
Universal Studios Singapore: Tickets, Rides & Insider Tips (2026)
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Is Universal Studios Singapore Worth It in 2026?
- Universal Studios Singapore Ticket Types and Prices (2026)
- Best Rides at Universal Studios Singapore — Ranked by Experience
- Zone-by-Zone Strategy — How to Plan Your Day at Universal Studios Singapore
- How to Get to Universal Studios Singapore
- Which USS Ticket Should You Choose?
- Tips for Visiting Universal Studios Singapore
- Make the Most of Your Day at Universal Studios Singapore
- Adult admission starts at S$83 (~US$62) off-peak in 2026; children aged 4–12 from S$62 (~US$46), and kids under 4 enter free.
- Eight themed zones — including the new Minion Land (opened February 2025) — house 14+ rides, live shows, and character meet-and-greets.
- The Express Pass (from ~S$90/~US$67) is worth the add-on cost on weekends and school holidays; on quiet weekdays, you can skip it with an early-arrival strategy.
- Arrive by 9:45 am and head straight to Sci-Fi City or Minion Land — both zones hit 60–90 minute queues by late morning.
- The park is compact enough to cover in 6–8 hours, including rides, shows, and a sit-down meal.
Universal Studios Singapore is Southeast Asia's only Universal Studios park, located on Sentosa Island with eight themed zones and 14+ rides. Adult tickets start from S$83 (~US$62) in 2026, with Express Pass add-ons from ~S$90 (~US$67) for queue-skipping. Most visitors cover the full park in a single day — but choosing the right ticket tier and arrival strategy makes the difference between a rushed scramble and a well-paced visit.
You've set aside a day on Sentosa for Universal Studios Singapore, but the ticket page alone can eat an hour of planning. Standard admission, Express Pass, VIP Experience, combo bundles — each at a different price point with different inclusions. Then there's the question of which rides justify their queue time, which zones to hit first, and whether the new Minion Land lives up to the hype.
Most online guides list every ride zone by zone without helping you decide which ticket to buy or where to start based on who you're travelling with. If you're visiting with a toddler, your priorities look nothing like those of a couple chasing roller coasters. And if you're watching your budget, spending S$90 on an Express Pass needs more justification than "queues are long."
This guide breaks down every 2026 ticket option with real prices in both SGD and USD, ranks the rides by experience quality rather than just listing them, and gives you a zone-by-zone route strategy. Whether you're a first-timer, a family with young kids, or a thrill-seeker on a tight schedule, you'll walk in with a plan — not a prayer.
Is Universal Studios Singapore Worth It in 2026?
For most visitors spending at least a full day on Sentosa, yes — USS delivers strong value across age groups, especially with the addition of Minion Land. But the park isn't for everyone, and an honest assessment saves you from a disappointing day.
Worth it if:
- You're a first-time Singapore visitor with a full free day — USS packs enough variety (roller coasters, 3D simulators, family rides, live shows) into a compact layout that you won't feel like you've wasted time.
- You're travelling with kids aged 4–14 — Minion Land, Shrek's Far Far Away, and Sesame Street Spaghetti Space Chase give younger children a full day of age-appropriate rides and character encounters.
- You enjoy theme parks but have limited time in Asia — USS is smaller than Universal Orlando or Universal Studios Japan, which means less walking and a realistic shot at covering everything in one visit.
Not ideal if:
- You only have 3 hours — the park's compact, but three hours barely covers 4–5 rides once you factor in queues, even on a weekday.
- You dislike queues and won't spring for an Express Pass — popular rides regularly hit 60–90 minute wait times on weekends and school holidays.
- You're after an extreme thrill park — USS has two serious roller coasters (Battlestar Galactica Human and Cylon) and one indoor coaster (Revenge of the Mummy), but the overall intensity skews mid-range compared to larger Universal parks.
Insider Reality Check: Park Size
- USS covers roughly 20 hectares — the smallest Universal Studios globally. That's a benefit, not a drawback: you spend less time walking between zones and more time on rides. But it also means the ride count is lower (14 rides vs. 30+ at Universal Orlando), so set expectations accordingly.
Universal Studios Singapore Ticket Types and Prices (2026)
USS offers four main ticket categories in 2026, each aimed at a different budget and visit style. Prices are tiered by peak and off-peak days, so what you pay depends on when you visit. Here's the full breakdown.
| Ticket Type | Adult Price (SGD / USD) | Child 4–12 (SGD / USD) | What's Included | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Admission (Off-Peak) | S$83 / ~US$62 | S$62 / ~US$46 | Full-day entry to Universal Studios Singapore, access to all rides and shows | Budget visitors, weekday travellers |
| Standard Admission (Peak) | S$86 / ~US$64 | S$66 / ~US$49 | Full-day park entry, access to all rides and shows | Weekend and holiday visitors |
| Express Pass (Add-On) | From ~S$90 / ~US$67 | Same as adult | One-time priority queue skip per participating ride + show; requires separate admission ticket | Weekend visitors, families with young kids, anyone short on time |
| VIP Experience | S$380 / ~US$284 | S$380 / ~US$284 | 5–6 hour guided tour (max 12 guests), unlimited Express access, private meet-and-greets, lounge access, S$25 dining voucher | Luxury travellers, first-timers wanting full coverage, families with very young children |
| Combo Tickets | From ~S$123 / ~US$92 | Varies | USS + Singapore Oceanarium, Adventure Cove Waterpark, or multi-attraction passes | Multi-day Sentosa visitors, value-seekers |
All prices reflect 2026 rates. Infants under 4 enter free. Gate tickets cost more than online bookings, so buying in advance is always the better move — you also skip the ticket counter queue, which can add 20–30 minutes on busy mornings.
What the Express Pass Actually Gets You
The Express Pass is an add-on, not a standalone ticket. You still need a standard admission ticket to enter the park. Once inside, the pass gives you one-time priority lane access at each participating ride and show. That means you skip the regular queue once per attraction — not unlimited re-rides.
Insider Reality Check: Express Pass Pricing Is Dynamic
- The Express Pass price fluctuates based on expected crowd levels. On a quiet Tuesday, it might cost S$50–60. On a Saturday during school holidays, it can exceed S$90. Check the official USS app or Resorts World Sentosa website the day before your visit for the exact rate. If you're visiting on a genuinely quiet weekday and arrive at park opening, you may not need it at all.
Is the VIP Experience Worth the Premium?
At S$380 per person, the VIP Experience is a serious investment. It makes sense if you're travelling with very young children who can't handle long queues, if you have limited time and want guaranteed full-park coverage, or if you simply prefer a guided, stress-free day. The tour caps at 12 guests, includes a knowledgeable guide who optimises your route, and comes with unlimited Express access for the rest of your visit after the tour ends.
It doesn't make sense if you're a confident theme park visitor who can plan your own route and is happy to buy a standard Express Pass instead.
Best Rides at Universal Studios Singapore — Ranked by Experience
USS has 14 rides spread across eight zones, ranging from full-throttle roller coasters to gentle family spins. Rather than listing every ride alphabetically, here's a ranking by experience quality — weighted by thrill factor, immersion, and whether the ride justifies its typical wait time.
Top Thrill Rides
Battlestar Galactica: Human vs. Cylon — The park's flagship attraction and the world's tallest duelling roller coaster. The Human track (red, seated) delivers sharp turns and steep drops at speeds above 80 km/h. The Cylon track (blue, inverted) flips you through five inversions — a vertical loop, corkscrews, and a near-collision with the Human track. Both tracks launch simultaneously, creating close-call moments as they intertwine. If you ride only one coaster at USS, make it the Cylon.
Revenge of the Mummy — An indoor roller coaster in the Ancient Egypt zone that blends dark-ride storytelling with genuine speed. The ride accelerates without warning through fire effects, animatronics, and near-total darkness. Height requirement: 122 cm.
TRANSFORMERS: The Ride — The Ultimate 3D Battle — A hyper-realistic 3D motion simulator that uses wraparound screens, physical drops, and wind/mist effects to put you inside a Decepticon battle. It's consistently rated among the best simulator rides in Southeast Asia. Expect wait times of 40–60 minutes by mid-morning.
Best Family Rides
Despicable Me Minion Mayhem — A motion simulator in the new Minion Land that transforms you into a Minion inside Gru's laboratory. The ride is immersive, funny, and suitable for kids who meet the 102 cm height requirement. It draws heavy foot traffic — prioritise it in the first 30 minutes after park opening.
Shrek 4-D Adventure — A 4D theatre experience in Far Far Away that adds water sprays, air blasts, and seat vibrations to a Shrek short film. No height restriction, making it one of the few rides the entire family can enjoy together regardless of age.
Sesame Street Spaghetti Space Chase — A gentle indoor dark ride in the New York zone. Ideal for toddlers and very young children. No height restriction.
New in 2025–2026: Minion Land Rides
Minion Land opened on 14 February 2025, replacing the former Madagascar zone. It's divided into three areas — Gru's Neighbourhood, Super Silly Fun Land, and Minion Marketplace — and adds three rides to the park roster.
- Despicable Me Minion Mayhem — 3D motion simulator (covered above). Height requirement: 102 cm.
- Buggie Boogie — The world's first Minion-themed carousel, exclusive to USS. Riders board space bugs and silly creatures while Minion-remixed pop tracks play overhead. No height restriction — a crowd-pleaser for families.
- Silly Swirly — A spinning aerial ride that lifts you above Super Silly Fun Land with views across the park lagoon. Gentle enough for younger kids, entertaining enough for adults who want a breather between thrill rides.


Shows Worth Your Time
WaterWorld — A live stunt show in The Lost World zone featuring jet-ski chases, explosions, and a crashing seaplane. It runs 2–3 times daily, lasts about 20 minutes, and is one of the most impressive live-action spectacles in any Southeast Asian theme park. Arrive 15 minutes early for front-section seating (be prepared to get splashed).
Lights, Camera, Action! Hosted by Steven Spielberg — A special-effects stage show in the New York zone that simulates a Category 5 hurricane. The effects are genuinely intense — the stage floods, winds howl, and a fuel barge catches fire metres from the audience. It's short (about 10 minutes) but memorable.
Zone-by-Zone Strategy — How to Plan Your Day at Universal Studios Singapore
The optimal route through USS runs counter-clockwise from the entrance, hitting the highest-demand zones before crowds build. Most visitors turn right toward Hollywood and New York — which means Sci-Fi City and Minion Land stay quieter for the first 30–45 minutes.
Recommended Route
- 10:00–10:45 am — Sci-Fi City: Head straight here at park opening. Ride Battlestar Galactica (both tracks) and Transformers while queues are shortest. This alone saves you 60–90 minutes compared to attempting these rides after 11 am.
- 10:45–11:30 am — Ancient Egypt: Walk through to Revenge of the Mummy. The queue builds fast, so getting here before 11:30 am is key.
- 11:30 am–12:15 pm — The Lost World: Ride Jurassic Park Rapids Adventure (you will get wet — bring a light rain poncho or budget S$5 for one at the park). Check the WaterWorld show schedule and time your visit around it.
- 12:15–1:00 pm — Far Far Away: Shrek 4-D, Enchanted Airways, and Puss in Boots' Giant Journey. Good time for families with young kids to regroup.
- 1:00–2:00 pm — Lunch break: Eat now while ride queues peak. Mel's Drive-In (Hollywood zone) serves reliable American diner fare. Super Hungry Food Stand in Minion Land offers themed snacks. Budget S$15–20 per main dish.
- 2:00–3:30 pm — Minion Land: Ride Despicable Me Minion Mayhem, Buggie Boogie, and Silly Swirly. Browse Minion Marketplace for merchandise. Character meet-and-greets with Gru, the girls, and Minions run throughout the afternoon.
- 3:30–5:00 pm — Hollywood & New York: Catch Lights, Camera, Action!, take photos at the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and ride Sesame Street Spaghetti Space Chase. Queues across the park generally ease after 4 pm as families with young children start to leave.
- 5:00 pm onwards: Re-ride favourites. Evening queues are noticeably shorter, making this the best window for a second pass on Transformers or Battlestar Galactica.
Rainy Day Plan
- Singapore gets sudden afternoon thunderstorms year-round. Outdoor rides like Jurassic Park Rapids Adventure, Canopy Flyer, and Enchanted Airways close temporarily during lightning. Indoor rides — Transformers, Revenge of the Mummy, Despicable Me Minion Mayhem, Shrek 4-D, Sesame Street, and Lights Camera Action — keep running. Use a rain delay as a chance to ride indoor attractions with reduced queues.
How Long Do You Need?
Plan for 6–8 hours to ride the major attractions, catch one or two shows, eat a meal, and browse shops without rushing. If you have an Express Pass, you can comfortably cover everything in 5–6 hours. The VIP Experience condenses the highlights into a guided 5–6 hour tour with unlimited Express for the remainder of the day.
How to Get to Universal Studios Singapore
USS sits on Sentosa Island, connected to mainland Singapore by monorail, road, and footpath. Here are the three most practical routes.
- MRT + Sentosa Express (recommended): Take the North East or Circle Line to HarbourFront MRT station. Walk to VivoCity mall (connected to the station). Head to Level 3 and board the Sentosa Express monorail. Alight at Resorts World station — the USS globe is a 2-minute walk. The Sentosa Express costs S$4 per entry.
- Grab or taxi: A direct ride from the city centre (Marina Bay, Orchard Road) costs S$15–25 and takes 15–25 minutes depending on traffic. Drop-off is at the Resorts World Sentosa entrance.
- Sentosa Boardwalk (free): Walk from VivoCity Level 1 across the boardwalk to Sentosa. It's free but takes 10–15 minutes in Singapore's heat and humidity — better for the return trip when you're not in a hurry to reach the park at opening.
Which USS Ticket Should You Choose?
The right ticket depends entirely on who you're travelling with, when you're visiting, and how much queue time you can tolerate. Here's a breakdown by traveller type.
Budget travellers → Standard admission on a weekday. Arrive at 9:45 am, follow the counter-clockwise route above, and you can cover 10+ rides without an Express Pass. Total cost: S$83 (~US$62) per adult.
Families with young kids (under 8) → Standard admission + Express Pass on weekends or holidays. Young children lose patience in long queues, and the Express Pass lets you move through family rides (Minion Mayhem, Shrek 4-D, Enchanted Airways) without meltdowns. Total cost: approximately S$173–183 (~US$129–137) per adult.
Couples → Standard admission on a weekday, or a combo ticket that bundles USS with Adventure Cove Waterpark or Singapore Oceanarium if you have two days on Sentosa. A weekday visit gives you enough time for every thrill ride plus a relaxed lunch.
Thrill-seekers → Standard admission + Express Pass regardless of the day. The Express Pass lets you re-ride Battlestar Galactica and Transformers without re-queuing in the regular line, maximising your ride count across the day.
Luxury and time-poor visitors → The VIP Experience. At S$380 (~US$284), it's steep — but the guided tour, unlimited Express, private character meet-and-greets, and lounge access mean you see everything without a single planning decision. Limited to 12 guests per tour, so availability is tight on weekends.
If you'd rather skip the comparison and book confidently, Travjoy's Singapore experiences are curated after extensive local research — each option is vetted by destination experts so you can choose based on your travel style without second-guessing.
Tips for Visiting Universal Studios Singapore
A few practical details that most guides skip — these make a tangible difference to your park day.
App and Queue Management
Download the official Universal Studios Singapore app before your visit. It shows live wait times for every ride, the daily show schedule, and a GPS-enabled park map. Checking wait times before walking to a ride saves you from arriving at a 90-minute queue when another ride nearby has a 15-minute wait.
Lockers and Bags
Several thrill rides — Battlestar Galactica, Revenge of the Mummy, and Transformers — require you to stow all loose items before boarding. Lockers are located at the entrance of each ride.
- The first 40 minutes of locker use are free.
- After 40 minutes, charges apply (rates vary by locker size).
- On peak days, lockers near popular rides fill up. Pack light — a small crossbody bag is easier to manage than a backpack.
Insider Reality Check: The Cashless Trap
- USS is fully cashless — all food outlets, shops, and arcade games accept only contactless cards or digital wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay, Samsung Pay). If your overseas card charges foreign transaction fees, load a local prepaid card or use a fee-free travel card. This catches visitors off guard, especially at food stalls where the S$15–20 per dish adds up quickly across a full day.
Dining on a Budget
- Mel's Drive-In (Hollywood zone): American diner burgers and shakes — reliable and filling. Budget S$15–18 per main.
- Super Hungry Food Stand (Minion Land): Themed snacks and mains exclusive to USS. Fun for kids, but portions run smaller than other outlets.
- Oasis Spice Café (Ancient Egypt zone): Halal-certified — one of the few halal options in the park.
- Loui's NY Pizza Parlor (New York zone): Quick slices if you want to eat fast and get back to rides.
Outside food and drinks are technically not allowed inside the park, though a small water bottle usually passes without issue.
What to Wear and Bring
- Wear comfortable shoes with good grip — you'll walk 8,000–12,000 steps across a full day.
- Bring a light rain poncho (or buy one inside for ~S$5) — essential for Jurassic Park Rapids Adventure and useful during sudden showers.
- Sunscreen and a hat — queues for outdoor rides like Battlestar Galactica have limited shade.
- An empty refillable water bottle — Singapore's heat and humidity demand constant hydration.
Sentosa After USS
If the park closes at 6 or 7 pm and you still have energy, Sentosa offers several evening options within walking distance. Wings of Time is a spectacular light-and-water show on Siloso Beach (evening showtimes). SkyHelix Sentosa gives you panoramic sunset views from an open-air gondola. And Skyline Luge Sentosa runs evening sessions with a lit downhill track — a relaxed way to wind down after a theme park day.
Make the Most of Your Day at Universal Studios Singapore
Universal Studios Singapore delivers more ride variety per square metre than most theme parks in the region. With Minion Land now fully operational, the park's family appeal has strengthened considerably — and the thrill rides remain strong enough to satisfy adrenaline-seekers for a full day.
The key to a good visit is matching your ticket to your travel style and arriving with a route plan. Budget visitors do well with standard admission on a weekday. Families and weekend visitors benefit from the Express Pass. And those who want the full VIP treatment can hand the planning to a guide entirely.
Ready to build your Sentosa day? Start planning your Singapore trip on Travjoy — browse curated experiences across the city, from theme parks and wildlife reserves to food tours and harbour cruises, all vetted by local destination experts. Check out the top 20 things to do in Singapore if you're still deciding how to fill your itinerary.


