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

Singapore car buyers now face nearly $100,000 for ownership certificates. Certificate prices for small vehicles have quadrupled since pre-pandemic times. This makes Singapore the world's most expensive city for car purchases. Demand remains strong...

Agencies
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.


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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.
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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).

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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.
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($1 = 1.2938 Singapore dollars)
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