Things to Do in Singapore 2026: The Complete Activities Guide

Things to Do in Singapore 2026: The Complete Activities Guide

Every activity worth your time on the island — theme parks, wildlife, adventure, beaches, culture, food, nightlife and the best free things — sorted, priced and linked to a deep-dive on each. The only Singapore to-do list you need.

Updated June 2026
Singapore’s activities at a glance

  • Singapore packs an astonishing range of things to do into one small island: world-class theme parks (Universal Studios, Adventure Cove), five wildlife parks at Mandai, futuristic gardens, beaches, adventure sports, deep culture and some of the best street food on earth — most within a 30-minute train ride.
  • The big-ticket attractions cluster in two zones: Sentosa (theme parks, beaches, adventure) and Marina Bay (the skyline, gardens, light shows, museums) — so you can knock out a lot in a day each.
  • An enormous amount is completely free: two nightly light shows, the Botanic Gardens, the nature reserves and TreeTop Walk, the ethnic quarters, the beaches and the Merlion — you could fill three days without paying admission.
  • If you’ll visit several paid attractions, a multi-attraction pass (Klook Pass or Go City) usually beats buying separately — and pre-booking anything online is cheaper than the gate and skips the queue.
  • This guide sorts everything by type — and at the end, by how much time you have, your budget and what you’re into — with a deep-dive guide linked on every major attraction.
Singapore’s activities at a glance
Two activity hubs Sentosa (theme parks, beaches, adventure) & Marina Bay (skyline, gardens, shows)
Don’t-miss paid Universal Studios, Gardens by the Bay, Mandai parks, the night light shows (free)
Best free things Spectra & Garden Rhapsody shows, Botanic Gardens, TreeTop Walk, beaches, ethnic quarters
Save money A multi-attraction pass (Klook/Go City) if you’ll do 3+ paid sights
New for 2026 Skypark Sentosa reopens (7 Jun), Mandai Rainforest Wild expands, i Light (5–28 Jun)
Getting around MRT + a contactless card reaches almost every attraction
How long 3–5 days to cover the highlights without rushing
🎫 Save with the Klook Pass Singapore🎟 Compare attraction passes on KKday

Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you, which helps keep this guide free.

Singapore is one of the most activity-dense places on the planet. In an island barely 50 km across you’ll find a Universal Studios, an open-concept zoo and the world’s first night safari, a futuristic garden with a 35-metre indoor waterfall, championship adventure sports, a UNESCO botanic garden, four distinct cultural quarters, a casino, world-class museums, dozens of beaches and islands, and the densest concentration of brilliant cheap food anywhere — all stitched together by a metro that reaches almost every door. The challenge isn’t finding things to do; it’s choosing. This is the complete map: every category of activity, the standout options in each, honest prices and timings, and a deep-dive guide linked on every major attraction so you can go as deep as you like. We’ll cover theme parks, wildlife, gardens and nature, the skyline and its light shows, Sentosa, adventure and adrenaline, water and beaches, culture and museums, food experiences, shopping, nightlife, the long list of free things, the hidden gems most visitors miss, family activities and day trips — and finish by sorting it all by how much time you have, your budget and your interests. Use it with our complete Singapore travel guide to turn this list into a trip.

A collage-style view of Singapore's skyline and Gardens by the Bay Supertrees, symbolising the range of things to do
From futuristic gardens to theme parks, beaches and street food — Singapore packs a staggering range of activities into one small island.

1. How to choose: Singapore’s activity map

Singapore has more to do than days to do it, so the trick is choosing by type and zone — and almost everything clusters around two hubs plus a string of cultural quarters.

Picture the island in three layers. Sentosa, the resort island off the south coast, is the action zone: Universal Studios, Adventure Cove, the beaches, the luge, iFly and the adrenaline sports (Sentosa guide). Marina Bay, downtown on the water, is the icon zone: the skyline, Gardens by the Bay, Marina Bay Sands, the museums and the free nightly light shows. Threaded through the city are the cultural quarters — Chinatown, Little India, Kampong Glam — plus the green nature reserves to the north and a scatter of islands. This guide walks through every category in turn. If you only remember one planning rule: group activities by zone so you’re not crisscrossing the island, and pre-book anything paid online to save money and skip queues.

The money move: if your list has three or more paid attractions, price a Klook Pass or KKday pass against buying separately — the multi-attraction bundles usually win and let you skip the ticket counters.

2. Theme parks & big-ticket rides

Singapore’s headline theme parks are world-class and mostly clustered on Sentosa — book online, arrive at opening, and give the big ones a full day.

Universal Studios Singapore is the flagship: seven themed zones, the Battlestar Galactica duelling coasters and Transformers, easily a full day (~S$83). Next door, Adventure Cove Waterpark pairs high-speed slides with a snorkelling reef and a lazy river — Sentosa’s best wet day out. The reopened Skypark Sentosa (from 7 June 2026) adds Southeast Asia’s tallest dry slides at 44m. On the mainland, the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands runs blockbuster digital-art shows, and the Science Centre (with Snow City’s indoor snow) is a rainy-day winner. Most of these pre-book cheaper online — and several are bundled into the multi-attraction passes.

Plan the big two first: Universal Studios eats a full day and Adventure Cove half a day. Do them on separate Sentosa visits, or pick one and fill the rest of the island with beaches and the luge. Check Adventure Cove tickets →

3. Wildlife: Mandai’s five parks

Mandai Wildlife Reserve is one of the best zoo complexes on earth — five separate parks sharing one forested corner of the island, each a half- to full-day.

The open-concept Singapore Zoo is the star, regularly rated among the world’s best, with animals in naturalistic moated habitats rather than cages. The Night Safari — the world’s first nocturnal zoo — is a completely different, atmospheric experience after dark. River Wonders adds giant pandas and a manatee river; Bird Paradise is a soaring walk-through aviary park; and Rainforest Wild Adventure, expanding through 2026 with okapis and a 125m canopy course, brings hands-on exploration. Visit one deeply rather than rushing several; if you’ll do two or more, a multi-park bundle saves real money. Full breakdown, prices and how to get there in our Mandai guide.

4. Gardens, parks & nature reserves

Singapore is the original ‘City in a Garden’, and its green spaces run from futuristic biodomes to genuine rainforest — much of it free.

Gardens by the Bay is the must-see: the Supertree Grove (free), and the ticketed Cloud Forest with its 35-metre indoor waterfall and the Flower Dome. The Singapore Botanic Gardens — a UNESCO World Heritage Site with a free National Orchid Garden discount on entry — is a peaceful half-day. For real wilderness, the MacRitchie Reservoir nature trails lead to the free HSBC TreeTop Walk, a 250m suspension bridge 25m above the canopy (Tue–Sun, closed Mondays). The Southern Ridges link several parks via the wave-form Henderson Waves bridge, and Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve is for birdlife and mangroves. Most cost nothing — bring water for the heat.

Green space What it’s for Cost
Gardens by the Bay Supertrees, Cloud Forest, Flower Dome Outdoors free; domes ~S$32
Botanic Gardens UNESCO park, Orchid Garden Free (Orchid Garden ~S$15)
MacRitchie / TreeTop Walk Rainforest hike, suspension bridge Free
Southern Ridges Henderson Waves, forest walk Free
A roller coaster at Universal Studios Singapore on Sentosa Island
Universal Studios Singapore — the island’s headline theme park and the anchor of a full day on Sentosa.

5. Iconic views & the skyline

For the postcard, Singapore offers a whole menu of high points — from a free roof terrace to a glass capsule 165 metres up.

The cheapest great view is free: Merlion Park and the Esplanade roof terrace look straight across the bay. For height, the Marina Bay Sands SkyPark observation deck (~S$32) puts you atop the towers, while the Singapore Flyer (~S$40, 165m) turns one slow rotation over the bay — both best at sunset into blue hour. On Sentosa, SkyHelix is an open-air rotating gondola 79m up with island views. Budget option: the Pinnacle@Duxton public sky bridge on the 50th floor of a housing estate costs just a few dollars and locals love it. Time any of these for golden hour and you get day, dusk and the lit city in one visit. Our Marina Bay at night guide compares the bay views in detail.

6. Marina Bay & the nightly light shows

Marina Bay after dark is the single best free evening in the city — two professional light shows, a glowing skyline and a walkable waterfront loop.

Every night, Garden Rhapsody lights the Supertrees (7:45 & 8:45pm) and Spectra stages fountains and lasers at Marina Bay Sands (8 & 9pm, +10pm Fri–Sat) — both free, and watchable in one evening with the right timing. Add a river cruise, a rooftop bar or the Flyer, or just walk the 3.5 km loop past the Merlion, the Helix Bridge and the Gardens. In June 2026, i Light Singapore (5–28 June) adds 14 sustainable light-art installations around the bay. The complete playbook — exact show times, the best viewing spots and three ready-made evening routes — is in our dedicated Marina Bay at night guide.

7. Sentosa: the activity island

If Singapore has a single ‘do everything’ day, it’s Sentosa — theme parks, beaches, adventure sports and views packed onto one small resort island 15 minutes from downtown.

Beyond Universal Studios and Adventure Cove, Sentosa is wall-to-wall activities: the Skyline Luge gravity karts, iFly indoor skydiving, AJ Hackett bungy and giant swing, the Mega Adventure zipline to the beach, SkyHelix and the Singapore Cable Car, plus three swimming beaches (Siloso, Palawan, Tanjong) and the nightly Wings of Time show. Getting there is part of the fun — the Sentosa Express monorail, the cable car, or a walk along the boardwalk (free). A multi-attraction Sentosa pass is the smart buy if you’ll do several. Our full Sentosa guide plans the day and compares the passes.

An orang utan at the open-concept Singapore Zoo in the Mandai wildlife reserve
Mandai’s five wildlife parks — the open-concept Zoo, Night Safari, River Wonders, Bird Paradise and Rainforest Wild — are a half- to full-day each.

8. Adventure & adrenaline

Singapore is more of an adventure playground than it looks — most of it on Sentosa, with a few wild cards elsewhere.

iFly Singapore is the world’s largest themed indoor-skydiving wind tunnel (a 5-storey vertical tube) — the most accessible thrill on the island. AJ Hackett Sentosa runs a 50m bungy, a giant swing and a skybridge; Mega Adventure sends you down a 450m zipline to Siloso Beach; and HydroDash is a floating obstacle course off the sand. Off Sentosa, walk the MacRitchie TreeTop suspension bridge, kayak the mangroves at Pulau Ubin, tackle the Forest Adventure high-ropes course at Bedok Reservoir, or cycle the breezy East Coast Park coastline. Book the Sentosa thrills online to lock in times.

One ticket, many thrills: the adrenaline activities cluster on Sentosa, so pair two or three in a half-day. Check iFly indoor-skydiving slots → and see the rest in our Sentosa guide.

9. Water, beaches & islands

Singapore is an island of islands — beaches, waterparks and short boat trips give you a whole sea-facing side to the city.

On Sentosa, the three beaches (Siloso, Palawan, Tanjong) are free and swimmable, and Adventure Cove Waterpark is the headline wet day. The mainland’s East Coast Park is the locals’ beach — cycling, BBQ pits, seafood and watersports along 15 km of coast — and Wild Wild Wet in the east is a big-value waterpark. For nature, take the 10-minute boat to Pulau Ubin (S$4 each way, cash) for kayaking, cycling and a last-kampong-village feel, or the bridge to Coney Island for a wild, undeveloped coastline. A Singapore River cruise is the gentlest way onto the water, drifting past the skyline. Most beaches and islands cost nothing beyond the boat fare.

10. Culture, heritage & museums

Singapore’s four cultures share one small island, and the best way to feel it is on foot through the historic quarters — most of it free.

Chinatown (the Buddha Tooth Relic Temple, Sri Mariamman Temple, food streets), Little India (the riot of Serangoon Road, the Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple, Mustafa Centre) and Kampong Glam (the golden Sultan Mosque, hip Haji Lane) are each a brilliant half-day of temples, shophouses, street art and food. For depth, the National Gallery (Southeast Asian art in the old Supreme Court), the National Museum, the Peranakan Museum and the ArtScience Museum are world-class. Kampong Gelam, Tiong Bahru and Joo Chiat/Katong (Peranakan shophouses) reward slow wandering. Pair each quarter with its food — our hawker guide tells you what to order where.

11. Food experiences

Eating is the national sport, and ‘doing food’ in Singapore ranges from a S$4 hawker plate to a Michelin tasting menu — the cheap end is the best.

The essential experience is a hawker centre: dozens of specialist stalls, dishes for S$4–8, and two stalls that have held Michelin stars. Beyond eating, you can take a guided hawker food tour, join a Peranakan or local cooking class, do a Singapore Sling at the Raffles Long Bar, or splurge on high tea at a colonial hotel. Don’t-miss dishes: chicken rice, chilli crab, laksa, char kway teow, satay, kaya toast with soft eggs. The food clusters by quarter — Chinatown Complex (the cheapest Michelin meal in the world), Maxwell, Lau Pa Sat’s satay street, Tiong Bahru and Old Airport Road. Our hawker food guide is the full playbook; budget S$8–15 a head and eat like royalty.

The HSBC TreeTop Walk suspension bridge in the MacRitchie nature reserve, Singapore
The free MacRitchie TreeTop Walk — a 250m suspension bridge 25m above the rainforest, proof Singapore is greener than it looks.

12. Shopping

From the world’s flashiest malls to a 24-hour bazaar, shopping is an activity in its own right here — and a great rainy-afternoon plan.

Orchard Road is the famous mile of malls (ION, Paragon, Takashimaya); Marina Bay Sands’ The Shoppes is the luxury end with a canal and a sampan ride. For character, the Mustafa Centre in Little India is a chaotic 24-hour everything-store, Bugis Street and Haji Lane are for cheap fashion and indie boutiques, and Tiong Bahru and Tanjong Pagar hide design shops and cafes. Tourists can claim the 9% GST refund on purchases over S$100 at Changi — see our budget guide. Even if you don’t buy, the malls double as air-conditioned shelter and food-court heaven when the afternoon storm hits.

13. Nightlife & bars

Singapore’s nights run from free light shows to S$25 rooftop cocktails and 4am clubs — there’s a tier for every budget.

The free tier is the Marina Bay light shows and a waterfront walk. Step up to a rooftop bar — 1-Altitude, LeVeL33, the CÉ LA VI deck atop Marina Bay Sands — where a cocktail (S$20–28) buys the skyline. Clarke Quay is the riverside nightlife strip of bars and clubs; Boat Quay is mellower; and the city has a serious craft-cocktail scene (Singapore regularly lands bars on the World’s 50 Best list). Two casinos — Marina Bay Sands and Resorts World Sentosa — run 24/7 (free for tourists; bring your passport). For a uniquely local night, the open-air satay street at Lau Pa Sat fires up after 7pm. Wind-down and money-saving options are in our budget guide.

14. The best free things to do

Singapore has a reputation for being expensive, but it hides an extraordinary amount of world-class, completely free activity — enough to fill days.

Free activity Where
Garden Rhapsody & Spectra light shows Gardens by the Bay & Marina Bay Sands
Supertree Grove & outdoor gardens Gardens by the Bay
Singapore Botanic Gardens (UNESCO) Tanglin / Orchard
MacRitchie TreeTop Walk & Southern Ridges Central & southern reserves
Merlion Park & the bayfront walk Marina Bay
Chinatown, Little India, Kampong Glam & temples Across the city
Jewel’s Rain Vortex & the beaches Changi & Sentosa/East Coast

String these together and you have a brilliant trip on hawker money. The complete free-Singapore plan, plus the cheapest way to do the paid stuff, is in our budget guide.

Colourful shophouses and street life in a Singapore heritage quarter
The ethnic quarters — Chinatown, Little India and Kampong Glam — are free, walkable, and among the city’s best half-days.

15. Hidden gems & quirky Singapore

Beyond the headline sights, the island rewards the curious with surreal parks, last-village islands and time-capsule neighbourhoods most visitors never reach.

Haw Par Villa is Singapore’s strangest free attraction — a 1937 park of lurid dioramas including the gory ‘Ten Courts of Hell’ (note: the park is partially closed for works from late 2025, though Hell’s Museum stays open). Pulau Ubin is a boat-ride back in time to Singapore’s last kampong. Tiong Bahru mixes 1930s Art Deco walk-ups with indie cafes and a wet market; Joo Chiat/Katong is Peranakan shophouse heaven. Nature-wise, Coney Island, the Sungei Buloh wetlands and the Pinnacle@Duxton sky bridge are local favourites the tour buses skip. These pair beautifully with the big sights for a more textured trip — and most are free or a few dollars.

16. Activities with kids

Singapore is arguably Asia’s most family-friendly city — safe, clean, stroller-easy and stuffed with attractions built for children.

The heavy hitters: Universal Studios, the Singapore Oceanarium, the zoo, River Wonders and Bird Paradise, Adventure Cove Waterpark, and the free water-play areas dotted across the island. For learning-through-play there’s the Science Centre and KidsSTOP, ArtScience Museum’s Future World, and the Children’s Museum. Gardens by the Bay has a free children’s water garden, and the beaches and the cable car are easy wins. The MRT is stroller-friendly and under-0.9m children ride free. Our complete Singapore with kids guide sorts it all by age with pacing tips, rainy-day swaps and family logistics.

17. Day trips & islands

You don’t need to leave Singapore for a change of scene — but if you want one, two countries are a boat or bus ride away.

The easiest ‘day trip’ is Sentosa (15 minutes from downtown) or Pulau Ubin (a 10-minute boat to Singapore’s rustic last village). Further out, the Southern Islands (St John’s, Lazarus, Kusu) are a quiet ferry escape with empty beaches. Across the border, Johor Bahru, Malaysia is a short causeway hop for cheap food and shopping, and the Indonesian islands of Bintan and Batam are resort beaches a ferry ride away — both need your passport and a regional eSIM that works over the border. For most short trips, though, the island itself has more than enough; save the cross-border runs for longer stays.

18. Plan it: by time, budget & interest

Too many options? Sort by what you’ve actually got — time, money, or a particular interest — and the list shrinks to a plan.

You have… Do this
Half a day Marina Bay loop + Gardens by the Bay, or one theme park
1 day Marina Bay + a hawker centre + the night light shows
3 days Add Sentosa or the zoo, plus one cultural quarter
5 days Add a nature reserve, the museums, a day trip and a slower pace
You’re into… Don’t miss
Thrills Universal Studios, iFly, the luge, Mega Adventure zipline
Nature Mandai parks, TreeTop Walk, Botanic Gardens, Pulau Ubin
Culture The three quarters, National Gallery, Peranakan Museum
Food Hawker centres, a food tour, satay street, a cooking class
Free / budget Light shows, gardens, reserves, beaches, the quarters

Whatever you choose, group it by zone, pre-book the paid sights, and weave it together with our complete Singapore travel guide and its day-by-day itineraries. The best Singapore trips mix one or two big-ticket attractions with the free, walkable, edible city around them.

Frequently asked questions

Q. What are the top things to do in Singapore?
The classic shortlist: ride and watch the shows at Universal Studios, explore Gardens by the Bay and its Cloud Forest, see the open-concept Singapore Zoo and Night Safari, watch the free Marina Bay light shows, eat your way through a hawker centre (guide), wander Chinatown, Little India and Kampong Glam, and spend a day on Sentosa. Most visitors fit these into 3–5 days.
Q. How many days do you need in Singapore?
Three days covers the absolute highlights (Marina Bay, Gardens by the Bay, a hawker centre, one theme park or the zoo, the ethnic quarters). Four to five days lets you add Sentosa properly, a nature reserve, the museums and a slower pace — see suggested itineraries in our main guide. Even a long layover is worth it: Jewel and the city centre are 20 minutes from the airport (Changi guide).
Q. What can you do in Singapore for free?
A huge amount. The Garden Rhapsody and Spectra light shows, the Singapore Botanic Gardens (a UNESCO site), the MacRitchie TreeTop Walk and the Southern Ridges, the ethnic quarters and their temples, Jewel’s Rain Vortex, Merlion Park, the Marina Barrage and most of the beaches all cost nothing. You could fill two or three full days entirely free — our budget guide has the complete list.
Q. What’s the best thing to do in Singapore at night?
Marina Bay, hands down. Two free light shows run nightly — Garden Rhapsody at the Supertrees (7:45 & 8:45pm) and Spectra at Marina Bay Sands (8 & 9pm) — linked by a glowing waterfront walk, with rooftop bars, a river cruise and the Singapore Flyer as paid add-ons. Our dedicated Marina Bay at night guide has the show times and the perfect route. The Night Safari is the other great after-dark option.
Q. Is Singapore good for adventure and adrenaline activities?
Surprisingly, yes. Sentosa alone has the Skyline Luge, iFly indoor skydiving (the world’s largest wind tunnel), the AJ Hackett bungy and giant swing, the Mega Adventure zipline, and HydroDash floating aqua park. Beyond it you can kayak through mangroves at Pulau Ubin, walk the MacRitchie TreeTop suspension bridge, cycle the coast, or try the Forest Adventure high-ropes course. It’s a compact but genuine adventure menu.
Q. Are attraction passes worth it in Singapore?
If you’ll visit three or more paid attractions, usually yes. A Klook Pass or Go City pass bundles big-ticket sights (Gardens conservatories, Singapore Cable Car, SkyHelix, the zoo, a river cruise and more) for less than buying separately — and you skip ticket counters. If you’re only doing one or two, book those individually online instead, which is still cheaper than the gate. Compare on Klook or KKday for your exact list.
Q. What are the best things to do in Singapore with kids?
Singapore is one of Asia’s most family-friendly cities. Top picks: Universal Studios, the Singapore Oceanarium, the zoo and River Wonders, Adventure Cove Waterpark, Gardens by the Bay, the Science Centre and KidsSTOP, and the free water-play areas. The MRT is stroller-friendly and under-0.9m kids ride free. Our full Singapore with kids guide has age-by-age plans.
Q. What’s new to do in Singapore in 2026?
Several things: Skypark Sentosa reopens on 7 June 2026 with Southeast Asia’s tallest dry slides (44m), Mandai’s Rainforest Wild Adventure is adding a second zone with okapis and a 125m canopy course, and i Light Singapore returns to Marina Bay (5–28 June 2026) with 14 light-art installations. Festivals and seasonal events run all year — see our best time to visit guide for the 2026 calendar.
Q. What should I do in Singapore when it rains?
Plenty stays dry. The Cloud Forest and Flower Dome at Gardens by the Bay, the Oceanarium, the museums (National Gallery, ArtScience, National Museum), the malls and Jewel, the Science Centre, and a hawker centre are all indoor or sheltered. Singapore’s afternoon storms usually pass within an hour — see our weather guide for timing.
Q. How do I get between Singapore’s attractions?
The MRT reaches almost everything — tap in with a contactless card, most rides cost S$1–2, and it’s fast and air-conditioned. The two exceptions are Mandai (zoo/Night Safari), reached by a shuttle from Khatib MRT, and Pulau Ubin, reached by a short boat from Changi. Full details, passes and payment in our MRT & transport guide; sort an eSIM so the route apps work from the moment you land.

Plan your whole Singapore trip with our complete guide →