Singapore · Southeast Asia · SGD · Moderate
For long-stay travellers and remote workers in Singapore, the realistic monthly figure is roughly $9,246 all-in. That assumes a long-stay rental (~60% of nightly mid-range accommodation), local food prices, public transit and miscellaneous — but excludes flights, visas, and tourist-style activities. For a comparable short-trip figure, see the Singapore travel cost page.
At $471/day mid-range, Singapore runs 69% over the $279/day global median across 68 cities.
Local transport costs $31/day, roughly 182% above the Southeast Asia average — the single biggest reason Singapore's daily total sits where it does.
Tops the Southeast Asia index at $471/day mid-range — the ceiling reference among 9 cities we track here.
Singapore sits well above the global median — a $471/day mid-range figure, 69% over the $279/day baseline across 68 cities. Inside Southeast Asia it's ranked #9 of 9 on daily cost, 180% above the regional average of $168/day. The line item that moves the total most is local transport at $31/day (182% above the regional norm) — worth accounting for before you compare against another city on headline numbers alone. Season effect is roughly 47% between low and peak, in line with the global average (~47%), which is why timing the trip to feb–apr shows up on nearly every itinerary that hits the numbers on this page.
| Line item | Monthly (USD) |
|---|---|
| Long-stay rent equivalent | $4,356 |
| Food (eating out + groceries mix) | $2,970 |
| Local transport | $930 |
| Miscellaneous | $990 |
| All-in monthly | $9,246 |
Local currency: SGD. FX snapshot: 2025-05.
For comparison, a week-long tourist visit at the mid-range tier in shoulder season runs roughly $3,297 for one person — a much higher per-day rate than the long-stay number above, because hotels charge nightly rates, tourists rely on taxis more, and short-trip activities are bundled into every day.
In Singapore, rent makes up about 47% of the monthly long-stay total — the largest line, but food and lifestyle still move the total meaningfully. Food sits around 32% and local transport around 10%; the remainder covers SIM, gym, co-working, occasional ride-shares, and the small unavoidable misc that every city imposes.
At the "Moderate" tier, Singapore sits inside the $200–350/day mid-range band of our index. Inside Southeast Asia, that means a comfortable solo nomad month at roughly $9,246 buys a central studio or shared 1-bed, a mix of local and international restaurants, and a monthly co-working pass.
If Singapore is borderline for your budget, the closest peer in Southeast Asia is Kuala Lumpur at roughly $3,354/month — within a few percent of Singapore on the monthly figure but with a different vibe (food, skyline). Two cities at the same monthly number can feel very different day-to-day: Singapore leans food / architecture, Kuala Lumpur leans food / skyline. If those words describe different versions of your ideal month, the cost similarity is a coincidence and the choice is a lifestyle one, not a budget one.
| Week | What hits the card |
|---|---|
| Week 1 (setup) | Rent deposit + first month, SIM, transit pass, co-working day passes while you scout — typically 1.3–1.5× a normal week, so plan for around $2,989. |
| Weeks 2–3 (steady state) | Roughly $2,135/week for food, transit, misc — accommodation is already paid. |
| Week 4 (re-up) | Same steady-state cashflow plus any month-end admin (laundry blocks, visa runs in some countries) — keep a $427 buffer. |
How the same city scales from a tourist week to a long-stay month. Per-day economics improve sharply once you cross the long-stay threshold — accommodation is the swing factor.
| Stay | Total (USD) |
|---|---|
| 1 week (tourist mid-range) | $3,297 |
| 1 month (long-stay) | $9,246 |
| 3 months (long-stay) | $27,738 |
| Per week, long-stay | $2,135 |
Three realistic nomad profiles at this monthly cost level — pick the one closest to your stage and adjust ±15%.
The Southeast Asia regional average all-in monthly cost is about $3,311/mo. Singapore sits at $9,246/mo — 179% above the regional average. Most of the premium is accommodation; food and transit track the regional norm closely.