SG · Singapore

What's it like to live in Singapore?

Pros, cons, and what locals really say · 5,866,139 residents

Reddit-sourced

What locals really say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on Singapore's subreddit.

Living in Singapore means daily efficiency, dense urban convenience, and a lot of rules, with most errands doable by MRT, bus, or a short walk under sheltered connectors. People talk as much about hawker food, school and work culture, and housing costs as they do about the skyline or airport. There’s a strong sense of safety and order, but also a recurring feeling that public life is tightly managed, expensive, and sometimes overly polished or punitive. At the same time, the city can feel genuinely communal in small moments, with neighbors, volunteers, workers, and strangers often stepping in to help each other.

Pros — why people love Singapore
  • Safety and public infrastructure6
  • Excellent hawker and casual food access5
  • Strong civic responsiveness and order4
  • Community kindness in small moments4
  • Convenient urban living4
Cons — common complaints
  • High cost of living and rent6
  • Overly controlled school and workplace culture5
  • Language and accessibility barriers3
  • Food quality and value concerns4
  • Litter, crowding, and public etiquette3
Daily life

Daily life in Singapore feels fast, organized, and tightly scheduled, with commuting, schooling, and workplace norms often shaped by rules and efficiency. Many residents seem polite but reserved in public, while small acts of kindness stand out precisely because the baseline is so structured. Frictions tend to be very concrete: MRT signage annoyances, voucher scams, school discipline, rent pressure, and food quality complaints. Even so, people also describe a reliable city where strangers can be helpful, services work, and the basics of urban life—water, transport, safety, connectivity—usually function well.

Food scene

Singapore’s food scene is one of its defining daily pleasures: hawker centres, kopitiams, coffee shops, and mall food courts provide cheap, quick meals from many Asian cuisines, with strong expectations around value. At the same time, Redditors are blunt about quality gaps, especially in school canteens, smaller restaurants, and institutional food, where price, language barriers, or “how much you get for what you pay” can become flashpoints. The scene is broad and convenient, but locals are very willing to call out bad portions, overpriced dishes, or places that feel like they’ve sacrificed variety to rent pressure or standardization.

Nightlife & culture

The nightlife is present but not the main character of daily life: the city is known more for convenience, food, and work than for all-night partying. Still, the guide-style image of a vibrant nightlife scene shows up in the city’s central areas, and the Reddit sample suggests more spontaneous public celebration than club culture, such as sports wins, election nights, or neighborhood gatherings that spill into the evening. The tone is more practical and social than wild, with people likely to end the night at supper spots, coffee shops, or transport hubs rather than in a purely party district.

Weather, for real

The weather is technically tropical year-round, but locals often describe it less as “pleasantly warm” and more as hot, humid, and tiring. The climate is tolerable when moving between air-conditioned spaces, sheltered walkways, and MRT stations, but the humidity is still a constant background complaint. In other words, the stats say equatorial and consistent; the lived experience is sweat, sudden rain, and planning the day around where you can cool down.

In their words

“Tiny island. Home of world best airport, 100% safe tap water, functioning traffic lights, sheltered walkways, efficient public service. Powered by Singaporeans and foreigners.”

r/singapore· 3044 votes

“it’s especially annoying when an ad plays while i’m looking at the screen, trying to figure out how many stops left till i have to get off the train”

r/singapore· 3007 votes

“Singaporean food is legendary, with bustling hawker centres and 24-hour coffee shops offering affordable food from all parts of Asia.”

r/singapore
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