Explore costs, top universities, student visa via SOLAR, scholarships, work rights, and post-study pathways for Filipino students in Singapore.
Studying in Singapore for Filipino students means enrolling at one of six Ministry of Education–funded autonomous universities or an EduTrust-certified private institution, applying for a Student’s Pass through the SOLAR system, and joining a Filipino community of approximately 200,000 already in the country (Commission on Filipinos Overseas).
Singapore sits 3 hours 30 minutes from Manila by direct flight and uses the same time zone as the Philippines (GMT+8), which makes weekend visits and live family calls realistic. The National University of Singapore (NUS) holds 8th place worldwide in the QS World University Rankings 2026, and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) holds 12th — the only two Southeast Asian universities in the global top 15.
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Destination | Singapore (Republic of Singapore) |
| Education regulator | Ministry of Education (public); Council for Private Education / SkillsFuture Singapore (private) |
| Top universities | NUS (QS #8), NTU (QS #12), SMU, SUTD, SIT, SUSS |
| Annual tuition — subsidised public undergrad with Tuition Grant | SGD 17,550–38,500 (~PHP 842,400–1,848,000) |
| Annual tuition — full-fee public, no grant | SGD 30,000–60,000 (~PHP 1,440,000–2,880,000) |
| Annual tuition — EduTrust-certified private institutions | SGD 12,000–25,000 (~PHP 576,000–1,200,000) |
| Living costs | SGD 800–1,500/month (~PHP 38,400–72,000) |
| Visa | Student’s Pass (ICA) — registered via SOLAR by the institution |
| Visa processing time | 4–6 weeks from SOLAR submission |
| Work rights | Up to 16 hours/week during term; full-time during vacation (MOE-approved institutions only) |
| Post-study pathway | LTVP (job search, up to 1 yr) → Employment Pass (SGD 5,600+/mo) → PR |
| Flight time Manila → Singapore | 3 hours 30 minutes (direct daily flights) |
| Time zone | GMT+8 (same as Manila — no jet lag) |
| Filipino community in Singapore | ~200,000 (Commission on Filipinos Overseas) |
| Main intakes | August (Year-1 entry); January (secondary) |
| Exchange rate basis used here | SGD 1 = PHP 48.00 (mid-market mean, June 2026) |
Singapore offers Filipino students a combination of proximity, academic prestige, English instruction, and post-study opportunity that no other major study destination matches in the same package.
Manila to Changi Airport is a 3-hour 30-minute direct flight, served daily by Cebu Pacific, Philippine Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Scoot, and Jetstar. Weekend visits home are realistic — Australia (7+ hours) and Canada (14+ hours) are not.
Singapore uses GMT+8, identical to the Philippines. There is no jet lag on arrival and no schedule conflict for family video calls.
The QS World University Rankings 2026 place NUS at 8th and NTU at 12th globally — the only two Southeast Asian universities in the global top 15. NTU has 11 subjects in the global top 10, including Materials Science and Communication & Media Studies (QS Subject Rankings 2026).
Singapore’s autonomous universities teach in English — the language Filipino students already use throughout secondary school. There is no language barrier to clear before classes begin.
Approximately 200,000 Filipinos work or live in Singapore (Commission on Filipinos Overseas). Lucky Plaza on Orchard Road is the long-standing weekend hub, and Filipino Catholic parishes, OFW associations, and student groups operate across the island.
Singapore is the regional headquarters for major banks, technology firms, and consultancies. Filipino graduates plug directly into ASEAN career networks rather than building them from scratch.
Long-Term Visit Pass → Employment Pass → Permanent Residence is a published sequence, with current Employment Pass salary thresholds set by the Ministry of Manpower.
Singapore operates two distinct higher-education tracks for international students: a public track run by the Ministry of Education (MOE) and a private track regulated by the Council for Private Education under SkillsFuture Singapore (CPE / SSG).
Six MOE-funded autonomous universities deliver degree programs: NUS, NTU, SMU, SUTD, SIT, and SUSS. Five government-funded polytechnics offer diploma programs that can ladder into university. Tuition is heavily subsidised for international students who accept the MOE Tuition Grant (covered in the next section).
Independent institutions — including Curtin Singapore, James Cook University Singapore, Kaplan Higher Education, MDIS, PSB Academy, and others — operate under licences from CPE.
Every private institution that accepts international students must hold EduTrust certification from CPE. The scheme has three tiers: Provisional EduTrust, EduTrust (4-year), and EduTrust Star (the highest standard). Filipino applicants should verify EduTrust status at ssg-wsg.gov.sg before paying any deposit or signing a contract. An institution without active EduTrust certification cannot lawfully enrol international students and cannot register Student’s Pass applications through SOLAR. This single check protects against unaccredited diploma mills that occasionally market to Filipino families.
August is the main intake for all six autonomous universities. January is the secondary intake for selected programs.
Singapore’s six MOE-funded autonomous universities are the standard target for Filipino undergraduate applicants. Each accepts international students each year, and each has Filipino alumni.
| University | QS 2026 | Tuition with Grant (SGD/yr) | Tuition with Grant (PHP/yr) | Notable Strengths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NUS | #8 | SGD 17,550–38,500 (medicine higher) | PHP 842K–1.85M | Computing, business, medicine, law |
| NTU | #12 | SGD 17,550–38,500 | PHP 842K–1.85M | Engineering, business, communications, teacher training (NIE) |
| SMU | #511 | SGD 18,650–25,500 | PHP 895K–1.22M | Applied business, law, social sciences |
| SUTD | Subject-strong | SGD 21,000+ | PHP 1.01M+ | Design + technology (MIT-aligned curriculum) |
| SIT | Applied focus | SGD 16,000–22,000 | PHP 768K–1.06M | Industry-integrated applied degrees |
| SUSS | Specialist | SGD 13,000–18,000 | PHP 624K–864K | Social sciences, part-time options |
Indicative international-student fees after MOE Tuition Grant. Confirm exact program fees on each university’s tuition page at application time; rates are reviewed annually.
NUS holds 8th globally and is the strongest broad-spectrum option for Filipino applicants targeting computing, engineering, business, medicine, or law. NTU sits at 12th globally and is the standard target for Filipino students focused on engineering, communications, or teacher training through its National Institute of Education. SMU runs US-style seminar pedagogy and is the strongest applied business and law option among the smaller autonomous universities. SUTD, SIT, and SUSS are more specialised — SUTD for design + tech, SIT for industry-integrated applied learning, and SUSS for social sciences and working-adult cohorts.
Private universities — Curtin Singapore, James Cook University Singapore, and INSEAD Asia (executive programs) — offer alternative routes for Filipino students who do not secure subsidised public-university admission. All must hold active EduTrust certification. Most Singapore public universities require IELTS Academic 6.5+ for Filipino applicants; IELTS preparation at Expert Education is the standard path for those who need to lift their band score before applying.
The full cost of studying in Singapore from the Philippines depends on three variables: whether you receive the Tuition Grant, where you live, and how often you eat outside hawker centres. All Philippine-peso equivalents below use SGD 1 = PHP 48.00 (mid-market mean, June 2026, Bloomberg / Xe).
For a complete side-by-side cost view across study destinations, see Expert Education’s student visa cost comparison across destinations.
The Ministry of Education Tuition Grant Scheme is a tuition subsidy — not a scholarship, not a loan — that reduces public university tuition for international students in exchange for a 3-year service obligation in Singapore after graduation.
TGS reduces full-fee international tuition by roughly half. Without TGS, undergraduate tuition at NUS runs SGD 30,000–60,000 per year. With TGS, the same courses cost SGD 17,550–38,500 — arts and social sciences at the low end, engineering and computing in the middle, medicine and dentistry higher.
Tuition Grant recipients sign a Tuition Grant Agreement and accept a 3-year bond. After graduation, the student must work full-time for three years in a Singapore-based entity registered with the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA). The bond clock starts on the date of degree conferment.
Any ACRA-registered entity qualifies — local Singapore firms, multinational subsidiaries based in Singapore, and certain overseas branches of ACRA-registered companies. NUS and NTU confirm this scope on their service-obligation policy pages.
A Filipino applicant must nominate two sureties aged 21–65, of any nationality, who are not undischarged bankrupts. Both sureties sign the agreement digitally. Filipino families should identify and confirm sureties early; the agreement cannot be signed without two confirmed.
The trade-off in one sentence: Tuition Grant Scheme is the financially rational choice for a Filipino student who intends to start their career in Singapore; it is not the right choice for a student certain to return to the Philippines immediately after graduation.
Singapore offers several scholarship routes Filipino applicants can target. Most are admission-linked: apply for the scholarship and the program together, 8–12 months before the August intake.
The Singapore Government scholarship for ASEAN nationals covers full subsidised tuition, an annual living allowance of approximately SGD 6,000 (PHP 288,000), a one-off settling-in grant, and a return economy airfare. It carries a 3-year bond in Singapore. Filipinos with strong Grade 11–12 transcripts and English-language scores are eligible.
Available to top NUS undergraduate applicants regardless of nationality. Coverage: full subsidised tuition plus a living allowance of SGD 6,000 per year, a one-time computer allowance, and accommodation support. Recipients must accept the MOE Tuition Grant and the 3-year bond.
Awarded to outstanding undergraduate applicants entering research-track programs at NTU. Covers full tuition plus a stipend.
Research attachments at A*STAR for Filipino students intending to pursue research-track graduate degrees.
SMU, SUTD, SIT, and SUSS each operate merit and need-based scholarships for international students. Coverage varies by program; check each university’s financial-aid page during application.
DOST-SEI scholarships do not fund Singapore study directly. CHED memoranda occasionally include partnered Singapore institutions; check ched.gov.ph for current overseas-scholarship listings.
The Student’s Pass is the visa issued by the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) that allows international students to study full-time at MOE-approved or CPE-licensed, EduTrust-certified institutions for courses longer than 30 days.
The Singapore institution — not the student — registers the application in SOLAR (Student’s Pass OnLine Application & Registration). The Filipino student receives login credentials from the institution and completes the eForm 16 with personal, educational, and financial details.
Expert Education Philippines coordinates the SOLAR registration with your Singapore institution and prepares the Filipino-specific document set, including the DFA Apostille of your PSA birth certificate and TOR/diploma authentication. For visa-related questions across destinations, our central student visa hub is the cross-country reference, and our cross-country student visa requirements comparison shows the visa processes side by side.
Singapore’s part-time work rules for international students are significantly more restrictive than Australia’s, Canada’s, or Germany’s. Filipino students should not plan to fund tuition through part-time work.
Who can work. Only full-time matriculated students at MOE-approved institutions — the six autonomous universities, polytechnics, and a small set of specified institutions — may take part-time employment. Filipino students at most private colleges cannot work part-time under their Student’s Pass conditions.
How many hours. Up to 16 hours per week during the academic term. Full-time hours are allowed during scheduled vacations.
What kind of work. On-campus academic positions (teaching assistant, research assistant) and off-campus internships are the standard options. Independent freelance work outside formal channels is not permitted under Student’s Pass conditions.
Wages. Singapore has no national minimum wage. Hourly rates range from SGD 8–12 (PHP 384–576) for unskilled work to SGD 15–25 (PHP 720–1,200) for tutoring and research assistantships.
Filipino graduates of Singapore universities follow a defined four-stage pathway from student to permanent resident.
Graduating students can apply for an LTVP valid for up to 1 year to search for work. LTVP is not automatic; the applicant must demonstrate active job search.
The Employment Pass is the standard work visa for graduate professional roles. Minimum fixed monthly salary for 2026: SGD 5,600 (PHP 268,800) for general sectors; SGD 6,200 (PHP 297,600) for financial services (Ministry of Manpower, 2026). EP applications are also assessed under the COMPASS framework — a points-based system covering salary, qualifications, employer diversity, and skills-shortage roles. Filipino graduates of NUS and NTU score well on the qualifications dimension; salary thresholds rise progressively with age.
Where a first role does not meet the EP floor, the S Pass is the next option. Minimum salary for 2026: SGD 3,300 (PHP 158,400) for general sectors; SGD 3,800 (PHP 182,400) for financial services. Filipino polytechnic graduates often qualify here.
Singapore PR is applied for through the Professional / Technical Personnel and Skilled Worker Scheme (PTS). Typical pathway: 2–4 years on EP or S Pass with consistent career progression before applying. Approval is at ICA’s discretion; no published timeline exists.
From 1 January 2027: the EP floor rises to SGD 6,000 (SGD 6,600 financial services), and the S Pass floor rises to SGD 3,600 (SGD 4,000 financial services). Plan for the higher figures if you intend to begin work in Singapore from 2027 onward.
Singapore is the right fit for some Filipino students and the wrong fit for others. Here is the honest decision frame.
| Factor | Singapore | Australia | Canada | Germany |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flight time from Manila | 3h 30min | 7+ hours | 14+ hours | 14+ hours |
| Time zone vs PH | Same (GMT+8) | +2 to +3 hrs | −12 to −16 hrs | −6 to −7 hrs |
| Tuition (UG, typical) | SGD 17,550–38,500 (subsidised) | AUD 20,000–45,000 | CAD 20,000–40,000 | Often €0 (public) |
| Term work hours/week | 16 (MOE-approved only) | ~24/wk (48/fortnight) | 24/wk | 20/wk |
| Post-study work | LTVP 1 yr → EP | 2–6 yr Temporary Graduate | 3 yr PGWP | 18 mo job-search visa |
| Direct PR pathway | EP → 2–4 yr → PR (discretionary) | Skilled Migration | Express Entry / PNP / CEC | EU Blue Card → PR |
| Filipino community size | ~200,000 | ~410,000 | ~957,000 | ~60,000 |
You want minimal distance and same-time-zone family contact. You’re targeting a top-15 global STEM or business university (NUS, NTU). You can accept the 3-year Tuition Grant bond and want to start your career in Singapore. You value Asia-region career networks over Western markets.
Expert Education’s consultants can walk through this comparison in detail during a free consultation.
Expert Education Philippines has helped 150,000+ Filipino students study abroad since 2003, across destinations including Singapore, Australia, Canada, the UK, USA, New Zealand, and Germany. We hold partnerships with 600+ institutions worldwide. Before you commit to a destination, work through your options with Expert Education’s full study-abroad consultation — our consultants compare Singapore against your other shortlisted destinations.
Philippines offices. Metro Manila (head office), Cebu, Davao, Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo, plus additional regional branches across 80+ locations.
Accreditations. NEAS, ISEAA, and AECA member.
No hidden fees. Expert Education provides free consultation and application services. There is no fee until you decide to enrol.
Speak with an Expert Education consultant who knows the NUS, NTU, SMU, and SOLAR processes from end to end. No fee, no commitment.
Subsidised public universities with Tuition Grant: SGD 17,550–38,500/year (PHP 842,400–1,848,000). Full-fee public: SGD 30,000–60,000/year. EduTrust-certified private institutions: SGD 12,000–25,000/year. Add living costs of SGD 800–1,500/month. Total Year-1 outlay: approximately PHP 1,300,000–2,700,000 for subsidised public undergraduate.
The Tuition Grant Scheme is an MOE subsidy that reduces public university tuition for international students by roughly half. It is not a loan, but acceptance requires signing a 3-year service obligation to work for an ACRA-registered Singapore entity after graduation. Liquidated damages apply if the bond is broken.
Yes. Both NUS and NTU admit Filipino students annually. Typical entry profile: strong Grade 11–12 academic transcripts, IELTS Academic 6.5+ or equivalent (SAT, A-Levels), and a credible application essay aligned to the chosen program. Apply 9–12 months before the August intake to allow time for visa processing.
Typically 4–6 weeks from SOLAR submission. The Singapore institution registers the application on your behalf — you do not submit directly to ICA. Apply at least 2 months before your course start date. The application processing fee is SGD 30; the issuance fee on approval is SGD 60.
Most public universities accept IELTS Academic 6.5+, TOEFL iBT 90+, SAT scores, or A-Level results. Some Filipino students with strong English-medium secondary school records can have IELTS waived; this varies by institution and program. Check each university’s English proficiency requirements during application.
Only full-time matriculated students at MOE-approved institutions can work — up to 16 hours per week during the academic term and full-time during scheduled vacations. Student’s Pass holders at most private colleges typically cannot work part-time. Wages range SGD 8–25 per hour depending on the type of work.
Three hours 30 minutes direct. Multiple daily direct flights operate from Manila via Cebu Pacific, Philippine Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Scoot, and Jetstar. Singapore uses GMT+8, the same time zone as the Philippines — no jet lag on arrival and no schedule conflict for family video calls.
Yes. Major options: ASEAN Undergraduate Scholarship (full subsidised tuition plus approximately SGD 6,000 annual living allowance), NUS Global Merit Scholarship, NTU President’s Research Scholarship, and university-specific merit awards from SMU, SUTD, SIT, and SUSS. Apply 8–12 months before the August intake; most are admission-linked.
Yes. Apply for the Long-Term Visit Pass for up to 1 year of job search, then the Employment Pass (minimum SGD 5,600/month, or SGD 6,200 in financial services). Singapore Permanent Residence is then accessible after 2–4 years on EP with consistent career progression, at ICA’s discretion.
Choose your university and program, then submit the admission application 9–12 months before the August intake. Once you receive your admission letter, the institution registers your Student’s Pass application via SOLAR. Submit documents and pay the SGD 30 fee. Arrive within IPA validity. Expert Education guides each step.
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