In The Know
Insider Guides

How Much Does Co-Living Cost in Singapore? A 2026 Price Guide

One of the first questions renters ask about co-living is simple: what does it actually cost? The honest answer is that the headline rent tells only half the story, because co-living bundles things a normal tenancy bills separately. Here is how co-living pricing works in Singapore and what moves it up or down.

What a co-living price includes

A co-living rate is designed to be close to all-in. In most Singapore co-living homes, one monthly payment covers:

  • A furnished private room
  • Utilities — electricity, water and gas
  • High-speed Wi-Fi
  • Weekly cleaning of shared areas and general maintenance
  • Community events, and sometimes co-working space

Renting a room privately looks cheaper on the rent line alone, but you then add utilities, Wi-Fi, an agent fee, furniture and your own cleaning.

Cost itemCo-livingRenting a room privately
Monthly rentOne bundled rateRent only
Utilities & Wi-FiIncludedExtra
Cleaning of shared areasIncludedYour responsibility
FurnitureIncludedOften extra
Agent feeTypically noneCommon
A calm, furnished co-living bedroom with natural light in a Figment heritage house in Singapore

What moves the price up or down

  • Location — rooms near an MRT station or the city core cost more.
  • Room type — an ensuite room costs more than one with a shared bathroom.
  • Building — a restored heritage shophouse differs from a plain apartment block.
  • Lease length — longer commitments usually earn a better monthly rate.

How co-living compares on value

Comparing a co-living rate against a bare room rent is misleading — once you add utilities, Wi-Fi, cleaning, furniture and an agent fee to a private room, the gap narrows quickly. Figment lists co-living options under S$2,000 a month and charges no agent fee. For a fuller picture, weigh co-living versus renting a room and co-living versus a studio apartment.

Minimum stay and flexibility

Co-living in standard private homes follows the same rule as any private rental in Singapore — a minimum of three consecutive months. Figment’s designated serviced-apartment shophouses offer flexible monthly stays, distinct from that three-month floor. You can browse the full range of co-living in Singapore to see what fits your budget and timeline.

How to compare co-living quotes

Because operators package things differently, put every quote on the same basis before you compare. Run through this checklist:

  • Is the deposit one or two months, and what are the refund conditions?
  • Which utilities are included, and is there a fair-use cap on electricity?
  • Is cleaning of your own room included, or only the shared areas?
  • What notice period applies if you need to leave early?
  • Are community events, co-working space and laundry part of the rate?

Frequently asked questions

Is co-living cheaper than renting a whole apartment?

For one person, usually yes. You pay for a private room plus shared spaces rather than an entire unit, and bills are already included.

Are there hidden costs?

Expect a security deposit, but reputable operators fold utilities, Wi-Fi and cleaning into the quoted rate and typically charge no agent fee. Always confirm what the monthly price covers before you commit.

What is the cheapest co-living in Singapore?

Entry-level rates depend on location and room type. Rooms with a shared bathroom in a suburban house sit at the lower end; Figment lists a range of options under S$2,000 a month.

Comments

guest
0 Comments