Singapore Internet and Mobile Plan Costs 2026: Fibre Broadband & SIM-Only Compared
Singapore fibre broadband plans from $29/month. SIM-only mobile from $10/month. How to pick the right plan for your household.
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Singapore consistently ranks among the world's top countries for broadband speed and mobile connectivity. The national fibre infrastructure — built on a government-mandated open-access network — means genuine competition among internet service providers, which has driven prices down and speeds up. In 2026, a fast, reliable home internet connection costs less in Singapore than in most comparable global cities.
This guide breaks down what you can expect to pay for home broadband and mobile services, and how to avoid overpaying.
Home Fibre Broadband — How Singapore's Network Works
Singapore's fibre broadband market runs on a foundation of mandated infrastructure sharing. The physical fibre network is built and maintained by NetLink Trust (formerly OpenNet), and all internet service providers (ISPs) must rent access to it on equal terms. This means your physical connection quality is identical regardless of which ISP you choose — competition happens at the service and pricing layer.
The practical result: providers compete aggressively on price, promotional offers, and bundle deals. Singapore regularly achieves median download speeds exceeding 200Mbps — among the highest in the world.
Fibre Broadband Speed Tiers and Pricing
Fibre plans are sold by speed tier. Note that the prices below are indicative ranges for 2026 — ISPs frequently run promotional pricing for new subscribers, and plan details change regularly. Always check the provider's website for current offers.
| Speed Tier | Approx. Monthly Cost | Best Suited For |
|---|---|---|
| 500Mbps | S$29–S$38 | 1–2 person household, light streaming |
| 1Gbps | S$30–S$45 | Standard family household, recommended default |
| 2Gbps | S$48–S$60 | Large households, heavy concurrent usage |
| 10Gbps | S$60–S$90 | Power users, home servers, content creators |
The price gap between 500Mbps and 1Gbps is often minimal — as little as S$2–S$5 per month — making 1Gbps the sensible choice for most households. Under real-world conditions, even a household with four simultaneous Netflix streams plus video calls and gaming will rarely saturate a 1Gbps connection.
Major Fibre Broadband Providers
Singtel is the incumbent operator and the largest provider. It typically prices at a slight premium but offers broad bundle options with mobile and TV services. Customer service quality is generally rated highest among the major ISPs.
StarHub competes closely with Singtel and has strong bundle offers combining broadband, mobile, and StarHub TV. Pricing is competitive with Singtel.
M1 is the third major telco offering fibre broadband. Competitive pricing, particularly on 1Gbps and 2Gbps plans. Good option if you also want an M1 mobile plan for bundle discounts.
MyRepublic is a digital-first ISP that typically offers among the lowest base prices on the market. It does not offer a mobile or TV service, so there is no bundling, but for pure broadband it is worth comparing. Customer service is primarily online.
ViewQwest is a smaller ISP that has built a reputation among enthusiast users for network quality and routing performance. Prices are competitive at higher speed tiers.
Contract terms are typically 24 months for promotional pricing. Month-to-month or 12-month contracts are available but usually at higher rates.
Mobile Plans — SIM-Only vs. Handset Bundles
Singapore's mobile market has two major segments: SIM-only plans and handset bundles (also called device contracts). For most consumers, SIM-only plans offer substantially better value.
Handset bundles tie you to a 24-month contract, embed the cost of a subsidised phone into your monthly bill, and typically result in you paying 2–3 times what a SIM-only plan costs. Unless you specifically need the convenience of paying for a phone in monthly instalments, a SIM-only plan on a purchased phone (outright or via a 0%-interest instalment from your credit card) will be cheaper over 24 months.
SIM-Only Plan Pricing by Segment
Prices below are illustrative ranges. The Singapore SIM-only market is extremely active — MVNOs regularly update plans, and major telcos run promotions. Verify current pricing on each provider's website.
| Segment | Monthly Cost | Data | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | S$10–S$18 | 10–30GB | Light users, seniors, backup SIMs |
| Mid-range | S$20–S$35 | 40–100GB | Typical working adult |
| High-end | S$40–S$60 | 100GB–unlimited | Heavy streamers, frequent travellers |
| Premium unlimited | S$60–S$80 | Unlimited | Power users, hotspot heavy users |
The Four Mobile Network Operators (MNOs)
Singapore has four MNOs operating their own physical mobile networks:
- Singtel — largest coverage, most roaming partners, highest prices
- StarHub — strong urban coverage, competitive bundle pricing
- M1 — good coverage, competitive on mid-range plans
- TPG — smaller network, aggressively priced entry-level plans
MVNOs — Often the Best Value
Several Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs) operate in Singapore, leasing network capacity from MNOs and reselling it at lower prices:
Circles.Life runs on Singtel's network and offers flexible, app-managed plans. Popular with younger users who want data-heavy plans without committing to a major telco.
GOMO is Singtel's own sub-brand targeting value-conscious users. Plans are digital-only and competitively priced for the network quality.
Simba (now part of TPG) offers consistently low prices, particularly for budget-tier users.
redONE targets price-sensitive segments with very low-cost plans, including options popular with migrant workers.
For most Singaporean consumers, an MVNO on Singtel's or StarHub's network will deliver equivalent call and data quality to the parent MNO at meaningfully lower prices.
How Much Data Do You Actually Need?
| Usage Pattern | Monthly Data Needed |
|---|---|
| Light (calls, messaging, light browsing) | 10–20GB |
| Typical (social media, maps, streaming occasionally) | 20–40GB |
| Heavy (video streaming, mobile gaming, hotspot use) | 50–100GB |
| Very heavy (freelancers using phone as hotspot, constant streaming) | 100GB+ |
Most working Singaporeans with home and office Wi-Fi available throughout the day sit in the 20–40GB range. Many people overestimate their data needs when buying plans.
Broadband + Mobile Bundles
All three major telcos (Singtel, StarHub, M1) offer bundled broadband and mobile plans at a 10–20% discount compared to purchasing the services separately. Bundles simplify billing and can offer meaningful savings if you are committed to staying with the same provider.
Considerations before bundling:
- Bundling typically requires aligned 24-month contracts. If you want to leave one service, the other may be affected.
- MVNO mobile plans cannot be bundled with a different provider's broadband. If you want the cheapest mobile plan and the cheapest broadband independently, separate plans from different providers may beat any bundle.
Streaming and Entertainment Add-Ons
Many Singapore households have cancelled traditional cable TV in favour of streaming services. Monthly costs:
| Service | Monthly Cost (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Netflix (Standard) | S$13.98 |
| Netflix (Premium) | S$19.98 |
| Disney+ | S$11.98 |
| Apple TV+ | S$9.98 |
| Singtel TV / StarHub TV (basic) | S$25–S$40 |
| Singtel TV / StarHub TV (full sports) | S$60–S$100+ |
A household subscribing to Netflix and Disney+ spends approximately S$25–S$32 per month on streaming, significantly below the cost of traditional cable packages. Sports coverage (EPL, F1) remains a key reason some households retain cable TV subscriptions.
Malaysia Roaming — Useful for JB Trips
If you travel regularly to Johor Bahru, all major Singapore telcos offer Malaysia day-pass or roaming add-ons:
- Day passes for Malaysia data typically cost S$3–S$5/day with generous data allocations
- Some plans include Malaysia data within the base Singapore data pool
- MVNOs on Singtel's network typically inherit Singtel's roaming partnerships
If you cross the Causeway frequently, factor roaming costs into your plan selection.
Sample Monthly Telecoms Budget
| Household Type | Broadband | Mobile (per person) | Monthly Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single renter | S$30 (1Gbps) | S$18 (MVNO, 30GB) | S$48 |
| Couple | S$32 (1Gbps) | S$18 × 2 | S$68 |
| Family of 4 | S$35 (1Gbps) | S$20 avg × 4 | S$115 |
| Family of 4 (bundled) | S$120 (broadband + 4 lines bundle) | Included | S$120 |
Add S$25–S$32 for Netflix + Disney+ streaming.
Getting the Best Deal
Always check current promotions first. ISPs frequently offer the first three to six months at a discount, free setup, or complementary routers. These offers change monthly.
Do not auto-renew without shopping around. When your 24-month contract ends, you typically revert to a higher month-to-month rate. Porting your mobile number to a new provider or re-contracting with your current provider under a new promotional rate is straightforward.
Separate broadband and mobile if it saves money. The cheapest broadband provider and the cheapest mobile MVNO are often different companies. Bundling is only worth it if the combined price genuinely beats the sum of the best individual plans.
Check for NS and student discounts. Singtel, StarHub, and M1 all have special rates for NSmen, students, and seniors that are often not prominently advertised.
Prices and plan details in this article are illustrative of 2026 market conditions. Telecoms pricing changes frequently. Always verify current plan pricing and terms directly with your chosen provider before signing up.
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