is suburban and quiet; Clementi and Kent Ridge cluster around NUS; Tampines and Punggol are newer residential towns.
  • Campus life at NUS and NTU is largely self-contained — residential halls, gyms, food courts, and events mean students often stay on campus.
  • The distinction in Singapore is between campus-focused life and city-centre (CBD/Clarke Quay) social life.

Culture

Social Norms

  • Singapore has extremely strict public laws and enforcement is real, not theoretical. Littering carries a $300–$1,000 fine for a first offence. Eating or drinking on the MRT (including gum) is $500. Vandalism can result in caning. These are not tourist myths.
  • Queue culture is sacred. Singaporeans form orderly queues for hawker stalls, buses, and lifts. Jumping a queue is a serious social offence. 'Choping' (reserving seats with a tissue packet) is an accepted norm — a packet on a table means the seat is taken.
  • Singapore is genuinely multiracial (Chinese ~74%, Malay ~13%, Indian ~9%) and this is actively managed through policy, housing quotas, and social norms. Racially insensitive remarks — even casual ones — cause serious social and sometimes legal consequences. Learn the basics of each community's key religious observances.
  • Work ethic and academic pressure are intense. 'Kiasu' (fear of losing/missing out) drives behaviour from hawker queues to study habits — Singaporeans are competitive about grades, jobs, and status. This isn't aggression; it's cultural survival.
  • The social hierarchy is explicit and tracked: older people, senior colleagues, and those of higher educational credentials are addressed with visible deference. Using a person's title (Dr, Prof) matters more here than in most Western cultures.
  • Air-conditioning shapes daily life — dress in layers. Hawker centres and outdoor spaces are hot; MRT, malls, and university classrooms are cold enough to need a light jacket.
  • Singlish (Singaporean English creole) is the informal spoken language. 'Lah', 'leh', 'lor', 'can?' are sentence particles, not mistakes. In professional and academic settings, Standard English is expected — Singaporeans code-switch fluently.

Daily Rhythm

Local pace

07:00–09:00

Morning

Singapore wakes early. Hawker centres serve kaya toast, soft-boiled eggs, and kopi (local coffee) from 07:00. MRT packed from 08:00. University classes often start at 08:30.

12:00–13:30

Midday

Lunch at a hawker centre is the daily ritual — meals from S$3–6. Queues form fast at popular stalls. One-hour break common in offices and universities.

13:30–18:00

Afternoon

Air-conditioned offices and malls provide refuge from heat and humidity. Study in libraries or cafés common for students. Productivity peaks in controlled environments.

18:30–21:00

Evening

Evening hawker runs are social rituals — groups of students eat together at 19:00–20:00. Hawker centres stay open until 22:00–23:00.

21:00–03:00

Night

Clarke Quay and Ann Siang Hill are the nightlife hubs. Bars and clubs open late, especially Friday–Saturday. Public transport ends around 00:30; Grab rides home after.

Food Culture

Hawker Centres

Hawker Centres

USD 4-7

The soul of Singapore. Michelin-starred food can be found in a plastic tray.

Student hack:

Look for the 'A' hygiene rating. Always bring tissues to reserve your seat (Chope).

Hainanese Chicken Rice

Hainanese Chicken Rice

SGD 4–8 / EUR 2.80–5.50

Poached or roasted chicken served over fragrant rice cooked in chicken stock, with chilli sauce and ginger paste. Singapore's unofficial national dish, available at every hawker centre.

Student hack:

The most affordable version with the same quality is always found at a hawker centre, not a restaurant — aim for stalls with long queues.

Char Kway Teow

Char Kway Teow

SGD 4–7 / EUR 2.80–4.80

Stir-fried flat rice noodles with prawns, cockles, Chinese sausage, bean sprouts, and eggs in a smoky wok. A hawker classic requiring high-heat wok hei technique.

Student hack:

Char kway teow at older hawker stalls where the uncle uses a carbon-steel wok is noticeably better than modern food court versions.

Laksa

Laksa

SGD 4–9 / EUR 2.80–6.20

Spicy coconut milk noodle soup with prawns, fish cake, bean sprouts, and cockles — a Peranakan signature dish and one of the most distinctively flavoured dishes in Singapore.

Student hack:

Katong laksa (eaten with a spoon, noodles already cut) at the East Coast hawkers is the most authentic version; visit on weekday mornings to avoid queues.

Kaya Toast with Soft Boiled Eggs

Kaya Toast with Soft Boiled Eggs

SGD 3–6 / EUR 2–4

Crispy toast with kaya (coconut jam) and butter, served with half-boiled eggs seasoned with soy sauce and white pepper. The definitive Singaporean breakfast ritual.

Student hack:

Ya Kun and Toast Box chains serve the full kaya toast set with two eggs and coffee for under SGD 5 — one of the best-value breakfasts in Singapore.

Bak Kut Teh (pork rib soup)

Bak Kut Teh (pork rib soup)

SGD 8–14 / EUR 5.50–9.70

Tender pork ribs slow-simmered in a peppery or herbal broth, served with rice and youtiao (fried dough sticks). A popular early-morning and late-night meal.

Student hack:

Some bak kut teh shops open as early as 6am; morning sessions are less crowded and sometimes cheaper with larger portions.

Dos and Don'ts

Do

  • Dispose of all rubbish in bins — zero exceptions

  • Respect religious practices across Chinese, Malay, and Indian communities

  • Chope (reserve) hawker seats with a tissue pack if this is the local norm

  • Use Standard English in academic and professional settings

  • Give up priority seats on the MRT — enforcement is social and real

  • Dress smart-casual for most social and academic settings

  • Download Grab and PayNow — cash is becoming secondary in most transactions

Don't

  • Don't eat, drink, or chew gum on the MRT — $500 fine

  • Don't litter anywhere — $300+ fine, with corrective work orders for repeat offenders

  • Don't make racially insensitive comments, even casually

  • Don't jaywalk on monitored roads — fines are issued

  • Don't bring durian on public transport — banned and strongly enforced

  • Don't assume Singaporeans want to be spoken to in Mandarin — many are English-first

  • Don't criticise the government in public — Singapore has defamation and sedition laws

Lifestyle & Travel

Gardens by the Bay Night Show

Gardens by the Bay Night Show

Gardens by the Bay, Marina Bay, Singapore Year-round

Watch the iconic Supertrees light show at Gardens by the Bay — free outdoor, ticketed domes.

Learn more
Hawker Centre Food Crawl

Hawker Centre Food Crawl

Maxwell, Lau Pa Sat, or Old Airport Road, Singapore Year-round

Eat your way through Maxwell, Lau Pa Sat, or Old Airport Road hawker centres.

Learn more
Sentosa Island Day Trip

Sentosa Island Day Trip

Sentosa Island, Singapore Year-round

Beach, Universal Studios, S.E.A. Aquarium — Singapore's resort island for a full day out.

Learn more
Little India Walking Tour

Little India Walking Tour

Little India district, Singapore Year-round

Explore Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple, spice shops, and authentic South Indian restaurants.

Learn more
Night Safari

Night Safari

Mandai Wildlife Reserve, Singapore Year-round

World's first nocturnal wildlife park — spot over 2,500 animals active at night by tram.

Learn more
Chinatown Heritage Trail

Chinatown Heritage Trail

Chinatown, Singapore Year-round

Walk through shophouses, temples, and clan associations of Singapore Chinatown.

Learn more
Marina Bay Sands SkyPark

Marina Bay Sands SkyPark

Marina Bay Sands, Marina Bay, Singapore Year-round

Rooftop infinity pool and observation deck atop the iconic three-tower complex.

Learn more
Pulau Ubin Cycling

Pulau Ubin Cycling

Pulau Ubin island, 10 minutes by bumboat from Changi Year-round

Ferry to Singapore last kampung island for mangrove cycling and wildlife spotting.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Chinese New Year

January or February

Chinese New Year

Chinatown and citywide

culture seekers families

Campus slows down, shops close for short periods, and Chinatown becomes the centre of public celebrations.

Deepavali

October or November

Deepavali

Little India

culture seekers photographers

A strong reminder that Singapore is not one culture: lights, food, and temple visits around Serangoon Road.

Singapore Food Festival
chill

August

Singapore Food Festival

Citywide (hawker centres, Marina Bay)

foodies students

Month-long celebration of Singapore's food culture with special menus, chef collaborations, and food trails across hawker centres and restaurants. Free events throughout the city.

Thaipusam
medium

January or February

Thaipusam

Little India to Tank Road Temple

culture seekers photographers

Hindu festival of extraordinary visual power. Devotees carry kavadi (elaborate metal frames) in a procession from Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple to Sri Thendayuthapani Temple. Free to watch along the route.

Singapore Night Festival
chill

August

Singapore Night Festival

Bras Basah.Bugis arts district

students all students photographers

Free open-air light art installations, performances, and pop-ups across the Bras Basah.Bugis heritage corridor. Running from 7 PM into the early hours. One of the best free nights out in Singapore.

Travel Tips

  • EZ-Link Card Essential: Get an EZ-Link card immediately at MRT stations — covers all metro, bus, and some attractions.
  • Hawker Over Restaurants: Hawker centres offer the same food as restaurants at 1/3 the price. Locals eat hawker daily.
  • Heat and Humidity: 30°C+ humidity year-round. Dress light, hydrate constantly, carry a small umbrella for sudden rain.
  • Strict Laws: Fines for littering, eating on MRT, jaywalking. Chewing gum import is restricted. Follow rules.
  • Weekend vs Weekday Prices: Attractions like Universal Studios cost more on weekends. Visit weekdays for lower prices and crowds.

Benefits & Scholarships

Personalize this layer

Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.

Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.

Useful either way

Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.

University shuttle and campus facilities

NUS, NTU, SMU, and SUTD run strong campus infrastructure: shuttle buses, libraries, sports centres, clinics, and subsidised food courts. The real saving is staying near campus and using university facilities daily.

Host university

Official source

Transit card fare tracking

Students can use contactless bank cards or SimplyGo-compatible cards for MRT and buses. Concession eligibility depends on institution and student category, so exchange students should verify with the host university.

SimplyGo / Land Transport Authority

Official source

Hawker-centre cost control

Singapore is expensive, but hawker centres keep daily meals realistic: budget SGD 4-8 per meal if you avoid malls and delivery apps.

Local hawker centres

Official source

Visa Requirements

Difficulty: Moderate
International full-time students Exchange duration
Official source

Student's Pass

Foreign students accepted by an approved Singapore institution normally need a Student's Pass. Your university triggers the SOLAR application flow; you complete forms, pay ICA fees, receive an IPA letter, enter Singapore, then complete formalities for the digital pass.

Usually 2-6 weeks after the university starts the SOLAR application Course or exchange duration
Short exchange or special case Short stay
Official source

Check Student's Pass exemption with host university

Some very short programmes or holders of existing Singapore passes can be exempt, but exchange students should not assume this. Confirm with the host university before booking flights.

Confirm before arrival Programme-specific

Application Checklist

5 steps
  1. 1
    Wait for the host university to issue admission and Student's Pass instructions; do not start with random agencies.
  2. 2
    Prepare passport, digital photo, admission details, home address, and financial/supporting documents requested through SOLAR.
  3. 3
    Print or save the IPA letter before flying; it is often checked at entry and during matriculation.
  4. 4
    Complete ICA formalities after arrival and keep the digital Student's Pass accessible on your phone.
  5. 5
    Check work rules separately with MOM; Student's Pass work permissions are conditional and not automatic for every programme.

Health & Healthcare

Emergency: 995
Avg polyclinic: SGD 20–50
MediShield Life: Not for non-citizens
Student cover: University plan mandatory

How It Works

Singapore has a well-funded hybrid public-private healthcare system with some of the highest standards in Asia. Public hospitals (Singapore General Hospital, National University Hospital, Tan Tock Seng Hospital) are world-class, but are priced at a level requiring insurance. Exchange students are not enrolled in Singapore's national healthcare subsidies (MediShield Life) and must rely on university-provided insurance or private international policies. NUS, NTU, and SMU include group medical insurance for all enrolled students — it covers hospitalisation, emergency treatment, and outpatient care at designated university clinics and partner hospitals.

Student Needs

All exchange students: confirm your university's group insurance coverage on the first day of orientation — NUS and NTU automatically cover all enrolled students; check the insurer name, policy number, and claims process before you need it. Register at your campus university health centre (NUS UHC, NTU Clinic) in the first week — campus clinic consultations are free or SGD 5–10 co-pay for enrolled students. For dental care, campus dental clinics offer significantly lower rates than private practices. Pharmacies (Guardian, Watsons, Unity) handle minor illness advice and sell most common medications over the counter.

Emergency vs Clinic

Call 995 for ambulance (Singapore Civil Defence Force) and fire. Call 999 for police. For non-emergency medical advice, call HealthHub at 1800-225-4122 or visit your campus clinic during operating hours. Hospital A&E departments treat all patients regardless of insurance status, but billing is handled separately — your university insurance should be notified within 24 hours of hospitalisation.

Public Coverage Notes

  • University group insurance (NUS, NTU, SMU) is mandatory and automatic for enrolled exchange students — covers hospitalisation, surgery, and outpatient care.

  • Campus clinic visits: free or SGD 5–10 co-pay depending on institution and visit type.

  • For stays after the Student's Pass period or if not covered by university insurance, private insurance options include AXA Global, Allianz, and AIA Student Plans — budget SGD 400–800/year.

Emergency

999 (police), 995 (ambulance/fire)

EXTRA: Culture Shock & Apps

Grab
Critical

The king of transport and food delivery. Since car ownership is restricted, Grab is essential.

Tip: Link your international card before arrival.
Citymapper
Critical

Superior to Google Maps for Singapore's complex MRT and bus network.

Tip: Check for 'rain-safe' routes during monsoon season.
SimplyGo
Recommended

Tracks your public transport spending. Note: You can just tap your Visa/Mastercard directly on gates.

Tip: Register your card to track travel history and claim refunds.
TraceTogether (Legacy/Safety)
Recommended

While no longer mandatory, it's a symbol of Singapore's tech-first approach to safety.

Cities to Explore

Singapore City

Singapore City

A clean, safe, expensive, ultra-efficient study base where the student decision is simple: secure campus housing or budget carefully, use MRT daily,…

Open City Guide