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Kid-Friendly Attractions in Singapore Ranked by Age Group
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Kid-Friendly Attractions in Singapore Ranked by Age Group

22 min read

Apr 10, 2026
SingaporeAdventureBeachDay TripsFamilyDiningF & BFor KidsKidsNature & ParksNature & WildlifeParentsWalking & Biking Tours
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • How to Plan Singapore Attractions Around Your Kids' Ages
  • Kid-Friendly Attractions in Singapore for Babies and Toddlers (0–3 Years)
  • Best Singapore Attractions for Pre-Schoolers (Ages 3–6)
  • Singapore Attractions Best for Ages 6–10
  • Attractions for Tweens and Teens in Singapore (Ages 10–15)
  • Which Singapore Attractions Work for Mixed-Age Families?
  • Practical Details: Getting Around Singapore with Children
  • Conclusion
  • Children under 3 enter most major Singapore attractions for free — including the Zoo, Night Safari, ArtScience Museum, and S.E.A. Aquarium
  • Universal Studios Singapore is best from age 7 upwards for the full ride experience; the gentler zones work for ages 4–6
  • The Mandai Wildlife Reserve cluster (Zoo, Night Safari, River Wonders) offers the best single-precinct value for mixed-age families
  • Singapore is stroller-friendly throughout — every MRT station has lifts, and most major parks have pram-accessible paths
  • Book tickets online in advance: you save 10–15% and avoid queuing at gates during peak periods

Singapore's kid-friendly attractions ranked by age cover more ground than any single family can cover in a week. Babies can splash in free water playgrounds at Gardens by the Bay while toddlers roam air-conditioned science museums at no cost. Children aged 6 to 10 get tram rides through a nocturnal wildlife park and river boat adventures past giant pandas. Teenagers unlock the full roller coaster roster at Universal Studios or bungy jump off Sentosa. Knowing which attraction belongs to which age group is the difference between a smooth family day out and a very long, very expensive afternoon where half the family is bored and the other half can't reach the height marker.

Children playing at the water playground at Gardens by the Bay Singapore, with Supertrees visible in the background

How to Plan Singapore Attractions Around Your Kids' Ages

Singapore's family attractions are genuinely world-class, but they are not equally suited to every child. A two-year-old at Universal Studios will spend most of the day watching their older sibling queue for rides they cannot go on. A ten-year-old at a toddler-focused play centre will be unimpressed within twenty minutes. The city rewards planning — and the planning is easier than it looks.

Why Age Matching Matters More Than You'd Think

Three factors determine whether an attraction works for a given age: height restrictions, which cut younger children off from most rides at Universal Studios and Adventure Cove; free-entry thresholds, which make the first three years of travel significantly cheaper; and attention span and stamina, which determine how long a given venue will hold a child's interest before the meltdown window opens.

Singapore Zoo, for instance, works across almost every age group — but for very different reasons. A two-year-old loves the splash pad in Rainforest Kidzworld. A nine-year-old is riveted by the orangutan free-ranging programme. A twelve-year-old wants to cycle between enclosures. Same park, three entirely different experiences.

Two Planning Rules That Apply to Every Family

Front-load the big-ticket, high-energy attractions in the morning. Younger children hit their wall between 1pm and 2pm, and Singapore's equatorial heat makes outdoor attractions genuinely uncomfortable after 11am. If you are visiting Universal Studios or Adventure Cove, arrive at opening and target the highest-demand rides in the first two hours.

Cluster by area to cut transit time. Sentosa holds Universal Studios, S.E.A. Aquarium, Adventure Cove, Skyline Luge, and several beaches — that is a full multi-day programme without leaving the island. The Mandai precinct contains the Zoo, Night Safari, River Wonders, and Bird Paradise side by side. Mixing Mandai with Sentosa in a single day adds unnecessary travel and eats into the time children actually spend on attractions.

What to Know About Pricing Before You Book

Ticket prices in Singapore are substantial, but free-entry ages and multi-park passes change the maths considerably. Key figures for 2025–26:

  • Children under 3 enter the Singapore Zoo, Night Safari, River Wonders, Bird Paradise, ArtScience Museum, and S.E.A. Aquarium for free
  • Children under 4 enter Universal Studios Singapore for free
  • The Mandai Xperience Pass (Zoo + Night Safari + River Wonders) costs SGD 95 (~USD 71) for adults and SGD 65 (~USD 49) for children — a saving of roughly 30% versus buying separately
  • Universal Studios adult tickets are SGD 83 (~USD 62) walk-up, or around SGD 70 (~USD 52) booked online
  • Gardens by the Bay's Supertree Grove and the Children's Garden water playground are free; the paid Cloud Forest and Flower Dome conservatories cost SGD 53 (~USD 40) for adults, with children's discounts available

Book everything online and at least a few days ahead. Beyond the price saving, pre-booked tickets let you walk past the ticketing queues entirely — which matters when you have a tired child in a stroller.

Kid-Friendly Attractions in Singapore for Babies and Toddlers (0–3 Years)

Singapore is one of the easiest cities in Asia to navigate with an infant or toddler. The Singapore Tourism Board rates it as the region's most family-ready destination, and the infrastructure backs this up: every MRT station has a lift, shopping malls function as the city's main indoor playgrounds during rain, and most major attractions waive entry entirely for children under three. This is the age bracket where Singapore is arguably the most rewarding for families, precisely because the costs are low and the infrastructure is exceptional.

Gardens by the Bay — Free Water Play and a Nightly Light Show

Gardens by the Bay is the most practical free destination in Singapore for families with very young children. The Far East Organisation Children's Garden has a water playground designed for ages one to twelve, with separate shallow splash areas for under-fives, changing rooms, lockers, and a café on-site. Arrive around 5pm: the water play area runs until 7pm, and the Supertree Grove's Garden Rhapsody light and music show begins at 7:45pm and is free to watch from the lawn below.

  • Water playground hours: Tuesday to Friday 10am–7pm; Saturday and Sunday 9am–9pm; closed Monday
  • Entry cost: Free for the Supertree Grove, Children's Garden, and Dragonfly Lake area
  • Nearest MRT: Bayfront (Exit B) — a flat, pram-friendly 10-minute walk
  • What to bring: Swimwear and a change of clothes; towels are not provided but coin-operated lockers are available

Science Centre Singapore — KidsSTOP for Ages 18 Months to 8 Years

The Science Centre Singapore runs KidsSTOP, a dedicated play and discovery zone for children from 18 months to 8 years old. The space has a water play area, a large indoor playground, and hands-on science exhibits scaled for small children. It operates on a timed-entry system, so pre-booking is essential. Children under three enter both the Science Centre and KidsSTOP for free.

  • KidsSTOP entry: SGD 15 (~USD 11) for children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Science Centre entry: SGD 15 (~USD 11) for adults; free for children under 3
  • Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 10am–5pm; closed Monday
  • Nearest MRT: Jurong East — take bus 335 or a short taxi ride

Singapore Botanic Gardens — Flat, Shaded, and Free

The Singapore Botanic Gardens is the quietest, cheapest option for families with babies and very young toddlers who need time outdoors without crowds or ticketing logistics. The paths are flat and fully stroller-accessible. Jacob Ballas Children's Garden — a free, dedicated children's garden within the grounds — has a water play area, a suspension bridge, a sandpit, and a treehouse. Entry to the Botanic Gardens is free; only the National Orchid Garden charges admission.

  • Entry cost: Free (Jacob Ballas Children's Garden included)
  • Hours: 5am–midnight; Jacob Ballas Children's Garden opens Tuesday to Sunday 8am–7pm
  • Nearest MRT: Botanic Gardens (CC19/DT9)
  • Best time to visit: Before 10am or after 4pm to avoid the worst of the heat

Best Singapore Attractions for Pre-Schoolers (Ages 3–6)

Children aged three to six are old enough to engage meaningfully with animal encounters, interactive museum exhibits, and gentle rides — but they still tire quickly, particularly in the heat, and most ticketed thrill rides remain off-limits on height grounds. The best strategy at this age is half-day visits combined with an indoor cool-down, rather than attempting full-day park itineraries.

Young children playing at the splash pad in Rainforest Kidzworld at Singapore Zoo Family on a tram tour at Night Safari Singapore, Mandai Wildlife Reserve, surrounded by dim lighting and wildlife

Singapore Zoo — Rainforest Kidzworld and Animal Shows

Singapore Zoo is the single most consistently recommended attraction for families with young children, and for good reason. The zoo runs in an open, barrier-free rainforest format where animals are separated from visitors by moats rather than cages — which means sightlines are better and the experience feels less contained. Rainforest Kidzworld, the dedicated children's area, has a water play zone with spray jets and shallow pools, a pony-riding section, and a farmyard where children can interact with smaller animals at close range.

Animal shows run at fixed times throughout the day; the Splash Safari show at the sea lion enclosure is particularly popular with the 3–6 age group. Check the schedule at the entrance and plan your route around show times. The zoo opens at 8:30am — arrive at opening to catch the Jungle Breakfast with Wildlife, a ticketed buffet meal where orangutans and other animals free-range near the dining area.

  • Entry: SGD 42 (~USD 31) adults; SGD 28 (~USD 21) children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Hours: 8:30am–6pm daily
  • Getting there: Khatib MRT, then free Mandai Khatib Shuttle (runs every 10 minutes)
  • Recommended duration: 3–4 hours for this age group; half-day is realistic
  • Multi-park tip: The Mandai Xperience Pass (SGD 65 for children, SGD 95 for adults) includes the Zoo, Night Safari, and River Wonders — strong value if you plan to visit two or more parks

ArtScience Museum — Future World Is Built for Young Visitors

The ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands houses Future World, a permanent exhibition by teamLab that turns digital art into something children can walk through, touch, and directly influence. The highlight for young children is a station where they draw sea creatures on paper, scan them, and watch them swim into a projected ocean scene on the floor. The exhibition is fully interactive and designed without fragile displays — children can run, lie on the floor, and engage physically with the art.

  • Entry (Future World): SGD 25 (~USD 19) adults; SGD 19 (~USD 14) children aged 2–12; free under 2
  • Hours: 10am–7pm daily (last entry 6pm)
  • Getting there: Bayfront MRT — the museum is connected to Marina Bay Sands via covered walkway
  • Rainy-day rating: Excellent — fully indoors and air-conditioned throughout

S.E.A. Aquarium Singapore

The S.E.A. Aquarium at Resorts World Sentosa is one of the largest aquariums in the world, and its centrepiece — a floor-to-ceiling viewing panel into the Open Ocean habitat — is the kind of moment that lands with young children at a level that is hard to plan for. The pace is calm, the air conditioning is reliable, and the touch pool section lets children handle sea cucumbers and small rays under staff supervision. There are no height restrictions and no rides, making it ideal for the 3–6 window.

  • Entry: SGD 41 (~USD 31) adults; SGD 30 (~USD 22) children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Hours: 10am–5pm daily
  • Getting there: HarbourFront MRT (Exit A), then Sentosa Express to Waterfront Station
  • Recommended duration: 2–3 hours

Singapore Bird Paradise

Bird Paradise at Mandai is Asia's largest bird park and a strong choice for pre-schoolers who are not yet ready for the pace of the Zoo. Eight immersive walk-through habitats cover everything from African waterways to Australian bushland, and the penguin encounter area — where children can watch penguins waddle at eye level through floor-to-ceiling glass — is a reliable favourite. The Penguin Cove feeding session runs twice daily and fills quickly; check the schedule on arrival and head there first.

  • Entry: SGD 48 (~USD 36) adults; SGD 33 (~USD 25) children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Hours: 9am–6pm daily
  • Getting there: Mandai Khatib Shuttle from Khatib MRT (same shuttle as Zoo)
  • Tip: Combine with Singapore Zoo in a single day if your child has the stamina — the two parks are a 10-minute shuttle ride apart

Singapore Attractions Best for Ages 6–10

The 6–10 age group unlocks the full range of Singapore's most popular family attractions. Height restrictions at most Universal Studios rides kick in at 92cm and 106cm — most children in this bracket clear both thresholds. Night Safari becomes genuinely engaging as children are old enough to stay awake past 9pm and process the nocturnal animal experience without being frightened. This is also the age at which multi-park passes start paying for themselves.

Universal Studios Singapore

Universal Studios Singapore has seven themed zones, and the ones that land best with the 6–10 age group are Far Far Away (Shrek, Puss in Boots), The Lost World (Jurassic Park Rapids Adventure), and Ancient Egypt (Revenge of the Mummy). Jurassic Park Rapids Adventure requires 107cm; Revenge of the Mummy requires 122cm. Children who clear both can ride everything except the Battlestar Galactica roller coasters, which require 125cm and are better suited to the next age bracket.

The Universal Studios Singapore experience for ages 6–10 works best as a full-day visit. Arrive at opening (10am) and head directly to Jurassic Park and Sci-Fi City before the queues build. The Minion Land zone — opened in February 2025 with three new rides — is well-suited to this age group and is currently drawing significant crowds.

  • Entry: SGD 83 (~USD 62) adults; SGD 62 (~USD 46) children aged 4–12; free under 4
  • Hours: 10am–6pm daily (check for extended hours on weekends)
  • Key height restrictions: Most rides 92cm+; Jurassic Park Rapids 107cm+; Revenge of the Mummy 122cm+
  • Express Pass: SGD 30–70 per person depending on date — recommended on school holidays and weekends
  • Getting there: HarbourFront MRT, then Sentosa Express to Resort World Station

Night Safari Singapore

The Night Safari at Mandai is the world's first nocturnal wildlife park and one of Singapore's most distinctive family experiences. The tram tour runs through seven geographical zones covering 2,500 animals across 86 species, viewed under dim amber lighting that mimics moonlight. The experience is genuinely different from a daytime zoo — animals are more active, behaviour is more natural, and the atmosphere is unlike anything else in the city.

Night Safari opens at 7:15pm and runs until midnight. According to the Mandai Wildlife Reserve, the Creatures of the Night show runs at 7:30pm and 8:30pm and is included in standard admission. For children aged 6–10, a 7:30pm arrival works well: it gives time to catch the show before boarding the tram. The tram ride itself lasts around 40 minutes. Most children in this age group are engaged throughout; younger children can find the darkness unsettling, so the 6+ starting point for this attraction is practical rather than arbitrary.

  • Entry: SGD 55 (~USD 41) adults; SGD 36 (~USD 27) children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Hours: 7:15pm–midnight daily
  • Tip: The tram runs every 15–20 minutes from the main boarding point; arrive by 8pm to ensure you get a tram before the queues peak

Singapore River Wonders

River Wonders is the world's only river-themed wildlife park, covering eight major river habitats from the Mekong to the Amazon. The giant panda habitat — home to Jia Jia, Le Le, and the cubs born in recent years — is the headline draw, but the Amazon River Quest boat ride (minimum height 106cm, the only ride in the park) is consistently the most popular attraction with children aged 6–10. Plan the boat ride first; queues build to 45+ minutes by mid-morning on weekends.

  • Entry: SGD 44 (~USD 33) adults; SGD 31 (~USD 23) children aged 3–12; free under 3
  • Hours: 10am–7pm daily
  • Height restriction: Amazon River Quest — 106cm minimum (riders under 122cm must be accompanied by an adult)
  • Best combined with: Singapore Zoo (same precinct, 5-minute walk between parks)

Adventure Cove Waterpark

Adventure Cove Waterpark on Sentosa is a full-day destination for families with children aged 7 and above. Its centrepiece is Rainbow Reef, where you can snorkel over 20,000 tropical fish in an artificial reef — no experience required, equipment is provided, and the depth is shallow enough for confident non-swimmers. The waterpark has six tube slides, a wave pool, and an Adventure River lazy float circuit. Most slides require riders to be at least 107cm tall, though the lazy river and wave pool are accessible to all heights.

  • Entry: SGD 38 (~USD 28) adults; SGD 28 (~USD 21) children aged 4–12; free under 4
  • Hours: 10am–5pm daily
  • Key height restriction: 107cm for most slides; wave pool and Adventure River are height-unrestricted
  • Tip: Lockers are available to rent (bring a SGD 2 coin for the deposit); sun protection is essential as much of the park is outdoors

Multi-Park Pass: Is the Mandai Xperience Pass Worth It?

  • What it includes: One-day entry to Singapore Zoo, Night Safari, and River Wonders
  • Adult price: SGD 95 (~USD 71) versus SGD 141 (~USD 105) bought separately
  • Child price: SGD 65 (~USD 49) versus SGD 95 (~USD 71) bought separately
  • Worth it if: You plan to visit two or more of the three parks in a single trip
  • Not necessary if: You only want the Zoo for a half-day — buy single-park in that case

Attractions for Tweens and Teens in Singapore (Ages 10–15)

Older children in Singapore get access to the city's genuine thrill attractions — the rides at Universal Studios that require 122–125cm, the adventure activities on Sentosa, and experiences that reward independence and physical confidence. This is also the age group most likely to enjoy Singapore's urban side: the food scene, the night markets, and the architecture of the Marina Bay waterfront.

Universal Studios Singapore — The Full Roller Coaster Roster

Children who clear 125cm unlock the Battlestar Galactica: HUMAN vs CYLON duelling roller coasters — the world's tallest duelling coasters at the time of their installation, and still among the most technically demanding rides in Southeast Asia. The HUMAN coaster is a conventional seated ride; CYLON is an inverted coaster. Both run simultaneously on parallel tracks, passing within metres of each other at full speed. For teens who want serious thrill rides, this is the headline draw at Universal Studios Singapore for older kids.

  • Battlestar Galactica height requirement: 125cm minimum
  • Transformers: The Ride height requirement: 102cm
  • Revenge of the Mummy: 122cm
  • Tip for teens: Download the Universal Studios Singapore app before visiting — it shows real-time queue lengths so you can time the big rides intelligently

Skyline Luge Sentosa — Self-Controlled Downhill Karts

Skyline Luge Sentosa is one of the better-value activities on the island. Riders take a chairlift to the top of the hill, then control their own luge kart down a 688-metre track with bends, tunnels, and banked curves. Speed is controlled by the rider — children aged 6 and above can ride solo, and the track is safe enough for confident younger children while still being fast enough to interest tweens and early teens. Multiple runs are the norm; the sunset slot (around 6–7pm) offers views across Sentosa and the southern islands.

  • Price: SGD 22 for one ride, SGD 32 for two rides (per person)
  • Age requirement: Riders aged 6 and above can ride solo; under 6 must ride with an adult
  • Hours: 10am–9:30pm daily
  • Getting there: Sentosa Express to Beach Station or Imbiah Station

AJ Hackett Sentosa Skypark — For the Genuinely Adventurous

AJ Hackett Sentosa Skypark runs bungy jumping, a giant swing, and a vertical skywalk at Siloso Beach. The giant swing — which takes three riders at once up to a 50-metre arc — is the entry point for most first-timers and works well for confident 10–12 year olds. Bungy jumping requires a minimum weight of 35kg and a minimum age of 7 years. This is an activity that appeals most strongly to the 12–15 age group, particularly those who have outgrown standard theme park rides.

  • Giant Swing: From SGD 59 per person; minimum age 7, minimum weight 25kg
  • Bungy Jump: From SGD 129 per person; minimum weight 35kg, minimum age 7
  • Hours: 11am–7pm daily

Mega Adventure Park — MegaZip and Climbing

Mega Adventure Park on Sentosa runs MegaZip, a 450-metre zipline from the top of Imbiah Hill to a platform above the beach — one of the longest ziplines in Southeast Asia accessible to children. The ClimbMax obstacle course, at 12 metres above ground, suits the 10–14 age group particularly well: it requires physical confidence but not exceptional fitness, and the safety harness system means participants can challenge themselves at their own pace.

  • MegaZip: SGD 45 per person; minimum weight 20kg, maximum 120kg
  • ClimbMax: SGD 35 per person; minimum age 7, minimum height 110cm
  • Hours: 11am–7pm daily (closed Tuesday)

Which Singapore Attractions Work for Mixed-Age Families?

The toughest planning scenario in Singapore is a family with children at very different developmental stages — say, a four-year-old and a twelve-year-old travelling together. The gap in ride access, stamina, and interest means that most single-venue days will leave one child under-served. The following options work because they have genuinely distinct zones or activities for different ages within the same location.

The Mandai Wildlife Reserve Cluster

The strongest argument for Mandai is that four separate parks — Singapore Zoo, Night Safari, River Wonders, and Bird Paradise — sit within a single precinct connected by shuttle. A toddler who cannot ride the Amazon River Quest boat at River Wonders can still watch the giant pandas and walk through the Amazon Flooded Forest. An older child who has outgrown the Zoo's Kidzworld splash pad can spend the same morning at the orangutan free-ranging experience or the Fragile Forest biodome. Evenings at Night Safari work for anyone aged 5 and above.

Travjoy's curated selection of top 20 picks for Singapore covers the full range of Mandai parks alongside the city's other headline attractions — useful if you are still deciding which combination to prioritise.

Gardens by the Bay — Parallel Experiences in One Park

A family with a toddler and a ten-year-old can spend a productive three to four hours at Gardens by the Bay without either child being bored. While younger children use the free water playground at the Children's Garden, older children and adults can explore the Supertree Grove, walk the OCBC Skyway aerial walkway (18 metres above ground), or visit the Cloud Forest's indoor waterfall. The free Garden Rhapsody light show at 7:45pm and 8:45pm brings everyone together at the end of the evening.

East Coast Park — Flexible, Free, and Uncrowded on Weekdays

East Coast Park is the most flexible option for mixed-age families who want a half-day outdoors without admission fees or strict scheduling. The park's Marine Cove playground — 3,500 square metres of slides, rope bridges, and climbing frames — is large enough to hold the attention of children from 2 to 12. Older children and teens can rent bikes from the park's cycling hire stations (from SGD 10 per hour). The 15km coastal path is flat, shaded in sections, and extends far enough to keep a twelve-year-old occupied while a younger sibling plays in the sand.

  • Entry cost: Free
  • Getting there: Bus 401 from Bedok MRT, or taxi from the city (SGD 15–20)
  • Best days: Weekday mornings — the playground is significantly less crowded than on weekends

One-Day Sentosa Plan for Mixed-Age Families

  • If your youngest is under 6: Start at S.E.A. Aquarium (calm, no rides, works for all ages) → afternoon at Universal Studios' Far Far Away and Minion Land zones → evening at Siloso Beach
  • If your youngest is 6–9: Morning at Universal Studios (arrive at opening, hit Jurassic Park and Minion Land first) → afternoon at Adventure Cove Waterpark → Skyline Luge at sunset
  • If all children are 10+: Full day at Universal Studios including Battlestar Galactica → evening at AJ Hackett for the giant swing
  • Sentosa transport note: The Sentosa Express from HarbourFront MRT costs SGD 4 per adult entry to Sentosa; children under 12 pay SGD 3. All internal shuttle buses on the island are free

Practical Details: Getting Around Singapore with Children

Singapore's public transport system is one of the most stroller-friendly in Asia. Every MRT station has a lift, every bus stop has a ramp, and the main tourist corridors — Marina Bay, Sentosa, Orchard Road — have underground or covered walkways that shield families from rain and heat. The Land Transport Authority's journey planner is the most reliable tool for mapping routes between attractions. A few practical notes:

  • Children under 90cm travel free on MRT and buses; children 90–120cm pay a reduced fare of SGD 0.60–1.10 per trip
  • Grab (the regional Uber equivalent) is the easiest way to move between attractions when tired — set your destination in the app and a car arrives within 5 minutes at most points in the city
  • Nursing rooms are available in every major shopping mall and most large attractions; standard in Singapore is a dedicated room with a feeding chair, changing table, and sink
  • Stroller hire is available at Singapore Zoo (SGD 15 per day) and most large parks — useful if you are travelling without your own

Conclusion

Singapore's reputation as one of Asia's most family-friendly cities is earned, not just marketed. The combination of free-entry ages, air-conditioned indoor attractions, lift-accessible transport, and a compact geography that puts most major sights within 30 minutes of each other makes it easier to manage than most comparable destinations. The key is planning by age group before you land — matching attractions to your children's heights, stamina, and interests removes the guesswork and turns what could be an expensive, chaotic day into one that runs smoothly from morning to the Supertree light show.

Whether you are travelling with a toddler who needs splash pads and free entry, a nine-year-old who is ready for River Wonders and Night Safari, or a teenager who wants to finally ride Battlestar Galactica, Singapore has the infrastructure and the variety to deliver. Start planning your Singapore family trip on Travjoy — where every experience has been selected and verified by local experts so you can book with confidence.

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Let our local expert- Adeline, a full time explorer & former marketing professional with10 years in travel and tourism- guide you through the best sights, experiences, dining, shopping, and nightlife in Singapore.

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