Events in Singapore today
Singapore has no events today.
Singapore Tickets 2026
Singapore blends futuristic skylines, tropical green spaces, and waterfront districts with major sports events, arena tours, and some of Asia’s most recognisable attractions. With big matches, headline concerts, and popular observation decks or gardens in high demand, securing Singapore tickets in advance makes it much easier to shape your days and evenings.
Why buy tickets in Singapore via SeatPick?
SeatPick pulls a broad range of Singapore tickets into one place, from events at the National Stadium and Singapore Indoor Stadium to arena‑level concerts and live shows at key performing‑arts venues. You can compare dates, prices, and seating categories side by side instead of juggling multiple local platforms.
- Filter tickets by event type, stand, and price band, whether you want a national‑team football or rugby fixture at the National Stadium, a fight night at Singapore Indoor Stadium, or a touring show in the theatre district.
- Each listing clearly shows what your admission includes, so you know if you are buying a standard seat, premium block, or package with extra perks.
- Only vetted partners are included and every purchase comes with at least a 100% guarantee, which is especially useful if you are timing your Singapore stay around a single match or concert.
Seeing games and shows together helps you map out your itinerary so you can balance nights in the stands or theatre with time around Marina Bay, Sentosa, and the city’s food districts.
Top Singapore sports teams and venues
Singapore’s sports calendar centres on the Sports Hub in Kallang, with additional events spread across key stadiums and waterfront spaces.
National Stadium
The National Stadium in Kallang is a 55,000‑capacity multi‑purpose venue and the home ground of the Singapore national football team. Its retractable roof and cooling system make it suitable for football, rugby, athletics, concerts, and large‑scale ceremonies, and it frequently hosts international friendlies, tournaments, and marquee sports events.
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Singapore Indoor Stadium, also within the Singapore Sports Hub, is a flexible indoor arena with a maximum capacity of around 15,000 depending on configuration. Designed by Kenzo Tange, it hosts everything from basketball and badminton to mixed‑martial‑arts cards, esports tournaments, and major concerts, with capacities typically between 8,000 and 12,000 for most events.
Other key sports venues
Beyond the main hub, Singapore uses venues such as Jalan Besar Stadium and The Float‑at‑Marina Bay (and its successors) for selected football matches, parades, and large outdoor events. Together, these facilities ensure that sports fans can usually find something on the calendar, whether they are interested in football, rugby, fight sports, or multi‑sport showcases.
Top Singapore music and performance venues
Singapore’s live‑performance scene spans purpose‑built arts centres, arenas, and theatres that attract both regional and international acts.
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Alongside sport, Singapore Indoor Stadium is one of the city’s most important music venues, hosting large‑scale concerts by global pop, rock, and K‑pop artists. Its flexible staging and strong production infrastructure make it a natural stop for world tours that need arena‑level capacity.
Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay
Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, nicknamed “The Durian”, is Singapore’s national performing‑arts centre on Marina Bay. It houses a 1,600‑seat concert hall and a 2,000‑seat theatre, plus smaller spaces, and presents a year‑round programme of orchestral music, jazz, theatre, dance, and festivals.
Other major venues
Additional key venues include large hotel theatres and integrated‑resort spaces, plus mid‑sized halls used for touring shows, comedy, and music. Together with outdoor stages used during festivals, they ensure visitors can often add at least one live performance night to their stay.
Top Singapore attractions
Singapore’s attractions range from bay‑front gardens and observation decks to islands, heritage districts, and green parks, many of which suggest or require timed entries.
Highlights include:
- Marina Bay Sands and the surrounding waterfront, where you can combine skyline views, waterfront walks, and nearby light‑and‑water shows.
- Gardens by the Bay, with its Supertree Grove, Flower Dome, and Cloud Forest, which together form a “mega plant metropolis” beside Marina Bay.
- Sentosa Island, home to beaches, attractions, and resorts, easily reached by monorail, cable car, or pedestrian boardwalk from the mainland.
- The Merlion, Esplanade area, and nearby waterfront promenades, which can be explored on foot while taking in views of the bay and skyline.
- Universal Studios Singapore is a great place for all the family, for tourists and locals alike, one of the most popular attraction tickets to be had.
- Heritage districts such as Chinatown, Little India, Kampong Gelam, and food‑focused stops like hawker centres, which show different sides of daily life and local cuisine.
Planning your Singapore visit
When planning a Singapore stay, it helps to identify whether your priority is a specific match, concert, or festival, or a circuit of top attractions around Marina Bay and Sentosa. Once the key dates are fixed, you can shape the rest of your days around neighbourhood walks, hawker‑centre meals, and time in parks and gardens to keep the pace manageable in the tropical climate.
From a national‑team fixture or international tournament at the National Stadium or a major tour at Singapore Indoor Stadium to an evening at Esplanade and a day between Gardens by the Bay, Marina Bay Sands, and Sentosa, you can build a Singapore itinerary that balances sport, culture, and city exploration.