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Singapore Car Costs vs Hong Kong, Tokyo, London

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Singapore is often cited as the most expensive place in the world to own a car. But how does it actually compare when you look at the full picture? We selected three comparable high-density, high-income cities — Hong Kong, Tokyo, and London — and compared the total cost of owning and operating a mid-range car across all major expense categories.

The Reference Vehicle

For a fair comparison, we use the same vehicle across all four cities: a Toyota Corolla 1.8 Hybrid, one of the world's best-selling cars. We calculate the 10-year total cost of ownership including purchase price, taxes, fuel/energy, insurance, parking, and maintenance.

Purchase Cost Comparison

ComponentSingaporeHong KongTokyoLondon
Base vehicle priceS$32,000HK$185,000 (S$32,000)JPY 2.75M (S$27,000)GBP 28,000 (S$48,000)
Registration tax/COES$120,000S$35,000S$3,000S$800
Total on-the-roadS$172,000S$67,000S$33,000S$52,000

Singapore's on-the-road price is 2.5 times higher than Hong Kong, 5 times higher than Tokyo, and 3.3 times higher than London. The overwhelming difference is driven by the COE, which has no equivalent in any of the other three cities.

Annual Running Costs

Annual CostSingaporeHong KongTokyoLondon
FuelS$2,400S$2,800S$1,800S$2,600
InsuranceS$2,000S$2,500S$1,200S$1,800
Road tax / vehicle dutyS$950S$600S$550S$250
Parking (home + work)S$3,000S$6,000S$3,600S$4,800
Tolls / congestion chargeS$700S$400S$300S$4,500
MaintenanceS$1,200S$1,400S$900S$1,100
Annual totalS$10,250S$13,700S$8,350S$15,050

A surprising finding: Singapore has the lowest annual running costs of the four cities. Hong Kong's astronomical parking costs and London's congestion charge (approximately GBP 15 per day, five days a week) push their running costs well above Singapore's. Tokyo offers the lowest fuel and maintenance costs but parking is expensive.

10-Year Total Cost of Ownership

CityPurchase10-Year RunningResidual ValueNet 10-Year TCO
SingaporeS$172,000S$102,500-S$25,000S$249,500
Hong KongS$67,000S$137,000-S$12,000S$192,000
TokyoS$33,000S$83,500-S$8,000S$108,500
LondonS$52,000S$150,500-S$15,000S$187,500

Over 10 years, Singapore remains the most expensive city for car ownership at S$249,500. However, the gap narrows significantly when running costs are included. London comes within S$62,000 of Singapore, and Hong Kong within S$57,500. Tokyo is in a different league at barely S$108,500.

Key Insight: Front-Loaded vs Back-Loaded Costs

The fundamental difference between Singapore and other cities is the cost distribution. Singapore front-loads the expense through COE and ARF at purchase, while other cities spread costs through higher running expenses (parking, fuel, congestion charges). The total gap is smaller than the purchase price gap suggests.

This front-loading creates a significant barrier to entry but results in relatively affordable ongoing motoring once you have made the initial investment. It also means that Singapore car owners are less affected by year-to-year changes in fuel prices, parking rates, or toll charges than their counterparts in other cities.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Singapore's purchase cost so much higher?

The COE system is unique to Singapore. No other country requires a pre-purchased certificate for the right to own a vehicle. Combined with the Additional Registration Fee (a percentage of the vehicle's Open Market Value), Singapore's upfront taxes add approximately $120,000-$130,000 to the cost of a mid-range car. The policy is designed to limit the vehicle population on Singapore's limited road network.

Which city offers the best value for car ownership?

Tokyo is by far the cheapest of the four cities for total car ownership cost. Japan has low vehicle taxes, affordable fuel, competitive insurance, and a well-maintained road network. The main constraint is parking in central Tokyo, which is expensive but still cheaper than Hong Kong or London.

Does this comparison account for public transport quality?

No. All four cities have excellent public transport systems, which means car ownership is a choice rather than a necessity. Singapore's MRT and bus network, in particular, is efficient, affordable, and covers most of the island. For many residents, the question is not whether they can afford a car, but whether the premium over public transport is worth it for the added convenience.

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