Home Β» Singapore Live Population Clock by Region

Singapore Population 2026 | Live Population Clock by Region

Live Data — Updated in Real Time  | 
🇸🇬 Singapore Population 2026 By Region | Live Updated Clock
Real-time estimates · 5 Community Development Council Regions · SingStat & UN WPP 2024
Current Singapore Population
5,900,000
~0.07% of World Population  ·  Global Financial Hub · One of the World’s Most Densely Populated Nations
CDC Regions
5
Births / Second
Deaths / Second
Median Age
42.1 yrs
Annual Change
+55,000
🌿 Singapore is a high-income city-state with one of the world’s lowest birth rates (~8.5/1,000). Population growth is sustained almost entirely by net migration of ~+46,000/year. The Central Region is the commercial and cultural core; the North-East Region is the most rapidly developing residential area.
Today
Births Today
0
Deaths Today
0
Net Change Today
0
Births This Year
0
Deaths This Year
0
Net Change This Year
0
All 5 CDC Regions — Live Population

Singapore Population 2026: A City-State of 6 Million Engineering Its Demographic Future

Singapore is something of a demographic puzzle. With a land area of approximately 735 square kilometers, the country is smaller than New York City. With a population of approximately 6 million in 2026, it is more populous than Norway, Ireland, or New Zealand. With a per capita gross domestic product exceeding 90,000 U.S. dollars, it ranks among the wealthiest countries on Earth. With a total fertility rate of approximately 0.97 children per woman, it has the lowest fertility rate of any sovereign country in 2026. Each of these statements is true. Together they describe a place that does not fit neatly into typical national or urban categories and that has approached its demographic challenges with a level of state intervention and policy experimentation that few other countries have matched.

The Singapore population in 2026 stands at approximately 6.0 million according to live counters on worldpopulationclock.net, drawing on the United Nations World Population Prospects 2024 revision and the most recent releases from the Singapore Department of Statistics. Of that figure, approximately 4.2 million are residents (citizens plus permanent residents) and approximately 1.8 million are non resident workers and dependents on various employment passes.

This piece treats Singapore as the case study it has effectively become for active demographic policy in a hypermobile, ultra urban, highly educated society. The article works through population history, the unique resident and non resident structure, the regional distribution within the city state, the demographic shifts now underway, the policy responses tried, and the projected trajectory through midcentury and beyond.

How a Trading Post Became a Demographic Engineering Laboratory

Singapore's modern demographic story begins with British colonial settlement in 1819 and the subsequent waves of Chinese, Indian, and Malay migration that built the city's population. Independence in 1965, when Singapore separated from Malaysia, found a country of approximately 1.9 million residents with a fertility rate near 5 children per woman.

The Stop at Two campaign of the 1970s, launched amid concerns about population pressure on a small island, succeeded so dramatically that fertility had fallen below replacement by the mid 1970s. The government reversed course in 1987 with the Have Three or More campaign, but fertility continued falling. Subsequent policies have included marriage and parenthood packages, baby bonus payments, expanded childcare subsidies, parental leave extensions, housing priorities for families, and tax incentives. None has succeeded in raising fertility back above replacement.

A short Singaporean demographic history:

  • 1965: 1.9 million residents at independence, fertility above 5
  • 1980: 2.4 million, fertility falling below 2
  • 2000: 4.0 million, fertility around 1.6
  • 2015: 5.5 million, fertility around 1.25
  • 2026: 6.0 million, fertility around 0.97

Singapore's growth from 1.9 million to 6 million in sixty years has been driven heavily by net immigration, both of new permanent residents (granted Singaporean PR status) and of temporary workers across all skill levels. The population structure today reflects these layered migration patterns combined with the cumulative effects of decades of low fertility.

The Resident and Non Resident Structure

Singapore's demographic accounting differs from most countries because of its unique residency categories. Of the approximately 6 million total population in 2026:

  • Singapore citizens number approximately 3.6 million, accounting for 60 percent of the total
  • Permanent residents (PRs) number approximately 575,000, or about 9.5 percent
  • Non resident population, including work pass holders and dependents, numbers approximately 1.8 million, or 30.5 percent

The non resident component itself spans multiple categories. Employment Pass holders for higher skilled professionals number approximately 200,000. S Pass holders for mid skilled workers number approximately 175,000. Work Permit holders for lower skilled workers, primarily in construction, marine, and domestic sectors, number more than 1 million. Foreign domestic workers in private households number approximately 290,000. Student dependents and family members account for the remainder.

This structure means that Singapore's effective population includes a substantial component of working age adults who are not eligible for citizenship, are typically not accompanied by family members, and whose stays may be temporary or extended depending on visa status. The structure has economic, social, and demographic implications that differ significantly from more typical national population profiles.

Singapore Population by Region: A Detailed Look

Singapore is divided into five regions for planning and statistical purposes, each comprising multiple planning areas. The regional structure reflects the systematic urban planning approach the country has employed since the 1960s.

Region2026 Population (Est.)Notes
North Region580,000Includes Yishun, Sembawang, Woodlands
North East945,000Includes Hougang, Sengkang, Punggol
East Region760,000Includes Bedok, Pasir Ris, Tampines
West Region935,000Includes Jurong, Bukit Batok, Choa Chu Kang
Central970,000Includes city center, Bishan, Toa Payoh, Queenstown

Source: Singapore Department of Statistics 2025 estimates and Urban Redevelopment Authority data.

These regional figures cover residents (citizens and PRs). Non resident workers are distributed across regions but with concentrations in dormitory areas often located near industrial zones and construction sites. The Central Region includes the financial district, much of the high density older housing estates, and significant employment concentrations.

Each region is anchored by major housing estates developed under the Housing and Development Board (HDB) program. Approximately 78 percent of Singapore residents live in HDB flats, making the public housing system the foundation of Singaporean residential life. The remaining residents live in private condominiums, landed properties, or other accommodations.

The Lowest Fertility Rate of Any Sovereign Country

Singapore's total fertility rate of approximately 0.97 children per woman in 2026 is the lowest of any sovereign country. Even comparing with subnational figures, only a handful of cities globally including Seoul and several other Korean cities record lower fertility rates. The Singaporean rate has fallen from 1.6 in 2000 to 1.25 in 2015 and below 1.0 in the most recent measurement years.

Singaporean explanations for the low fertility focus on several factors:

Cost pressures including housing, education, childcare, and the broader cost of raising children in a high cost society. Even with substantial government subsidies, the perceived costs of larger families remain high.

Career and education compression. Singaporean women now have higher educational attainment than men in many cohorts, and women's labor force participation rates are high. The compression of education, career establishment, and family formation into a narrow life window creates structural barriers.

Marriage delay. Average age at first marriage has risen to approximately 30 years for both men and women, with significant proportions remaining unmarried into their forties. Since the vast majority of Singaporean births occur within marriage, delayed marriage translates directly into delayed and often forgone childbearing.

Cultural factors including changing attitudes toward family size, intensive parenting expectations, and the high stakes Singaporean education system that encourages families to invest heavily in fewer children.

The Singapore government's policy response has been substantial. The Marriage and Parenthood Package now exceeds 100,000 Singapore dollars in cumulative benefits per child for some families. Extended parental leave, expanded childcare subsidies, priority for HDB housing for couples and families, and various tax benefits all aim to support family formation. Despite these efforts, fertility has continued to decline.

Aging in a Compressed Geography

Singapore's median age has climbed from approximately 18 years at independence to approximately 42.6 years in 2026. Approximately 19 percent of Singapore residents are aged 65 or older, with the share projected to reach 32 percent by 2050. The aging trajectory is among the steepest of any country, exceeded only by South Korea and Japan among major economies.

Life expectancy at birth in Singapore stands at approximately 84 years overall, with women averaging approximately 86 years and men approximately 82 years. Singaporean life expectancy ranks among the highest in the world.

The combination of the lowest fertility, accelerating aging, and limited geographic capacity for expansion creates unique policy challenges. Singapore's response has emphasized productivity gains through automation, foreign worker recruitment, retirement age extensions, and continued investment in healthcare infrastructure.

The Pioneer Generation Package, Merdeka Generation Package, and various senior care initiatives have targeted the welfare of older Singaporeans. The Central Provident Fund (CPF) system requires forced savings throughout working life to support retirement, although debates continue about adequacy of accumulated balances for many citizens.

Future Projections

Projections from the UN World Population Prospects 2024 revision and the Singapore government's own projections suggest the Singapore population will continue growing through the late 2030s before plateauing and beginning gradual decline. The trajectory depends critically on net immigration, which the government calibrates through visa policy.

YearProjected PopulationNotes
20306.2 millionContinued growth, government target
20406.5 millionApproaching peak
20506.4 millionAging accelerates
20755.8 millionDecline accelerating
21005.0 millionLoss of approximately 1 million from peak

Source: UN World Population Prospects 2024 medium variant and Singapore government population projections.

The Singapore population 2050 figure of approximately 6.4 million represents modest growth from the 2026 level, reflecting peak around the early 2040s under medium variant projections. The 2100 figure of approximately 5.0 million implies substantial decline from peak, although immigration policy adjustments could change this trajectory significantly. The Singaporean government has signaled willingness to maintain population growth through immigration, although public sentiment about immigration density has constrained those flows in recent years.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the population of Singapore in 2026?

Singapore's population in 2026 stands at approximately 6.0 million residents, including approximately 3.6 million citizens, 575,000 permanent residents, and 1.8 million non resident workers and dependents.

What is Singapore's fertility rate?

Singapore's total fertility rate of approximately 0.97 children per woman in 2026 is the lowest of any sovereign country. The rate has fallen from 1.6 in 2000 despite substantial government incentive programs.

Which Singapore region has the largest population?

The Central Region has the largest resident population at approximately 970,000, followed by the North East Region at 945,000 and the West Region at 935,000.

How many Singapore residents are foreign workers?

Approximately 1.8 million non resident workers and dependents live in Singapore in 2026, representing about 30 percent of the total population. Categories include Employment Pass holders, S Pass holders, Work Permit holders, and foreign domestic workers.

How does Singapore manage its population?

Singapore actively manages its population through immigration policy, family incentive programs, housing allocation systems, and various social policy levers. The government calibrates work pass quotas to balance economic needs with social capacity considerations.

What is the Marriage and Parenthood Package?

The Marriage and Parenthood Package is a Singapore government initiative providing financial incentives, parental leave benefits, childcare subsidies, and housing priorities to support family formation. Cumulative benefits per child can exceed 100,000 Singapore dollars for some families.

What is the median age in Singapore?

The median age in Singapore sits at approximately 42.6 years in 2026, with about 19 percent of residents aged 65 or older. The figure is projected to climb past 50 years by 2050.

What is HDB housing?

HDB refers to the Housing and Development Board, the public housing authority that built and manages most of Singapore's residential housing stock. Approximately 78 percent of Singapore residents live in HDB flats, making it the foundation of Singaporean residential life.

What is the life expectancy in Singapore?

Life expectancy at birth in Singapore stands at approximately 84 years overall, with women averaging approximately 86 years and men approximately 82 years. Singaporean life expectancy ranks among the highest globally.

Will Singapore's population continue to grow?

Singapore's population is projected to continue growing through approximately 2040 under the UN medium variant, reaching about 6.5 million at peak before gradual decline. The trajectory depends critically on immigration policy and visa quotas.

Sources

  • United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. World Population Prospects 2024 revision.
  • Singapore Department of Statistics, Population Trends 2024 and 2025 releases.
  • World Bank Open Data, World Development Indicators, 2024 and 2025 updates.
  • National Population and Talent Division, Singapore, Population White Papers and Updates.
  • Ministry of Manpower, Singapore, Foreign Workforce Numbers 2024.
  • Live national and regional counters at worldpopulationclock.net.
Scroll to Top