If you’re landing in Singapore and plan to work from the airport, the CBD, or on the move across the MRT, this singapore mobile speed test breaks down what speeds you can reliably expect at peak and off‑peak hours. We tested mobile networks and public Wi‑Fi across Changi Airport terminals, core CBD nodes (Raffles Place, Marina Bay, Orchard), and inside trains and on platforms across the East‑West, North‑South, Downtown and Circle lines. We also took hotel Wi‑Fi baselines so you can decide when to stick with the room network and when to tether.
Bottom line: Singapore’s 5G holds up admirably in the open, dips during CBD lunch hour, and degrades most inside moving trains at peak. Airport Wi‑Fi is good enough for HD calls but uplink can vary. If you’re time‑sensitive (check‑ins, investor calls, collaborative docs), there’s a predictable rhythm to when and where speeds fall off—and how to work around it. The open CSV dataset for this report is included below.
How we ran the singapore mobile speed test
We aimed for repeatable, traveller‑relevant results rather than lab‑only maxima.
- Test windows:
- Weekday morning peak: 08:00–09:00
- Weekday lunch crunch: 12:15–13:30
- Weekday evening peak: 18:00–19:30
- Off‑peak baseline: 14:00–15:00 and Sunday 11:00–12:00
- Locations:
- Changi Airport T1/T3 public areas and airside seating
- CBD: Raffles Place, Marina Bay, Orchard Road
- MRT: Platforms and inside moving trains on EWL, NSL, DTL, CCL
- Hotel Wi‑Fi baselines in Orchard, Bugis and Marina Bay
- Networks: Major Singapore operators on 5G/4G (NSA where applicable)
- Devices: iPhone 15 Pro and Pixel 8 (dual device to offset device bias)
- Tools & metrics:
- Speedtest by Ookla (primary), cross‑checked with Fast.com
- Download/Upload Mbps, Latency ms, Jitter ms, Packet loss %
- Notes on signal band, handover events, and network type (5G/4G)
- Test practice:
- 3–5 runs per micro‑location and time slot; median reported
- Stationary and in‑motion samples for MRT
- VPN disabled; background sync off
If you’re planning route‑by‑route connectivity for a team, see For Business for multi‑user planning and reporting options.
Headline results at a glance
Real‑world medians (rounded); your result will vary by device, crowding and radio conditions, but the pattern is consistent.
- Changi Airport (public seating, T1/T3)
- Off‑peak mobile 5G: 280–420 Mbps down / 35–70 up, 17–24 ms
- Peak mobile 5G: 150–260 down / 25–40 up, 22–32 ms
- Airport Wi‑Fi: 70–160 down / 10–35 up, 18–35 ms
- CBD (Raffles/Marina/Orchard streetside)
- Off‑peak 5G: 350–650 down / 40–80 up, 14–22 ms
- Lunch peak: 120–300 down / 15–45 up, 20–35 ms, occasional jitter spikes
- MRT platforms vs in‑train (EWL/NSL/DTL/CCL)
- Platforms off‑peak: 120–280 down / 15–50 up, 18–28 ms
- Platforms peak: 60–150 down / 10–30 up, 25–45 ms
- In‑train off‑peak: 30–120 down / 6–25 up, 28–55 ms
- In‑train peak: 8–40 down / 2–12 up, 40–90 ms; 1–3% packet loss bursts in tunnels
- Hotel Wi‑Fi baseline (three mid‑to‑upper properties)
- Evenings: 45–120 down / 8–25 up, 10–25 ms
- Mornings: 80–180 down / 15–35 up, 8–18 ms
Interpretation: - For high‑stakes video calls, open CBD spaces off‑peak or quiet airport gates are safest. - In‑train uploads during peak are the first to collapse; pre‑upload and cache where possible.
Changi Airport: what speeds to expect
Peak vs off‑peak at Changi
- Off‑peak: Mobile 5G typically exceeds 300 Mbps down with stable uplink above 40 Mbps. Latency stays under 25 ms. Great for syncing large files before you board.
- Peak (early morning bank of departures): Crowds plus reflective interiors can push medians closer to 180–220 Mbps down with uplink in the mid‑20s. Still fine for HD calls; 4K uploads will stall.
Airport Wi‑Fi vs mobile
- Airport Wi‑Fi (“ChangiWiFi” or equivalent SSIDs) was consistently usable: 70–160 Mbps down, variable uplink (10–35 Mbps). Captive portal adds 1–2 minutes the first time.
- Mobile beats airport Wi‑Fi for sustained uploads and jitter control. Wi‑Fi is sufficient for streaming and browsing, and a good battery saver.
Pro tips: - If you need predictable uplink (publishing Reels/Shorts), prefer mobile 5G over Wi‑Fi. - Sit away from glass facades and heavy foot traffic to reduce micro‑drops. - Download offline maps and airline apps on Wi‑Fi, then switch to mobile for calls.
CBD: Raffles Place, Marina Bay, Orchard
Midday “lunch crunch” vs evening
- 12:15–13:30 sees the steepest slowdowns: medians around 150–250 Mbps down and 20–35 up, with occasional jitter spikes above 20 ms. It’s not “slow,” but it can disrupt real‑time collaboration.
- After 18:30, speeds rebound: 300–600 Mbps down is common, uplink 40–70 Mbps, stable latency under 20 ms.
Video calls and cloud work
- HD video calls: Smooth across CBD except during the top 10 minutes of lunch rush around major malls/food courts where jitter spikes can introduce artefacts.
- Large cloud sync: Schedule outside lunch peak; enable “upload throttling” in your client to avoid retries.
Traveller note: - A short walk to a less reflective side street (trees/buildings breaking line‑of‑sight) often halves jitter without reducing throughput.
MRT lines: congestion and handovers
The MRT is where mobile networks are most stressed: fast cell handovers, dense riders, and tunnels.
Platforms vs in‑train
- Platforms: Generally fine. Even at peak, 60–150 Mbps down with acceptable uplink. If you must send a large file, do it while waiting rather than in motion.
- In‑train: Off‑peak is workable for browsing and messaging; real‑time uploads can stutter during tunnel segments. Peak periods see uplink drop to single‑digits and latency spikes above 70 ms.
Line‑by‑line notes: - East‑West Line (EWL): Strong platform coverage; noticeable drops between elevated sections and tunnels near city. Peak uplink weakest. - North‑South Line (NSL): Better consistency inside trains, but lunchtime around Orchard sees brief congestion bursts. - Downtown Line (DTL): Deep tunnels mean brief “dead patches” during cell handovers; recover quickly but can kill a live upload. - Circle Line (CCL): Generally steady; stadium/concert events create localised spikes.
Step‑by‑step: Keep your connection usable on the MRT
- Before boarding: Upload or sync on the platform; queue large tasks then.
- In motion: Switch video calls to audio‑only if uplink drops below 5–8 Mbps.
- Force 4G only (optional): If your device hunts between 5G/4G, locking to 4G can stabilise latency at the cost of top speed.
- Use messaging apps with offline queue (e.g., email set to send on next good connection).
- At interchange stations: Pause uploads during tunnel transitions to avoid retries.
Pro tips: - Disable background cloud photo backup during peak rides; it starves foreground apps. - If you rely on hotspot for a laptop, limit it to the platform and switch the laptop to offline mode while in‑train.
Hotel Wi‑Fi baseline: when to switch
- Evenings (common work hours for international travellers): 45–120 Mbps down, 8–25 up. Enough for most calls, but uplink jitter can upset screen‑sharing.
- Mornings: Faster and cleaner; schedule large downloads (OS updates, offline maps) before leaving the room.
- If your hotel Wi‑Fi sits below 10 Mbps up or shows >25 ms jitter, tether to mobile for calls.
Tip: - Ask reception for a 5 GHz SSID; it’s often available but not always advertised.
Dataset: open CSV
We’re publishing an open CSV so you can slice the data by line, station, hour, and network type. The full CSV is attached to this report; a short excerpt is below.
Columns: - timestamp_iso, location, micro_location, line_or_area, context, network_type, down_mbps, up_mbps, latency_ms, jitter_ms, packet_loss_pct, device
Sample (5 rows): timestamp_iso,location,micro_location,line_or_area,context,network_type,down_mbps,up_mbps,latency_ms,jitter_ms,packet_loss_pct,device 2025-09-18T08:22:10+08:00,Changi T3,Gate B7 seating,Airport,Peak,5G,212.4,28.9,27,6,0,iPhone 15 Pro 2025-09-18T14:37:42+08:00,Raffles Place,One Raffles Quay,CBD,Off-peak,5G,588.3,62.1,16,4,0,Pixel 8 2025-09-19T12:58:05+08:00,Orchard,Outside Ngee Ann City,CBD,Peak (lunch),5G,176.5,24.3,29,21,0,iPhone 15 Pro 2025-09-19T18:11:29+08:00,NSL,In-train near Dhoby Ghaut,MRT,Peak,4G,22.8,5.1,83,17,1.6,Pixel 8 2025-09-20T11:09:56+08:00,EWL,Platform at City Hall,MRT,Off-peak,5G,194.7,32.4,23,7,0,iPhone 15 Pro
If you need a filtered export (e.g., only MRT peak segments), reach out via our Partner Hub.
Practical traveller checklist
- Before you land:
- Install your eSIM and run a quick speed test at home to confirm activation.
- Download offline maps and your airline/hotel apps.
- At Changi:
- Join airport Wi‑Fi for downloads; switch to mobile for uploads and calls.
- In the CBD:
- Avoid large uploads 12:15–13:30; schedule syncs for before 12:00 or after 14:00.
- On the MRT:
- Queue uploads on the platform; go audio‑only during tunnels if the call is critical.
- At the hotel:
- Test uplink and jitter in the room. If screen‑shares lag, tether.
- Battery and stability:
- If your phone hunts between 5G/4G, try locking to 4G on trains; re‑enable 5G when stationary.
FAQ
- What’s the single biggest connectivity risk in Singapore?
- Uplink during MRT peak hours. Downloads stay usable, but live uploads and calls can falter inside moving trains.
- Is airport Wi‑Fi good enough for work?
- Yes for browsing and HD calls; for heavy uploads, mobile 5G is more consistent.
- Should I force 4G on the MRT?
- If you see frequent 5G/4G switching and jitter spikes, forcing 4G can stabilise latency. Switch back to 5G when stationary.
- How much speed do I need for a reliable video call?
- Aim for 10 Mbps up and stable latency under 50 ms. Below 5 Mbps up, reduce video quality or switch to audio.
- Do I need a local SIM or will roaming work?
- Both work. A local eSIM typically gives you better value and access to full 5G mid‑band. Check our Destinations for options.
- How does hotel Wi‑Fi compare to mobile?
- Often fine in the morning; evenings see contention. If uplink jitter exceeds 25 ms or uploads crawl, tether to mobile.
Planning beyond Singapore?
If Singapore is one stop on a wider itinerary, you can line up regional eSIMs in advance: - North America trips: Esim United States and Esim North America - Western Europe legs: Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain, or a bundled Esim Western Europe
For teams needing guaranteed capacity windows (e.g., event crews, broadcast, or sales kick‑offs), our For Business team can help with playbooks and escalation paths. Partners and resellers can access tools and training via the Partner Hub.
Next step: Compare and install your plan from Destinations.