Can Tourists Watch Singapore’s National Day? Fireworks, Parade & Free Viewing Spots

Can Tourists Watch Singapore’s National Day? Fireworks, Parade & Free Viewing Spots

You can’t ballot for parade tickets as a tourist — but the fireworks are free to watch, and there are three nights to catch them. Here’s exactly where to stand, what time to arrive, and how to do National Day 2026 as a visitor.

Updated June 2026
Singapore National Day 2026 — quick facts
Date Sunday, 9 August 2026 (61st National Day)
Preview nights Saturday 25 July & Saturday 1 August 2026 — fireworks on both
Venue National StadiumMap, The Kallang (Singapore Sports Hub)
Parade tickets Free, but balloted via SingPass — Singapore citizens & PRs only (tourists can’t apply)
Fireworks Free to watch from public spots; no ticket needed
Typical time Evening; fireworks around 8pm (confirm nearer the date)
Best for visitors Free spots around Kallang Basin & Marina Bay, or a paid skyline view
Heads-up Huge crowds, road closures and packed trains — arrive early, leave late
🎫 Check Singapore Flyer tickets on Klook🎟 Compare Singapore Flyer tickets on KKday

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Singapore’s National Day is the one night the whole city dresses up — fighter jets scream over the skyline, the parade fills the National Stadium, and the bay erupts in fireworks. If you’re visiting in early August, the obvious question is whether you can be part of it. The honest answer: you can’t get a seat inside the parade (those free tickets are balloted to Singaporeans and residents only), but you absolutely can watch the fireworks — for free, from some of the best vantage points in the city — and most visitors don’t realise there are three nights to catch them, not one. This guide is written for travellers: where the fireworks are this year, the exact free spots to stand, when to turn up, how to get in and out, and the paid options if you’d rather watch with a drink in hand. For the wider picture of the bay after dark, see our Marina Bay at night guide.

Fireworks bursting over the Singapore skyline on National Day
National Day fireworks light up the skyline — and you can watch them for free from public spots around the bay.

1. Can visitors actually take part in National Day?

Short answer: you can’t get into the parade, but you can absolutely watch the fireworks — for free. The in-stadium tickets are balloted to Singapore citizens and Permanent Residents through SingPass, so tourists can’t apply. The fireworks, though, are a public show that anyone can enjoy from the waterfront, the parks and the bridges around the bay.

That distinction is the key to doing National Day as a visitor. Don’t waste energy hunting for parade tickets (they’re free, never sold, and restricted — anyone ‘reselling’ them is a red flag). Instead, treat the evening like the world’s best free fireworks night: pick a spot, get there early, and enjoy the build-up of fly-pasts, music drifting from the stadium, and a city in full celebration. If you’d rather watch from up high or with a table and a drink, there are paid options too, which we cover below. Either way, you’ll have a memorable night.

2. National Day 2026: the dates that matter

National Day is Sunday 9 August 2026 — but the smartest move for visitors is to know about the two preview nights on Saturday 25 July and Saturday 1 August, which carry the same full fireworks finale.

The parade is staged three times: two previews and the actual day. All three end with the fireworks, and the previews are typically a touch less mobbed than 9 August itself — so if your trip overlaps any of these dates, you have options. This year the show is at the National Stadium (The Kallang), the first time National Day has been back at the stadium in about a decade, which shifts the best free viewing toward the Kallang Basin (more on exactly where below).

Date What it is Fireworks?
Sat 25 July 2026 NDP Preview 1 Yes — full finale
Sat 1 August 2026 NDP Preview 2 Yes — full finale
Sun 9 August 2026 National Day itself Yes — the big one

Dates and exact timings are set by the organisers and confirmed nearer the day, so double-check the official NDP channels before you commit your evening.

The National Stadium at the Singapore Sports Hub in Kallang
In 2026 the parade returns to the National Stadium in Kallang, so the closest free views are around the Kallang Basin.

3. Three nights to catch the fireworks — use them

Most visitors assume National Day fireworks happen only on 9 August. They don’t: the 25 July and 1 August previews include the same fireworks, usually with smaller crowds — which makes them the insider’s choice.

If you can be in Singapore for a preview, you’ll get the spectacle with a little more breathing room at the popular free spots, shorter waits, and easier trains afterwards. The day itself, 9 August, has the biggest atmosphere — the full national mood, the flag, the crowds singing along — so there’s a trade-off between buzz and comfort. Families and anyone wary of crushes often prefer a preview; if you want the once-a-year emotion of the actual day, go on the 9th but arrive especially early.

4. Best free spots near the National Stadium (Kallang)

With the parade at the National Stadium this year, the closest free fireworks views are around the Kallang Basin. The standouts are the Stadium Riverside WalkMap, the Tanjong RhuMap promenade, and Bay East GardenMap.

The Stadium Riverside Walk runs right outside the stadium beside Kallang Wave Mall, with the water in front of you — for the clearest sightline, approach from the Tanjong Rhu side. Tanjong Rhu promenade, just across the water, gives you the fireworks reflecting off the basin with the stadium as a backdrop. Bay East Garden — the eastern lobe of Gardens by the BayMap — is a big open lawn that looks back across the water toward the action and the Marina Bay skyline beyond. All three are free, all get busy, and all reward turning up early with a mat and some snacks.

  • Stadium Riverside Walk — closest to the launch; arrive very early for the front.
  • Tanjong Rhu Promenade — fireworks over the water with the stadium behind.
  • Bay East Garden — open lawn, room to spread out, skyline beyond.
  • Kallang Basin edges & nearby parks — quieter pockets if the main spots fill.
Live telecast option: if you’d rather see the parade and the fireworks together, public spaces near the Sports Hub (such as OCBC Square) usually screen the live broadcast on big screens — a relaxed, no-ballot way to feel part of it.

5. Marina Bay & skyline spots

Even with the parade at Kallang, the Marina Bay area is still a wonderful place to be on National Day — for the skyline, the festive crowds, fly-pasts and any displays over the bay. The reliable free spots are Marina BarrageMap, Gardens by the Bay, the EsplanadeMap waterfront, Merlion ParkMap and the Helix BridgeMap.

Marina Barrage is a local favourite: a breezy rooftop lawn with a wide-open view across the water — bring a picnic. Gardens by the Bay gives you the Supertrees and the bay in one frame, while the Esplanade waterfront, Merlion Park and the Helix Bridge put you right on the Marina Bay promenade with Marina Bay SandsMap across the water. These spots are more about the skyline, the atmosphere and the fly-pasts than a close-up of the stadium fireworks this particular year, but they’re classic, easy to reach, and pure Singapore. Check what’s on around the bay that night in our Marina Bay at night guide.

National Day fireworks over Marina Bay seen from a high vantage point
From an elevated spot like the Marina Bay Sands SkyPark, the fireworks open right up over the bay — the paid alternative to the free railings below.

6. Paid & elevated views (watch with a drink)

If you’d rather not stake out a railing for two hours, three paid options give you a high, comfortable view: the Marina Bay Sands SkyPark deck, a capsule on the Singapore FlyerMap, and the rooftop bars around the bay. All book out fast for National Day — reserve well ahead.

The Marina Bay Sands SkyPark observation deck puts you 57 floors up over the bay; the Singapore Flyer is one of the only ways to actually be airborne as the fireworks climb — a memorable splurge on a night like this. Rooftop bars such as CÉ LA VIMap (atop MBS), 1-Altitude and Level33 sell the view with a table and a cocktail, though most switch to a special package or minimum spend for National Day and the previews. Whatever you choose, book early and confirm whether fireworks viewing is included that night.

Up high for the fireworks: a Singapore Flyer capsule or the MBS SkyPark deck both put you above the crowd for the show. Check Singapore Flyer tickets on Klook →  ·  MBS SkyPark deck tickets →

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7. What time to arrive (and how early is early)

Aim to be in position by around 7pm for an 8pm-ish fireworks finale — and for the very best free spots, 1.5 to 2 hours earlier on the day itself.

National Day evenings build slowly: expect fly-pasts and aerial moments before sunset, the parade segments through the evening, and the fireworks as the grand finale. The popular free railings around Kallang and Marina Bay start filling in the late afternoon, especially on 9 August. On the quieter preview nights you can usually arrive a bit later and still do well. Bring water, a small mat or something to sit on, a hand fan, and a power bank — you’ll be out in the warm, humid evening for a while. Light rain is possible in August; a compact poncho beats an umbrella in a crowd.

Marina Bay Sands and the Singapore skyline at dusk, a prime fireworks backdrop
Marina Bay still delivers the skyline and the atmosphere — and there are elevated paid views if you’d rather watch with a drink.

8. Getting there and getting out

Use the MRT and plan your exit before you arrive. Stadium station (Circle Line) is right by the National Stadium; Kallang (East-West Line) and the Marina Bay / Bayfront stations serve the other spots. Trains and roads are packed on show nights.

Tap in with an EZ-Link or a contactless card and avoid driving anywhere near the stadium — there are road closures and almost no parking worth chasing. The classic mistake is bolting for the station the second the finale ends, along with tens of thousands of other people. Instead, either move a few minutes before the last firework, or settle in for half an hour, let the crush clear, and walk to a station one stop further out. For how passes and the network work, see our getting around Singapore guide.

9. Beating the crowds (a visitor’s game plan)

The whole island turns out for National Day, so a little strategy goes a long way: pick a preview night if you can, arrive early, choose a spot with an easy exit, and don’t try to do anything time-sensitive straight afterwards.

  • Prefer 25 July or 1 August over the 9th if comfort matters more than the peak atmosphere.
  • Scout your spot in daylight if you can, so you know the sightlines and the nearest station.
  • Bring the essentials: water, a mat, a fan, a power bank, a light poncho.
  • Eat before, not after — nearby food queues balloon at finale time.
  • Have a Plan B spot a short walk away in case your first choice is full.
  • Don’t plan a tight onward booking for right after the show.

10. Make a full day of it

The fireworks are the finale, but National Day is a great excuse to do a full, very local evening around the bay.

Start in the late afternoon at the Gardens by the Bay while it’s a fraction cooler, grab an early dinner at a hawker centre (eat before the finale rush), then settle into your chosen fireworks spot with time to spare. Travelling with children? The open lawns at Marina Barrage or Bay East Garden suit families better than a packed railing — our Singapore with kids guide has more. Watching your budget over a busy weekend? Our Singapore on a budget guide helps, and free fireworks are about as good-value as a big night out gets.

The Singapore Flyer observation wheel lit up in the evening
A capsule on the Singapore Flyer is one of the few ways to be up high as the fireworks go off.

11. Where to stay for National Day

If the fireworks are a priority, a room with a high floor facing Marina Bay or Kallang is the dream — but those book out early and cost more over the National Day weekend, so reserve well ahead.

You don’t need a bay-view room to enjoy the night, though. Anywhere on an MRT line near Marina Bay, Kallang or the city centre puts you within easy reach of the free spots and an easy ride home afterwards. Weigh the splurge of a skyline view against simply walking to a free railing — for most visitors, a well-located, sensibly priced base plus a free waterfront spot is the sweet spot. Our where to stay in Singapore guide breaks down the best areas and what each is good for.

12. A simple National Day evening plan

Here’s an easy template that works whether you pick a preview or the 9th.

Time Do this
4:30–5:30pm Early dinner at a hawker centre near the bay (beat the queues)
5:30–6:30pm Walk to your chosen free spot — Stadium Riverside Walk, Tanjong Rhu, Marina Barrage or Bay East Garden
6:30–7:30pm Settle in, claim your railing/lawn, watch the fly-pasts build
~8pm Fireworks finale
After Wait 30–45 min for crowds to thin, then MRT home

Confirm the exact timings on the official NDP channels closer to the date, keep it loose, and let the city’s biggest night come to you. When you’re ready to plan the rest of the trip, our complete Singapore guide ties it all together.

Frequently asked questions

Q. Can tourists watch Singapore’s National Day?
Yes — with one caveat. You can’t get into the parade itself, because the free tickets are balloted through SingPass and are limited to Singapore citizens and Permanent Residents. But the fireworks are a public spectacle that anyone can watch for free from spots around the bay and the National Stadium, no ticket required. Many hotels, rooftop bars and observation decks also offer paid views. So as a visitor you’ll miss the in-stadium show, but you can still have a brilliant National Day evening.
Q. When is Singapore National Day 2026?
National Day falls on Sunday, 9 August 2026 — Singapore’s 61st birthday. Crucially for visitors, there are also two preview shows on Saturday 25 July and Saturday 1 August 2026, and these include the full fireworks finale. That gives you three separate evenings to catch the fireworks, and the two preview nights are usually a little less crowded than the day itself.
Q. Where can I watch the National Day fireworks for free?
In 2026 the parade is at the National Stadium in Kallang, so the closest free views are around the Kallang Basin: the Stadium Riverside Walk just outside the stadium, the Tanjong Rhu promenade, and Bay East Garden (the eastern part of Gardens by the Bay). The classic Marina Bay spots — Marina Barrage, the main Gardens by the Bay, the Esplanade waterfront, Merlion Park and the Helix Bridge — also give you the skyline, the atmosphere and any displays over the bay. All are free; just arrive early.
Q. What time do the National Day fireworks start?
Plan for the evening — the fireworks typically go off around 8pm, after the parade’s evening segment (some sources note displays from about 7.30pm onwards). The preview shows on 25 July and 1 August follow a similar timeline. Exact timings are confirmed closer to the date, so check the official NDP channels, but if you’re in position by around 7pm you’ll be set. There are usually fly-pasts and other moments earlier in the evening too.
Q. Do I need a ticket to see the fireworks?
No. You only need a ticket to sit inside the National Stadium for the parade, and those are balloted to citizens and PRs. Watching the fireworks from any public area — the waterfront promenades, parks, bridges and open spaces around Kallang and Marina Bay — is completely free. The only ‘cost’ is turning up early enough to claim a good patch of railing or grass.
Q. Can I buy National Day Parade tickets as a foreigner?
Not through the official ballot — it requires a SingPass login and is restricted to Singapore citizens and Permanent Residents. Tickets are free and not sold, so be wary of anyone reselling them. As a tourist, your realistic routes to a ‘seat’ are a paid view from an observation deck, a rooftop bar, or a hotel with a high floor facing the bay — otherwise simply join the free crowds at a waterfront spot.
Q. Which are the best paid spots to watch the fireworks?
For a guaranteed elevated view, the three reliable options are the Marina Bay Sands SkyPark observation deck, the Singapore Flyer (you can be in a capsule as the fireworks go up), and the rooftop bars around Marina Bay such as CÉ LA VI, 1-Altitude or Level33. These book out fast for National Day and the preview nights, and many bars switch to a special package or minimum spend, so reserve well ahead. See our Singapore Flyer guide and Marina Bay Sands guide for details.
Q. How do I get to and from the fireworks?
Take the MRT — the Stadium station (Circle Line) sits right by the National Stadium, and Kallang (East-West Line) and the Marina Bay stations serve the other spots. Expect very full trains and some road closures near the stadium on show nights. The golden rule is to arrive early and not rush out the instant the last firework fades: either leave promptly before the surge, or relax for 30–45 minutes and let the crowd thin before you head to the station. Our Singapore MRT & transport guide covers passes and how the system works.
Q. Is National Day a good or bad time to visit Singapore?
It’s a fun, festive time with a real buzz — flags everywhere, special menus, and the fireworks — but it’s also busy and warm, and a few attractions adjust hours around the parade. Hotels near Marina Bay can fill up and charge more for that weekend, so book early. If the parade itself isn’t your focus, the city is otherwise completely normal to explore. For the month overall, see our best time to visit and seasonal guide.
Q. What else happens around National Day besides the parade?
Plenty. There are usually community (‘heartland’) fireworks at several neighbourhood spots across the island around the National Day weekend, so you may catch a display closer to where you’re staying. The city is decked out in red and white, malls and restaurants run National Day specials, and the mood is celebratory all weekend. Combine the evening fireworks with an early dinner at a hawker centre and a stroll through the Gardens by the Bay and you’ve got a full, very local day out.
Q. Can I watch the parade on a screen if I can’t get tickets?
Yes — the parade is broadcast live, and there are usually big-screen live telecasts at public spaces near the stadium (such as OCBC Square at the Sports Hub) so you can soak up the show and then look up for the fireworks. Plenty of bars and hotel lobbies also put the broadcast on. It’s the easy, no-stress way for visitors to experience the parade without a ballot ticket.

Plan the rest of your evening — see our Marina Bay at night guide →