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How Much Do Beach Clubs Cost in Singapore? (2026 Guide)

8 min read
How Much Do Beach Clubs Cost in Singapore? (2026 Guide)

Table of Contents

    Quick price summary: Beach Clubs in Singapore (2026)

    • Low end: SGD $20–$50 per person (entry-level access, sunbed hire, casual dining spots)
    • Mid-range: SGD $100–$300 per daybed or table minimum spend
    • High end / enterprise: SGD $400–$600+ per cabana or group table reservation

    Prices in Singapore local currency. Last updated 2026.

    Singapore’s beach club scene spans two main hubs: Sentosa Island, with its stretch of managed beach fronts along Palawan Beach and Tanjong Beach, and East Coast Park, which runs along the mainland shoreline and attracts a more local, laid-back crowd. What you pay at either location depends heavily on the type of seating you book, the day you visit, and whether you’re going for a quick afternoon drink or a full-day group outing with reserved daybeds and bottle service.

    Costs vary considerably because beach clubs in Singapore operate on a minimum spend model rather than a flat entry fee at most venues. This means the price you see quoted for a daybed, cabana, or poolside table is the amount you’re expected to spend on food and drinks during your visit. Some venues charge a separate reservation fee on top. Weekends, public holidays, and peak evening slots command significantly higher minimums than weekday visits, and the gap between the cheapest sunbed at East Coast and a premium cabana at Tanjong Beach Club can be several hundred dollars.

    What Do Beach Clubs Cost in Singapore?

    At the budget end, venues like Aloha Beach Bar at East Coast Park and Rumours Beach Club charge no entry fee, and you can spend as little as SGD $20–$50 on food and drinks without a table reservation. Splash Tribe at Palawan Beach targets families with water park access priced around SGD $30–$50 per adult. Coastes on Sentosa and FOC Sentosa on Palawan Beach sit in the mid-range, with daybed minimum spends typically starting around SGD $100–$150 on weekdays and rising to SGD $200 or more on weekends.

    At the premium end, Tanjong Beach Club is the benchmark. A reserved daybed starts at around SGD $150–$200 on weekdays and can reach SGD $400 per table on busy Sundays or public holidays. Cabanas and larger group areas at this venue, and at +Twelve (an adult-only club on Sentosa), push into SGD $400–$600 territory for weekend bookings. OLA Beach Club at Kallang, which offers water sports including kayaking and paddle-boarding alongside its beach bar, sits in the SGD $100–$300 range depending on the seating category and day of the week.

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    Price Breakdown by Service Level

    Service Level What You Get Typical Price Range (SGD) Best For
    Basic / Walk-In No reservation, public seating or bar stools, food and drinks ordered at leisure, venues like Aloha Beach Bar and Rumours Beach Club $20–$60 per person spend Casual visits, solo diners, budget groups
    Standard Daybed / Sunbed Reserved sunbed or daybed for two, minimum spend applies, access to pool or beach area, venues like Coastes and FOC Sentosa $100–$200 minimum spend per booking Couples, small groups wanting guaranteed seating
    Premium Table / Daybed Prime beach-front or poolside daybed, dedicated service, higher minimum spend, venues like Tanjong Beach Club and OLA Beach Club $200–$400 minimum spend Weekend outings, celebrations, groups of 4–6
    Cabana / Group Reservation Private or semi-private cabana, bottle service options, premium views, DJ nights, venues like Tanjong Beach Club and +Twelve $400–$600+ minimum spend Large groups, birthday parties, corporate bookings

    What Affects the Cost of Beach Clubs in Singapore?

    Day of the week and public holidays

    The single biggest pricing variable is timing. Most beach clubs in Singapore charge Friday and Sunday minimums at 50–100% above their weekday rates. Public holidays are treated the same as peak weekend days, and some venues like Tanjong Beach Club apply a separate surcharge on New Year’s Eve and other special event nights. If you visit on a Tuesday afternoon, you can often secure a daybed at Coastes or FOC Sentosa for around SGD $100. The same spot on a Sunday could cost SGD $200 or more.

    Seating category

    Beach clubs tier their seating into sunbeds, daybeds, sofas, and cabanas, each with a different minimum spend. A basic sunbed at Rumours Beach Club or Splash Tribe carries little to no booking cost. A beachfront cabana at Tanjong Beach Club or a private daybed area at +Twelve is a substantially different proposition. The further from the water or pool you sit, the lower the minimum spend tends to be.

    Venue location

    Sentosa venues, particularly those on Palawan Beach and Tanjong Beach, carry a premium over East Coast Park clubs. The Sentosa development levy, higher operating costs, and tourist demand all push prices up. East Coast venues like Aloha Beach Bar and Ohana Beach House are generally more wallet-friendly and attract a more local crowd. OLA Beach Club at Kallang sits between the two in terms of pricing.

    Group size and type of reservation

    Minimum spends are set per booking, not per person, so a cabana minimum of SGD $600 shared across eight people works out to SGD $75 each, which is reasonable. Smaller groups booking the same space face the same floor, making large reserved areas poor value for two people. Venues like Tanjong Beach Club and +Twelve often require a minimum group size for cabana reservations on peak days.

    Add-ons and activities

    Water sports at venues like OLA Beach Club (kayaking, paddle-boarding, wakeboarding) and Aloha Beach Bar are charged separately from any food and drink minimum. Splash Tribe includes water park access, which is priced per adult at around SGD $30–$50 on top of any food spend. Live DJ events, themed party nights, and New Year’s or Christmas Eve specials at Tanjong Beach Club and Rumours Beach Club come with ticket or table packages that replace the standard minimum spend structure.

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    How to Get Accurate Quotes

    1. Check the venue’s official website or Instagram before contacting them. Most beach clubs publish their minimum spend schedules online, and some (Tanjong Beach Club, OLA Beach Club) have booking portals with live pricing by date and seating category.
    2. Specify the exact date, day type (weekday, weekend, public holiday), and group size when making an enquiry. A quote given for a Tuesday is useless if you’re planning a Sunday visit in April.
    3. Ask whether the minimum spend is redeemable fully on food and drinks, or whether part of it is a non-refundable reservation fee. These are structurally different and affect the value of the booking.
    4. Confirm whether service charge and GST are included in the minimum spend figure. At current rates, adding 9% GST and a 10% service charge to a SGD $400 minimum spend adds another SGD $76 to your bill.
    5. For group events or cabana bookings, ask directly about what is included at that price tier, specifically whether dedicated staff, ice, glassware, and any welcome drinks form part of the package.

    Red Flags to Watch Out For

    • Venues that quote a minimum spend without clarifying whether taxes and service charge are included. At Singapore’s current rates, the real cost of a SGD $400 booking is closer to SGD $476 all-in.
    • Third-party booking platforms advertising beach club packages at prices well below what the venue charges directly. These may be outdated listings, and the actual minimum spend on arrival can be higher.
    • No cancellation or refund policy stated at the time of booking. Reputable venues like Tanjong Beach Club and OLA Beach Club have clear policies. Avoid any venue that won’t confirm this in writing.
    • Walk-in pricing that seems unusually low on a weekend. Some venues use attractive posted rates to draw guests in, then enforce a higher table minimum once you are seated. Check the minimum spend confirmation before committing to a table.
    • Operators that cannot confirm group capacity for cabanas. Overcrowded shared areas are a common complaint at East Coast venues during weekends. A legitimate booking should specify the number of guests the reserved space is intended for.
    • Packages promoted as “all-inclusive” that exclude standard items like house spirits, soft drinks, or food items from the set menu. Always ask what the drinks and food minimum actually covers.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much do beach clubs cost in Singapore on average?

    Most visitors to Singapore’s beach clubs spend between SGD $80 and SGD $200 per person across food, drinks, and any seating reservation costs. A couple booking a standard daybed at a mid-range Sentosa venue like FOC Sentosa or Coastes on a weekend should budget around SGD $200–$300 total for the day. Groups using premium daybeds or cabanas at Tanjong Beach Club can spend SGD $400–$600 per booking, which works out to SGD $75–$150 per person depending on group size.

    Why are some beach clubs prices so much cheaper?

    East Coast Park venues operate on lower overheads than Sentosa clubs, have no transport levy, and cater primarily to locals rather than tourists. Venues like Rumours Beach Club and Aloha Beach Bar charge no entry fee and have no mandatory minimum spend for walk-in seating. Some Sentosa venues like Splash Tribe and Trapizza are also priced more accessibly because they target families with children rather than the party and sundowner crowd. The difference in price between these venues and a peak-weekend cabana at Tanjong Beach Club reflects the difference in location, service level, crowd management, and overall experience.

    Is it worth paying more for beach clubs in Singapore?

    For a group celebrating a birthday or hosting out-of-town guests, the experience at Tanjong Beach Club or +Twelve justifies the premium. You get beachfront access, consistent service, a curated food and drinks menu, and a well-managed environment. For a casual afternoon with friends or a family outing with kids, East Coast Park venues or family-friendly Sentosa spots like Coastes and Splash Tribe offer genuine value without the high minimum spends. The question is less about whether quality costs more and more about whether the occasion warrants the higher outlay.

    Singapore’s beach clubs cover a wide enough range that there is a viable option at almost every budget, from a SGD $30 afternoon at East Coast Park to a SGD $600 cabana booking on Tanjong Beach. The key is matching the venue to your group size, your occasion, and the day you plan to visit, then confirming the full cost including taxes before you book.

    For a curated list of top-rated providers, see our guide: Best Beach Clubs in Singapore (2026).

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