Pulau Ubin Day Trip: Singapore’s No-Passport Island Escape by Bumboat

No cars, no ATMs, and no visa required — just a ten-minute bumboat ride to kampong houses, a mountain-bike park, and one of Singapore’s richest wetlands. Here’s exactly how to plan it.

Updated July 2026
Pulau Ubin at a glance
What it isA rustic, car-free island off Singapore’s northeast coast, with a kampong village, Chek Jawa wetlands, and a mountain-bike park
How to get thereBumboat from Changi Point Ferry TerminalMap, about 10 minutes, roughly S$4 per person one-way, cash only, no fixed timetable
Passport or visaNone needed — Pulau Ubin is still legally part of Singapore
Getting aroundRent a bicycle at the jetty for about S$8-25 a day, cash only — the default way to see the island
Star attractionChek Jawa WetlandsMap boardwalk, best near low tide, plus the 21-metre Jejawi TowerMap
MoneySingapore dollars, cash only on the island — there are no ATMs
Best forFamilies, cyclists, and anyone curious about old Singapore; skip it if you want air-conditioned comfort or a fast, easy outing
Best timeYear-round; weekday mornings are quietest — go early to beat weekend bike-rental queues and the midday heat
🎫 Prefer a guided bike tour with the ferry sorted? Compare options on Klook

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Pulau Ubin is a small, car-free island off Singapore’s northeast coast, reachable only by a shared bumboat from Changi Point, and it is the closest thing the country has to a time machine. Kampong houses on stilts, a mountain-bike park, flooded granite quarries, and Chek Jawa’s tidal flats sit a ten-minute boat ride from the mainland, for about S$4 in cash. Unlike the region’s other classic day trips from Singapore, such as Johor Bahru or Batam and Bintan, Ubin needs no passport at all — it’s still legally part of Singapore, which makes it one of the easiest half-day escapes on the whole Singapore itinerary.

The waterfront village settlement on Pulau Ubin, seen from across the water
Pulau Ubin’s small village near the jetty, seen at dusk from across the water — a rare surviving slice of pre-HDB Singapore, and some houses are still lived in today.

1. Is a Pulau Ubin Day Trip Worth It?

Yes, if you want a slower, greener side of Singapore for the cost of a bus ticket and a S$4 boat fare — Pulau Ubin rewards cyclists, families and anyone curious about the country’s kampong past, but it’s not the trip for anyone chasing air-conditioning or a fast, curated outing.

The island itself is tiny by Singapore standards: no cars, a scattering of kampong houses, a mountain-bike park, and Chek Jawa’s wetlands at the eastern tip. The cost floor is low, too. Round-trip bumboat fare runs about S$8 per person, and a basic bike rental adds roughly S$8-15 for the day, so a full day of cycling and exploring can come in well under S$30 without any extras. For the rest of what to see around the country, our Singapore travel guide covers the bigger picture.

Who it suits: families with kids old enough to cycle, mountain bikers looking for actual trails, birdwatchers, photographers, and travellers who want to see what Singapore looked like before land reclamation and high-rises took over. Who should skip it: anyone short on time who wants a quick, polished attraction, or travellers who’d rather not deal with heat, unpaved paths, and cash-only everything.

2. Getting There: The Changi Point Bumboat

The only way to Pulau Ubin is a bumboat from Changi Point Ferry Terminal — a small motorised boat that departs once roughly a dozen passengers are aboard, not on a printed schedule.

Bumboats run on demand, roughly from 6am to 7pm daily. There’s no fixed departure time; the boat leaves when it’s reasonably full, so on a quiet weekday morning you might wait a little longer than on a busy weekend. The crossing itself takes about ten minutes. Fare is about S$4 per person, one-way, cash only — bring smaller notes and coins, since operators may not be able to break a large bill. If you’re bringing your own bicycle across, expect an extra S$2-4 for it.

If you’re heading back to the mainland and no boats happen to be waiting at Ubin’s jetty, NParks operates a helpline (1800-471 7300) for stranded visitors. Outside the usual operating hours, or if there simply aren’t enough passengers for a shared trip, it’s usually possible to arrange a boat privately for a higher fare.

Cash only, no fixed timetable. There is no app, no printed schedule, and no card payment for the bumboat. Bring enough small-denomination cash for the crossing both ways, and build a little flexibility into your plans rather than timing everything to the minute.

3. Getting to Changi Point Ferry Terminal

From central Singapore, the fastest route is MRT to Tanah Merah, then Bus 2 to Changi Village Bus Interchange, followed by a short walk to the ferry terminal.

  • Take the MRT to Tanah Merah station on the East-West Line.
  • Board Bus 2 from the station and ride to Changi Village Bus Interchange. Buses 29 and 59 also serve the area if you’re coming from elsewhere.
  • Walk about 3 minutes from the bus interchange to Changi Point Ferry Terminal, where the bumboats to Pulau Ubin depart.

For getting around the rest of Singapore before or after your Ubin trip, see our Singapore transport guide.

A bumboat crossing from Changi Point Ferry Terminal to Pulau Ubin
The bumboat from Changi Point is the only way onto Pulau Ubin — a shared, motorised boat that leaves once enough passengers are aboard, not on a fixed timetable.

4. Getting Around Pulau Ubin: Bike, Foot, or Shared Van

Renting a bicycle at the jetty, for roughly S$8-25 a day in cash, is how most visitors cover ground on Pulau Ubin — the island is compact enough to see plenty in half a day, but too spread out to comfortably walk everywhere.

Rental shops cluster right by the main jetty and open roughly 8am to 6pm. A basic single-speed bike with a basket costs about S$8-15 for the day; better-geared or mountain bikes, some from brands like Polygon or Trinx, run up to roughly S$20-25 and sometimes come with a helmet and a bottle of water. No booking is needed — just show up, compare a stall or two, and expect to pay cash. If you want a noticeably better bike than the village rentals offer, it’s also possible to rent one on the mainland at Changi Point and bring it over on the bumboat, though that adds a small boat fee.

Walking is fine for the area right around the jetty and village, but slow going if you want to reach Chek Jawa or Ketam Mountain Bike ParkMap on foot. A handful of shared taxis and vans, run informally by villagers, wait near the jetty and charge a flat fee — a useful backup if cycling isn’t for you, though seats are limited.

OptionCostBest for
Bicycle rental at the jetty~S$8-25/day, cashMost visitors — flexible, covers the whole island
Bike rented at Changi Point (mainland)Rental fee + boat surchargeWanting a better-quality bike
WalkingFreeThe village and jetty area only
Shared van/taxiFlat fee, cashBackup option, limited availability

Most people simply rent from the villagers at the jetty and pay cash on arrival — it’s the cheapest, simplest default, and no one books it in advance. If you’d rather have the ferry and a bike pre-arranged and not deal with any queuing or haggling, especially on a busy weekend, a guided tour is the alternative worth comparing.

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5. Chek Jawa Wetlands: Why Most People Come

Chek Jawa Wetlands, at Pulau Ubin’s eastern tip, packs an unusually wide range of habitats into a small area — sandbar, seagrass lagoon, mangroves, and both rocky and coral-rubble shore — and it’s the single biggest reason many day-trippers make the crossing.

A Visitor Centre anchors the site, and a roughly 1km boardwalk lets you move through the ecosystem without trampling it, split into the Coastal Loop (about 600m) and the Mangrove Loop (about 500m). The 21-metre Jejawi Tower adds a treetop view over the mangroves and the strait beyond. The wider area, including the Visitor Centre, is open daily from 7am to 7pm, though the boardwalk itself is only accessible from 9am to 5pm.

Timing matters here more than at most Singapore attractions. Chek Jawa is at its best near low tide, when the sandbar’s marine life is actually exposed and visible — check a tide table before you plan the day around it. A separately guided Chek Jawa Boardwalk Tour has existed at various points, and pontoon-boat tours have occasionally been suspended for maintenance, so check the NParks Pulau Ubin page ahead of your trip rather than assuming a specific tour will be running.

The boardwalk and viewing tower at Chek Jawa Wetlands
The boardwalk at Chek Jawa Wetlands lets visitors see the sandbar, mangroves and lagoon without disturbing them — the 21-metre Jejawi Tower adds a treetop view.

6. Ketam Mountain Bike Park: For the More Adventurous

Ketam Mountain Bike Park is a roughly 45-hectare, purpose-built trail network with about 10km of single-track, built to international mountain-biking standards — Singapore’s first park of its kind, and it’s aimed more at capable riders than at a wobble on a rental cruiser.

Trails range from easy, leisurely loops to genuinely technical sections with roots, berms and elevation changes, so the experience varies a lot depending on which part of the park you ride. Not all of it suits the basic single-speed bikes rented at the jetty; if you’re planning to tackle the more technical trails, a better-geared or full mountain bike, rented either on Ubin or brought over from Changi Point, is worth the extra cost.

Casual cyclists who just want a relaxed ride, rather than a workout, are often happier sticking to the flatter kampong paths near the village and heading to Chek Jawa instead, and saving Ketam for a trip focused specifically on more active things to do in Singapore.

7. Puaka Hill and the Old Granite Quarries

Puaka HillMap, Pulau Ubin’s highest point, is a short but genuinely steep climb that rewards you with a panoramic view over the island and its flooded former granite quarries.

The old quarries — Ketam, Pekan, Kekek, Ubin and Balai — are visible from several of the island’s paths and roads, now still, quiet bodies of water where granite was once cut for the mainland’s early construction. Pekan Quarry in particular has become a reliable spot for birdwatching, with hornbills, herons, egrets and sunbirds reported by regular visitors.

Neither Puaka Hill nor the quarries require much specialist gear, just decent shoes and a bit of patience on the climb, and they pair well with a bike ride if you’re spending a full day on the island rather than a quick half-day loop.

8. The German Girl Shrine and Other Ubin Curiosities

The German Girl ShrineMap, tucked near Ketam Quarry, is local legend rather than verified history — a small shrine built around the unmarked grave of a young woman local lore says was a German national who died fleeing British forces during the World War I-era internment of German nationals in Singapore.

Over time it became a place locals, including some gamblers seeking luck, would visit and leave offerings, and dolls and toys are still commonly left there today. It’s reachable via signposted paths off the Ketam bike trail, and it’s worth treating as folklore rather than confirmed fact — no verified historical record backs the specific story, but it remains one of the island’s more talked-about stops.

Two other things worth knowing about: Butterfly Hill, reported to host dozens of butterfly species drawn to nectar and host plants along its paths, and the kampong village itself, clusters of traditional wooden houses on stilts near the main settlement, some of which are still lived in. Treat the village as someone’s home rather than a photo backdrop, and keep noise and intrusion to a minimum.

Visitors riding a tandem bicycle along a paved road on Pulau Ubin
Bicycles rented at the jetty, including tandem bikes for two, are how most visitors cover ground on Pulau Ubin.

9. A Perfect Pulau Ubin Day: Sample Itinerary

A half-day on Pulau Ubin, roughly four hours, comfortably covers the jetty village and a ride out to Chek Jawa and back; add Ketam Mountain Bike Park and Puaka Hill and it easily fills a full day.

  • Morning arrival: catch an early bumboat from Changi Point (soon after boats start running avoids both crowds and the heat) and rent a bicycle at the jetty.
  • Ride to Chek Jawa: cycle to the eastern tip, timed close to low tide if possible, and walk the boardwalk loops and Jejawi Tower.
  • Return via the village: ride back through the kampong houses near the main settlement, stopping at a jetty-side stall for a drink or a simple lunch.
  • Return bumboat: head back to the jetty and catch a boat to Changi Point before the afternoon heat peaks.

To stretch this into a full day, add a detour to Ketam Mountain Bike Park in the late morning if you have a suitable bike, or the climb up Puaka Hill for the view over the quarries, and simply slow the pace down rather than rushing between stops.

10. Food on the Island (and Off It)

Food on Pulau Ubin itself is modest — a handful of kampong-style stalls near the jetty sell drinks, basic noodles or rice, and snacks, cash only and with limited hours — so the island’s more substantial seafood experiences are a separate boat trip from Changi Point, not something you arrange from Ubin.

Don’t count on a big lunch menu; bring extra cash and water regardless, and treat whatever you find at the jetty stalls as a bonus rather than a plan. For a fuller seafood meal, kelong (offshore fish-farm) restaurants like Smith Marine Floating Restaurant and Uncle Tan’s Kelong are reachable by a separate, bookable private boat from Changi Point — Uncle Tan’s has historically run around S$70 per boat round-trip with a semi-fixed zichar-style seafood menu and free-flow rice. These are a distinct, book-ahead experience layered on top of a Changi Point visit, not part of the basic Ubin bumboat trip.

One common mix-up worth clearing up: New Ubin Seafood is a well-known Singapore zichar restaurant brand that originated as a kelong restaurant on Pulau Ubin decades ago, but it now operates on the Singapore mainland rather than on the island itself — so don’t plan an Ubin day trip around eating there.

11. Wildlife and Staying Safe Around It

Wild boars are a real, generally low-risk presence on Pulau Ubin, and the standard advice is simple: don’t feed them, keep food out of sight, and give them space, especially a sow with piglets.

Wild boars: they’re known to approach cyclists and picnickers if food is visible, particularly hanging in a bicycle basket. Don’t feed them, keep food covered or out of sight, don’t corner or provoke one, and simply give it room to move off.

Other wildlife reported on the island includes long-tailed macaques, Malayan water monitors, Oriental pied hornbills, and a range of other birds — treat all of it as wild and keep a respectful distance rather than approaching for photos.

Beyond wildlife, ordinary outdoor sense applies: there’s little shade on the open trails, so bring sun protection; pack insect repellent and more drinking water than you think you’ll need, since buying more on the island is limited; wear sturdy, closed shoes for the unpaved and sometimes uneven bike paths; and take extra care on loose gravel or muddy sections after rain.

A flooded former granite quarry on Pulau Ubin
One of Pulau Ubin’s flooded granite quarries, now a still, quiet water body and a favourite spot for birdwatchers.

12. Money, Signal, and Other Practical Logistics

There are no ATMs on Pulau Ubin, so cash isn’t a convenience but a necessity — for the bumboat, the bike rental and anything you eat — while unlike a trip to Johor Bahru or Batam and Bintan, you need no passport, visa or currency exchange at all, since Ubin is still legally part of Singapore.

Currency is the Singapore dollar, same as the mainland, so there’s nothing to exchange. Mobile signal can be patchy or weaker in parts of the island, particularly in the nature reserve areas, so it’s worth downloading offline maps or noting your planned route before you lose reception. Toilets are available near the jetty and village and at the Chek Jawa Visitor Centre; facilities elsewhere on the island are limited, so plan around those points.

If you’re budgeting the day alongside the rest of your trip, our Singapore on a budget guide has more on keeping costs down without cutting corners on the experience.

13. Camping Overnight on Pulau Ubin

Yes, you can camp overnight on Pulau Ubin, but only with an NParks permit applied for at least two weeks ahead, at one of three designated campsites: Jelutong, Mamam, and Endut Senin.

Singaporeans and permanent residents apply through the AXS system, while short-term visit pass holders and tourists use an online form instead. Campers must be 16 or older, and one permit covers one tent of up to six people. There’s a cap of 4 camping days per month per applicant, and each booking runs from 9am to 9am the following day.

One detail worth flagging before you book: permits are non-cancellable and non-changeable once confirmed, so there’s no refund if it rains or plans change. Treat camping as an option for a longer, more deliberate trip to Ubin rather than something to add on impulsively to a standard day visit.

Oriental pied hornbill perched in a tree on Pulau Ubin
Pulau Ubin’s quieter corners support birdlife including Oriental pied hornbills, alongside wild boars and long-tailed macaques.

14. Best Time to Visit Pulau Ubin

Pulau Ubin works year-round, but the best conditions are a cool, dry weekday morning — rain turns the trails slippery and muddy, and the open paths offer little shade once the sun climbs.

Weekday visits are noticeably quieter than weekends, when queues can form at the bike rental shops near the jetty and the more popular trails see far more traffic. School holidays add to the crowds too. Arriving early, soon after the first boats start running around 6-7am, avoids both the worst of the heat and the rental queues, and gives you first pick of bikes before the better ones are gone.

If your Ubin trip is one stop in a longer visit, our best time to visit Singapore guide covers how the wider weather patterns and event calendar might shape the rest of your dates.

15. First-Timer Mistakes to Avoid

Most Pulau Ubin mistakes come down to the same root cause: assuming the island runs like the rest of Singapore, when in fact it’s cash-only, on-demand, and mostly unshaded.

MistakeWhy it bitesFix
Not enough cashNo ATMs, no cards anywhere on the islandBring small notes for the boat, bike and food
No water or sun protectionLittle shade on open trailsPack more water than feels necessary, plus sunscreen and a hat
Expecting a fixed ferry scheduleBumboats leave on demand, not on a timetableBuild in flexibility and don’t time the day to the minute
Missing low tide at Chek JawaSandbar life is only visible when the tide is outCheck a tide table before you plan the visit
Feeding wild boarsEncourages boars to approach visitors and foodKeep food hidden, don’t feed or corner them
Underestimating trail distances on a basic bikeSingle-speed rentals are slow on longer or hilly routesUpgrade to a geared bike for a full-day plan
Forgetting cash is the only payment methodCard payment is essentially unavailable outside pre-booked toursTreat cash as non-negotiable, not a backup

16. Who Pulau Ubin Suits, and Planning the Rest of Your Trip

Pulau Ubin suits families, cyclists, photographers and anyone curious about pre-HDB Singapore, and it’s an easy skip for travellers who’d rather have air-conditioned comfort or a fast, low-effort outing.

Traveller typeUbin verdict
Families with older kidsGood fit — cycling and wetlands make an easy, active day
Cyclists / mountain bikersStrong fit — Ketam Mountain Bike Park is a genuine draw
Photographers / birdwatchersGood fit — quarries, Chek Jawa and kampong scenes reward patience
History and heritage buffsGood fit — one of the few surviving kampong settings left
Travellers wanting AC comfort or a fast outingSkip it — better suited to a mall or indoor attraction day

Ubin pairs naturally with a lazier, greener day elsewhere on the island — the Botanic Gardens makes a gentle counterpoint if you want more nature without the boat ride, while Sentosa covers the opposite end of the spectrum if the rest of your group wants beaches and rides instead. Families planning a broader trip might also check our Singapore with kids guide, and budget-conscious travellers can see how a day like this fits into a wider Singapore on a budget guide. For getting to and from Changi Point, our Singapore transport guide has the details, and if you’re weighing up other cross-border day trips, Johor Bahru and Batam and Bintan are the two most popular alternatives. For more ideas closer to home, browse our roundups of things to do in Singapore and our guides to Singapore’s neighbourhoods and districts.

None of this needs much advance planning. Bring cash, start early, and Pulau Ubin delivers a genuinely different day out for very little money — a reasonable trade for a country as compact and polished as Singapore usually is.

Frequently asked questions

Q. Is Pulau Ubin worth visiting?
For the right traveller, yes. If you like cycling, quiet nature, or seeing what Singapore looked like before high-rises, Ubin delivers all three for the price of a bus ticket and a S$4 boat fare. It won’t suit anyone hoping for air-conditioning, polished facilities, or a short, effortless outing — there’s real cycling, real heat, and very little infrastructure. Think of it as the opposite of a mall day, and plan accordingly.
Q. How do I get to Pulau Ubin from Singapore?
Take the MRT to Tanah Merah on the East-West Line, then Bus 2 to Changi Village Bus Interchange (buses 29 and 59 also pass nearby), then walk about three minutes to Changi Point Ferry Terminal. From there, a bumboat carries you across to Pulau Ubin in roughly ten minutes. There’s no other way onto the island — no bridge, no scheduled ferry service, just the bumboat.
Q. Do I need a passport or visa for Pulau Ubin?
No. Pulau Ubin is still legally part of Singapore, so there’s no immigration checkpoint, no passport stamp, and no visa of any kind, unlike a day trip to Johor Bahru or Batam. Bring identification as you would for any outing, but you won’t be asked for travel documents to board the bumboat.
Q. How much does the bumboat cost?
About S$4 per person one-way, paid in cash to the boat operator — bring small notes, since operators may not be able to break a large bill. If you’re bringing your own bicycle on board, expect to pay roughly S$2-4 extra for it. There’s no online booking; you simply turn up at Changi Point Ferry Terminal and pay when you board.
Q. Is there a fixed ferry schedule to Pulau Ubin?
No, and this trips up a lot of first-time visitors. The bumboats run on demand, roughly from 6am to 7pm, and generally depart once around a dozen passengers are aboard rather than on a printed timetable. Outside those hours, or if there simply aren’t enough passengers, you can usually arrange a boat privately for a higher fare. If you’re stuck at Ubin’s jetty on the way back with no boats around, NParks runs a helpline (1800-471 7300) for assistance.
Q. How much is bike rental, and do I need to book ahead?
No booking is needed — rental shops cluster right by the main jetty and open roughly 8am to 6pm. A basic single-speed bike with a basket runs about S$8-15 a day; better-geared or mountain bikes cost more, up to roughly S$20-25 a day, sometimes with a helmet and water bottle thrown in. Everything is cash only, and it’s fine to haggle a little if you’re comparing a few stalls.
Q. What is Chek Jawa Wetlands and when’s the best time to see it?
Chek Jawa is a small stretch of coastline at Ubin’s eastern tip that packs an unusual range of habitats into one area — sandbar, seagrass lagoon, mangroves, and both rocky and coral-rubble shore. A roughly 1km boardwalk (split into a Coastal Loop and a Mangrove Loop) and the 21-metre Jejawi Tower let you see it without trampling the ecosystem. The area is open 7am to 7pm daily, though the boardwalk itself is only accessible 9am to 5pm. Aim to visit near low tide, checking a tide table beforehand, since that’s when the sandbar life is actually visible.
Q. Are wild boars on Pulau Ubin dangerous?
Generally low-risk, but real, and worth respecting. Wild boars roam the island and are known to approach cyclists and picnickers if they smell food, particularly if it’s visible in a bicycle basket. The standard advice is straightforward: don’t feed them, keep food out of sight, give them space, and never corner one, especially a sow with piglets. Most encounters are simply the boar wandering off once it realises there’s nothing for it.
Q. Is there an ATM on Pulau Ubin?
No. There are no ATMs anywhere on the island, and card payment is essentially unavailable outside pre-booked tours. Bring enough Singapore dollars in cash, ideally small notes, to cover the bumboat fare both ways, bike rental, food, and any incidentals, because there’s no way to withdraw more once you’ve crossed.
Q. Can I camp overnight on Pulau Ubin?
Yes, with an NParks permit applied for at least two weeks in advance. There are three designated campsites: Jelutong, Mamam, and Endut Senin. Singaporeans and permanent residents apply through the AXS system, while short-term visit pass holders and tourists use an online form. Campers must be 16 or older, one permit covers one tent of up to six people, and camping runs from 9am to 9am the next day. Permits can’t be cancelled or changed once booked, so there’s no refund if it rains.
Q. How long should I plan for a visit — half day or full day?
A half day, around four hours, is enough to cover the jetty village and a ride out to Chek Jawa and back, which suits most first-time visitors. If you want to add Ketam Mountain Bike Park and the climb up Puaka Hill, or just want to explore at a slower pace, block out a full day instead. Either way, aim to arrive early, since the island gets hot and the bike queues build up as the morning goes on.
Q. What should I bring to Pulau Ubin?
Cash in small notes (there are no ATMs), sun protection, insect repellent, and more drinking water than you think you’ll need, since options to buy more are limited once you’re away from the jetty. Sturdy, closed shoes help on the unpaved and sometimes uneven bike trails. It’s also worth downloading offline maps beforehand, since mobile signal can be patchy in parts of the island’s nature areas.

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