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Cost of driving in Singapore soars as ownership certificates reach nearly $100,000

By Thomson Reuters Jul 8, 2026 | 9:57 AM

By Jun Yuan Yong

SINGAPORE, July 8(Reuters) – Car buyers in Singapore will now need to fork out almost $100,000 for a certificate to own a small car, as ​costs in the city-state’s vehicle quota system hit ‌an all-time high for small models on Wednesday.

Singapore regularly auctions a fixed number of “certificates of entitlement” allowing car ownership for 10 years, which helps limit the number of vehicles on the road to ‌about ​1 million.

Singapore has a population of ⁠6.1 million people and the ⁠city-state can be traversed by car in less than an hour.

The auctions have made Singapore the most expensive city in the world to buy a car.

Certificates prices ​for small vehicles, or those with engine capacity below 1.6 litres, have quadrupled from pre-pandemic levels, with no ⁠signs of abating.

Answering parliamentary questions in ⁠May about the rising prices, Transport Minister Jeffrey ​Siow said demand remained strong due to competitive electric car ​prices, while the availability of smaller vehicle certificates ‌at auctions was declining.

The price of a certificate alone is now equivalent to the cost to buying four Toyota Corollas in the United States. The same vehicle in Singapore, ⁠with the certificate, registration fees and taxes, would cost S$179,888 ($139,000).

By comparison, the median annual household salary in the city-state is S$149,352, while ⁠a small, government-subsidised ‌flat costs upwards of S$139,000.

In October 2023, ⁠when certificates for larger cars crossed the $100,000 ​mark, ‌those for smaller cars were about $77,500. Prices ​have steadily ⁠risen from $78,844 (S$102,009) at the first auction of this year.

Many carmakers detune engines of popular models for the Singapore market so their cars qualify for the cheaper certificate.

($1 = 1.2938 Singapore dollars)

(Reporting by Jun Yuan Yong; additional reporting by Xinghui Kok; Editing ​by Martin Petty)