Mundevo

International schools · Singapore, Singapore

International schools in Singapore — landscape, curricula, cost bands

Singapore's international school market is premium-priced and highly competitive. British, American, IB, Australian, Indian, and others. Waitlists are real.

Landscape map, not a school directory

This page maps the categories of schools and the cost bands — it intentionally doesn't name specific schools or quote current tuition. Tuition adjusts annually and admissions status changes; the directories linked below are the authoritative source for the current list.

Singapore has an international school landscape that solves the schooling problem for most relocating families — but the right choice depends on curriculum fit, language of instruction, admissions timing, and budget. This page maps the landscape and gives you the decision framework; the actual school shortlist needs current research.

International schools in this market change year-over-year — tuition adjusts, waitlists shift, new schools open, and admissions criteria evolve. Mundevo intentionally doesn't name specific schools or quote current tuition: those numbers go stale within a year. The directories linked below are the authoritative starting points for the current list.

Curricula commonly available

IB (PYP / MYP / DP)

Strong IB presence across multiple schools. Among the most internationally portable exit qualifications.

British (IGCSE / A-Level)

Long-established British curriculum schools. Common for Singapore's UK-tied expat population.

American (US curriculum + AP)

Established American-curriculum schools. Suits families on US college tracks or with US employer assignments.

Australian

Smaller but established Australian-curriculum option.

Other national curricula (Indian, French, German, Japanese, Korean)

Singapore hosts several national-system schools serving specific expat communities.

Languages of instruction

EnglishMandarin (bilingual options)FrenchGermanJapaneseKorean

Tuition cost bands

Order-of-magnitude only. Headline tuition typically excludes registration, capital levies, uniforms, meals, transport, and extracurriculars — add 15-30% for an all-in estimate per child.

Mid-tier (S$25-40k/year)
Smaller international schools and national-system schools.
Smaller schools may have less depth in extracurriculars and university counseling.
Established international (S$30-50k/year)
Mid-large international schools across British, American, IB segments.
The bulk of the established international market sits here. Adds registration and facilities fees.
Premium / branded (S$45-65k+/year)
Premium schools with established reputations, often with extensive campus facilities.
Capital levies (one-off building fees of S$5-20k+) common at the premium tier. All-in cost can exceed S$70k/year per child.

Where to find the current school list

Authoritative directories — these stay current in ways an editorial page cannot.

  • Singapore Ministry of Education
    Sets the regulatory framework. Singapore's local schools are also accessible to PR / citizen families.
    Reference: https://www.moe.gov.sg
  • IB World Schools Directory
    Official directory of all IB-authorized schools worldwide — searchable by location and programme.
    Reference: https://www.ibo.org/programmes/find-an-ib-school
  • COBIS — Council of British International Schools
    Accredited British international schools directory — useful for English-language British-curriculum schools.
    Reference: https://www.cobis.org.uk
  • ECIS — Educational Collaborative for International Schools
    International school network with directory and accreditation framework.
    Reference: https://www.ecis.org

How to think about the decision

  1. 1.International curriculum (IB / British / American) or local national curriculum?

    International curricula are smoother for families likely to relocate again, kids who speak English / the curriculum language, and teenagers who need recognized exit qualifications for university abroad. National curricula are smoother for families planning to stay long-term and young kids who can pick up the local language fast. Bilingual schools split the difference, but quality varies widely.

  2. 2.How early do you need to apply?

    Most established international schools open admissions 12-18 months before the start of the academic year. Waitlists at popular schools run 1-3 years in cities with high expat demand. The single biggest mistake families make is leaving school applications until after the move is confirmed — by which time the slots are gone.

  3. 3.What does the cost actually include?

    Headline tuition often excludes registration fees, capital levies, uniforms, meals, transport, technology, and extracurriculars. Add 15-30% to the headline number for a realistic all-in cost. Multiple children compound the math quickly.

  4. 4.Will your employer or visa sponsor pay?

    Many corporate relocation packages include school fees as a separate line item, especially for expat assignments. If you're negotiating compensation for a move, school fees often beat salary uplift dollar-for-dollar — they're tax-treated differently in many jurisdictions.

What's particular to Singapore

Singapore international school waitlists are real and long — popular schools have 1-3 year waitlists for popular year groups, especially primary entry. Apply as soon as the move is plausible, not when it's confirmed. Many families also consider Singapore's local school system (excellent quality, much lower cost) but local-school admissions for non-citizen / non-PR children are constrained.

Other cities

See the full directory for all 13 cities.