
Singapore's Best Attractions
Beyond Gardens by the Bay, the essentials are: the Marina Bay Sands SkyPark observation deck for the classic skyline photo (public, no hotel stay required); the Mandai wildlife precinct (Singapore Zoo by day, Night Safari after dark, River Wonders for river ecosystems); Jewel Changi Airport's indoor Rain Vortex, the world's tallest indoor waterfall, free to visit even if you're not flying; and the Singapore Botanic Gardens, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that's completely free to enter.
Singapore doesn't do 'must-see' the way a country with centuries of ruins does — its best attractions are recent, engineered, and unapologetically spectacular. Here's what's genuinely worth carving time out for in 2026, what to skip, and the one attraction that's completely free and sits inside the airport.
Marina Bay Sands SkyPark Observation Deck
The 57th-floor deck, open to the public with a separate ticket (roughly $28-32), gives the view most people picture when they think of Singapore's skyline — including a look at the hotel's famous rooftop infinity pool from outside, since that pool itself is reserved for hotel guests only. Go around sunset for the transition from daylight skyline to lit-up night skyline in one visit.
The Mandai wildlife precinct
| Park | What it is | Approx. cost |
|---|---|---|
| Singapore Zoo | An open-concept zoo with naturalistic, moat-separated enclosures rather than cages | $35-45 |
| Night Safari | The world's first nocturnal wildlife park, viewed by tram or on foot after dark | $45-55 |
| River Wonders | River and wetland ecosystems, including giant pandas and an Amazon flooded-forest walkthrough | $35-45 |
Book a combo ticket if you're doing more than one Mandai park — Zoo + Night Safari on the same day works well logistically, since Night Safari doesn't open until early evening, leaving the whole day free for the Zoo first.
Jewel Changi Airport — free, even if you're not flying
Jewel is a shopping-and-nature complex attached to Changi Airport, built around the Rain Vortex — the world's tallest indoor waterfall, cascading through the middle of an indoor forest four stories tall. It's completely free to visit (the waterfall runs on a schedule with a light show after dark), reachable by MRT or taxi even if you have no flight to catch, and worth a special trip on its own.
Singapore Botanic Gardens
A genuinely huge, completely free 200-plus-year-old park, and Singapore's only UNESCO World Heritage Site. The National Orchid Garden inside charges a small separate fee (roughly $12-15) and is worth it — Singapore is the 'Orchid Island' for a reason, and this is the best place to see why.
What to skip or approach carefully
- Anything billed as a 'VIP fast-track' add-on sold outside official ticket counters — buy skip-the-line tickets only through the attraction's official site.
- Attempting the Zoo, Night Safari, and River Wonders all in one day — the Zoo alone deserves 3-4 unhurried hours; combining all three properly needs two visits or a very long single day.
- Underestimating Jewel's crowds around the Rain Vortex's evening light shows — arrive a bit early if you want a clear sightline.












































